MURFREESBORO — Five
eminent jurists illuminated the foundation of our nation’s laws and the role of
judges in interpreting those laws as part of MTSU’s 2017 Constitution Day
festivities.
Under the title “The Constitutional Role of an Independent
Judiciary in a Democracy,” the senior and retired federal and state appellate
judges and justices examined a wide range of topics both in the abstract and in
the context of current events.
Former Tennessee Supreme Court Justice Penny White addressed
the ongoing ideological dispute between so-called “strict constructionists,”
who believe that the Constitution should be interpreted literally, and those
who believe the interpretation of the Constitution should be flexible over time
as society changes.
“I believe that the Constitution is a living document, that
it has to adjust as times adjust,” said White, now E.E. Overton Distinguished
Professor of Law at the University of Tennessee College of Law.
“Just for example, we confront all sorts of searches that
weren’t even thought about, searches of (the) internet, searches of phone
devices, that weren’t even thought about when the Constitution was drafted.”
Another former state Supreme Court justice, Martha Craig
Daughtrey, noted that emerging democracies look to the American judiciary as a
model, although they do not seek to replicate the American executive and
legislative models.
“There is a widespread universal respect for the courts, and
it goes back to the independence of the courts,” said Daughtrey, who is now
senior judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Without mentioning President Donald Trump by name, Daughtrey
decried what she perceived to be a recent “disrespect for the judicial branch”
on the part of the executive.
“It is hard to imagine how much damage that does among
people looking at the court system,” she said.
Belmont College School of Law Dean Alberto Gonzalez, who was
U.S. Attorney General during President George W. Bush’s administration,
contended that judges should be subject to criticism. However, he asserted that
the criticism should be delivered respectfully.
“Sometimes judges get it wrong,” said Gonzalez, a former
Texas Supreme Court justice. “We wouldn’t have courts of appeals and the
Supreme Court if trial court judges always got it right … It’s how you do it.”
Curtis Collier, senior judge for the U.S. District Court of
the Eastern District of Tennessee, was asked about the role of the judiciary in
the thorny issue of immigration.
“Immigration is one of those areas where all three branches
have a very strong interest and those interests will compete and conflict,”
said Collier. “And, if there is not a resolution politically, it, ultimately,
will end up in the hands of the judiciary.”
Former state Supreme Court Chief Justice Gary Wade likened
the judiciary to a “referee” that settles disputes between the executive and
legislative branches.
“When called upon to make a call, whether it’s an executive
order or a piece of legislation that might conflict with Constitutional
principles, the court makes that call,” said Wade, who now is vice president
and dean of the Duncan School of Law at Lincoln Memorial University in upper
East Tennessee.
Keel Hunt, author and columnist for The Tennessean, moderated
the panel discussion, which included an audience question-and-answer session.
The discussion, which was sponsored by the MTSU chapter of
the American Democracy Project, capped a day of public readings of sections of
the Constitution at various locations around campus, as well as a voter registration
drive.
“We want civic learning to be
pervasive, not partial, across our university, and central, not peripheral, to
our identity,” said American Democracy Project coordinator Mary Evins in
describing the importance of the campus-wide celebration.
MTSU has celebrated the 1787 signing of the Constitution for
the past 12 years. Because this year’s actual Constitution Day was Sunday,
Sept. 17, the celebration was scheduled for Sept. 20.
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