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Here's the text: http://www.cyberspace.org/lawsuit/ruling.txt Diving right in, I read the following paragraph as the most telling: "Since final conclusions on the ultimate issues involved in the lawsuit are premature and inappropriate at this stage of the district court proceedings, we must assume that the district court was speaking tentatively only, in the context of viewing the likelihood of plaintiffs' ultimate success on the merits of their claims. Indeed, the final paragraphs of the opinion speak in those terms." I interpret this statement as a commentary on and rebuke of Judge Tarnow's effusive condemnation of Mich. Pub. Act 33, to wit: "...the Act offends the guarantee of free speech in the First Amendment and is, therefore, unconstitutional." The appeals court finds Judge Tarnow's ruling to be within the limits of the law, but only by what appears to be the slimmest of margins. In fact, the ruling's wording seems to suggest that the court would rather have ruled in favor of the State of Michigan, but was unable to contravene established precedent which dictated otherwise. The wording to which I refer is, "Because the district court cited and relied upon opinions of the United States Supreme Court that arguably support its conclusion that plaintiffs would likely succeed on the merits of their claim, we are unable to say that the district court abused its discretion when it granted the preliminary injunction." Specifically, I refer to the word "arguably" near the beginning of the statement. It looks as though, by that reference, the court is offering the appellants a potential route to pursue in Judge Tarnow's court in the trial on the merits of our suit. The upshot is, as I see it, that the Appeals court feels that our suit is founded on legal precedent which might conceivably be overturned if the State of Michigan wished to adapt its tactics and pursue the case to the extreme end. I'm no legal scholar, but that's what I read between the lines. ---- [I would love for this to be a serious and substantive discussion of the meaning and implications of this ruling. Accordingly, please read the ruling in full before commenting (preferably twice -- it's short), and also please link any outside sources and references so that we can all follow along. Thanks!]
9 responses total.
I think you attach negative connotation to "arguably" that is not present. In fact, in my experience, "agruably" carries *positive* connotations. Who appealed to this court? If the appeal asked that the injunction be overturned, then the court's negative construction, "we are unable to say that the district court abused its discretion," seems to me appropriate: "We can't do what we have been asked to do."
The article on Slashdot seems to imply this is a posative ruling for free speech as well, see: http://slashdot.org/yro/00/11/28/1438210.shtml IANAL so dodn't ask me. :-)
Now linked to cyberpunk your conf on computers and social controversy. j cyberpunk at the next Ok: prompt.
The way they read it, the quibble they were picking was that something stated as "fact" in the injunction was actually a fact to be settled in the trial itself, which as it hadn't happened was still only a probability rather than a certainty. It seemed rather more nit-picking than anything else, at least to me.
This is a review of a preliminary injunction, under the "abuse of discretion" standard. The court's language reflects that it found no evidence of an abuse of discretion by the trial court, in issuing the injunction.
The web page http://www.cyberspace.org/lawsuit/ruling.txt is a horrible mess. Long lines, and missing text. Is there a legiable copy of this somewhere?
OK, there is a cleaner link at http://www.cyberspace.org/lawsuit/ruling.htm l but it still starts in the middle of a sentence. This really doesn't say anything much. I don't think it rebukes Judge Tarnow for writing a stronger opinion than is strictly necessary at the preliminary injunction stage, though it points out that he did so. The reason for doing that, I think, is that Judge Tarnow sees this as ending in a summary judgement based on his prelminary judgmenti, so he put some meat in that. It's just denying the specific terms of the appeal that the state made.
Oh, I see. The text is all there. I was confused by the footnote being in the middle of the text. I'd personally recommend to whomever HTML'ized this that the page break be elminated and the footnote be moved to the bottom of the page. Legiability is more important that strict reproduction of the faults of paper documents.
Done.
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