The Jurisprudence Of Found-Object Taxidermy
Rarely do law students’ academic articles make any substantial waves. But yesterday, a recently-published piece in the Tennessee Law Review by law student Michael Cottone concerning the doctrine of ignorantia legis neminem excusat (“ignorance of the law is no excuse”) seems to tickle the fancy of Professor Glenn Reynolds. Seeing as Prof. Reynolds is also at Tennessee Law, there is reason to suspect that he offered some academic guidance to the author, but Prof. Reynolds is not just any law professor, he’s Instapundit: a well-known blogger and columnist. So he can spread some eyeballs to the idea.
That notion is in today’s modern world, there are laws and in particular regulations for so many arcane things that it is unlikely that anyone can get through a single ordinary day without breaking some law in some way. If a law, in particular a regulation, is so obscure that a reasonable person could not be expected to know in advance that the behavior is regulated, oughtn’t that be available as a defense to a person accused of such a crime?
Bear in mind that when I use the term defense I mean something that absolves the defendant of criminal culpability. Self-defense is a defense to the charge of homicide. Consent is a defense to the charge of rape. By defense, I do not mean a mitigating factor, such as a colorable claim of actual title as a mitigating factor to the charge of theft or a medical emergency as a mitigating factor to a charge of a traffic violation. A mitigating factor is a reason to impose a lesser or even no punishment, but it does not mean that no crime was committed. A defense means that no crime was committed at all. Cottone, and Reynolds, suggest we consider the idea that in some cases, good-faith ignorance of the law ought to be available as a defense, not just as a mitigating factor for determining a just level of punishment.
The premise of this proposition is that the law is so complex that a reasonable, ordinary person cannot be expected to be on notice of all of the provisions of our intricate law; just having it available on the internet is not enough. I know of no reliable way to test this which does not quickly reduce itself to a doomed trivia game, one which even David Boies and Ted Olsen and John Roberts would eventually fail. Which is not the same thing as proving the thesis: it is not the case that people who fail to correctly name the Vice-President’s spouse are too ignorant to be trusted with the franchise, so it’s analogously not clear that an encyclopedic knowledge of the law is necessary to navigate contemporary life sufficient to avoid the commission of a crime. (Bonus points, though, if when put on the spot and asked, “What is the law?” the respondent returns with “No spill blood!“)
In favor of such a consideration, Prof. Reynolds (and, I presume, Mr. Cottone, who offers a much more theoretical and philosophical inquiry about the matter) points to the fact that in tort suits against governmental officials, for harm allegedly inflicted as a result of executing their duties, those officials can claim “qualified immunity,” which basically operates against a bar to tort recovery if the rights of the plaintiff were not “clearly established,” meaning that a reasonable official in the position of the defendant would not have been able to know with substantial certainty that the plaintiff’s rights were being violated. (For example.)
We can’t ever get away from the problem that tort law and criminal law are aimed at achieving different ends. Criminal law prescribes certain kinds of conduct which society finds, to varying degrees, intolerable and thus subject to punishment and sanction. Tort law exists to redress the harm done by private wrongs. Criminal law exists to govern society; tort law exists to make victims whole. Obviously, there are ways that these concepts will overlap and it may often by the case that these different sorts of law will reach the same conduct: there is such a thing as a crime of battery and a tort of battery. But importation of a concept from one field of law into another ought to be done with great caution.
For instance, Prof. Reynolds cites in his brief popular piece an “inadvertent” crime in which the defendant is obviously morally innocent. She finds some pretty feathers on the ground, and gathers them up, perhaps for an arts and crafts project. Little does she know that in so doing, she has potentially violated 16 U.S.C. § 668(a) because feathers are parts of birds and these happen to be the feathers of a bald eagle. You probably didn’t know, any more than I did a few years ago (see infra), that gathering fallen eagle feathers is a crime. And it’s fair to say that the vast majority of people out there living in these United States don’t know that.
Of course, we hope that prosecutorial discretion would kick in at some point, and the U.S. Attorney would not be asked to seek either the $10,000 per-violation fine (I presume that this is per gathering, not per feather), the 2-year per-violation prison sentence (!), or the $5,000 per-violation civil penalty. But the hope for prosecutorial discretion may not mean that we want to provide a complete defense in the event that a prosecutor for whatever reason, good or bad, decides to go ahead with pressing the charge.
The law exists, in part, to eliminate demand for products made with the body parts of eagles. This, in turn, creates significant dilemmas whenever pretty much anything is done with an eagle. Reading Prof. Reynolds’ hypothetical reminded me of a friend who was once a curator at LACMA. She once graced my wife and I with a special tour of the contemporary collection, and related a seemingly endless amount of headaches that came from exhibiting a loaned piece by Robert Rauschenberg, “Canyon,” which subsequently resulted in a rather non-obvious sort of legal resolution. Hearing her story was what made me aware of the illegality of the mere existence of the piece (never mind that the stuffed eagle used in the work had been found, already dead and stuffed and discarded, in 1958).
So what’s the problem with “Canyon” or with an artistic arrangement of found objects that happen to include eagle feathers? It creates a demand. As noted in one of the links in the previous paragraph, when a taxidermied eagle is manipulated by a famous artist, the resulting work becomes intensely desirable and salable. It’s possible that demand increases. And if the rule is that “found” feathers are permissible, then some jagoff is going to start “finding” feathers after having first shot the eagle out of the sky. Now a well-intentioned defense to the rule perversely creates an incentive to do exactly what the rule was intended to prohibit.
Moreover, addressing the reality that our laws are indeed very complex and contain a great many obscurities does not mean that the law is not to be taken seriously or its violations countenanced. Whether the law was broken or not seems to be a different sort of question than whether the violator knew, or should have known, or could reasonably have learned, that the law prohibited a certain act. That second question goes to the classic criminal issue of mens rea, and in a strict liability crime (as a lot of crimes are strict liability, such as speeding or selling alcohol to a minor) mens rea isn’t an issue because the nature of the harm effected by the activity are thought to be of such a nature that the mental state of the person committing the act isn’t particularly important.
Now, bear in mind that good faith ignorance of the law is going to depend on not only the obscurity of the law in question as well as similar laws, but also the moral gravity of the act. While we can’t necessarily expect everyone to know what is consistent with or contrary with a very technical field of law, we can expect everyone to have a functioning moral compass. Moreover, a person’s occupation and activities and education are going to come in to play. We might not expect that a person unfamiliar with transportation would know that in most cases, a long-haul trucker can only drive a maximum of eleven hours a day. But we can expect that someone who holds a commercial driver’s license to know that there are restrictions on hours of operation, and for such a person to acquaint herself with what those restrictions are in her case. If such a person says she’s never heard of that rule, we’re going to look at her a whole lot more skeptically than we are a layman, and treat her ignorance of the law as being in something other than strictly good fatih.
To be sure, good-faith ignorance of the law relates to the moral culpability of the defendant. Which means that it is of course relevant to an evaluation of the holistic situation. So while I’m very skeptical of the notion that good faith ignorance of the law it ought to be invokable as a defense. I’m sanguine about accepting such a claim as a mitigating factor at the phase of sentencing.
What I’m not sanguine about, and what seems peculiarly subversive to me about this proposal, is the notion that the law is somehow unknowable. It’s never been easier to know the law than it is today, thanks to modern information technology. We ought not to incentivize ignorance of the law. We ought not to make the law somehow less of a law because it is complex, or worse, make the law only the law for some people and not the law for others.
To have people be equal before the law necessarily means that the law is equally applied as to all people before it. We don’t always achieve the perfect justice to which we aspire — indeed, many people complain that justice is routinely unevenly applied, that the rich get better treatment than the poor, or that people of color get treated worse than members of the majority, or that men and women stand differently before the law.
Alternatively, many people see the law as part of a system that encourages certain kinds of behaviors and discourages others, with the goal in mind of creating a community where people all behave in a fashion thought to be mutually beneficial. Letting some people behave contrary to those incentives on the basis that they aren’t even aware those incentives exists defeats the purpose of having those incentives in the first place.
Adding to this the possibility of a defendant, whether from a favored or disfavored group, claiming ignorance as a defense strikes me as less likely to help perfect our administration of justice than it is to aggravate the inequalities we should hope and strive to remedy and the kind of society we want the law to help mold us into becoming. I can see this being one of many factors a judge considers when sentencing a crime. But unless we’re dealing with a crime for which knowledge of the law is already an element, I can’t see even good faith ignorance being a good defense to a crime.
Image credit: wikimedia commons.
Burt Likko is the pseudonym of an attorney in Southern California and the managing editor of Ordinary Times. His interests include Constitutional law with a special interest in law relating to the concept of separation of church and state, cooking, good wine, and bad science fiction movies. Follow his sporadic Tweets at @burtlikko, and his Flipboard at Burt Likko.
I had sent this to Will for Linky Friday, but you got there first.
I’m sanguine about accepting such a claim as a mitigating factor at the phase of sentencing.
For strict liability crimes, we should have graduated penalties such that unless it can be shown that the law in question is one the defendant should be very familiar with (your truck driver and laws regarding driver working hours, for instance), the penalty for a first offense should almost always be a low level misdemeanor and very modest fine. One would think, after getting such a slap on the wrist, the defendant would educate themselves more completely regarding that specific area of law, and thus avoid future trouble.
That a first offense for a crime that harms no one could result in a felony conviction, thousands of dollars in fines, and significant jail/prison time gives lie to any legitimate concept of justice or good social order.Report
That’s fair, but I wouldn’t say that truckers working long shifts is necessarily a victimless crime, since a fatigued driver is a risk to everyone on the road, including themselves. The whole notion seems to be to criminalize negligence before the failure to exercise due care actually results in an injury. It may not be a very wise idea in this case, but there’s a logic to it.Report
And if it’s a pattern at a trucking company that their schedules ignore those rules, the fines should be large and painful, and egregious violations should be criminalized.Report
Yes but a truck driver has a much greater burden to show that they made an honest mistake of the law since one can assume it is part of the CDL training.Report
As the resident truck driver let me chime in here. @oscar-gordon is correct; drivers are expected to know the hours-of-service rules as well as any other rules from the fairly thick DOT regulation book that applies to us. It’s also part of the Federal regulations that since I have the legal responsibility for following the regs I also have the legal authority to tell my company to piss up a rope if they try to tell me to do something the violates those rules and retribution is officially not allowed. I’m also responsible for paying any fines for violations that are under my control.
But @mike-schilling is correct in his assumption that some (actually many) companies will pressure drivers to “bend” the rules now and then. I’ve worked for such a company. At one point I simply had to tell my boss that it was all well and fine that they were willing to pay any fines that may result but when I asked him if I ran over a minivan and killed a family when I was in violation would he also be serving my prison sentence he… demurred on that point.
I now work for a company that takes safety and compliance seriously and somehow I’m making more money than I have anywhere else. Imagine that.Report
In criminal law, what is illegal alligns close enough to common sense ethics and morality that knowledge of the law isn’t really necessary. It should be a no-brainer that killing people is against the law even if a law person would stuggle to distinguish between murder 1 and 2, voluntary manslaughter, involuntary manslaughter, and the rest of the homicide statutes. The same is true for practically every other criminal offense. Even victimless crimes like prostitution or corruption have some alignment with popular morality.
For civil law, its different but civil procedure has enough steps to give the defendant notice on why he or she is being brought to court that ignorance of the law still isn’t really a defense. By the times things get before a judge, a defendant should know why he or she is being sued.Report
Is this really the appropriate standard: that the defendant is aware that the action is prohibited before trial? Seems to me substantial fairness is achieved when the defendant is aware of the prohibition before engaging in the act. I’m satisfied at the level of defendant being reasonably able to learn of the prohibition. But I think that a defendant who is in good faith ignorant of the law until the time of arrest presents a tougher case.Report
@leeesq
While I am inclined to pay you regard in matters of law (you being a lawyer and all), I have two questions/quibbles:
1) What is the difference between criminal & civil law? You seem to imply that criminal law falls under malum in se, & civil law is malum prohibitum. My quibble is, if an infraction of either set can result in a criminal record, what is the practical difference.
2) I think there is a lack of sufficient civil procedure, as you say, to prevent the unawares from running crosswise with the law, or possibly, the benefit of such procedure is at the discretion of the DAs office, and not a process that must be followed. If I am wrong here, can you explain how?Report
Criminal law is one that results in a criminal penalty. In a typical criminal case, the burden of proof is on the state and it must be beyond a reasonable doubt. It has an entirely different procedure than a civil trial. It isn’t necessarily malum in se but most of it does involve things that people think should be illegal. People think that taking other people’s property is wrong even though most wouldn’t be able to distinguish between larceny, robbery, and extortion by their legal definitions.
Civil law is everything else; torts, contracts, family law, wills and trusts, etc. The penalty is usually monetary but it could sometimes by an equitable form of relief like an injunction, a court order to do or not do something. A private party usually needs to initiate it. The standard of proof and procedures are lower.Report
@leeesq
OK, that makes sense, but the point Prof. Reynolds was making is that there is a great deal of regulatory law that results in criminal penalty, and a great deal of that regulatory law is not obvious in they way that “common sense” criminal law is, but can still result in severe criminal penalties. Ideally DAs would look at the totality of a situation, determine if the defendant made an honest, good faith error, and dispense with the case with a minimum of pain for everyone. The reality is that while this does happen, there are also times when the DA has an axe to grind, or a campaign to run, or bones to make, and honest mistakes are treated as serious crimes.
As per your definition of civil law, yes, the procedure is usually sufficient to let people know they are about to really step in it (although it can be problematic as well, see CA ADA and lawyers bounty hunting for violations).Report
In criminal law, what is illegal alligns close enough to common sense ethics and morality that knowledge of the law isn’t really necessary.
As a lawyer you’re probably sick of people pointing to this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wXkI4t7nuc – but I found it extremely interesting. The two points made back to back starting around 5:45 seem relevant counterpoints to that statement
– The congressional research service can’t even count all the federal crimes, much less all the state ones.
That does not seem consistent with a criminal code that merely codifies common sense ethics and morality.
– (To my reading of the law quoted there) in order to legally buy, sell, or transport a fish or plant in the US, you need to know its entire history, and every single law of every single country in the world, and compare the two.
Which if nothing else suggests that efforts to legalize marijuana in the US are doomed – if any single country in the world leaves it illegal, any handling of marijuana would presumably fall afoul of the “foreign law” provision there…Report
One of my favourite Canadian examples – if you plant a pack of poppy seeds from the seed rack at the garden centre (or the poppy seeds sold in the bulk bins at the grocery store, if they’re fresh enough to sprout), you’re “producing a schedule I controlled substance” and liable for up to life imprisonment.
You don’t have to extract the opium from the plants, just grow them. You don’t have to know that growing poppies is illegal, despite the seeds being for sale at every garden store in the country, only that they are indeed poppies.
That’s not a codification of common sense ethics and morality. Ignorance of the law really should be a defence against that one. (Well, if you ask me, the law should just be struck down for the idiocy of banning a species)Report
Enjoyed reading this, Burt, thanks.Report
Interesting.
When I went to Alaska (Juno; college visit with one of my kids,) we went out to Douglass Island, drove to the end, and walked down to the beach. Saw what looked like an odd seaweed rib sticking out of the sand when I first stepped down onto the beach, and being the curious person I am, I went to check it out. It was a big, black feather with a white rib, and the white rib had caught my eye. I picked it up, cleaned it off, and took it back to our hotel; I hadn’t a notion yet of what I’d found.
For the few days before, the hotel staff had treated us like all other Alaskan tourists; basically ignoring us as much as possible. But when the feather appeared, that changed. The woman who cleaned our room asked me about it; where I’d found it. I told her the above story. “It’s an eagle feather,” she said. She came, with another woman, and spent her lunch break with me. The next day, there were four of them, The day after, eight. Our final day, when we were packing to go, every woman who worked there, and a few neighboring places, showed up. They were concerned about me getting my feather home. They made phone calls, they talked to the state’s wildlife biologist. He told them to how to pack it, to carry it in my bag and not on my person, and have them give me his phone number in case there were any questions as I went through airport security.
Now I’d been aware that bald eagles were on the endangered species list, but not that found feathers were an issue before. Ironically, I have three; the found feather, and two given to each of my children (golden eagle) by Charlie Eagle Plume, who ran a trading post in CO. They are part of a bouquet of feathers in a vase on the mantle.
But I remain, to this day, amazed at 1) the change in the hotel staff toward me after I found and brought that feather back to the hotel; I went from being blank person to a real person, and 2) how much effort and concern they put into its transport, because unlike me, they were aware of the laws.Report
I should also note that these laws are a big deal for instrument makers, who often use protected tropical wood — rose wood, ebony. Ivory is no longer used on piano keys. Gibson Guitar <a href="http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2012/08/gibson-and-feds-settle-illegal-wood-case" was raided and settled a claim, admitting guilt over ebony from Madagascar.
And in the antiques market, the sale of certain old items are often problematic.Report
Although raiding a guitar maker with a federal SWAT team seems a bit much…Report
I had a family member who’s business was purchased by Gibson, ruined by Gibson, and who then re-purchased it to build it up into a thriving company; and I own two Gibson guitars and a mandolin. I also know luthiers who left after the new management rolled in.
So I have much mixed feeling about the company; but new management does seem worth examination; lowered quality of instruments, inflated PR and some weird/bad business decisions are all matters of concern.
Which does not excuse SWAT teams. (Unless you think luthier tools make good weapons. . . )Report
Oscar,
still better than sending the Marines to blow up a data center.Report
@zic
I have no opinion of the company itself, except that for all intents & purposes, the feds seems to be rather heavy handed in their approach, which remains a disturbing trend on the part of all law enforcement lately.
@kim
As usual, WTF are you going on about?Report
the off-shore data center that was shut down by the feds at the behest of AmericanEntertainmentIndustries for intellectual property theft.
It was a big deal; and a lot of people lost a lot of information they’d paid to store there.
And since people seem so willing to jump all over Kim, I will defend her that this is a legitimate point to raise in the context of SWAT teams.
(Ya’ll need to lighten up on her, particularly if you don’t get her references; often they’re insightful.)Report
zic,
what gets me is the pure and utter lack of intellectual curiosity.
I mean, sure, it probably had tons of viruses and crap all through it…
But didn’t they at least want to know what nasty little beasties were there?
Ya know, because nasty little beasties are useful to government agencies wanting to send North Korea a message? ;-PReport
@zic
@kim
Links people! Or at least searchable key words! As much as I’d like to, I can’t know about every crappy thing our government does, there’s just too much.Report
This is nitpicky, but a good faith claim of right is a complete defense to a charge of theft; you can’t be convicted of larceny if you didn’t have a specific felonious intent to steal.
As to the more general point, I think most regulatory offenses should be treated as civil violations rather than criminal offenses. Basically any strict liability offense that is, as we fancy legal types say, malum prohibitum rather than malum in se, seems to me like an inappropriate subject of the criminal law.Report
I do think Prof. Reynolds does have one other very valid point. It is very problematic that government employees can break laws & violate rights, then claim ignorance and, unless it can be shown that they specifically should have known better, hide behind immunity.
While this arrangement has the support of the courts, the practical effect is to create a situation where equal protection under the law, isn’t.Report
I agree; it is a strong example of how the idea could work, amd why. With that said, bear in mind that the doctrine exists to protect the government itself, not (just) the government’s employees.Report
doctrine exists to protect the government itself
This I understand & can see the reason for. The fix, to me, is simple – instead of granting immunity to the employee, you grant it to the government itself.
To use the most obvious example, if a cop violates your rights, you can press charges against the cop, or sue the cop, and the cop as an individual is the only one on the hook for punishment or damages. You can not succeed in a suit against the department/city unless you can show that leadership was complicit in the underlying offense (such as a culture of racism that leadership fostered or failed to control that inspired officers to act unfairly toward a subset of the population; see Ferguson, MO).
It stops people from trying to get at the deep pockets of government because an employee was bad, and it addresses the problem of bad employees being protected because the government has to protect itself.Report
The issue of indemnification makes it more onerous.Report
I would like to say that I agree with this comment to the point where I feel embarrassed that there isn’t anything more to say than “I agree with this comment”.Report
I suspect there’s a fairly broad consensus on this site that modern qualified immunity doctrine is double plus ungood, at least for those of us who have had the pleasure of learning about it.Report
Qualified immunity isn’t about ignorance of the law, it’s about a lack of clarity regarding whether something is legal or not. Ignorance is no excuse even for an officer who has qualified immunity; if it would be clear from reading prior Supreme Court caselaw that what the officer did was a violation of the constitution, it doesn’t matter whether the officer had read the cases or not. What the qualified immunity doctrine says is that, in a situation where it wouldn’t be clear from reading prior cases that an act was unconstitutional, the officer can’t be held liable for the act even if the court later decides it was illegal. This is one of several reasons that qualified immunity isn’t a good analogue for the problem of strict liability regulatory crimes.Report
None of which is to say that there aren’t problems with the qualified immunity doctrine — there are big ones! But it’s really not an “ignorance of the law” situation.Report
@griff
Perhaps that is how qualified immunity is supposed to work, but in practice that shoulda coulda woulda leaves a lot of wiggle room for government employees to use. Otherwise, in this age of cell phone videos of police violating civil rights, cops would be losing their jobs left & right.Report
Can you expand on that?Report
Most government employees are indemnified, some by statute, against any claims arising from their employment.
In Missouri, the liability of a municipality is limited to the amount of insurance coverage the municipality carries.
That is, in most, if not all, cases, when suit is filed against a cop, it’s really the municipality fighting against a claim on their insurance policy.
That said, I know a guy that had a frivolous sec. 1983 claim filed against him in So. Carolina, where the police are not indemnified. He found out he was being sued when his bank account was seized, before he was served.Report
That’s a strange way to apply the Due Process Clause y’all got down there, Palmetto State.Report
Then I guess that is what I’m getting after, adjusting that indemnity such that it doesn’t apply in cases of wrong doing. (Specifics of that would be tricky I imagine) .Report
They didn’t supply him with an attorney either, which I thought was automatic.
But then they don’t supply attorneys for either side in misdemeanor cases either; the arresting officer acts as the prosecutor, unless it’s a jury trial.
Sometimes, it’s amazing how much they can get away with, while other times, it’s amazing how little they can get away with.Report
good faith ignorance being a good defense to a crime.
United States v. Stevens< was either the first or second successful defense of sec. 1519.
Have to get bad advice from counsel before proceeding to pick up eagle feathers, I’d say.
Creates a perverse market for bad advice of counsel, no less.Report
My goodness, the topic is deep enough before getting into general intent or specific intent issues. The focus of Mr. Cottone’s argument is on strict liability crimes, ones for which at this point there is no mens rea issue. Think: “statutory rape, good faith mistake regarding age of consent.”Report
I’m having a hard time thinking of any strict liability criminal offenses other than traffic offenses. (Go figure.)
Some of those seem like they may be subject to a defense of good faith reliance. Though a cross-claim is barred, a civil action partial recovery might stand. I just haven’t tabulated all the elements yet.
It seems more feasible in a negligence action. the good faith defense; the cross-claim would be viable then.
I remember discussing strict liability torts, and those were the ones that were really, really, bad.
It doesn’t look like that aspect of it transfers over to criminal law.
Odd, that.Report
Actually this issues resonates with the Religious Freedom Restoration act at the federal level as many native american religions regard Eagle Feathers as they are an important point of their religion: http://www.abajournal.com/mobile/mag_article/american_indians_challenging_eagle_feather_rules_get_a_boost_from_hobby_lob
In the particular case a member of a non recognized tribe picked up some feathers. The above article implies this case may end up before the supreme court.Report
I agree with Burt on everything here, but I’d add that the present situation seems very unfair to me as a citizen. I wish lawmakers would perhaps use some more discretion in making laws that are likely to create criminals who lack any criminal intent.Report