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Jurisprudence

University of Connecticut

Series

2014

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Retroactivity And Prospectivity Of Judgments In American Law, Richard Kay Jan 2014

Retroactivity And Prospectivity Of Judgments In American Law, Richard Kay

Faculty Articles and Papers

In every American jurisdiction, new rules of law announced by a court are presumed to have retrospective effect — that is, they are presumed to apply to events occurring before the date of judgment. There are, however, exceptions in certain cases where a court believes that such application of the new rule will upset serious and reasonable reliance on the prior state of the law. This essay, a substantially abridged version of the United States Report on the subject, submitted at the Nineteenth International Congress of Comparative Law, summarizes these exceptional cases. It shows that the proper occasions for issuing …


Statutes And Democratic Self-Authorship, Kiel Brennan-Marquez, Paul W. Kahn Jan 2014

Statutes And Democratic Self-Authorship, Kiel Brennan-Marquez, Paul W. Kahn

Faculty Articles and Papers

In this Article, we argue that both sides of the usual debate over statutory interpretation-text versus purpose-rest on a common, but flawed, premise. Judges and scholars have assumed that legislative bodies are the authors of statutes. We disagree; instead, we argue that the people are the authors of statutes. Legislative bodies play an indispensable role in the process: they draft statutes. And courts play a similarly indispensable role: they interpret statutes. But ultimately, it is the polity-we, the people-that is responsible, as authors, for the content of the law.

This shift yields dramatic consequences. To date, no theory of statutory …