Historical Analogies in Second and Seventh Amendment Cases--And Analogies More Generally
A recent Fifth Circuit decision, Texas Tobacco Barn v. US Dep't of Health & Human Services , was handed down two years to the day after the Supreme Court decision it applied to hold that agency proceedings within the FDA resulting in civil penalties violate the Seventh Amendment. After providing a bit of background for those readers who don't have the misfortune to follow the Supreme Court's convoluted federal jurisdiction rulings as closely as I do, I'll use the case as an opportunity to compare and contrast the historical analogy approach the Roberts Court has taken to the Second and Seventh Amendments. For those readers already put off by the subject, here's the bottom line: the Court's purported use of historical analogies is mostly a mask for its normative preferences. Now, that background: In its 2024 decision in SEC v. Jarkesy , an ideologically divided 6-3 Court held that the Seventh Amendment requires jury trials whenever the government seeks civil ...