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December 18, 2012
Meier on Summary Judgment
Luke Meier has posted Probability, Confidence, and the Constitutionality of Summary Judgment to SSRN.
Abstract:
Professor Suja Thomas has famously asserted that summary judgment
violates the Seventh Amendment guarantee of a right to a jury trial in
civil cases. Most commentators and courts, however, continue to believe
that summary judgment is constitutional and that the issue was resolved
by the Supreme Court in Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. United States.
This Article argues that this entire debate is misguided. The current
debate has proceeded under the assumption that every summary judgment
raises identical Seventh Amendment concerns. The reality, however, is
more complex. This Article distinguishes between the concepts of
probability and confidence, both of which can be the basis of a summary
judgment. When summary judgment is entered pursuant to a confidence
analysis, no Seventh Amendment violation occurs. This conclusion is
confirmed by existing Supreme Court caselaw. When, however, summary
judgment is entered pursuant to a probability analysis, Seventh
Amendment concerns arise; contrary to popular believe, the Supreme
Court has not addressed these Seventh Amendment concerns.
RJE
December 18, 2012 | Permalink
