Saturday, October 10, 2020

Pennsylvania Appeals Court Finds Life in Tenth Amendment and Limit to Commerce Clause for PLCAA


Image from Pennsylvania Courts Public Domain, Cropped and scaled by Dean Weingarten

On 20 March, 2016, 32 year old Joshua Hudec of Mount Pleasant, left his three children and house in the hands of an 18-year-old babysitter. The babysitter apparently left 13-year-old James Gustavson and 14-year-old John Bunsworth  into the home. In the home was a Springfield XD pistol.

The babysiter is said to have asked Bunsworth to point the pistol at Gustavson in order to scare Gustavson into leaving. Bunsworth fired the pistol, killing Gustavson. He later claimed the magazine was removed from the pistol, so he thought it was unable to fire, and he did not mean to fire it. He was sentenced to involuntary manslaughter in juvenile court. Joshua Hudec was charged and pled guilty to five counts of child endangerment and reckless endangerment, to serve between 11.5 and 23 months in prison. 

These details were not included in the case before the court. 

In the court findings, only the fact the 14-year-old obtained the handgun in the Hudec household, then subsequently shot and killed Gustavson, is in the court document. It is accepted as fact that Bunsworth, the 14-year-old, told the truth when he claimed the magazine was out of the gun, and he assumed the gun was unloaded because the magazine had been removed. 

The fact the pistol could fire with the magazine removed is the basis for the liability lawsuit.

0n 28 September, 2020, the Superior Court of Pennsylvania (one of two state courts of appeals in the state of Pennsylvania) issued an opinion which held the United States Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA) was unconstitutional under the Tenth Amendment, the Commerce Clause, and the Fifth Amendment. The Court also held the Fourteenth Amendment and the Second Amendment could not render the PLCAA constitutional.

Because the United States government has intervened in the case, to protect the PLCAA, it is almost certain the case will be appealed to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. From Gustafson v. Springfield, Inc. and United States of America, Intervenor:

 The Gustafsons responded that the PLCAA does not apply here. In the alternative, they argued the Act is unconstitutional, because it (1) overrides Tenth Amendment principles of federalism,(2) cannot be sustained under the Commerce Clause,5 and (3) violates the Fifth Amendment. Upon learning of the Gustafsons’ constitutional attacks against its statute, the United States of America (“Federal Government”) intervened to defend the PLCAA. It claimed Congress properly enacted the PLCAA under the Commerce Clause and Bill of Rights.

With the probable appointment of Judge Amy Coney Barret to the Supreme Court, this case becomes interesting. The Tenth Amendment, federalism, and Commerce Clause claims are strong and well argued. From the Pennsylvania decision:

We hold that merely because, at some point in time, that gun passed through interstate commerce,does not give Congress perpetual authority to regulate any harm it may cause

 (snip)

At that point, the activity surrounding the use or misuse of products reverts to a local matter, subject to state, not federal, regulation. This is especially true where, as here, the product kills someone who did not even purchase it.

The idea the gun killed someone is absurd, on its face. It would have been laughed out of any court before tort law escaped most regulation, starting in the 1970's. The gun did not point itself at a human being. The gun did not pull its own trigger.

The principle that the federal government has limited powers over state regulation is sound. The opinion states on page 43-44 that application of state law is in no sense an economic activity. The court cites the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) in the Lopez decision. But Lopez has been rendered mostly moot since it was written. Lopez was a sound decision, a start in limiting federal power under the Commerce Clause.  

It is not so clear that state law allowing lawsuits against corporations in other states is not intruding into federal power to regulate interstate commerce. That state power would not have been accepted in 1960. In 1960, the ability to sue entities in other states was severely limited, as was the ability to sue corporations on frivilous notions of defective products which performed as intended.

A clarification based on what the states may do or not do in tort law, beyond their boundaries, might be in order. The power of the litigation lobby of trial lawyers is great. It would be difficult to overcome.

The opinion then claims the Second Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment do not apply, because gun manufacturers are not "people" for the purposes of the Bill of Rights. The opinion does not mention Citizens United, where SCOTUS held exactly the opposite. 

Organized groups of people are still people, at least as far as the First Amendment is concerned. If they were not, the First Amendment would not apply to CNN, Fox News, or AmmoLand. Much the same logic applies to the Second Amendment.

Tenth Amendment challenges are exceedingly rare, as are state challenges to the Commerce Clause. 

The optimum result for this lawsuit would be to make it to the Supreme Court; then have SCOTUS uphold the PLCAA via the Fourteenth Amendment and the Second Amendment, but fail to be upheld by the Tenth Amendment and the Commerce Clause. 

An opinion which did so would reinforce federalism and the Bill of Rights.  Optimistically, the privileges and immunities clause of the Fourteenth Amendment would be invoked.

Lopez was decided in 1995. Justice Thomas and Justice Breyer were on the court. Thomas was enthusiastically in favor of the decision, as were Justices Scalia and Kennedy, O'Conner and Rehnquist. Jusice Breyer dissented, as did Justices Ginsburg, Stevens and Souter.

The court is decidedly more originalist and textualist now than it was in 1995. It is not inconceivable that Justices Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, Barret, and possibly Roberts, would reach such an opinion.

It may be a good time to reinforce placing limits on the Commerce Clause while limiting state power to use torts to regulate firearms out of legal existence. 

Realistically, the case is likely to be decided on only one of the Constitutional issues mentioned.  It could easily be struck down by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court; appealed to SCOTUS, with SCOTUS refusing to grant a writ of certiorari,  killing the appeal.

©2020 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

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3 comments:

ScienceABC123 said...

Getting back to the original action... The argument of a person who doesn't know how guns work using the gun and killing another person is not a logical reason for holding the gun manufacturer liable for the killing. If someone claimed they didn't know bullets came out of the gun barrel because they never saw a bullet come out of the gun barrel only smoke also be used to hold the gun manufacturer liable for a killing? Absurd!

Anonymous said...

Another angle on this is the tenth amendment Limits states to any thing covered in the federal constitution is not subject to any state regulation. The stated have no authority to amend the federal constitution. there fore since the second amendment is in the federal constitution states have no authority to amend the second amendment , There fore all state gun laws that have more or less than the 26 words exactly as written in the second amendment are null and void. Since the Second amendment has never been amended to change "the rights of the citizen to keep and bare arms shall not be infringed" any federal gun laws are also null and void. To amend the second amendment requires a ratified amendment to the second amendment ratified by the people to change even one word, even a punctuation mark. there fore all NGCA's, FFA's are unconstitutional. Look up the word INFRINGE. All inclusive is written there, any thing related is written there. The constitution was written in English of the day and it means exactly what it says. It took many months to write the constitution and every word written was written for it's exact meaning Words and punctuation marks were seriously argued over. Read the notes letters and floor arguments at the national archives for reference. I have.

Anonymous said...

It matters that politicians have ignored the limitations and mandate of the constitution for many decades. Gun registration violates the forth amendment right to privacy The constitution was written to limit the power of government both state and federal. Government has no authority to increase it's own power or to infringe on any of our rights. The tenth amendment is for protection of all of our un enumerated rights , those not directly addressed. That is what restoring the constitution is all about. Too many laws passed for political purposes.