, at 165.
Soundings and Silences
53
a famous concurring opinion by Justice Brandeis in Ashwander v. Tennessee
Valley Authority.
184
Refusing to address the claim that the entire TVA Act – a
federal statute designed to promote rural electrification as part of FDR’s “first”
New Deal – was unconstitutional, Justice Brandeis memorably articulated a
set of considerations that he said ought to lead federal courts to avoid deciding
difficult constitutional questions that might dispose of a case when it would
be possible to decide the case on narrower grounds – grounds leaving those
difficult questions unanswered at least for the time being.
185
There are more than a few occasions when the Court has all but tortured
the words of a federal statute in order to avoid resolving a particularly perplex-
ing constitutional issue. One particularly egregious example involved Bond v.
United States, a 2014 Supreme Court decision stemming from a US attorney’s
seemingly bizarre and at the very least unwise decision to charge a woman
with violating the law Congress had enacted to implement the Chemical
Weapons Convention, even though all the distraught woman did was con-
spicuously spread toxic substances on the car, mailbox, and door knob of a
rival for her husband’s affection in the hope that her rival would develop an
uncomfortable rash.
186
Although the terms of the law literally covered what the
woman had done, the Court, in an opinion written by Chief Justice Roberts,
managed to cobble together six justices to hold that, because of uncertainty
about whether Congress really meant what it said as applied to circumstances
like those presented in that case, respect for “basic principles of federalism”
supported holding that the accused woman’s “local criminal activity” could
not be punished under the Act to Implement the International Convention
on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of
Chemical Weapons and on Their Destruction.
187
The Court’s majority wrote
that, just as it would have had a duty to interpret an ambiguous federal law
so as to avoid difficult constitutional questions about the reach of the treaty
power and of Congress’s power to implement a duly ratified treaty, so too it
had a duty to find some way to hold even an unambiguous federal law inap-
plicable if holding it applicable in accord with its manifestly applicable terms
would have made such avoidance impossible.
188
184
297 U.S. 288, 346 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring; “The Court developed, for its own govern-
ance in the cases confessedly within its jurisdiction, a series of rules under which it has avoided
passing upon a large part of all the constitutional questions pressed upon it for decision.”).
185
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