Bernard H. Siegan, RIP
by
Alan Bock
by Alan Bock
If anyone ever
fit the term "a gentleman and a scholar" it was Bernie
Siegan. Bernard H. Siegan, Distinguished Professor of Law at the
University of San Diego law school, died Monday at the age of 81
after being hospitalized since late last year with a stroke. One
of the most persistent and quietly influential advocates of freedom
in this country, and a valued friend to many of us, he will be sorely
missed. But he left a legacy of distinguished scholarship that strengthened
the case for limited government and a free society and will no doubt
influence generations to come.
Bernie was
both a gentleman, unfailingly kind and courteous, and a gentle man.
His wife Shelley might know differently, but I would be surprised
if he ever raised his voice. When he argued he was always in full
command of the relevant information, but he never bludgeoned someone
who had not yet come around to his point of view. Instead he would
gently offer alternative ways of looking at things, civilly point
out holes in an argument, tease out the implications of an assertion,
and politely invite others to join him in what was obviously the
correct conclusion.
Yet within
that gentle exterior beat the heart of an intellectual lion. Once
his research had convinced him of a position, he was utterly unafraid
to state it, whether anyone else agreed or not.
He crossed
intellectual swords with Antonin Scalia and Robert Bork – and was
effectively vetoed for a position on the federal bench by Ted Kennedy.
I feel a special tie because during the 1970s Bernie Siegan wrote
a regular column for the Orange County Register on constitutional
issues.
When he published
what was probably his most influential book, Economic
Liberties and the Constitution, in 1980, he was almost alone
among legal scholars in believing that the U.S. Constitution was
written in large part to limit the ability of government to infringe
on property rights and economic freedom. The conventional wisdom
was that Congress and state governments had broad, almost unlimited
powers to regulate our economic activities and limit our use of
our property, and the courts were commanded to show great deference
so long as a regulation had even the slightest "rational relationship"
to some public policy goal.
I met him shortly
after the book was published and did a full-page question-and-answer
piece for the Register. Later that decade, when he was chairman
of the presidential commission on housing I attended hearings the
commission held in Houston and got to see first-hand, with running
commentary, what Bernie had written about that city in his 1972
book, Land
Use Without Zoning.
In the book
on the constitution, going back to the Magna Carta and before, Bernie
demonstrated that virtually the entire history of English common
law, with which almost all the framers were familiar (some to the
point of near-reverence), was one of limiting arbitrary government
power and protecting private property and personal freedom. He argued
that when the Supreme Court prior to the New Deal struck down various
economic regulations it was being true to the letter and spirit
of the Constitution, and illustrated the dire results in loss of
freedom and prosperity that followed excessive deference to legislative
whims.
That book precipitated
a revolution in legal scholarship. Scholars like Richard Epstein
and Roger Pilon at Chicago were already pursuing research along
similar lines, but as Mr. Pilon told me, "Bernie was older
and his scholarship was more advanced. He demonstrated that the
insights of the law-and-economics movement were consistent with
the intentions of the framers and with a principled approach to
constitutional interpretation."
The fact that
about half of the 40,000 lawyers and legal scholars in the Federalist
Society adopt a libertarian approach is largely due to Bernie Siegan’s
influence. The Pacific Legal Foundation, Institute for Justice and
Mountain States Legal Foundation, which undertake litigation on
behalf of property rights and personal freedom, got much of their
intellectual underpinning from Bernie Siegan.
As Richard
Epstein said to me by phone, "he should be remembered for a
blessing."
Farewell, old
friend. It was a privilege to know you.
March
31, 2006
Alan
Bock [send him mail] is Senior Essayist at the Orange County
Register. He is the author of Ambush
at Ruby Ridge and Waiting
to Inhale: The Politics of Medical Marijuana.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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