By Lisa McElroy
It’s August, and that means that it’s time for two big events: the start of fall classes and, once every four years, the summer Olympics.
For me, at least, they go together like peanut butter and jelly.
That’s because most beginning law students come to law school interested in doing justice. Somewhere along the way, they learn that there’s this tricky thing called “law” that sometimes (at least to them) gets in the way.
And so in the first week of classes, I teach new students that the Olympics provide us with the perfect example of how law and justice can intersect – and diverge.
On the first day of law school, I ask students to think back to the Summer Games of 2004 (when many of our current students were – gulp – just starting high school, not law school), Athens, and the men’s all-around gymnastics competition. Paul Hamm, a petite, muscular college star from Wisconsin, was heavily favored to win gold. And win gold he did – although according to many, he really didn’t.
That was where Yang Tae Young (“Yang,” as Koreans’ surnames precede their given names) came in.
Yang, a South Korean superstar, would have scored higher than Paul Hamm, except that the judges made a scoring error, resulting in his winning bronze.
Fair? You be the judge. Here’s why it happened.
In 2004, as gymnastics was then scored, a “10” was the highest possible “start value.” Essentially, that meant that the harder a gymnast’s routine, the higher score he could potentially earn. Also in the rules? Any score dispute had to be raised before a gymnast moved on to the next apparatus (for example, after completing a parallel bars routine, but before the group moved to the pommel horse).
Yang’s parallel bars routine was exceptionally difficult, and the judges should have given him a start value of “10.” They made a mistake, however, and scored his routine out of “9.9.” That might seem like a small mistake, but in gymnastics, every tenth of a point counts. In fact, in Yang’s case, the tenth mattered so much that when the final all-around scores were calculated, Yang had won the bronze medal, not the gold as he would have according to proper scoring. After the competition, all officials – including the competition judges, the Federation of International Gymnastics (“FIG”), and the USOC – agreed that the scoring had been incorrect and that Yang should have won over Hamm (and the silver medalist).
The problem? Yang and his coaches did not protest until sometime around the medal ceremony, long after the parallel bars rotation was complete and Yang had moved on to the next apparatus. In other words, Hamm won gold because of a technicality, not because he was the best gymnast.
Immediately, there was an outcry across the world. Koreans, Americans, and the FIG called for Hamm to give up his gold to Yang voluntarily, saying that the Olympics were about sportsmanship and that a good sport would recognize the true winner. Hamm, however, refused (and the USOC backed him up), saying that sports are about rules, he followed the rules, and so he won fair and square. Hamm was called a bad sport, and Yang was called a Korean national hero. And yet, at the end of the day, Hamm went down in history as a gold medal winner, and Yang did not.
Every fall, I tell 1L’s about the Hamm/Yang controversy and ask them, “What do you think should have happened? Should Wheaties have put Hamm on the box – General Mills refused – or should Hamm have gone down in disgrace? Should Yang have gotten the $20,000 that the Korean Olympic Committee eventually awarded him, saying that he really did win the gold? Why?”
Their answers inevitably revolve around the age-old concepts of law and justice.
Should the “law” have prevailed in the 2004 men’s gymnastics all-around competition? Even though there was a rule about the timing of protests, should it have been waived in this very clear instance of error? If not, why not? Perhaps because waiving the rule this time would have set precedent for questioning the rule every time, creating an untenable slippery slope? Perhaps because, in sports, there is a real interest in finality of results? Perhaps because good sportsmanship, like Hamm said, involves following rules, without which sports would be anarchy?
Or should “justice” have prevailed? After all, the best gymnast came in third. Because of what some would say was rigidity on the part of the USOC, Yang did not win the ultimate prize in his sport, something for which he’d worked his whole life.
But then we have to ask: is consistent application of rules – the law – is in and of itself just?
Think the Yang/Hamm controversy was an isolated incident, never to be repeated? Nope. Fast forward to June, 2010, when Armando Galarraga of the Detroit Tigers was one out away from being the 21st pitcher in major league baseball history to throw a perfect game – but the umpire incorrectly called the last batter “safe” on first. Instant replay showed that batter to be out. The problem? Yep, a baseball rule – one saying that instant replay could not be used to override umpire calls.
That law/justice dichotomy is a tricky thing – if, in fact, it is a dichotomy. As Oliver Wendell Holmes and Judge Learned Hand are reported to have said on the occasion of Holmes’ appointment to the United States Supreme Court, “Do justice, sir.” “That is not my job. My job is to apply the law.” Was Holmes right? Should the law always control, I ask my students? Or was Holmes’s view of “Equal Justice Under Law” too rigid?
And so we brainstorm about legal, not athletic, examples of the law/justice divergence (or intersection, depending on how you look at it). How about when a landlord throws a family with children out in the middle of winter, all because they haven’t paid their rent? How about when a criminal defendant goes free because the police search was unconstitutional? How about when a woman is a victim of domestic violence and obtains a restraining order against her ex-husband, but the police fail to enforce the order, and the ex-husband kidnaps and murders her three children? How about when a mother - trying to protect her daughter from the girl’s father, who is accused of sexually molesting the child - is sent to prison and serves two years for contempt of court because she refuses to comply with a visitation order, released only after Congress passes a bill specifically aimed at her situation?
To some, these are miscarriages of justice of Olympic proportions. And to some, these decisions are just, because they comply with the law. And our role as professors? It’s our job throughout the school year – beginning in that very first week - to guide our students in seeing that every situation can be judged on the equities, every legal dispute has two sides. Sometimes both sides can make good legal arguments, and sometimes both sides can argue that their way of looking at the facts is the just way. Our job as lawyers? It’s to ferret out these arguments and apply them on behalf of our clients.
Let the games begin.
Sunday, August 05, 2012
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15 comments:
Or, if you want something they won't remember, how about the 1972 Olympic Men's Basketball finals between the U.S. and Soviet Union. That had the added benefit of being both unjust and of not following the rules--or worse, seeming to make up the rules as they went along.
Even your baseball example is consistent with the Olympic rule you cite. Suppose replay could overturn an umpire's call. You still have to review it before the next play.
Johan Santana earned a no hitter this year due to a missed call in the middle of a game. A missed call on the last play of a game is more memorable but not a good analogy to the situation you refer to, IMO. If the error in 2004 was on the last event, would it have been reversed?
The problem I see is that somewhere along the way we've lost our perspective. Isn't the purpose of the law to achieve justice? It seems that far too many judges believe, as you point out, that their role is to uphold the law.
Section 2 of the Constitution provides that "The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity." Not just law. Laws exist out of necessity. It is the role of the courts to ensure that they are 'properly' applied; not just applied. Evidence of this is in the intention of the Framers that is better to let 10 guilty persons go free than to punish the innocent.
In the Yang/Hamm situation, because the law had wrongly awarded Hamm the gold medal why couldn't the IOC award a similar medal to Yang?
Police and prosecutors enforce the law. In courts we have trials and hearings to ensure justice is accomplished. This is obviously not happening. Possibly because of the way we select our judges. I don't care how a potential judge feels about abortion or any other issues. The primary concern with any potential judge is whether he/she can put his/her personnal views aside and render a just decision.
We widely accept that our judges are either liberals or conservatives. Pundits can consistently predict how judges are going to rule in far too many cases. Yet, we cynically accept these decisions and don't do anything about it. The Constitution provides that these judges should hold their positions during 'good behavior'. I hardly think that the predictability of our judiciary is indicative of good behaviour. Isn't it time we "occupy our courts."
As a former gymnast and sports law professor, I love the idea of using the Paul Hamm scenario in the way you describe with my first year civil procedure students. But to be technical, you should read the CAS opinion on this case. yang was not clearly the best gymnast. Review of his performance showed the judges made the error in his start value (which was not properly challenged) AND that the judges overlooked a clear deduction later in the routine. In addition, as the CAS panel pointed out, there were more events to go after that scoring mistake. It is not at all clear how Yang would have performed on the last two events had he endured the pressure of being the leader. I am not sure what this ultimately says about rules and justice, but it certainly is what is behind my friends and colleagues' claims that gymnastics is not a sport!
Dionne: I wasn't going to say, but . . . :-)
Note what happened in the women's balance beam competition: Aly Raisman got her score and immediately appealed, saying they had set the degree of difficulty too low; her score was raised and she ended up with the Bronze Medal.
Glad to know this additional detail about the Yang/Hamm controversy! Thank you!
And, Howard, I noted the Aly Raisman protest with glee. Clearly, every gymnast and every coach now is all too aware of that procedural rule . . .
Police and prosecutors enforce the law. In courts we have trials and hearings to ensure justice is accomplished. This is obviously not happening. Possibly because of the way we select our judges. I don't care how a potential judge feels about abortion or any other issues. The primary concern with any potential judge is whether he/she can put his/her personnal views aside and render a just decision.Windows 7 professional activation Key
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earned a no hitter this year due to a mwww.windows7keysp.comissed call in the middle of a game. A missed call on the last play of a game is more memorable but not a good analogy to the situation you refer to, IMO. If the error in 2004 was on the last event, would it have been reversedhttp://www.windows7keysp.com/
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1654To be a ex - gymnast and also sports activities law mentor,guild wars 2 key I adore the concept of utilizing the Henry Hamm scenario in how a person illustrate along with the 1st year civil treatment pupils. Although being specialized, it is best Diablo III goldto look at the CAS opinion about this circumstance. yang had not been clearly the best gymnast
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