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Pandas
and Part Three
By Timothy Sandefur
Posted December 30, 2005
John West is not a lawyer, so it's hard to tell if his criticisms of Kitzmiller
are utterly dishonest or just totally ignorant. His last posts have contained a
lot of footstamping at the Judge's factual findings, and I'll leave those issues
to
Pim van Meurs. But in
Part 3 of his criticism, West claims that Judge Jones erred by relying on
previous editions of Of Pandas And People in determining whether it was a
religious book or not.
But what in the world is wrong with this? The Supreme Court has
recently reiterated that the most important element of an Establishment Clause
case is context, and that historical details are important to
understanding that context. See McCreary County v.
American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky, 125 S.Ct. 2722, 2734-35, 2735-37
(2005). Justice Souter, whose opinion in McCreary is an unusually
good Establishment Clause decision, rejected the argument "that purpose in a
case like this one should be inferred, if at all, only from the latest news
about the last in a series of governmental actions." Id. at 2736.
Instead, he took the "common sense" position, id. at 2737, that a court
should consider the historical context of a challenged government action when
deciding whether it violates the Establishment Clause, because that context will
allow the court to perceive the government's sectarian intent.
And, of course, the facts justify Judge Jones in that expectation. Of
Pandas And People began as a creationist tract, and was transformed into an
Intelligent Design textbook by simply replacing the word "creation" with
"design" and so forth—quite a symbol for the entire ID movement, which is just
creationism dressed up in a lab coat. In fact, in one
amazing incident (not mentioned by Judge Jones) one unpublished draft of
Pandas reflected this change when a typo read, ""Evolutionists think the
former is correct, cdesign proponentsists [sic!] accept the latter
view." West is bothered by the fact that Judge Jones denied the book's
publishers the opportunity to intervene in the case to, in West's words, "defend
[themselves]." But the publishers were not parties to the case, and had no need
to "defend" themselves from anything. Their book was only evidence in a trial
between two other parties. Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 24, as any attorney knows, governs whether a non-party can
intervene in a case, and that rule entirely justified the court in denying the
publisher's motion for intervention. But, again, John West is not an
attorney, so I'll explain. Intervention is a process whereby someone who is
not a party to a case—not a plaintiff or defendant—can become a party. This is a
much bigger step than becoming an amicus, which is what happens when a
non-party just has an opinion about a case, or just has some additional
information to offer. The difference between an intervenor and an
amicus is the interest at stake. An intervenor has some sort of "direct,
substantial interest in [the] litigation," Brewer v. Republic Steel
Corp., 513 F.2d 1222, 1223 (6th Cir. 1975), while an amicus "give[s] the
court the benefit of its expertise," or provides further evidence. Id. at
1225.
Because intervention adds a new party to a case, it complicates things
enormously. Intervenors can appeal, they can settle, they can do all sorts of
things that make a case much more difficult to manage. This is why the Dover
School Board opposed the publishers' motion to intervene as did the
Plaintiffs. The Federal Rules give the right to intervene in spite of that kind
of opposition only when the intervenor "claims an interest relating to the
property or transaction which is the subject of the action" and which the
"disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair." Obviously this was
not the case here, since the publishers of Pandas in no way stood to lose
a property right, or anything like it, as a consequence of the case. They argued
that they stood to lose potential profits if because "[a] ruling by this Court
finding that intelligent design theory is religion would destroy [their] ability
to market [their] textbooks within this district," Motion
to Intervene by FTE at 7, but this is not the sort of direct, tangible
interest that warrants intervention as of right, particularly since private
schools and private individuals are still free to purchase Pandas if they
want, and because the publishers failed to provide any evidence to substantiate
their claim of potential losses. Order Denying
Motion to Intervene of FTE at 11. Judge Jones found that the publishers'
asserted interest in the outcome of the case was "an uncertain and purely
economic one," id. at 12, and that their "'interests [were] of a general
and indefinite character,'" id. at 12 (quoting Harris v. Pernsley,
820 F.2d 592, 601 (3d Cir. 1987)). Thus the publishers had nothing to "defend,"
and intervention was not warranted.
Moreover, Judge Jones found that the publishers waited five months
before filing their motion—not what you'd expect of a group trying to "defend"
themselves—and that they filed their motion only a month before discovery was
set to close, meaning that to allow intervention would have required changing
that deadline and possibly allowing a whole new round of depositions and other
discovery. Id. at 8. And there was no reason to believe that the school
board would not do just as good a job of defending ID as the publishers of
Pandas. Id. at 15-19.
Of course, a judge may also choose to allow intervention anyway, if
"an applicant's claim or defense and the main action have a question of law or
fact in common," but remember, intervention means that the applicant becomes an
actual party—the publisher would become a defendant in the case. That's a big
step, since, as I've said, intervention complicates cases a great deal. This is
why " if an amicus curiae status adequately protects an applicant's interests,
this will be chosen instead of intervention, where the only issues involved are
of law, and the applicant would contribute little but possibly complicate the
proceedings, or where the applicant has only an attenuated interest in the legal
issues, and intervention might significantly complicate the proceedings." 25
Fed. Proc., L. Ed. § 59:382 (2005). It was entirely appropriate to for Judge
Jones to deny permissive intervention to the publishers and to grant them amicus
curiae status instead. The decision of a judge to keep a case simple and require
a party that has only an opinion or evidence to offer to do so through an amicus
brief is " the kind of judgment on which the district court's expertise and
authority is at its zenith." Daggett v. Commission on Governmental Ethics and
Election Practices, 172 F.3d 104, 113 (1st Cir. 1999).
What is "grotesque" here is not Judge Jones' ruling, but John West's ignorant
and dishonest characterization of this case. He ought to hesitate before
accusing people of "misappl[ying] the relevant legal standards" when he himself
has so little understanding of what those legal standards are. Judge Jones was
correct to limit the publishers' participation to that of amici, and right to find
their rationalizations for their disguised creationist tract to be
unconvincing.
Originally posted on the Panda's Thumb weblog.
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