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86 Fordham L. Rev. 697 (2017-2018)
Why Civil and Criminal Procedure Are So Different: A Forgotten History

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      WHY CIVIL AND CRIMINAL PROCEDURE
                     ARE SO DIFFERENT:
                  A FORGOTTEN HISTORY

                              Ion Meyn  *

   Much  has been written about the origins of civil procedure. Yet little is
known  about the origins of criminal procedure, even though it governs how
millions of cases in federal and state courts are litigated each year. This
Article's examination of criminal procedure's origin story questions the
prevailing notion  that civil and criminal procedure   require different
treatment. The Article's starting point is the first draft of the Federal Rules
of Criminal Procedure-confidential in 1941 and since forgotten. The draft
reveals that reformers of criminal procedure turned to the new rules of civil
procedure  for guidance.   The contents of this draft shed light on an
extraordinary moment:  reformers initially proposed that all litigation in the
United States, civil and criminal, be governed by a unified procedural code.
The implementation of this original vision of a unified code would have had
dramatic implications for how criminal law is practiced and perceived today.
The  advisory committee's final product in 1944,  however, set criminal
litigation on a very different course. Transcripts of the committee's initial
meetings reveal that the final code of criminal procedure emerged from the
clash of ideas presented by two committee members, James  Robinson and
Alexander Holtzoff  Holtzoffs traditional views would ultimately persuade
other members, cleaving criminal procedure from civil procedure.
   Since then, differences in civil and criminal litigation have become
entrenched and normalized.  Yet, at the time the Federal Rules of Criminal
Procedure  were drafted, a unified code was not just a plausible alternative
but the only proposal. The draft's challenge to the prevailing notion that
civil and criminal wrongs inherently require different procedural treatment
is a critical contribution to the growing debate over whether the absence of
discovery in criminal procedure  is justified in light of discovery tools
afforded by civil procedure. The first draft of criminal procedure, which
called for uniform rules to govern proceedings in all civil and criminal
courtrooms, suggests the possibility that current resistance to unification is,
to a significant degree, historically contingent.


* Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin Law School. The author expresses special
thanks to Joseph Hoffmann, Carissa Hessick, Brad Snyder, David Schwartz, Daniel
McConkie, Brooke Coleman, Anthony O'Rourke, Howard Erlanger, Miriam Seifter, Russell
Gold, and Sandra Mayson for their close review and insights.


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