At Springer, Lawrence Solum: Deferentialism: Soames on legal interpretation (reviewing [favorably] chapter 12 of Scott Soames, The World Philosophy Made (Princeton University Press 2019)). Here is the abstract:
This essay explores themes raised by Scott Soames in Chapter Twelve of The World Philosophy Made. Soames’s key contribution is the articulation of a general theory of legal interpretation and more specific theory, Constitutional Deferentialism, that is a form of public meaning originalism. His development of the connections between the philosophy of language and legal interpretation have been especially important and influential.
And from the introduction:
In The World Philosophy Made, Scott Soames ranges across a wide variety of topics, including the contribution that philosophy has made to legal theory. In Chapter 12, ‘‘Laws, Constitutions, and the State,’’ Soames begins with the basics, including H.L.A. Hart’s account of the nature of law from The Concept of Law, but the heart of the chapter is his argument for a constrained role for both judges and the executive branch in the context of the United States Constitution. The lynchpin to that argument is Soames’s theory of legal interpretation. This essay focuses on that theory.
Soames begins with Article I of the United States Constitution, which states, ‘‘All legislative powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States.’’ He then states his basic argument: ‘‘To take this seriously is to recognize that neither the courts, the executive, nor the regulatory agencies are authorized to make laws.’’ Soames moves directly from the text to the speech act theory. Constitutions and statutes involve stipulations. Thus, the vesting clause that Soames quotes stipulates that ‘‘legislative power’’ is ‘‘vested’’ in the United States Congress, a new institution created by the Constitution itself.
The question then becomes how we determine what content was stipulated. Soames reminds us that content of a constitutional or statutory provision may not be fully explicit. The text alone is likely to be ambiguous and it may also be incomplete, implying but not stating all of the content that it conveys. So, interpretation require s both contextual disambiguation and pragmatic enrichment. Otherwise, the constitutional provision or text would have ‘‘indefinitely many meanings’’ or as Soames has put it in oral remarks, linguistic meaning alone is‘ ‘sparse.’’
Soames then provides a general statement of the process by which content is conveyed: When an ordinary speaker uses a sentence S to assert in a given context is, roughly, what an ordinarily reasonable and attentive hearer who knows the linguistic meaning of S, and is aware of all relevant intersubjectively available features of the context of utterance, would rationally take the speakers use of S to be intended to convey and commit the speaker to. (314)And in the context of legal interpretation:Applying this to legal interpretation, we look for what the lawmakers meant,and what an ordinarily reasonable and attentive person who understood the linguistic meanings of their words, the publicly available facts, the recent history in the lawmaking process, and the background of existing law into which the new provision is expected to fit, who take them to have meant. That is the content of the law.
With this general framework in place, Soames then articulates three principles of legal interpretation. His first principle is a reminder that the explicit legal content of the text of a statute or constitutional provision is only part of full content communicated by the statute. The second principle is more complex and has several moving parts, consisting of a general directive and specified exceptions. The general directive requires judges to reach the outcome (Soames says ‘‘verdict’’) determined by the content of the constitutional provisions or statute. The three exceptions cover cases of (a) un-determinacy (such as vagueness or what legal theorists call ‘‘open texture’’), (b) contradiction (where the content of the provision in light of surrounding law leads to inconsistent outcomes, and (c) unanticipated consequences that would frustrate the intended purpose of the law.
Soames’s third principle then provides the procedure to be followed in the three kinds of cases identified by the second principle. Here is his statement in full:
In cases of [the three types identified by the second principle], the judicial authority is authorized to make new law by adopting a minimum change in the asserted or stipulated content of the law that maximizes the fulfillment of the lawmaker’s discernable intended purposes in making that assertion or stipulation.
The three principles together comprise a general account of legal interpretation. Soames elaborates these principles in the context of constitutional interpretation and construction by articulating a theory he calls ‘‘Constitutional Deferentialism.’’ I will return to that theory and its relationship to contemporary constitutional theory in the United States, but first, we need say something about the theoretical landscape of legal theory in the United States.
On my understanding, Soames’s theory is offered as both a positivist account of what the norms of legal interpretation and construction are, and as a normative account of what they ought to be. For the most part, my comments are directed to the normative dimension of Soames’s argument, but I will have a few comments about the positivist dimension as well.
(Via Legal Theory Blog.)