The cert pool is a mechanism by which the
Supreme Court of the United States
The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) is the highest court in the federal judiciary of the United States. It has ultimate appellate jurisdiction over all Federal tribunals in the United States, U.S. federal court cases, and over Stat ...
manages the influx of
petitions
A petition is a request to do something, most commonly addressed to a government official or public entity. Petitions to a deity are a form of prayer called supplication.
In the colloquial sense, a petition is a document addressed to an officia ...
for
certiorari
In law, ''certiorari'' is a court process to seek judicial review of a decision of a lower court or government agency. ''Certiorari'' comes from the name of a prerogative writ in England, issued by a superior court to direct that the recor ...
("cert") to the court. It was instituted in 1973, as one of the institutional reforms of
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger on the suggestion of Justice
Lewis F. Powell Jr.
Purpose and operation
Each year, the Supreme Court receives thousands of petitions for certiorari; in 2001 the number stood at approximately 7,500, and had risen to 8,241 by October Term 2007. The court will ultimately grant approximately 80 to 100 of these petitions, in accordance with the
rule of four. The workload of the court would make it difficult for each justice to read each petition; instead, in days gone by, each justice's
law clerk
A law clerk, judicial clerk, or judicial assistant is a person, often a lawyer, who provides direct counsel and assistance to a lawyer or judge by Legal research, researching issues and drafting legal opinions for cases before the court. Judicial ...
s would read the petitions and surrounding materials, and provide a short summary of the case, including a recommendation as to whether the justice should vote to hear the case.
This situation changed in the early 1970s, at the instigation of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. In Burger's view, particularly in light of the increasing caseload, it was redundant to have nine separate memoranda prepared for each petition and thus (over objections from Justice
William Brennan who chose to personally review all incoming petitions) Burger and Associate Justices
Byron White,
Harry Blackmun,
Lewis Powell, and
William Rehnquist created the cert pool. Today, all justices except Justices
Samuel Alito and
Neil Gorsuch
Neil McGill Gorsuch ( ; born August 29, 1967) is an American jurist who serves as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. He was Neil Gorsuch Supreme Court ...
participate in the cert pool.
Alito withdrew from the pool procedure late in 2008,
and Gorsuch has declined to participate since joining the court in 2017.
The operation of the cert pool is as follows: Each participating justice places his or her clerks in the pool. A copy of each petition received by the court goes to the pool, is assigned to a random clerk from the pool, and that clerk then prepares and circulates a memo for ''all'' of the justices participating in the pool. The writing law clerk may ask his or her justice to call for a response to the petition, or any justice may call for a response after the petition is circulated.
It tends to fall to the
Chief Justice to "maintain" the pool when its workings go awry. Rehnquist chastised clerks for a number of practices, including memos that were tardy, too long, biased, left in unsecure locations, or swapped between chambers.
Criticisms
The cert pool remedies several problems, but creates others:
*The fate of a petition may be disproportionately affected by which chambers' clerk writes the pool memo. Certain types of petitions may be more likely to succeed in the hands of more conservative or liberal clerks.
*
Ken Starr, a former clerk to Warren Burger and solicitor general, has criticised the cert pool as having "unjustifiable influence" and being "unhealthily powerful", writing that "efficiency is achieved at the expense of informed judgment." Starr further argued that there was a "a hydraulic pressure to say no" while writing pool memos, stating that there were more benefits to recommending denials.
*
Lyle Denniston of ''
SCOTUSblog
''SCOTUSblog'' is a law blog written by lawyers, legal scholars, and law students about the Supreme Court of the United States (sometimes abbreviation, abbreviated "SCOTUS"). Formerly sponsored by Bloomberg Law and now owned by ''The Dispatch'' ...
'' has argued that the cert pool is partially responsible for the court's shrunken (by historical standards) docket.
*Memos prepared for an audience of nine (or however many justices participate in the pool) cannot be as candid as private communications within chambers;
moreover, they must be written in far more general terms than may be possible in memos between a justice and their clerk.
*Douglas A. Berman has argued that the cert pool results in a greater emphasis on capital cases on the court's
docket due to clerks not encountering them with the same frequency in the lower courts.
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Supreme Court of the United States