The legal principle behind a more restrained Supreme Court term
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It is the first question that must be answered in every U.S. Supreme Court case: Does the court have jurisdiction to hear the case at all?
The question of standing, as it is called, loomed large over the just-concluded term in cases covering everything from immigration policy to student loans to Native adoption law.
Standing doctrine, per the U.S. Constitution, limits federal court jurisdiction to certain 鈥渃ases鈥 and 鈥渃ontroversies.鈥
Why We Wrote This
A story focused onThere were death threats, ethics scandals, and polls showing that Americans lost trust in the Supreme Court. But this term, the opinions themselves offered a return 鈥 in several cases 鈥 of more modest rulings and unwillingness to entertain controversial theories.
If this seems vague 鈥 well, not even the nine justices always agree, especially when it comes to cases brought by states against the White House. And it鈥檚 something that even the justices have criticized as easy to manipulate.
In 2007, for example, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in a dissent that the special consideration for states was emblematic of 鈥渉ow utterly manipulable [standing doctrine is] if not taken seriously as a matter of judicial self-restraint.鈥
Last week, in her dissent in the student loan ruling, Justice Elena Kagan quoted that line back to him. 鈥淎fter today,鈥 she wrote, 鈥渘o one will have to go back 50 years for the classic case of the Court manipulating standing doctrine.鈥
While not as historic, or divisive, as the term before it 鈥 which included decisions overturning the constitutional right to abortion and expanding gun rights 鈥 the deeply conservative court still reshaped the law in significant ways this year. But this most recent term has shown that, in some cases, the high court is only willing to go so far. Some cases involving more radical arguments and theories failed. Notably, the court upheld a key provision of the Voting Rights Act and threw out a controversial legal theory that would have given state legislatures sole authority over how federal elections are run. Both decisions were hailed by election experts as strengthening democracy.
In other cases, the justices sought narrower rulings 鈥 rather than sweeping outcomes 鈥 and they often did so on procedural, jurisdictional grounds.
鈥淭he federal courts are not supposed to have jurisdiction over policy disputes that are just purely policy disputes,鈥 says Carolyn Shapiro, a professor at the Chicago-Kent College of Law.
The Supreme Court, she adds 鈥 in this term and past terms 鈥 鈥渉as not been entirely consistent鈥 on that point.
The return to restraint comes after last term鈥檚 ruling overturning Roe v. Wade brought with it protests, death threats, and polls showing record low trust in the high court. It also comes after ethics scandals embroiling several justices have renewed calls for the high court to adopt a judicial code of ethics. But this term鈥檚 opinions themselves were 鈥 with several key exceptions, including overturning affirmative action and allowing creative businesses to deny service to LGBTQ+ Americans 鈥 less likely to rely on the raw power of the supermajority. Last term, there were 14 decisions split 6-3 on partisan lines. This term, there were five.
The student loan case
In recent decades, the Supreme Court has typically taken a strict view of standing. Two years ago, for example, the court significantly narrowed the doctrine in a case concerning when causes sufficient harm to confer standing.
鈥淔ederal courts do not possess a roving commission to publicly opine on every legal question,鈥 wrote Justice Brett Kavanaugh in that .
There have always been exceptions, however. One decision in particular this term, involving President Joe Biden鈥檚 student loan forgiveness program, provoked a fiery standing debate.
Two cases challenging the program reached the court, one brought by individual borrowers and one brought by a group of Republican-led states. The court ruled unanimously that the individual borrowers, who hadn鈥檛 qualified for maximum relief, lacked standing. In the case brought by the states, Missouri argued that because an independent loan servicing agency it created would be financially harmed by the plan, the state itself was harmed.
While it was created by the Missouri government, the agency operates independently. It had the power to sue the Biden administration itself but chose not to 鈥 in fact, it declined to even file a brief in the case. Missouri had never before filed a suit on behalf of the agency, and any revenue loss the agency would suffer because of the loan relief program would not be passed on to the state.聽
鈥淣ot even Missouri, and not even the majority, claims that [the agency鈥檚] revenue loss gets passed through to the State,鈥 wrote Justice Kagan in her dissent.
鈥淎 bedrock principle of standing law [is] that a plaintiff cannot ride on someone else鈥檚 injury. Missouri is doing just that,鈥 she added. 鈥淭hat means the Court, by deciding this case, exercises authority it does not have. It violates the Constitution.鈥
Chief Justice Roberts 鈥 the author of the 6-3 majority opinion and a justice with some of the court鈥檚 strictest views on standing 鈥 took umbrage at the criticism. The standing analysis was simple, he wrote. Because the agency suffered a concrete harm from the program (revenue loss) and because the state 鈥渃reated and controls鈥 the agency, the state also suffered a concrete harm.
Several other standing decisions this term, however, came out against the interests of conservative plaintiffs.聽
Most prominently, the Supreme Court ruled 8-1 that Texas and Louisiana didn鈥檛 have standing to challenge Biden administration guidelines on immigration enforcement. Texas had argued that the guidelines prioritizing the arrest and removal of the most dangerous immigrants financially harmed the state. Accepting that argument would create a dangerous new standard, wrote Justice Kavanaugh in the majority opinion.
鈥淭he States have brought an extraordinarily unusual lawsuit,鈥 he added. They 鈥渨ant the Federal Judiciary to order the [administration] to alter its arrest policy so that [it] arrests more noncitizens.鈥
鈥淚f the Court green-lighted this suit, we could anticipate complaints in future years about alleged Executive Branch under-enforcement of any similarly worded laws,鈥 he continued. 鈥淲e decline.鈥
In that sense, the term featured the return of an older Roberts court trend: deciding potentially sweeping cases on narrow grounds.
鈥淭his effort to postpone deciding certain questions, deciding certain cases narrowly, that鈥檚 something we haven鈥檛 really seen鈥 for a few years, says Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law.
That isn鈥檛 to say that the current Supreme Court isn鈥檛 , but it does mean it seems unwilling 鈥渢o change [the law] dramatically without a full sense of what that entails,鈥 adds Professor Adler. 鈥淭hat leads then to some of the more, I wouldn鈥檛 say moderate, but more modest and narrow decisions.鈥
Why standing matters
Since the standing doctrine is a procedural one, it may lack the glamour of meaty merits questions. But it鈥檚 arguable that no doctrine is more important to the court as an institution, and to the federal judiciary as a whole.
Standing jurisprudence informs what cases the courts can hear, which has ripple effects on the powers of Congress and the presidency. And that jurisprudence is determined exclusively by the judiciary itself. These case-by-case decisions also tend to be very fact-based and subjective.
鈥淚t gives lower courts, and particularly the Supreme Court, a lot of leeway to say, 鈥榃e do want to hear this type of claim, so it doesn鈥檛 cross the line,鈥 or 鈥榃e don鈥檛 want to hear this type of claim, so it does cross the line,鈥欌 says Scott Anderson, a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution and an expert on standing.
Even when the high court rejects a claim on standing grounds, it can detail how similar claims could be successful in the future. This term, Justice Kavanaugh 鈥 another proponent of a strict standing doctrine 鈥 took on that role.
In one notable decision, the Supreme Court upheld a federal law governing the adoption of Native American children, holding that the parties didn鈥檛 have standing to challenge the law鈥檚 constitutionality. But in a solo concurrence, Justice Kavanaugh outlined how litigants might be able to achieve standing to bring such a constitutional challenge.
In his majority opinion in the immigration case, he also outlined how states could challenge other federal immigration policies, including the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. And while a majority of the court upheld Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act in what may have been the biggest surprise of the term, Justice Kavanaugh outlined how states could challenge that key section in future.
These kinds of opinions offer guidance not just for prospective litigants, but for lower federal courts as well. When the Supreme Court rejects a standing claim, it鈥檚 also telling lower courts to reject that standing claim, says Professor Adler.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a way of imposing restraint on the judiciary as a whole,鈥 he adds. 鈥淭he tighter the [high] court is on standing, the more control it has on when it reaches these [merits] questions.鈥
The justices could tighten standing doctrine even more next term. The court will hear asking if a woman can sue a hotel for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act if she had no plans to stay there.
But another looming challenge for the court, previewed in this past term, is the combination of a more conservative federal judiciary and targeted lawsuits from conservative litigants bringing forth a steady stream of unusual legal arguments.
The 鈥渆xtraordinarily unusual鈥 suit advanced in the immigration case had been approved by a District Court judge in southern Texas. Missouri鈥檚 controversial standing claim in the student loan case had been rejected by a District Court judge but endorsed by a panel of judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit.
And in perhaps the highest-profile standing case of the term, the court stayed a ruling from a federal judge in northern Texas that would have restricted access to a widely prescribed abortion pill. That case has yet to reach the court for oral arguments.
In some of the court鈥檚 more controversial rulings 鈥 such as striking down affirmative action and allowing a website designer to not serve LGBTQ+ clients 鈥 standing was not an issue, says Professor Shapiro. The court is very conservative, and it can move the law in conservative directions without transforming standing doctrine. But its commitment to a narrow view of standing is likely to be tested, regularly, in the coming years.
鈥淲e will continue to see some really radical arguments take hold in some of the lower courts,鈥 predicts Professor Shapiro.
鈥淭he fact the Supreme Court has so far rejected some of them doesn鈥檛 mean that it doesn鈥檛 push the law to the right,鈥 she adds. The court 鈥渨ill probably accept some of them at some point, and it will consistently move the Overton window to the right on what arguments are acceptable.鈥