Orin S. Kerr, The Two Tests of Search Law: Reconciling Katz and Jones

Orin S. Kerr, The Two Tests of Search Law: Reconciling Katz and Jones on SSRN. Abstract:

Fourth Amendment law has two “search” tests: The Katz privacy test and the Jones property test. Lower courts don’t know what the difference is between them, however, or whether the Jones test is based on trespass law or the mechanics of physical intrusion. The result is a remarkable conceptual uncertainty in Fourth Amendment law. Every lower court recites that there are two search tests, but no one knows what one test means or how it relates to the other.

This Article argues that the Jones test hinges on physical intrusion, not trespass law. Jones claimed to restore a pre-Katz search test, and a close look at litigation both before Katz and after Jones shows an unbroken line adopting an intrusion standard and (where it has arisen) rejecting a trespass standard. This understanding of Jones is not only historically correct, but also normatively important. How we understand Jones tells us how to understand Katz. The intrusion approach offers an appealing interpretation of both tests that may prevent Katz’s rejection by a Supreme Court otherwise inclined to overturn it.

Note 20:

To what extent the two approaches differ depends in large part on the unsettled question of what theory of trespass or positive law one takes as the alternative to Katz. On this point, there is a growing literature offering a range of approaches. See, e.g., Danielle D’Onfro, Daniel Epps, The Fourth Amendment and General Law, 132 Yale L.J. 910 (2023) (articulating a broad theory of general law to give meaning to Jones); Matthew Tokson & Michael Pollack, Decentering Property in Fourth Amendment Law, U. Chi. L. Rev. (forthcoming), available at https://ssrn.com/abstract=4726627; Nicholas A. Kahn-Fogel, The Benefits of the Fourth Amendment’s Property-Rights Baseline, Villanova L. Rev. (forthcoming 2025), available at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4898729; Laurent Sacharoff, Constitutional Trespass, 81 Tenn. L. Rev. 877 (2014) (arguing that the starting point for applying Jones should be the contemporary majority trespass rule from the states).

[Remember Kerr’s The Digital Fourth Amendment released a month ago.]

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