2.1 The Inner Structure of A Rule: Court."
2.1 The Inner Structure of A Rule: Court."
2.1 The Inner Structure of A Rule: Court."
At this moment the King, who had for some time been busily writing in his notebook, called out
‘‘Silence!” and read from his book, ‘‘Rule Forty-two. All persons more than a mile high to leave the
court.”
Everyone looked at Alice.
‘‘I’m not a mile high,” said Alice.
‘‘You are,” said the King.
‘‘Nearly two miles high,” added the Queen.
— Lewis Carroll,
Alice in Wonderland
The court must not require a bond, obligation, or other security from
the appellant when granting a stay on an appeal by the United States,
prohibitory:
its officers, or its agencies, or on an appeal directed by a department
of the federal government. 2
Step 2: Look at each of those small parts separately. Figure out the meaning of
each element, the causal term, the result, and any exception. Look up the words in a
legal dictionary, and read other material your teacher has assigned until you know
what each word means. You already know what a plaintiff and a defendant are. If
you look up service in a legal dictionary you’ll learn that it’s the delivery of legal
papers. If you read other material surrounding this rule in Civil Procedure, you’ll
learn that a request for a waiver is a plaintiff’s request that the defendant accept
service by mail and waive (give up the right to) service by someone who personally
brings the papers to the defendant. The surrounding materials also tell you that the
expenses of service are whatever the plaintiff has to pay to have someone hired for
the purpose of delivering the papers personally to the defendant.
Step 3: Put the rule back together in a way that helps you use it. Sometimes that
means rearranging the rule so that it’s easier to understand. If when you first read
the rule, an exception came at the beginning and the elements came last, rearrange
the rule so the elements come first and the exception last. It will be easier to
understand that way. For many rules — though not all of them — the rule’s inner
logic works like this:
Even if all the elements are present, could anything prevent the result?
(An exception, if the rule has any.)
Usually, you can put the rule back together by creating a flowchart and trying out the
rule on some hypothetical facts to see how the rule works. A flowchart is essentially
a list of questions. You’ll be able to make a flowchart because of the diagramming
you did earlier in Step 1. Diagramming the rule not only breaks it down so that it can
be understood, but it also permits putting the rule back together so that it’s easier to
apply. The flowchart below comes straight out of the diagram in Step 1 above.
(When you gain more experience at this, it will go so quickly and seamlessly that
Steps 1, 2, and 3 will seem to merge into a single step.) Assume that Keisha wants
Raymond to pay the costs of service.
elements:
1. Is Raymond a defendant?
2. Is Raymond located within the United States?
3. Did Raymond fail to comply with a request for waiver?
4. Is Keisha a plaintiff who made that request?
5. Is Keisha located within the United States?
If the answers to all these questions are yes, the court must impose the costs
subsequently incurred in effecting service on Raymond — but only if the answer to
the question below is no.
exception:
Does Raymond have good cause for his failure to comply?
Step 3 helps you add everything up to see what happens when the rule is applied to a
given set of facts. If all the elements are present in the facts, the court must order the
defendant to reimburse the plaintiff for whatever the plaintiff had to pay to have
someone hired for the purpose of delivering the papers personally to the
defendant — unless good cause is shown.
The elements don’t have to come first. If you have a simple causal term and
result, a long list of elements, and no exceptions, you can list the elements last. For
example:
Common law burglary is committed by breaking and entering the dwelling of another in the nighttime
with intent to commit a felony inside.5
How do you determine how many elements are in a rule? Think of each element as
an integral fact, the absence of which would prevent the rule’s operation. Then
explore the logic behind the rule’s words. If you can think of a reasonably
predictable scenario in which part of what you believe to be one element could be
true but part not true, then you have inadvertently combined two or more elements.
For example, is ‘‘the dwelling of another” one element or two? A person might be
guilty of some other crime, but he is not guilty of common law burglary when he
breaks and enters the restaurant of another, even in the nighttime and with intent to
commit a felony therein. The same is true when he breaks and enters his own
dwelling. In each instance, part of the element is present and part missing. ‘‘The
dwelling of another” thus includes two factual integers — the nature of the building
and the identity of its resident — and therefore two elements.
Often you cannot know the number of elements in a rule until you have consulted
the precedents interpreting it. Is ‘‘breaking and entering” one element or two? The
precedents define ‘‘breaking” in this sense as the creation of a gap in a building’s
protective enclosure, such as by opening a door, even where the door was left
unlocked and the building is thus not damaged. The cases further define ‘‘entering”
for this purpose as placing inside the dwelling any part of oneself or any object
under one’s control, such as a crowbar. Can a person ‘‘break” without ‘‘entering”? A
would-be burglar would seem to have done so where she has opened a window by
pushing it up from the outside, and where, before proceeding further, she has been
apprehended by an alert police officer — literally a moment too soon. ‘‘Breaking”
and ‘‘entering” are therefore two elements, but one could not know for sure without
discovering precisely how the courts have defined the terms used.
Where the elements are complex or ambiguous, enumeration may add clarity to
the list:
Common law burglary is committed by (1) breaking and (2) entering (3) the dwelling (4) of another
(5) in the nighttime (6) with intent to commit a felony inside.
Instead of elements, some rules have factors, which operate as criteria or guidelines.
These tend to be rules empowering a court or other authority to make discretionary
decisions, and the factors define the scope of the decision-maker’s discretion. The
criteria might be few (‘‘a court may extend the time to answer for good cause
shown”), or they might be many (like the following, from a typical statute providing
for a court to terminate a parent’s legal relationship with a child).
In a hearing on a petition for termination of parental rights, the court shall consider the manifest best
interests of the child. . . . For the purpose of determining the manifest best interests of the child, the court
shall consider and evaluate all relevant factors, including, but not limited to:
(1) Any suitable permanent custody arrangement with a relative of the child. . . .
(2) The ability and disposition of the parent or parents to provide the child with food, clothing, medical
care or other remedial care recognized and permitted under state law instead of medical care, and other
material needs of the child.
(3) The capacity of the parent or parents to care for the child to the extent that the child’s safety, well-
being, and physical, mental, and emotional health will not be endangered upon the child’s return home.
(4) The present mental and physical health needs of the child and such future needs of the child to the
extent that such future needs can be ascertained based on the present condition of the child.
(5) The love, affection, and other emotional ties existing between the child and the child’s parent or
parents, siblings, and other relatives, and the degree of harm to the child that would arise from the
termination of parental rights and duties.
(6) The likelihood of an older child remaining in long-term foster care upon termination of parental
rights, due to emotional or behavioral problems or any special needs of the child.
(7) The child’s ability to form a significant relationship with a parental substitute and the likelihood that
the child will enter into a more stable and permanent family relationship as a result of permanent
termination of parental rights and duties.
(8) The length of time that the child has lived in a stable, satisfactory environment and the desirability
of maintaining continuity.
(9) The depth of the relationship existing between the child and the present custodian.
(10) The reasonable preferences and wishes of the child, if the court deems the child to be of sufficient
intelligence, understanding, and experience to express a preference.
(11) The recommendations for the child provided by the child’s guardian ad litem or legal
representative.6
Only seldom would all of these factors tip in the same direction. With a rule like
this, a judge does something of a balancing test, deciding according to the tilt of the
factors as a whole, together with the angle of the tilt.
Factors rules are a relatively new development in the law and grow out of a recent
tendency to define more precisely the discretion of judges and other officials. But
the more common rule structure is still that of a set of elements, the presence of
which leads to a particular result in the absence of an exception.
Welty and Lutz are students who have rented apartments on the same floor of the same building. At
midnight, Welty is studying, while Lutz is listening to a Radiohead album with his new four-foot
speakers. Welty has put up with this for two or three hours, and finally she pounds on Lutz’s door. Lutz