Category: Uncategorized

A Guest Speaker in My Insurance Class Reaffirms the Importance of Teaching and Blogging in a Nonpartisan Way

Today, in Insurance class, I received a reminder of how critical it is that law professors approach their craft of teaching and writing in a nonpartisan way.  As a First Amendment scholar, my priors were already set to fostering respectful disagreement in my classes, but it is all too easy, without constant vigilance, to teach classes and present legal arguments in an ideological way.  Today’s guest speaker in my Insurance class reminded me that free speech can and does work, if we, especially academics, commit to the enterprise as honest brokers.

My guest speaker, who Skyped into class, represents maritime insurance companies in a litigation, arbitration, and appellate practice.  He regaled my students with vivid stories about the complexities of maritime law and the foibles of state and federal courts.  Ever since the Supreme Court, in Wilburn Boat v. Fireman’s Fund Insurance, 348 U.S. 310 (1955), ruled that not all maritime insurance disputes are governed by federal admiralty law, courts now decide whether to apply state or federal law to maritime insurance disputes.  My guest speaker explained that courts often look beyond the choice of law question to the ultimate result in a given case to decide which law applies, generally to favor policyholders over insurance companies.  Indeed, my guest speaker told my class that his father, who started their insurance practice, was once denied the ability to speak on behalf of his client, by a Florida state-court judge who said something to the effect of, “No slick Jewish lawyer in Gucci loafers is going to come into my court and tell me how to rule.”

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What’s the Deal with SCOTUS, the Supremacy Clause, and Insurance Subrogation? (A Series)

Part One:  The Basics

Often, the most technical cases are the most fun.  When I was clerking, my co-clerks amiably mocked the fact that my first case was a contract dispute between a shopping center and its tenant (“How’s Minges Creek?” they would chide).  I loved that case.

You may never have considered your view on whether the Federal Employees Health Benefits Act (FEHBA) pre-empts state laws that bar insurance carriers from seeking subrogation.  However, considering this issue promises to be a good time. Cases involving abstruse, interlocking statutes or technical contractual language require judges and lawyers to puzzle through logical challenges in order to reach a coherent, satisfying solution.  The difficulty of reconciling analytical inconsistencies and assimilating technical knowledge overshadows any obvious political valence.  The case becomes more about making the parts fit together within the statutory parameters.  Courts must provide workable conceptual principles for future cases, which will present vastly different policy issues.  So it is with insurance subrogation and the Supremacy Clause.

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Oral Argument in Packingham v. North Carolina: Justice by Justice

Earlier this week, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in Packingham v. North Carolina, a case about whether North Carolina can make it a crime for registered sex offenders to access commercial social networking websites.  Packingham v. North Carolina is an interesting case with significant First Amendment implications.  The Court will decide not only what level of First Amendment scrutiny applies to “access” restrictions on speech, but will have to contend with the question of whether speech can be restricted as a means of preventing crimes.

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What the Supreme Court’s First Amendment Cases Show About Trump’s Relationship to the Media

President Donald Trump is not shy about his distaste for the press, and even for mainstream media entertainment.  President Trump recently characterized the media as “the enemy of the American people.”  He believes the media slants stories unfairly, uses quotes out of context, and even fabricates facts, to serve a political agenda.

The media has not taken these criticisms lightly.  Many journalists and politicians have spoken about the historical connection between media disrespect and authoritarian regimes.  To truly understand the import of Trump’s comments for this country, however, we need to examine the Supreme Court’s First Amendment jurisprudence relating to the media.  The Supreme Court protects the First Amendment rights of a fallible media – a media that is factually incorrect, misleading, and crass —  because the media is a necessary instrument to robust public discourse and informed democratic participation.  President Trump’s criticisms turn First Amendment jurisprudence on its head.  The media deserves deference from the government despite its flaws; the government does not deserve deference because of the media’s flaws.   
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An Insurance Amputation Case With a Pure Legal Issue

My students in Insurance described feeling saturated by political debates, and I sympathize.  Today, I won’t be blogging about a current crisis or pressing First Amendment lawsuit.  Instead, I want to demonstrate how thinking about a purer legal issue – arising in an Insurance case about whether a particular contract term should be void as a matter of public policy –gives us perspective on more abstract questions involving freedom to contract and the scope of the judicial role in shaping public policy.  Contemplating these questions outside of our fraught political climate may be helpful in thinking through current issues.

Contracts are generally enforced as written, unless their terms violate a state’s specific public policy, either codified by the legislature or articulated by judges.  “Public policy” is why courts will not enforce the terms of a murder-for-hire contract, or an organ-sale contract, even though the parties freely bound themselves by the contract’s terms.  Those are easier cases.  Cases involving public policies not specifically covered by statutory prohibitions are much more difficult and complex.  How much power one believes a judge should possess to nullify an insurance contract depends on one’s views about autonomy, insurers and their motives, and the role of judges versus private parties in ordering society.

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To those Inspired to Practice Law – Remember That Law School is Also an Intellectual Journey

The past few weeks have demonstrated the efficacy and beauty of practicing law.  When Trump’s Executive Order banning travel from seven countries took effect, lawyers met with green card and visa holders detained at airports across the country.  Lawyers achieved a temporary stay of deportation of those who traveled before the EO took effect, and a stay of the travel ban to visa holders affected (and, in Boston, a stay of the entire order).  Lawyers even helped get back to this country some who lived here but were prevented from traveling, so they could reunite with their loved ones.   The finer points of immigration law and civil procedure became the focal point of the day, and now, as lawyers challenge the constitutionality of the travel ban (Ninth Circuit arguments to air today), equal protection and due process issues move to the fore.  All of this legal activity is rightly portraying lawyers as important guardians of justice and the rule of law.

To those energized by the ability of lawyers to concretely challenge the injustices plaguing our country, and to those now paying more attention to the courts as the arbiters of justice, I have a note about the role of law school and lawyers.  One reason the law can legitimately be used as a force for good is because it is generally logical, rational, and restrained.  Change through the courts is often incremental, and the positions of both sides usually have some merit.  Because everyone has his or her own sense of what is “just,” the law requires methodologies that are independent, nonpartisan, and coherent.  Creating legal doctrine that can be reconciled with all other areas of the law, on many levels of abstraction, is what gives the law its legitimacy.  If you want to go to law school, prepare yourself for an intellectual journey, where both your mind and your heart may change.

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What does “Rule of Law” Mean to You?

I am excited that people are speaking positively about the rule of law.   President Trump’s attacks on the legitimacy of “so called” judges, and his initial reluctance to follow judicial decisions on his Executive Order banning travel from seven countries, threaten the fabric of our constitutional democracy and the concept of judicial review.  However, simply citing rule of law concerns without understanding them, or without having rules for applying them consistently, is actually antithetical to rule of law values.

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