To some parties the costs of litigation are not conveyed
Because the American judicial system of trial courts and appellate courts reaches an apex in the Supreme Court of the United States, the trends there are crucial for the behavior of the whole legal system. Within the past three decades — and especially in the controversial “Warren Court” era — there has been an expansion of the issues which the Supreme Court will adjudicate, and of the extent to which the court will go beyond defining the boundaries of other institutions’ discretion to reviewing the specific decisions made. Some degree of this is inherent in any appellate court’s functioning — a guilty verdict by a jury in a courtroom surrounded by a raging lynch mob cannot be allowed to stand merely because formal procedure was followed — but neither are appellate courts supposed to re-try issues rather than determine the constitutionality of trials and legislation. Otherwise, in the words of an appellate judge, “Law becomes the subjective preference of the reviewing court.”4
The U.S. Supreme Court was increasingly surrounded by controversy after Earl Warren became its Chief Justice in 1953. In the early stages of these controversies, those who accused the court of going beyond the legitimate bounds of constitutional interpretation into the dangerous area of judicial policy making tended to be those opposed to the particular social or political substance of the decisions made, while those who defended the court tended to be those in favor of the social and political impacts achieved or expected. It is unnecessary at this point to enter the specifics of these early controversies. As the Supreme Court continued along a path that involved increased judicial activism at all levels and in a variety of issues — lower courts running school systems, ordering prisons to be built, or even ordering a state legislature to pass a tax bill — the nature of the defense of the Court also began to change. Many of those in favor of the social or political results of Supreme Court decisions began to question whether there was any legal or constitutional basis for those decisions. Some argued that a constitutional case
Trends in American legal institutions will be considered in four broad areas, those dealing with (1) administrative law-making, (2) free speech, (3) race, and (4) crime.