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Appellate Courts, Historical Facts, And The Civil-Criminal Distinction, Chad M. Oldfather
Appellate Courts, Historical Facts, And The Civil-Criminal Distinction, Chad M. Oldfather
Vanderbilt Law Review
Among the pieties of our legal system is the notion that appellate courts do not engage in factual evaluation. Murky though the distinction between "fact" and "law" may be,' there is general agreement that somewhere along the fact-law spectrum lies a point beyond which appellate courts ought not venture. Past it exist questions of "historical fact," the "who, when, what, and where" series of questions that we have deemed only juries or trial judges to be capable of answering.
Just as well accepted is the reasoning behind this juridical line in the sand. Simply put, we believe that appellate courts …