JAMES PATTERSON McBAINE
HONORS MOOT COURT COMPETITION

 
FINAL ROUND

 

April 13, 1998
6:00 p.m.

 

Booth Auditorium

University of California, Berkeley


This evening:

IN THE
UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT

For the Petitioners,
JACOB S. LAKE D.D.S., et al.,

ANDREW MACKAY

v.

For the Respondents,
OXANA ANISIMOV, et al.,

MICHAEL KWUN
 

BEST BRIEF AWARDS

ANNE MCMILLAN
Best Brief

JASON SKAGGS
Runner-Up, Best Brief


MEMBERS OF THE COURT

THE HONORABLE CHARLES FRIED
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court

THE HONORABLE D. LOWELL JENSEN
United States District Court
for the Northern District of California

THE HONORABLE PATRICIA WALD
United States Court of Appeals
for the D.C. Circuit
 

MARSHALL

MARY OSE
 

McBAINE COMPETITION DIRECTORS

Rebecca Fisher
Elizabeth Riles


STATEMENT OF THE CASE

This year's McBaine Honors Competition focuses on the constitutionality of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA), which was passed by Congress in 1994 to provide a cause of action under federal law for victims of gender-motivated violence. Under VAWA, a person who is the victim of "gender-motivated violence" may bring a civil lawsuit against his or her attacker for damages, an injunction, and/or declaratory relief.

Under our dual system of federal and state governance, Congress is restricted to the exercise of powers expressly granted to it by the Constitution. Consequently, for VAWA to be valid, it must be the product of the valid exercise of one or more Congressional powers under the Constitution. In passing VAWA, Congress stated that it was exercising two distinct constitutional powers. VAWA is constitutional if it passes muster as a valid exercise of either power.

Congress first justified VAWA under its power to regulate interstate commerce. Since the mid-1930s, the Supreme Court has interpreted this power to mean that Congress can regulate any activity that has a "substantial effect" on interstate commerce. Until 1995, the Supreme Court did not strike down a single Congressional Act that was premised on the power to regulate interstate commerce. In that year, however, in U.S. v. Lopez, the Court struck down the Gun Free School Zones Act, which had made it a federal crime to possess a gun near a school. The Court found the connection between possession of guns near schools and interstate commerce was too attenuated to justify the Act under Congress' commerce power.

Congress also justified VAWA under its power, granted by the Fourteenth Amendment, to remedy failures by the states to protect their citizens' right to equal protection of the laws. Congressional exercise of this power must be directed against state action and cannot reach conduct that is purely private in nature. Thus, to be valid under this power, VAWA must be characterized as an attempt to remedy the failure of states to provide equal protection to persons who are victims of gender motivated violence. The most important recent decision of the Supreme Court in this area is the 1997 case of City of Boerne v. Flores, where the Court struck down the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. That Act, which purported to address the failure of the states to sufficiently guarantee religious freedom, could not stand under the Fourteenth Amendment (in part) because there was no evidence that the states had enacted any laws unfairly impinging on religion within the last 40 years.

In the case before the Court today, respondent Oxana Anisimov was an employee who worked in the dental offices of petitioner Jacob S. Lake. She sued Lake under VAWA, claiming that he had committed four crimes of gender-motivated violence against her, culminating in his rape of her at one of his former offices. Lake has challenged the constitutionality of VAWA, arguing that the Act cannot stand as either a valid exercise of Congress' power to regulate interstate commerce, or of its power to remedy failures of the states to guarantee the equal protection rights of their citizens. In today's argument, counsel for the petitioner will attempt to discredit VAWA on both grounds, while counsel for the respondent will be arguing that VAWA is the valid exercise of either commerce power, the Fourteenth Amendment power, or both.


BIOGRAPHIES OF THE JUSTICES

ASSOCIATE JUSTICE CHARLES FRIED
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court

Associate Justice Charles Fried was appointed to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in 1995. He graudated Phi Beta Kappa from Princeton University in 1956 and received his LL.B. from Columbia University in 1960.

Prior to his appointment, he served under the Reagan administration in the following capacities: Counsel to the White House Office of Policy Development in 1982; Counsel to the Department of Transportation in 1981 and 1982; Litigator at the Department of Justice in 1983; and Solicitor General form 1985 to 1989. He also served as Special Counsel to the Treasury Department from 1961 to 1962.

Charles Fried is also a leading constitutional law scholar. While a professor at Harvard Law School, he published numerous treatises and was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1971 and 1972. He is currently a Professor Emeritus at Harvard Law School.
 

JUDGE D. LOWELL JENSEN
United States District Court
for the Northern District of California

Judge D. Lowell Jensen was appointed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California by President Ronald Reagan in 1986. He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1949 and received his LL.B. from Boalt Hall in 1952.

Prior to his appointment to the bench, Judge Jensen served as District Attorney for Alameda County from 1969 to 1981. He also served as Deputy Attorney General at the Department of Justice from 1984 to 1986. Judge Jensen has authored several publications on criminal law and has taught seminars for prosecutors. He was named Distinguished Alumnist of the Year by Boalt Hall in 1983.
 

JUDGE PATRICIA WALD
United States Court of Appeals
for the D.C. Circuit

Judge Wald was appointed to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in July 1979 and served as its Chief Judge from July 1986 to January 1991. A graduate of Connecticut College (B.A. 1948) and Yale Law School (LL.B. 1951), she served as a law clerk to Judge Jerome N. Frank of the Second Circuit following her graduation from Yale.

Prior to her appointment to the bench, Judge Wald served as Assistant Attorney General for Legislative Affairs in the Department of Justice from 1977 to 1979. She was an attorney for the Mental Health Law Project from 1972 to 1977, and the Project's Litigation Director from 1975 to 1977, as well as an attorney with the Neighborhood Legal Services Program and the Center for Law and Social Policy in Washington and co-chair of the Ford Foundation's Drug Abuse Research Project. She is a Council Member and Second Vice President of the American Law Institute and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
 


BIOGRAPHIES OF THE FINALISTS

As PETITIONER,

ANDREW MACKAY

Andrew MacKay is a third year student from Novato, California. In 1995, he graduated from Yale University summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, with distinction in his English major. He also received the George A. Schrader, Jr. Prize for the highest grade point average in his residential college.

Andrew is a member of the Moot Court Board. He has received the Prosser Prize in California Marital Property, as well as a Moot Court Commendation.

In August, Andrew will marry his fiancee Dee Do, who is studying to be a teacher. Andrew will join the Oakland office of Donahue, Gallagher, Woods & Wood this fall.
 

As RESPONDENT,

MICHAEL KWUN

Michael Kwun graduated from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor with an interdisciplinary degree. After receiving his degree, he moved to San Francisco to work for the Institute for Global Communications, a non-profit Internet service provider. While there, he witnessed the blossoming of the World Wide Web, and co-produced IGC's first website, an electronic version of the League of Conservation Voters' annual congressional scorecard.

During the summer after his first year in law school, Michael worked for the Regional Center of the East Bay, leading workshops on naturalization and working on a class action against the INS on behalf of immigrants with disabilities. Last summer, he clerked for Rudy, Exelrod, Zieff & True, a plaintiff-side employment litigation firm in San Francisco. Currently, Michael is one of the Executive Editors for the Berkeley Women's Law Journal. Last year, he was BWLJ's Production Editor, and for the fall semester he was also the Web Editor for the Berkeley Technology Law Journal. In addition, Michael has been active with the Workers' Rights Clinic, and clerked with the Berkeley Community Law Center's housing unit in his second year.

After graduation, Michael will join Christensen, Miller, Fink, Jacobs, Glaser, Weil & Shapiro in Los Angeles as a litigation associate. After a year at the firm, he will take a leave of absence to clerk for the Honorable Claudia Wilken, United States District Court, Northern District of California, in Oakland.


JUDGES OF PREVIOUS ROUNDS

Peter Anderson
Jeff Bleich
J. Thomas Bowen
Kathryn Burke
Jocelyn Burton
John Cardoza
Ray Cardozo
Michael Charlson
Prof. Jesse Choper
Louis Cisz
Chris Crook
Daniel Doporto
Harry Dorfman
Jonathan Eisenberg
Prof. David Feller
Prof. Willy Fletcher  
Gary Fry
James Gerien
Judy Gold
Ann Hartman
Arthur Hilman
Cheri Ho
Sam Kamin
Dean Herma Hill Kay  
Jessica Lanning
Christopher Leslie
Linda Lipscomb
Stu Mackey
Mia Mazza
Dave McGowan
Miranda McGowan
Heather Meeker
Ken Morris
Marie Park
Dan Purcell
Prof. Eric Rakowski
Robyn Roberts
Prof. Dan Rodriguez
James Rosenquist
Jeff Ross
Andrew Sabey
Ethan Schulman
Eric Silber
Jessica Takano
Hon. Leslie Tchaikovsky
Jon Tigar
Michael Von Loewenfeldt
Garner Weng
Joan Wolff
Margaret Wu
Prof. John Yoo

 

BRIEF GRADERS

Professor John Dwyer
Assistant Dean Leslie Oster
Jody Rosen Knower
Eric Silber
Professor Jan Vetter
 

FACULTY LECTURES

Professor Jesse Choper
Professor John Dwyer
Paul Fogel, Esq.
Professor Daniel Rodriguez
Professor John Yoo


1998 McBAINE PARTICIPANTS

Vanessa Alvarez
Linda Beresford
Erica Bullock
Vince Chhabria
Erica Craven
Stephanie Duiven
Andrew Gustafson
Matthew Hinks
Robert Holzinger-Gamboa  
Peter Huang
Dorian Jung
Charles Kim
Michael Kwun
Monica Larkins
Thomas Loughlin
Andrew MacKay
Elizabeth Martins
Anne McMillan
Jan Morimoto
Ryan Sakamoto
Jason Skaggs

 

SPECIAL THANKS TO:

Assistant Dean Leslie Oster  
Prof. Jesse Choper
Christopher Leslie
Sam Kamin
Prof. John Dwyer
Dan Purcell
Mary Ose
Scott Willoughby
Jody Rosen Knower
Carol Mitchell
Nancy Cooley
Prof. Daniel Rodriguez
Robyn Roberts
Kate Rubin
Prof. Jan Vetter
Eric Silber
Dylan Clements
Kellie Aki Takanaka
Dave Petersen
Brian Mesibov

 

AWARDS DONATED BY:

Michael Hartmann, Esq.

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