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26 Judges J. 18 (1987)
Ex Parte Communication

handle is hein.journals/judgej26 and id is 67 raw text is: JAD
Judicial Adn
American B

Chairman
Ernest S. Hayeck
Judge
District Court
Worcester, Massachusetts

ninistration Division
ar Association

EX PARTE COMMUNICATION
It is rare when items concerning the inner workings
of the judiciary and the judicial process attain the
status of front page lead items on the pages of such
national newspapers as the New York Times and the
Washington Post. However, as I pause to prepare
another chairman's column, such is the case involv-
ing the recent revelations concerning the commu-
nications between Mr. Philip Elman and the late
J ustice Felix Frankfurter relative to the United States
Supreme Court's decision in the historic school
segregation case of Brown v. Board of Education in
1954.
The catalyst for this attention was an article which
appears in the February 1987 issue of the Harvard
Law Review under the title The Solicitor General's
Office, Justice Frankfurter, and Civil Rights Liti-
gation, 1946-1960. (See 100 Harv. L. Rev. 817.) In
this article, actually an oral history interview, Mr.
Elman described his role as a former law clerk to
J ustice Frankfurter and his later conversations with
the justice after Mr. Elman had become a member
of the Solicitor General's staff, responsible for han-
dling all civil rights cases in the Supreme Court in
which the United States was involved as a party or
amicus curiae. While working in that position in the
Department of Justice, Mr Elman described holding
ongoing ex parte conversations with Justice Frank-
furter and discussed attempting to shape a strategy
in Brown that would insure a unanimous decision,
which was ultimately achieved in the case. Some fla-
vor of the objective sought may be gleaned from the
following excerpt from the Harvard article:
The Justices (except for Black and Douglas) were
deliberately pursuing a strategy of procrastina-
tion. The Court's strategy, and this was the
Frankfurter-Jackson strategy, was to delay, de-
lay, delay - putting off the issue as long as pos-
sible.
Q. That strategy has bothered quite a few ob-
servers since.
Elman: Any other strategy would have been dis-
astrous for everybody-the Court, the country,
and most sadly of all, the blacks themselves.
Frankfurter wanted the Court to deal with the
issue openly, directly, wisely, courageously, and
more than anything else, unanimously. He did
not want the segregation issue to be decided by
a fractured Court, as it then was; he did not
want a decision to go out with nine or six or
four opinions. He wanted the Court to stand
before the country on this issue united and

speaking in a single voice. He felt that whatever
it did had to go out to the country with an ap-
pearance of unity, so that the Court as an insti-
tution would best be able to withstand the
attacks that inevitably were going to be made
on it. And, what was crucial at that time-
1952-Frankfurter could not count five sure, or
even probable, votes for overruling Plessy. So
Frankfurter, along with Jackson, wanted to
postpone as long as he possibly could. (See 100
Harv. L. Rev. at 822.)
In the article, Elman goes on to recount how he
and Frankfurter held weekly Sunday evening tele-
phone conversations to discuss, among other things,
shifts in the mood of the Court and more signifi-
cantly, to plan the strategy and approach which
would most effectively garner the vote of each jus-
tice in accord with these shifting moods and mo-
mentums.
Following the publication of the article there has
been a veritable firestorm of criticism concerning
the situation. The thrust of the criticism is that the
kind of ex parte contact and communication dis-
closed in the Harvard article departed seriously from
prevailing standards ofjudicial ethics-then and now.
For certainly it has long been the traditional model
under our adversary system, that whatever a judge
learns of a case should be learned in the court-
room-where it might be subjected to searching
cross-examination by opposing counsel.
Justice Frankfurter was brilliant and ubiquitous,
as seen from his ongoing relationship with President
Franklin Roosevelt after Frankfurter took his seat
on the Court and as seen from his even more unique
ongoing relationship with Justice Brandeis while still
a professor at Harvard Law School. (See, e.g. Freed-
man, Roosevelt & Frankfurter, Their Correspond-
ence, 1928-1945; Little Brown, 1967; Murphy, The
Brandeis/Frankfurter Connection; Oxford Press.
1982.) Justice Frankfurter obviously did not feel cir-
cumscribed by tradition and orthodox restraints.
This was especially true where he deemed the cause
at issue-the eradication of racial discrimination in
the public schools-to be a moral cause of tran-
scending significance. Elman, for his part, believed
that despite changes in time, place and status. he, de
facto, remained Frankfurter's law clerk for life.
I do not address this situation here in order to
rekindle the embers of a footnote to history al-
most four decades behind us. However, one can cer-
tainly say that, if true, the kinds of ex parte
(Please turn to page 46)

Thle Judges' Journal

18

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