Jump to content

John T. Noonan Jr.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by KasparBot (talk | contribs) at 18:29, 19 April 2016 (migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

John Noonan
Senior Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Assumed office
December 27, 1996
Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
In office
December 17, 1985 – December 27, 1996
Appointed byRonald Reagan
Preceded bySeat established
Succeeded byMarsha Berzon
Personal details
Born (1926-10-24) October 24, 1926 (age 97)
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Alma materHarvard University
St John's College, Cambridge
Catholic University of America

John Thomas Noonan, Jr. (born October 24, 1926) is a Senior United States federal judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, with chambers in San Francisco, California.

Personal and education

Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Noonan attended the John D. Runkle School and the Rivers School.[1] Noonan entered Harvard University in 1944 and graduated summa cum laude two years later with a B.A. in English.[1][2][3] While at Harvard he wrote for the Harvard Crimson and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.[2][3] After a year at St. John's College, Cambridge, Noonan matriculated at The Catholic University of America, from which he received an M.A. in 1949 and a Ph.D. in 1951, both in philosophy.[4][5] In 1954, he received an LL.B. from Harvard Law School, where he served on the Harvard Law Review.[4][5]

Noonan has been married to art historian Mary Lee Noonan (née Bennett) since 1967.[3][6][7] They have three children.[7][8][9]

Professional

From 1954 to 1955, Noonan worked as Special Staff to the United States National Security Council, assisting then National Security Advisor Robert Cutler.[4] In 1955, Noonan entered private practice, working for the Boston law firm of Herrick & Smith.[2] From 1958 to 1962, he served as Chairman of the Brookline Redevelopment Authority.[2]

In 1960, Noonan joined the faculty at the University of Notre Dame Law School.[2] He was tenured three years later.[2] Noonan was appointed, largely on account of his book Contraception, to the papal commission established by Pope Paul VI to investigate the question of birth control.[3] In 1966, Noonan moved to Boalt Hall, the law school of the University of California, Berkeley, where he is Robbins Professor of Law Emeritus.[2][4][10]

Noonan was the 1984 recipient of the Laetare Medal, awarded annually since 1883 by Notre Dame University in recognition of outstanding service to the Roman Catholic Church through a distinctively Catholic contribution in the recipient's profession. Noonan has served as a consultant for several agencies in the Catholic Church, including Pope Paul VI’s Commission on Problems of the Family, and the U.S. Catholic Conference’s committees on moral values, law and public policy, law and life issues. He also has been director of the National Right to Life Committee.[11]

On October 16, 1985, President Ronald Reagan appointed Noonan to the newly created 27th seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, created by 98 Stat. 333.[4] Noonan was confirmed by United States Senate on December 16, 1985, and received his commission the following day.[4] He took senior status on December 27, 1996.[4]

Noonan's former law clerks include University of Notre Dame Professor M. Cathleen Kaveny,[12] WNYC reporter Ailsa Chang,[13] California Superior Court Judge Allison M. Danner,[14] U.S. District Judge Brian M. Morris, poet and lawyer Monica Youn,[15] and Dean of Washington University School of Law Nancy Staudt.[16]

Noteworthy Rulings

  • Lazo-Majano v. INS, 813 F.2d 1432 (9th Cir. 1987). Noonan, joined by Judge Harry Pregerson, held that Olympia Lazo-Majano's abuser, a Salvadoran army sergeant who had repeatedly beaten, raped, and threatened her, had imputed to Lazo-Majano the political opinion that she was a subversive. Lazo-Majano had, therefore, suffered persecution on account of her political opinion, which entitled her to asylum. Noonan wrote:

Even if she had no political opinion and was innocent of a single reflection on the government of her country, the cynical imputation of political opinion to her is what counts under both statutes. In deciding whether anyone has a well-founded fear of persecution or is in danger of losing life or liberty because of a political opinion, one must continue to look at the person from the perspective of the persecutor. If the persecutor thinks the person guilty of a political opinion, then the person is at risk.

At the 30th anniversary of the Harvard Immigration & Refugee Clinical Program, at which Noonan gave the keynote address, Harvard Law School Clinical Professor Deborah Anker noted that the Lazo-Majano decision had inspired all her work.[17]
  • EEOC v. Townley Eng'r & Mfg. Co., 859 F.2d 610 (9th Cir. 1988). The Ninth Circuit held that Townley Engineering and Manufacturing Company, a closely held corporation whose founders made a covenant with God that their business "would be a Christian, faith-operated business," could not require employees to attend prayer services. The company was indifferent to whether employees prayed: employees could, if they chose, wear earplugs, read, or sleep. Noonan dissented. Anticipating the Supreme Court of the United States's opinion in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, 573 U.S. __ (2014), Noonan wrote:

The First Amendment, guaranteeing the free exercise of religion to every person within the nation, is a guarantee that Townley Manufacturing Company rightly invokes. Nothing in the broad sweep of the amendment puts corporations outside its scope. Repeatedly and successfully, corporations have appealed to the protection the Religious Clauses afford or authorize. Just as a corporation enjoys the right of free speech guaranteed by the First Amendment, so a corporation enjoys the right guaranteed by the First Amendment to exercise religion. The First Amendment does not say that only one kind of corporation enjoys this right. The First Amendment does not say that only religious corporations or only not-for-profit corporations are protected. The First Amendment does not authorize Congress to pick and choose the persons or the entities or the organizational forms that are free to exercise their religion. All persons--and under our Constitution all corporations are persons--are free. A statute cannot subtract from their freedom.

Id. at 623 (citations omitted).
  • Harris v. Vazquez, 901 F.2d 724 (9th Cir. 1990). Noonan stayed the execution of Robert Alton Harris, holding that a hearing should be held to determine whether Harris had received competent psychiatric assistance in his defense.[18] Some lauded Noonan's ruling. The Los Angeles Times' editorial board wrote, "By granting convicted killer Robert Alton Harris a stay of execution Friday, Judge John Noonan of the U.S. Court of Appeals not only vindicated Americans' traditional confidence in the integrity of the federal bench but also demonstrated the difficulty of imposing a death sentence with complete confidence in its fairness."[19] Others did not. California Governor George Deukmejian stated at a press conference that he "share[d] with most Californians disappointment and great frustration with the action taken by the Court."[18] Ultimately, the Supreme Court of the United States ordered the Ninth Circuit to stop issuing stays of execution, see Miscellaneous Order, 503 U.S. 1000 (1992), and Harris was executed.[20]
  • United States v. Johnson, 956 F.2d 894 (9th Cir. 1992). Noonan held that a defendant was permitted to introduce battered woman's syndrome in an attempt to mitigate her sentence for a drug offense: "Our own law recognizes that for a substantial period of time a brutal man may subject women to severe psychological stress such that they failed to escape or cry out for help when in a public place because they lacked sufficient ego strength, self-confidence and willpower when they were in the threatening shadow of [the man's] complete domination over them.... [W]hat is required is for the fact-finder to determine whether, given the experience and psychological makeup of this defendant, she feared to leave her criminal ways and obeyed from fear the criminal who directed her conduct."
  • Compassion in Dying v. Washington, 49 F.3d 586 (9th Cir. 1995). Noonan, joined by Judge Diarmuid O'Scannlain, issued a ruling upholding a Washington state law banning assisted suicide. Noonan ended the opinion with this:

Compassion, according to the reflections of Prince Myshkin, is "the most important, perhaps the sole law of human existence." Feodor Dostoevsky, The Idiot, 292 (Alan Myers, trans.) (1991). In the vernacular, compassion is trumps. No one can read the accounts of the sufferings of the deceased plaintiffs supplied by their declarations, or the accounts of the sufferings of their patients supplied by the physicians, without being moved by them. No one would inflict such sufferings on another or want them inflicted on himself; and since the horrors recounted are those that could attend the end of life anyone who reads of them must be aware that they could be attendant on his own death. The desire to have a good and kind way of forestalling them is understandably evident in the declarations of the plaintiffs and in the decision of the district court. Compassion is a proper, desirable, even necessary component of judicial character; but compassion is not the most important, certainly not the sole law of human existence. Unrestrained by other virtues, as The Idiot illustrates, it leads to catastrophe. Justice, prudence, and fortitude are necessary too. Compassion cannot be the compass of a federal judge. That compass is the Constitution of the United States. Where, as here in the case of Washington, the statute of a state comports with that compass, the validity of the statute must be upheld.

The case was reheard by the court sitting en banc which, in an opinion by Judge Stephen Reinhardt, reversed. See Compassion in Dying v. Washington, 49 F.3d 586 (9th Cir. 1996). The Supreme Court of the United States granted certiorari and reversed the Ninth Circuit. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702 (1997).
  • United States v. Kyllo, 190 F.3d 1041 (9th Cir. 1999). The Ninth Circuit held that the government's use of a thermal imager was not a "search" within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Noonan dissented. Comparing the thermal imager to a telescope, Noonan wrote that "[i]n each case the amplification of the senses by technology defeats the homeowner's expectation of privacy. The government is not entitled to defeat this expectation by technological means." Id. at 1048. The Supreme Court agreed with Noonan, and reversed 5-4. See Kyllo v. United States, 533 U.S. 27 (2001).
  • United States v. Arizona, 641 F.3d 339 (9th Cir. 2011). The Ninth Circuit upheld a decision by Judge Susan Bolton, which blocked parts of the Arizona SB 1070 law targeting immigrants. Concurring, Noonan wrote: "For those sympathetic to immigrants to the United States, it is a challenge and a chilling foretaste of what other states might attempt."[21]
  • United States v. Black et al., 733 F.3d 294 (9th Cir. 2013). The court affirmed the denial of defendants' motions to dismiss their convictions. The defendants had argued that in scripting from start to finish a reverse sting operation, the government had overreached. Noonan dissented, writing:

Massively involved in the manufacture of the crime, the ATF's actions constitute conduct disgraceful to the federal government. It is not a function of our government to entice into criminal activity unsuspecting people engaged in lawful conduct; not a function to invent a fiction in order to bait a trap for the innocent; not a function to collect conspirators to carry out a script written by the government. As the executive branch of our government has failed to disavow this conduct, it becomes the duty of the judicial branch to refuse to accept these actions as legitimate elements of a criminal case in a federal court.

The majority, consisting of Judges Raymond Fisher and Susan Graber, denied defendants' petitions for rehearing en banc. Judge Stephen Reinhardt, joined by Chief Judge Alex Kozinski, dissented from the denial of rehearing en banc. Reinhardt wrote:

The Black cases require us to address the limits on how our government may treat its citizens. They pose the question whether the government may target poor, minority neighborhoods and seek to tempt their residents to commit crimes that might well result in their escape from poverty. Equally important, these cases force us to consider the continued vitality of the outrageous government conduct doctrine itself. The majority opinion decides all of these issues incorrectly. Further, despite its claims to the contrary, the majority’s reasoning does virtually nothing to caution the government about overreaching. Instead, it sends a dangerous signal that courts will uphold law enforcement tactics even though their threat to values of equality, fairness, and liberty is unmistakable.

See United States v. Black et al., Nos. 11-10036, 11-10037, 11-10039, 11-10077 (9th Cir. May 2, 2014).

Selected honors and awards

Publications

Noonan is a prolific and wide-ranging author. To quote one commentator:

[Noonan] has written a number of important studies about the interaction of Catholic moral doctrine and law, including comprehensive studies concerning contraception, marriage and divorce, and abortion. . . . He has written important studies of legal and judicial ethics, judicial and legal biography, the privilege against self-incrimination, American slave law, capital punishment, abortion, the legal and moral dimensions of physician-assisted suicide, the use of the constitutional convention as a means of amending the Constitution, marriage and family law, the emergence and development of an anti-bribery ethic, law reviews, legal philosophy, the Judiciary Act of 1789, and political affairs and theory.[26]

Noonan's major publications include:

  • The Scholastic Analysis of Usury (Harvard 1957) (ISBN 0-674-79170-3)
  • Contraception: A History of Its Treatment by the Catholic Theologians and Canonists (Harvard 1968) (ISBN 0-674-16853-4)
  • The Morality of Abortion: Legal and Historical Perspectives (Harvard 1970) (ISBN 0-674-58725-1) (editor)
  • Power to Dissolve: Lawyers and Marriages in the Courts of the Roman Curia (Harvard 1972) (ISBN 0-674-69575-5)
  • Persons and Masks of the Law: Cardozo, Holmes, Jefferson and Wythe as Makers of the Masks (California 1975) (ISBN 0-520-23523-1)
  • A Private Choice: Abortion in America in the Seventies (Free Press 1979) (ISBN 0-02-923160-4)
  • Bribes: The Intellectual History of a Moral Idea (California 1984) (ISBN 0-02-922880-8)
  • The Antelope: The Ordeal of the Recaptured Africans in the Administrations of John Quincy Adams & James Monroe (California 1990) (ISBN 0-520-03319-1)
  • Professional and Personal Responsibilities of the Lawyer (Foundation Press 1997) (ISBN 1-56662-962-4) (casebook editor, with Richard W. Painter)
  • The Lustre of Our Country: The American Experience of Religious Freedom (California 1998) (ISBN 0-520-20997-4)
  • Religious Freedom: History, Cases, and Other Materials on the Interaction of Religion and Government (Foundation Press 2001) (ISBN 1-56662-962-4) (casebook editor, with Edward McGlynn Gaffney)
  • Narrowing the Nation's Power: The Supreme Court Sides with the States (California 2002) (ISBN 0-520-23574-6)
  • A Church That Can And Cannot Change: The Development of Catholic Moral Teaching (Notre Dame 2005) (ISBN 0-268-03603-9)

References

  1. ^ a b Noonan, John Thomas Jr. (1998). The Lustre of Our Country: the American Experience of Religious Freedom. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press. pp. 15, 18, 23, 24, 25. ISBN 0-520-20997-4.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Almanac of the Federal Judiciary. Aspen. 2011. ISBN 9780735568891. Retrieved December 13, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d Starr, Kevin. "Judge John T. Noonan, Jr.: A Brief Biography". Journal of Law and Religion. 11 (1): 151–176. doi:10.2307/1051628. Retrieved 14 December 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g John T. Noonan Jr. at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
  5. ^ a b "John T. Noonan, Jr". The Notre Dame Center for Ethics & Culture. Retrieved December 13, 2013.
  6. ^ McGreevy, John T. (November 17, 2000). "A case of doctrinal development". Commonweal. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
  7. ^ a b "NOONAN, John T(homas), Jr. 1926-". Contemporary Authors. 2005. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
  8. ^ "Dixie Rodgers and John Noonan". The New York Times. October 2, 2005. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
  9. ^ "Rebecca Noonan and Stuart Murray". The New York Times. May 8, 2005. Retrieved April 26, 2011.
  10. ^ "John T. Noonan". Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies at the University of Southern California. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  11. ^ "Former Laetare Medalist Judge John T. Noonan to deliver address at Notre Dame's Commencement". Notre Dame News. 30 April 2009. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  12. ^ "M. Cathleen Kaveny". University of Notre Dame Law School. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  13. ^ "Ailsa Chang". WNYC. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  14. ^ "Vanderbilt Law School Faculty: Judge Allison M. Danner". Vanderbilt University Law School. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  15. ^ "Monica Youn". Brennan Center for Justice. Retrieved September 8, 2014.
  16. ^ "Nancy Staudt". Washington University School of Law. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
  17. ^ "Ninth Circuit judge recounts landmark case at HIRC 30th anniversary". July 22, 2014. Retrieved September 8, 2014.
  18. ^ a b "High Court Backs Stay of Execution". The New York Times. April 30, 1990. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  19. ^ "The Case of Robert Alton Harris". The Los Angeles Times. March 31, 1990. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  20. ^ "Witness to the Execution: A Macabre, Surreal Event". The Los Angeles Times. April 22, 1992. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  21. ^ Markon, Jerry (April 11, 2011). "Court upholds block on parts of Arizona immigration law". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  22. ^ "John T. Noonan". Library of Congress Bicentennial. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  23. ^ "Messenger Lectures". Cornell University. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  24. ^ "John Thomas Noonan Jr". Dominican School of Philosophy & Theology. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  25. ^ "Villanova Presents Judge John T. Noonan, Jr. with Civitas Dei Medal". Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  26. ^ Reid, Jr., Charles. "The Fundamental Freedom: Judge John T. Noonan, Jr's Historiography of Religious Liberty". Marquette L. Rev. 83 (2): 367–433. Retrieved 13 December 2013.

External links

Legal offices
New seat Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
1985–1996
Succeeded by