Jay Wexler is Professor of Law at Boston University. He is the author of Holy Hullabaloos: A Road Trip to the Battlegrounds of the Church/State Wars and The Odd Clauses: Understanding the Constitution through Ten of Its Most Curious Provisions.

Thomas
The Supreme Court has a lovely tradition whereby each Justice’s group of law clerks gets to go out to lunch with each other Justice once during the term. This tradition, which dates back to the sixteenth century, allows the Court’s thirty-six or so law clerks to have at least a little face time with all the Justices. When I was clerking for Justice Ginsburg during the 1998-1999 term, for example, my three co-clerks and I were lucky enough to share Indian food with Justice Breyer, pizza and red wine with Justice Scalia, and classic American with Justice Stevens. The only Justice we didn’t have lunch with was Justice Kennedy, and that was only because on the day of the event, we were notified that we would have to get dressed up to be seen with the Justice in public. Since we generally showed up to work in bathrobes and hair curlers, we were forced to decline the invitation. 

When people ask me which Justice seemed the most like a regular, normal person, they often appear surprised when I say that it was, without any doubt, Justice Thomas. Not that “Most Normal Supreme Court Justice” is a particularly difficult title to achieve, but during our lunch, Justice Thomas impressed me as being a totally friendly and incredibly down-to-earth guy, and I say this not just because he laughed at my “Why- did- the- guy- get- fired- from- the- orange- juice- factory?- Because- he- couldn’t- concentrate” joke.

Obviously my time up close with Justice Thomas was extremely limited, but I did get the sense that he cared a great deal about the people who he worked with at the Court. He’s the guy, for example, who supposedly knows the name of everyone who works at the Court, from the cafeteria workers to the Curator’s assistant to the security guards. At the time of our lunch, one of my co-clerks was having a family problem that Justice Thomas knew something about. The next day, I was working on some memo or something when the door to the chambers opened.  It was Justice Thomas with a book that he wanted my co-clerk to have. It’s hard to communicate how unusual it is for a Justice to just pop into the chambers of another Justice, much less anywhere near where the clerks sit. Perhaps it’s some evidence of how startling it was that, when I saw Justice Thomas suddenly standing in front of my desk, I immediately projectile vomited all over my memorandum.

It has been widely reported recently that Justice Thomas has not asked
a question from the bench in over two years
. This fact is about as
interesting as one of my hangnails, and somewhat less important. Many
in the blogosphere and elsewhere have taken Justice Thomas’s silence as
a sign that he is not engaged
or is not fully doing his job. For some
it’s evidence to support their already existing views that Justice
Thomas is a bad judge or a bad person. These criticisms are unfair.
Oral argument may play an important role in the lower courts, where it
can help judges figure out what’s going on in a case with messy facts,
but in the Supreme Court, where cases are only heard if they clearly
present a discrete legal issue, oral argument simply isn’t a big deal. More than anything, the Justices use the time to argue with each other,
albeit indirectly, through questions posed to the lawyers. This will
probably come as a huge surprise to many readers out there, but some
lawyers, even judges, like to talk just to hear themselves talk.
Justice Thomas has indicated that he sees no reason to talk for this
purpose, and I have to say I kind of admire him for it.

Please don’t get me wrong.  I wish Clarence Thomas was not on the
Supreme Court.  Justice Thomas’s jurisprudence threatens to send the
nation back to the middle ages.  In my own field of study, church-state
law, Justice Thomas has said that the First Amendment’s “Establishment
Clause” does not apply to state and local governments.  This means that states and localities would be free to promote religion by, for instance, putting up huge crosses on public property, teaching creationism, and leading school prayers. Probably they could even set up their own
official religions.  Just thinking about this makes me want to cry.

In other areas of law, from the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on
unreasonable searches to the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and
unusual punishment to the breadth of executive power, Justice Thomas’s
crabbed approach to constitutional interpretation has similarly
resulted in the abuse of individual rights.  This is plenty reason
enough to lament Justice Thomas’s presence on the bench (and, sweet
mother of God, to vote Democrat in November), without resorting to
criticisms about his silence there.  Indeed, given Justice Thomas’s
reactionary views, liberals should probably be happy that he doesn’t
speak during oral argument.  If only somehow he could be persuaded to
write as few opinions as he asks questions, now that would be something
worth talking about.

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3 responses to “The Sound of Silence, Supreme Court Style”

  1. Associate Dean Avatar
    Associate Dean

    Having clerked at the Court as well and had similar, though somewhat less vivid, experiences with Justice Thomas–unless you count watching him carefully cover BOTH sides of his burger in ketchup (something I wish I had the courage to do in public), I have to endorse every last word of this post. Great guy as far as I can tell; scary Justice.

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  2. Laura Avatar
    Laura

    Will you please clarify about the projectile vomiting? I would feel much better if I knew you were just kidding about that.
    Otherwise, I’d like to thank you for sharing your thoughts about Justice Thomas. One gets in the habit of considering him the embodiment of all evil, and it’s nice to get the sense of him as a person, from someone who does not support him politically.

    Like

  3. LaborAttorney Avatar
    LaborAttorney

    As a former student of Jay Wexler, I am delighted whenever I come accross a piece like this, which is a terrific example of his unique perspective and insight on the Court, not to mention his great sense of humor!

    Like

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