William Kovacic, Apr 24, 2008
In the eye of the historian, published judicial decisions are badly incomplete accounts of the disputes they resolve. Some incompleteness stems from the nature of the judicial process. For example, courts have neither the means nor the duty to recount the parties choice of litigation strategies. Nor can a judge discuss, except by speculation, the actual effects of a decision just taken. Other gaps can result from the court´s vanity. Wanting to seem unassailably correct, judges sometimes replace the losing party´s best facts and arguments with flimsy strawmen, who collapse beneath the tribunal´s awesome logic.
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