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July 6, 2009
The Past, Present, and Future of Trans-Substantivity in Federal Civil Procedure
Prof. David Marcus recently posted an interesting piece on SSRN, The Past, Present, and Future of Trans-Substantivity in Federal Civil Procedure. Click the title to download it. The abstract follows:
The
trans-substantivity principle – the same procedural rules should apply
regardless of the substance of the case – has been a central feature of
modern federal civil procedure since its beginnings in 1938. In recent
years, however, a number of scholars have questioned whether the
principle should continue to govern procedural rulemaking. Mirroring
this scholarly disquiet, legislatures have crafted substance-specific
rules to apply in heavily-litigated areas of substantive doctrine. The
future of trans-substantivity is uncertain. In this symposium
contribution, I use the history of the rise of trans-substantivity in
American civil procedure as a basis to predict its role going forward.
This history, beginning in the early nineteenth century and culminating
in 1938, illuminates the jurisprudential foundation for
trans-substantivity, its normative implications, and the political role
it played in assisting the development of court-supervised rulemaking.
I then assess the current status of trans-substantivity. Recent
legislative developments call the jurisprudential and normative bases
for trans-substantivity into question, but court-supervised rulemakers
continue to limit themselves to trans-substantive rules. Guided by this
pattern of institutional behavior, I argue that the principle, however
theoretically suspect, has a role going forward as a mechanism for the
allocation of rulemaking power. Court-supervised rulemakers can
strengthen their legitimacy if they limit themselves to
trans-substantive rules, while substance-specific departures from the
principle should come from legislatures.
--RR
July 6, 2009 | Permalink
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