Thursday, April 15, 2010

Factors and Participatory Democracy for the High Court

Vincent Aleven and Kevin D. Ashley developed CATO to help teach law students legal reasoning; They based it on factors. This Thoughtful Thursday explores the work of Dr. Ashley and his colleagues and how it can be applied to let sortition juries or the whole population replace the Supreme Court. ( At the end of a Thoughtful Thursday on Judiciaries and Judges of February 25th, I closed with problems in Constitutional interpretation by high courts in Illinois, Italy and Indonesia. A Case decided for the plaintiffs has F15 and F21. A second case has F15, F21 and F1 and third case could identify F15 but did not have F21. A lawyer could distinguish the second case by the presence by the presence of F1 And an arguer with the third case for a defendant would point out the lack of F21. As Drs. Aleven and Ashley pointed out, boiling down the judges opinion in a case to a set of yes/no values on factors does not capture all the subtlety of legal reasoning or the theories involved.

(Although irrelevant to a participatory democracy, it is fair to point out than in a controlled test of argument skills and querying a legal database, the students who had the instruction from CATO did better than the students who had a conventional law lecture.)

Drs. Aleven and Ashley used trade scecret law in their studies and the codes corresponded to:

whether a product was unique [F15], whether the plaintiff disclosed the trade secret in the course of a business negotiation [F1] and whether the defendant knew the information was confidential [F21]. The first case might have these three factors (F1, F15, F21) and

The concept of factors was also illustrated by Fourth Amendment law in Rissland's wonderful review article on case-based reasoning, analogy and similarity in the law. She pointed out resoning in dealing with fourth amendment cases, those that determine whether the police can do a search without a warrant. The Supreme Court had already decided that the police can search a car when they make a stop. On the other hand, a warrant is required to search someone's home. But what about a mobile home? What about a mobile home being driven down the highway? What about a mobile home moored semipermanently in the mobile home park? In the words of Rissland, what about "a vehicle..hooked up to water and electricity but with its wheels still on," a "camper's tent with the person's things" and "a van with a bed and upholstered chairs."

One can develop hierarchies to help organize factors, e. g. combining several factors into the uberfactor of "home" Then "home" is another factor, along with "emergency" "permission" and who did the search. (A person not affiliated with the police might find evidence of a crime and alert the police officers--this could be a person with permission to be in the dwelling, a roommate, a family member, or a landlord coming in to do a repair. It could also be a person who is not authorized, a vigilante or a common burglar.) Then these factors might be the ones combined to determine whether evidence is supressed, the outcome of the case. Figure Four of the conference paper >shows the factor hierarchy used in CATO, a tutoring system to help law students argue cases appropriately from precedent. F15 (Unique product) positively influences (supports) the abstract factors of F104 that information is valuable and negatively influences F106 that "information is known." These in turn positively impact the determination F101 that there was a trade secret. Factor F21, that the party knew "the information was confidential" influences F115 that there was a "notice of confidentiality" which in turn positively influences that F114 that there was a "confidential relationship." F114 and F101, leaves of the directed graph, could be considered final legal factors that determine the case.

Ashley and Aleven identified eight sargument strategies with cases for lawyers and law students to use. But what are the strategies for judges or sortition jurors to use. I will use the term "case at bar" for the new case for which the jury is voting on a decision and legal argument. And any of the prior cases is a "precedent case." (generically P1, P 2, etc.)

  1. The jury could simply say, choose or vote that the "case at bar" matches one of the "precedent cases" and match up the factors. That is P1 has factors F1, F2, and F3. The Case at Bar also has factors F1, F2, and F3. Case P1 was decided for the plaintiff, without loss of generality(wlg). Therefore case at bar would also be decided for the plaintiff. Presumably, this is what will happen in many cases.
  2. The jury could distinguish. That is the precedent P1 has factors F1, F2, and F3. They would say the case at bar has F1, F2, F3 and F4 They would in doing this by labling P1 as having factors F1, F2, F3 and not F4. (by "not" F4, they might mean that the case has not demonstrated F4, not necessarily that the lawyers in that case demonstrated conclusively or presented sufficient that F4 did not occur.)
  3. The jury could change the reasons for a precedential case. Assume the precedent P1 was decided for the plaintiff factors on factors F1, F2, and F3. However, from the writing in the opinion, they also find that the case had factor F4. P1 was decided for the plaintiff.

    But the case at bar has factors F1, F2, and F3 as well and the jury would like to vote it for the defendant. They don't want to overrule it. They could decide that the precedential case was decided on the basis of F1, F2 and F4. The jury then decides the case at bar on the basis of factors F1, F2 and F3 for the defendant.

  4. And, lastly, the jury could simply overrule the precedential case.
In an experiment with precedential participatory democracy systems, the computer program could allow all four of these strategies or only the first two or three, and we could see what the result is.

These strategies are not as arcane as they might appear. Parents do them all the time, at least in homes with siblings. Bob, Age 18, is allowed to say out past midnight. His sister, Janet, Age 16, is not allowed to do the same thing. Their parent distinguishes. Bob is age eighteen, you are sixteen. Of course when Janet becomes eighteen and wants to say out late, she is going to cite that precedent. The parent really doesn't want to let her out and then says, Oh, you are a girl, and ... Or perhaps, she might want to add a new factor, "Just last month, I heard that there is someone preying on. Back then, our suburb was peaceful." Or she could overrule, "I was wrong then, I shouldn't have let him out-- we were lucky he came back safely."

The System

In the real world, the lawyers would present their arguments and the record would be available. The justices would assign factors to the case and write up an opinion. They would also say whether the opinion supports for plaintiff or defendent. Note that not all justices might render an opinion if other justices prepared one with which they agreed.

The system would ensure that any outcome was consistent with with prior precedents. Justices could apply the strategies above, such as adding factors to prior opinions to distinguish them or perhaps overruling them.

Assume that there was more than one opinion. Then the voting would begin. In the real world, there could be a different set of voters than justices. I proposed that the judges would write opinions and if there was a disagreement or dissent, then the American people would vote which opinion would rule.

(This raises the analogy of concurring opinions. Let us consider an example with three opinions and four factors. A third of the voters might vote that factors F1 and F2 -> plaintiff. Another third might vote that factors F3 and F4 ->plaintiff. And the remaining third might vote F1 and F2 ->defendant.) Obviously the plaintiff will win the case at bar. In Marks versus United States, as cited by Wikipedia, the narrowest opinion would rule. IN the above case, there would be no holding but what if the layout was: A third of the voters that factors F1 F2 and F3-> plaintiff. Another third might vote that factors F1, F2 F4 ->plaintiff. And the remaining third still voting F1 and F2 ->defendant.) See the Wikipedia article for some more work and I will hold Marks versus United States, 430 U. S. 188 (1977) for a future Thursday post.

In experiments, we would probably use squibs or short synopsis of the cases. We might help the authors along by requiring them to use a set of factors that we predefined with the help of legal experts or might allow them to add factors themselves.

Experiments

Drs. Ashely and McLarenalso did an experiment with factors and a case body of ethics decisions that showed the power of precedents in information retrieval. And Ashley acknowledged that there is more to legal opinions than just a few yes/no values. But I propose an interesting experiment where groups would try and set up opinions and judge cases in various topic areas such as the fourth amendment or trade secret law.

Some groups will just write their opinion in prose. Other groups will just get to assign factors. And the third groupw ill do both. We can measure the predictability by giving people half the opinions and ask them to predict how they would decide the remaining cases, and then see how they do. We will also try splitting the decisions after half the cases were decided. Assume that a specific area has twenty questions to decide. Each group would get the first ten. Then, they would be given the next ten cases to decide. They will be asked to be true both to the precedents but also to apply their own opinion. I would assume there are some sophisticated statistics that could see whether each group is influenced in decisions eleven to twenty by the precedents that they are to follow-or they simply find a way to write or assign the precedents so as to write a justification for what they believe.

When I was at the 2001 International Conference on Artifical Intelligence and Law, Dr. Schauer lectured us in the Old Court House in St. Louis of Dred Scott fame. Aand he said that most of the time an appelate court judge could write the opinion and justify the opinion to meet his personal desire of how the case should be decided, but every so often, they say "it just won't write." And I recall a Clarence Darrow biography where he said that a lawyer must make the judge want to rule in their favor from an emotional sense more than provide the precedents and legal reasoning. To what extent would a system based on factors guide the participants, especially a jury or a whole democracy, to maintain stare decisis?

For Future Thoughtful Thursday

Marks Vs. United States

References

  1. Aleven, V., Ashley K., "Evaluating a Learning Environment for Case-Based Argumentation Skills" In the Sixth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law: proceedings of the Conference University of Melbourne Law School, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia June 30 to July 3 1997, ACM Press, New York, NY Pages 170 to 179.
  2. Vincent Aleven and Kevin D. Ashley, "Doing Things with Factors" The Fifth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law, May 21 to 24 1995, Page 31 to 40.
  3. Vincent Aleven and Kevin D. Ashley, "What Law Students Need to Know to Win" in the Fourth International Conference and Law, June 15 to 18, 1993 in The Netherlands, Pages 152 to 161.
  4. Bruninghaus, S. and Ashley, K. Improving the Representation of Legal Case Texts with Information Extraction Methods" In The Eigth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law Proceedings of the Conference (Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, May 21 to May 25, 2001). ACM Press, New York, NY, 2001, 42-51.
  5. Ashley, Kevin D. and Bruce M. McLaren, "An AI Investigation of Citation's Epistemological Role" In The Eigth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law Proceedings of the Conference (Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, May 21 to May 25, 2001). ACM Press, New York, NY, 2001, 32-41
  6. Rissland, E. L. AI and Similarity. IEEE Intelligent Systems 21, 3, 2006, pages 39 to 49.

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