Judge Frank Easterbrook is known for insisting that legislative intent is a misconception, bordering on oxymoron. He has also advanced the idea that legislative bargains should be upheld by courts and that where a legislature leaves a “gap,” courts should be non-activis rather than eager gap-fillers. Still, there are many cases where legislation leaves ambiguities. I suggest that the cause of an ambiguity has some bearing on the best way for a judge to resolve it. Easterbrook decisions, including an Equal Pay Act case, where (unequal) wages were based on prior compensation, are used to reveal various strategies for dealing with ambiguous statutes. One conclusion is that it is almost inevitable that even a non-activist judge will occasionall...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
Debates about statutory interpretation typically proceed on the assumption that statutes have lingui...
In the modern debate over statutory interpretation, scholars frequently talk past one another, argui...
Judge Frank Easterbrook is known for insisting that legislative intent is a misconception, bordering...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
For centuries, courts have dealt with the challenge of imposing penalties for crimes when governing ...
Most scholarship on statutory interpretation discusses what courts should do with ambiguous statutes...
An aspect of the battle over deconstruction is whether resort to legislative intent might help to de...
By leaving the meaning of a statute—or procedural rule—undecided, ambiguous appellate decisions crea...
Judicial review of agency statutory interpretations depends heavily on the linguistic concept of amb...
There has been recent discussion of abandoning the literal meaning rule and most of the other rules ...
This Note will apply Judge Kavanaugh’s proposed mechanism to the interpretation of the Title IX proh...
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
Ambiguity serves a legislative purpose. When legislators perceive a need to compromise they can, amo...
Pepper v. Hart gave American lawyers a number of insights into the English law of statutory interpre...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
Debates about statutory interpretation typically proceed on the assumption that statutes have lingui...
In the modern debate over statutory interpretation, scholars frequently talk past one another, argui...
Judge Frank Easterbrook is known for insisting that legislative intent is a misconception, bordering...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
For centuries, courts have dealt with the challenge of imposing penalties for crimes when governing ...
Most scholarship on statutory interpretation discusses what courts should do with ambiguous statutes...
An aspect of the battle over deconstruction is whether resort to legislative intent might help to de...
By leaving the meaning of a statute—or procedural rule—undecided, ambiguous appellate decisions crea...
Judicial review of agency statutory interpretations depends heavily on the linguistic concept of amb...
There has been recent discussion of abandoning the literal meaning rule and most of the other rules ...
This Note will apply Judge Kavanaugh’s proposed mechanism to the interpretation of the Title IX proh...
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
Ambiguity serves a legislative purpose. When legislators perceive a need to compromise they can, amo...
Pepper v. Hart gave American lawyers a number of insights into the English law of statutory interpre...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
Debates about statutory interpretation typically proceed on the assumption that statutes have lingui...
In the modern debate over statutory interpretation, scholars frequently talk past one another, argui...