UNCgolf
Well-Known Member
If State law allows it and you rule against it then your ruling should be overruled on appeal and if you continue to make rulings that run counter to the law as written then you should be removed from office.
The judiciary doesn't make the laws, it interprets the laws.
What do you think interpreting the law means? And common law, which is a major part of the legal system (and especially so for contract law), essentially is made by the judiciary.
Even if a state had a law specifically stating forced arbitration clauses are legal in this exact situation (and I can't imagine any state actually has any law remotely like that), that doesn't mean the law is unimpeachable. A state could pass a law throwing you in jail for making that exact comment, but that law certainly shouldn't be enforceable upon judicial review. It has to be reviewed in context of other things, like the state constitution.
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