http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=564302

Ubi Jus, Ibi Remedium: The Fundamental Right to a Remedy Under Due Process

Tracy A. Thomas 
<http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=284134>
University of Akron School of Law



/San Diego Law Review, Vol. 41, November 2004 <JavaScript:WinOpen();>/


* Abstract: *    
This essay is part of the 2003 Remedies Forum symposium comprised of 
international remedies scholars addressing the topic of equitable relief 
in the fifty years since Brown v. Board of Education. It may be true as 
other scholars have argued that since the time of Brown, institutional 
defendants have won at the expense of plaintiffs. Defendants have 
learned that delay and defiance work. The U.S. Supreme Court has adopted 
a standard for ordering equitable relief that significantly defers to 
defendant wrongdoers at the plaintiffs' expense. Epithets of activist 
courts and judicial legislation have colored the existing scholarship 
and portrayed remedial action as illegitimate and excessive judicial 
power. And the recent barrage of school funding cases demonstrates the 
same resistance to court-ordered conduct as seen in Brown.

This essay attempts to swing the pendulum in the other direction by 
suggesting that remedial action like that of Brown and its progeny is 
not only acceptable, but indeed, required judicial action. It argues 
that a remedy is more than a legal maxim. Rather, this essay argues that 
the right to a meaningful remedy is a fundamental right protected by the 
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Stated simply: Ubi jus, 
ibi remedium. Where there's a right, there must be a remedy.

The article traces the history of the remedy as a fundamental concept of 
our ordered liberty from Blackstone to the Federalists to Marbury v. 
Madison. It argues not only that the right to a remedy has been 
recognized historically as a fundamental right, but that it should 
appropriately be considered a fundamental interest under the law. 
Remedies perform two critical functions in the law: they define abstract 
rights and enforce otherwise intangible rights. Rights standing alone 
are simply expressions of social values. It is the remedy that defines 
the right by making the value real and tangible by providing specificity 
and concreteness to otherwise abstract guarantees. Relying upon U.S. 
Supreme Court precedent in cases involving punitive damages and tax 
remedies, the essay argues that the Court has implicitly recognized the 
minimum right to a meaningful remedy.

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