Henry Monaghan: A Curmudgeon With Integrity
Henry P. Monaghan died last week. He was a towering figure in Federal Courts and Constitutional Law. On Verdict , I have a new column that describes the ongoing relevance of two of his better-known law review articles, but that barely scratches the surface of Henry's output. Henry did very important work on the overbreadth doctrine, first articulating the proposition that everyone has a right to be judged by a constitutionally valid rule of law. He explained how the concurrence in Bush v. Gore was less of an outlier than it appeared in real time, placing it within a line of cases in which the Supreme Court reviews state court rulings of state law non-deferentially in order to protect federal interests. He gave coherence to a wide range of SCOTUS practices that seemed unmoored by conceptualizing them as "constitutional common law." He grappled comprehensively with the relation of supranational courts to domestic doctrines limiting the Article III judiciary. And much m...