attempting to flee across the border to West Germany. Of course, the mortal
2005 (Cory Merrill trans.) (“[t]he reigning ideal image of the jurist is as follows: a higher civil
servant with academic training sits in his cell armed only with a thinking machine, certainly
one of the finest kinds. His cell is furnished with nothing more than a green table on which
the State Code lies before him. Present him with any kind of situation, real or imaginary,
and with the help of pure logical operations and a secret technique understood only by him,
dutifully he is able to deduce the decision with absolute precision from the legal code that is
1949, BGBl. I., Article 103(2).
504
Russell A. Miller
defense of East Germany’s “anti-fascist barrier” was legal under – was man-
dated by – East German law.
115
The defendants could be convicted by courts
in a newly unified Germany that were applying old West German criminal law
only if the civilian formalism “a law is a law” were to be rejected. That is what
the ordinary courts did.
116
And that is how the Constitutional Court upheld the
convictions in the
Wall Shooting Case.
117
The Constitutional Court explained
that the lesson of the Radbruch formula is that the “fundamental principle
of legal certainty,” which is the promise of civilian formalism and positivism,
“can be given less weight than material justice if the law would otherwise
lead to an intolerable violation of justice.”
118
The Constitutional Court’s
Wall
Shooting Case decision was regarded as a profound victory for justice over
civilian legal formalism and positivism. At the same time it was a victory for
the justices – and the common law tradition that gives them priority.
The myth has no less force with respect to more commonplace jurispru-
dence that does not involve the constitutional reckoning with Germany’s
totalitarian pasts. The mere exercise of unexceptional judicial review is a
species of the same common law judicial power, and it is a significant depar-
ture from the formalist and positivist tradition in the German legal cul-
ture.
119
The German Constitutional Court has assumed this new role with
great enthusiasm and confidence. It is no exaggeration when the German
Federal Constitutional Court is characterized as the “most powerful consti-
tutional court in the world.”
120
Elsewhere, I have remarked that the “Court’s
115
See Kif Augustine Adams, “What is just?: The Rule of Law and Natural Law in the Trials of
Former East German Border Guards” (1993) 29 Stanford Journal of International Law 271,
289–93; Peter E. Quint, “Judging the Past: the Prosecution of East German Border Guards
and the GDR Chain of Command” (1999) 61 The Review of Politics 303; Peter E. Quint, “The
Border Guard Trials and the East German Past-Seven Arguments” (2000) 48 American Journal
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