2002
DOI: 10.1111/1468-2508.00138
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Overruled: An Event History Analysis of Lower Court Reaction to Supreme Court Alteration of Precedent

Abstract: While past research has demonstrated widespread compliance in the Courts of Appeals with Supreme Court precedent (e.g., Gruhl 1980; Songer 1987; Songer, Segal, and Cameron 1994; Songer and Sheehan 1990), compliance is not automatic and is surely political. We examine compliance with Supreme Court overrulings of precedent—cases in which we might expect the lowest levels of compliance with Supreme Court policy prescriptions. We argue that several variables are relevant to the compliance decision and that those v… Show more

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Cited by 93 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…As Canon and Johnson (1999, p. 30) state, "all courts lower in the hierarchy must attempt to apply the policy to relevant cases, interpreting the policy as necessary to fit the circumstances at hand." Several scholars examined lower court treatment of legal precedents and concluded that inferior judges generally adhere to Supreme Court pronouncements of law (Benesh & Reddick, 2002;Gruhl, 1980;Johnson, 1987;Songer & Sheehan, 1990), and lower court judges tend to follow ideological trends from these higher tribunals (Baum, 1980;Songer, 1987). According to Baum (1997), the reason for compliance by lower court judges is that while those judges seek to set doctrine near their personal ideal points, they realize that doing so may increase the chance of being reversed by a higher court.…”
Section: A Theory Of Decision Making In Judicial Hierarchiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Canon and Johnson (1999, p. 30) state, "all courts lower in the hierarchy must attempt to apply the policy to relevant cases, interpreting the policy as necessary to fit the circumstances at hand." Several scholars examined lower court treatment of legal precedents and concluded that inferior judges generally adhere to Supreme Court pronouncements of law (Benesh & Reddick, 2002;Gruhl, 1980;Johnson, 1987;Songer & Sheehan, 1990), and lower court judges tend to follow ideological trends from these higher tribunals (Baum, 1980;Songer, 1987). According to Baum (1997), the reason for compliance by lower court judges is that while those judges seek to set doctrine near their personal ideal points, they realize that doing so may increase the chance of being reversed by a higher court.…”
Section: A Theory Of Decision Making In Judicial Hierarchiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, only "ticketed" judges can be chosen. 7 Second, whenever possible, allocation follows the "cab-rank principle". As judges dispose of their cases, they join the back of the rank and wait to receive a new case; as a case requiring a panel of size n arrives, the CA Civ Listing…”
Section: Institutional Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The findings provide important evidence about the importance of competing constraints on state supreme court decisionmaking. 1976Benesh and Reddick 2002;Canon and Johnson 1999;Songer, Segal and Cameron 1994).…”
Section: Competing Constraints: State Court Responses To Supreme Courmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Explanations for this fear typically refer to the reputation costs associated with being overturned by the Supreme Court (Baum 1976(Baum , 1978Benesh and Reddick 2002;Canon and Johnson 1999;Songer, Segal, and Cameron 1994). Thus, Supreme Court decisions are typically implemented by these lower court judges, especially as the probability of review increases (Baum 1976(Baum , 1978(Baum , 1980Benesh and Reddick 2002;Songer and Sheehan 1990;Johnson and Canon 1984;Songer, Segal and Cameron 1994;Songer and Tabrizi 1999). However, since much of the extant research does not explicitly examine state court decisions on state legislation, it is not entirely clear whether the general pattern will emerge as strongly or at all.…”
Section: The Role Of Supreme Court Precedentmentioning
confidence: 99%