« Alternative MDL-management Method | Main | FRCP Amendments »
March 25, 2009
Pleading and the Dilemmas of "General Rules"
Click the article title to download Pleading and the Dilemmas of General Rules, by Prof. Stephen B. Burbank. The article will appear in the Wisconsin Law Review. The abstract follows:
This
article comments on Professor Geoffrey Miller's article about pleading under
Tellabs and goes on (1) to use Tellabs, Bell Atlantic Corp. v Twombly, and
Iqbal v. Hasty (in which the Court has granted review) to illustrate the limits
of, and costs created by, certain foundational assumptions and operating
principles that are associated with the Rules Enabling Act's requirement of
general rules, and (2) more generally, to illustrate the costs of the complex
procedural system that we have created. Thus, for instance, the argument that
the standards emerging from Twombly should be confined to antitrust conspiracy
cases confronts the foundational assumptions that the Federal Rules are
trans-substantive and that they cannot be amended by judicial interpretation.
Similarly, in Iqbal, the Government presumably denies that it is calling for
the imposition of a heightened fact pleading requirement in cases involving
high government officials entitled to an immunity defense because the Court
seems to have made it impossible for the judiciary openly to impose such a
requirement other than through The Enabling Act Process. The Court may,
however, take a different view of the appropriate contextual plausibility
judgment than did the lower court in Iqbal. If so, however, the Court would
thereby confirm the view that Twombly is an invitation to the lower courts to
make ad hoc decisions reflecting buried policy choices. I therefore argue that,
if the Court is persuaded that the changes already made to pleading
jurisprudence are insufficient to accommodate the needs of the immunity
defense, it should forthrightly require fact pleading as a matter of substantive
federal common law.
--RR
March 25, 2009 | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef01156e586d45970c
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Pleading and the Dilemmas of "General Rules":
