

Constitutional Private Law: A Conversation with Garrett West
16 snips Apr 16, 2025
Garrett West, an Associate Professor of Law at Yale, dives into the concept of constitutional private law, exploring its significance in individual disputes with the government. He distinguishes between public and private law and examines how constitutional torts promote accountability among government officials. West discusses the implications of these legal frameworks in addressing injustices, urging a reflective approach to the evolving role of constitutional norms in private life. This conversation offers fresh insights into the intersection of legal theory, civil liberties, and accountability.
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Constitutional Torts Are Core Workhorses
- Constitutional torts are common but understudied parts of constitutional law that let individuals sue officials for damages.
- They comprise 5–10% of the federal docket and are vital to many plaintiffs' justice.
Public vs Private Law Defined
- Public law governs government structure and state-citizen relations while private law covers duties among private persons.
- Private law includes torts, contracts, and property governing civil wrongs and remedies between individuals.
Torts, Contracts, And Property Overlap
- Tort, contract, and property overlap but serve different functions: torts impose default duties, contracts create agreed duties, property allocates interests.
- Many private-law problems can be framed as tort obligations, though law schools teach them separately.