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How Many Sotomayor Opinions Were Overturned?

 

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Q: What percentage of Sonia Sotomayor's opinions have been overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court?

Have Judge Sotomayor's decisions really been overturned 80 percent of the time as Rush Limbaugh stated on May 26?

A: Three of her opinions have been overturned, which is 1.3 percent of all that she has written and 60 percent of those reviewed by the Supreme Court.

Of the majority opinions that Judge Sonia Sotomayor has authored since becoming an appellate judge in 1998, three of her appellate opinions have been overturned by the Supreme Court.

Our search for appellate opinions by Sotomayor on the LexisNexis database returned 232 cases. That's a reversal rate of 1.3 percent.

But only five of her decisions have been reviewed by the justices. Using five as a denominator, the rate comes out to 60 percent.

We have contacted Rush Limbaugh to ask how he came up with the figure he used recently when he said, "She has been overturned 80 percent by the Supreme Court." We'll update this item if we receive a response. In the week before President Barack Obama announced that he would nominate Sotomayor, the conservative Judicial Confirmation Network ran an Internet ad saying she had a "100 percent reversal rate," which is false. (We asked that group for back-up material, which a spokesman agreed to give us but which we never received; since Obama's announcement, the group has taken the ad down.)

In any case, 60 percent of the cases the Supreme Court has reviewed is not a particularly high number. In any given term, the Supreme Court normally reverses a higher percentage of the cases it hears. During its 2006-2007 term, for instance, the Court reversed or vacated (which, for our purposes here, mean the same thing) 68 percent of the cases before it. The rate was 73.6 percent the previous term.

In two of the three Sotomayor reversals, at least some of the more liberal justices dissented, agreeing with her holding.

One was a 5-4 decision in 2001 in Correctional Services Corporation v. Malesko, which involved an inmate who sought to sue a private contractor operating a halfway house on behalf of the Bureau of Prisons over injuries he sustained. Sotomayor said he could, but a majority of the justices disagreed.In another case, Sotomayor wrote that under the Clean Water Act, the Environmental Protection Agency could not use a cost-benefit analysis to determine the best technology available for drawing cooling water into power plants with minimal impact on aquatic life. By a vote of 6-3 this year, the Supreme Court ruled otherwise in Entergy v. Riverkeeper. The third reversal, in 2005, was a unanimous 8-0 decision in the case Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Dabit.Sotomayor had written that a class action securities suit brought in state court by a broker/stockholder was not preempted by the 1998 Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act. But the high court's opinion said it "would be odd, to say the least" if the law contained the exception that Sotomayor said it did.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule by the end of June on the much-discussed Ricci v. DeStefano case in which Sotomayor took part. It's not publicly known whether she wrote the unsigned, one-paragraph order in the reverse discrimination case involving firefighters in New Haven, Conn., to which all three of the judges hearing the case agreed. (That order later became an official opinion with the same wording at the behest of other 2nd Circuit judges.) The decision, upholding the ruling of the lower-court judge who first heard the case, said the city was justified in not certifying the results of an exam required for firefighters to be promoted after no African Americans scored highly enough to be considered.

(Note: We haven't analyzed cases in which Sotomayor merely voted with the majority, only those in which she is on record as having written the majority opinion. She also may have written some unsigned opinions or orders, such as the one in the Ricci case above, but we have no way of knowing if that's true or if so, how many she may have written.)
— Viveca Novak

Update, May 29: We wrote above that we didn't know how Rush Limbaugh had calculated that Sotomayor "has been overturned 80 percent by the Supreme Court." Since we posted, however, an alert reader has pointed us to something else Limbaugh said in the same May 26 show:

Rush: The Supreme Court has reversed Judge Sotomayor in four instances where it granted certiorari to review an opinion she authored. "In three of these reversals, the Court held that Judge Sotomayor erred in her statutory interpretation," meaning she goofed up on the law. She was overturned four times when she wrote the opinion, the lead opinion, and in three of the four cases the Supreme Court held that she erred in her statutory interpretation. The cases are Knight v. C.I.R., Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. v. Dabit, New York Times, Inc. v. Tasini, and Correctional Servs. Corp. v. Malesko. The cases are 2008, 2006, 2001, and 2001. So there you have it.

Four out of five – as we noted above, Sotomayor has had five appellate decisions reviewed by the Supreme Court – is 80 percent. But Limbaugh is wrong on his cases, and thus wrong in his calculation. First, in Knight v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Sotomayor's decision wasn't "overturned" at all. In fact, it was upheld unanimously , though the justices faulted her reasoning.

Second, New York Times v. Tasini was one of Sotomayor's 442 rulings as a district court judge. Limbaugh is correct that the Supreme Court upheld the appellate court ruling that had reversed her decision.

But we have not dived into her lower court jurisprudence, as opposed to her appellate majority opinions, nor have we seen a reliable analysis of it done by anyone else. We don't know how many of her decisions in district court were appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, or what their disposition was. And third, Limbaugh didn't include Entergy v.
Riverkeeper, which was a clear reversal by the justices. Eliminating the cases Limbaugh shouldn't have included and adding back in the one he should have brings us back to 60 percent.

Sources
Riverkeeper, Inc. v. EPA, 475 F.3d 83 (2007).
Dabit v. Merrill Lynch, 395 F.3d 25 (2005).
Ricci v. DeStefano, 530 F.3d 87 (2008).
Malesko v. Correctional Services Corp., 299 F.3d 374 (2000).
Correctional Services Corp. v. Malesko , 534 U.S. 61 (2001).
Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc . (Nos. 07-588, 07-589 and 07-597) (2008).
Merrill Lynch v. Dabit , 547 U.S. (2006).

© 2009

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: grayguy_1942 @ 07/28/2009 12:10:09 PM

    Posted By: I'm all in @ 06/29/2009 5:36:34 PM
    In the grand scheme of things most of us are really unaffected by the Supreme Court, despite what the Gun and Religeos Pac may say.

    Do you really believe that? I'll take the most obvious, Roe vs. Wade. That ruling weather you agree or disagree has changed our society. And I'll leave it's morality to each of you that read this.

    Roe vs. Wade, started as one woman wanting to terminate her pregnancy. This was denied by Wade representing the state of Texas. The Supreme Court ruled in her favor. Based on that ruling a new industry sprouted: abortion clinics.

    The last ruling by Sonamayor, if not overturned could have far reaching affects. How about instead of a white fireman it was a black fireman. Read this in the New York Time, black fireman not hired because not enough minorities applied for position.

    How about you and me at work. No promotion unless a certain amount of minorities apply for the same position. A little farfetched, agreed.

    But what number on minorities are needed before someone can be hired for a position? And are we talking about only black vs. white? Why not Asian? Why not Native American? Why not Hispanic? And what is the quantity of each.

    So, based on the above, we would need a certain number--unknown--of Asians, Native Americans, African Americans, Hispanics, apply for our job positions before we could be hired by our companies. Notice I did not include Caucasians--commonly known as whites.

    Now this may toast your noodle--Matrix--what about Irish Americans, Italian Americans, Polish Americans, etc.


  • Posted By: grayguy_1942 @ 07/28/2009 11:12:23 AM

    The point isn't really what she said about a Latino woman and white man. Personally that's her opinion and we all have opinions one way or the other. The problem as I see it, Sotomayor can't separate her opinions from the law--creating gray rulings.
    Now I'm not the sharpest knife in the draw, but, as I understand it, the supreme court does not go looking for rulings to overturn. I believe rulings are appealed and eventually work their way up to the court. Then they decide to review the ruling or not.
    Now would the number of overturned rulings by Sotomayor be greater if they were all appealed and went to the Supreme Court?
    Just because someone has a hard life and makes good does not mean they are the right person for the job. Look at the people you work with. Are they all good at what they do?


  • Posted By: Rush3041 @ 07/15/2009 10:42:11 PM

    The real point is the racist comments she made not once but several times. The point here is that she should not sit on that bench because of those remarks. If you think otherwise then you have nothing to say if a white man makes a similar statement and then is put in the same position. The simple fact is that had McCain won, and he was nominating some older white conservative who had made the statement that "A wise white man, based on the richness of his life experience, would reach a better conclusion than a woman of a minority race.", there is no way he would get confirmed. Nobody would say that the issue is his voting record. Nobody would say that it was OK for him to say that. Nobody would make excuses for him, or by his excuses when he tried to say that wasn't what he meant. Simple fact is, that one statement would have sunk his nomination. You don't solve racial equality problems by treating the races differently. You don't make excuses for impropriety. You solve racial problems by insisting that in all instances, the races be treated equally. Period.

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