Germany’s German Constitution
491
what kind of normative information is being carried forward from the past into
the contemporary life of the law in Germany.
The civil law’s foil is imagined to be the common law tradition.
45
The com-
mon law does not share the civil law’s Roman roots (or at least not in the
same degree).
46
It is the product of the Norman conquerors’ efforts to govern
occupied – and often hostile – England.
47
This led to some of the common
law tradition’s most distinctive characteristics, including an empowered judi-
ciary working on a case-by-case basis with local norms and in cooperation
with local populations to settle on the most acceptable (or least offensive) sub-
stantive rules to resolve disputes as they arise.
48
The galvanizing focus of the
tradition was on the process leading to the court’s jurisdiction over the case,
and not the substantive resolution of the case once the courthouse doors had
been pried open.
49
The accretion of these judicial decisions is the case law that
has priority in the common law tradition.
50
The common law is altogether less
conceptual and less systematic. It is inductively focused on facts, which we are
told “are the life of the law.”
51
But here, too, I cannot neglect the practice of
recognizing distinct Anglo and American currents within the so-called com-
mon law family.
52
A key difference between the two, according to David and
Brierley, is the Americans’ unique and less rigorous application of the rule of
precedent or stare decisis.
53
“All that can really be said with certainty about the
American rule of stare decisis,” David and Brierley concluded,
is that, as compared to the corresponding rule in England, it has and impor-
tant limitation the United States Supreme Court and the supreme courts of
the different states are not bound to observe their own decisions and may,
therefore, operate a reversal of previously established judicial practice.
54
It is this kind of unbounded judicial authority, among other factors, that
convinces me of the temperamental link between the common law tradition
45
David and Brierley, Supra note 6, 334 (“English legal structure is not the same as that of French
law and it poses the greatest difficulty for a continental jurist since it is, in fact, totally different to
anything with which he is familiar.”); Merryman and Pérerz-Perdomo, Supra note 6, 1–5; Siems,
Supra note 6, 43–64.
46
David and Brierley, Supra note 6, 309–11.
47
Ibid.
, 311–18; Glenn, Supra note 2, 237–41.
48
Glenn, Supra note 2, 237–41.
49
Ibid.
, 254–5.
50
Glenn, Supra note 2, 243; David and Brierley, Supra note 6, 366–7, 376–8.
51
“The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience”: Oliver Wendell Holmes, The
Common Law (Boston, MA: Little, Brown & Co, 1881), 1.
52
David and Brierley, Supra note 6, 397, 407.
53
Ibid.
, 434–5.
54
Ibid.
492
Russell A. Miller
and constitutionalism. And so I have to concede that I may only be talking
about the American-style common law constitutionalism.
Glenn knew that the traditions that interested him were complex and evolv-
ing and confoundingly contingent – and that they could only do limited ser-
vice as fixed concepts.
55
Still, he believed that they maintained “some form of
external coherence.”
56
It is in the same spirit that I rely on them here, where
they do just enough to allow us to look for the surprising interplay of diverse
approaches to the law in the context of the German legal system.
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