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Oral Argument Preview | Postal Service v. Konan | Dictionary Duel Over "Loss," "Miscarriage," and Government Liability
Season 2025 · Episode 6

Oral Argument Preview | Postal Service v. Konan | Dictionary Duel Over "Loss," "Miscarriage," and Government Liability

The High Court Report · SCOTUS Oral Arguments

September 25, 202511m 1s

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Show Notes

Postal Service v. Konan | Case No. 24-351 | Oral Argument Date: 10/8/25 | Docket Link: Here

Episode Overview

This episode examines United States Postal Service v. Lebene Konan, a Supreme Court case that asks whether the federal government has immunity when postal employees intentionally refuse to deliver mail as part of a campaign of racial harassment. The case centers on the interpretation of the Federal Tort Claims Act's "postal exception" and whether terms like "loss" and "miscarriage" cover intentional wrongdoing or only negligent acts.

Episode Roadmap

Opening: A Deceptively Simple Question

  • Can you sue the federal government when postal workers intentionally withhold your mail?
  • The answer hinges on the Federal Tort Claims Act's postal exception
  • Core tension between remedy for wrongs vs. government immunity

Legal Framework: The Federal Tort Claims Act

  • 28 U.S.C. § 2680(b): Exception for claims arising from "loss, miscarriage, or negligent transmission" of mail
  • Key interpretive battle: Does "negligent" modify only "transmission" or all three terms?
  • Government argues broad immunity; plaintiff argues narrow exception

The Facts: Alleged Racial Harassment Campaign

  • Lebene Konan: Black realtor and landlady in Euless, Texas
  • Two-year campaign by USPS employees Raymond Rojas and Jason Drake
  • Allegations: Changed postal records, changed mailbox locks, refused mail delivery
  • Over 50 administrative complaints filed; Inspector General investigation ordered delivery

Procedural Journey

  • District court: Dismissed under postal exception
  • Fifth Circuit: Reversed, held "loss" and "miscarriage" imply unintentional acts
  • Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve circuit split

Government's Arguments

  • "Miscarriage" = broad failure to arrive (Webster's 1940s definition)
  • "Loss" = deprivation, regardless of intent
  • Structural argument: FTCA uses "loss" to cover intentional acts elsewhere
  • Policy concern: Flood of litigation if intent matters

Konan's Counter-Arguments

  • "Miscarriage" = mail mistakenly delivered to wrong place
  • "Loss" = destruction or misplacement, both inherently accidental
  • Statutory structure shows Congress concerned only with negligence
  • "Negligent transmission" proves Congress knew how to limit scope when intended

Battle of the Dictionaries

  • Government relies on neutral 1940s definitions from Webster's Second
  • Konan cites specific legal definitions and Oxford English Dictionary
  • Competing interpretations of what "loss" and "miscarriage" historically meant

Looking Ahead to Oral Arguments

  • How will Justices react to competing dictionary definitions?
  • Will practical consequences (floodgates) persuade the Court?
  • Strange incentive structure if government immune for intentional but not negligent acts

Referenced Cases

Dolan v. USPS | 546 U.S. 481 (2006) | Docket Link

  • Question Presented: Interpretation of FTCA postal exception terms
  • Overview: Supreme Court precedent that both parties cite for their competing interpretations of "miscarriage" in the postal exception context.

Key Legal Concepts Explained

  • Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA): Law allowing lawsuits against the United States for employee torts
  • Sovereign Immunity: Government's general protection from lawsuits
  • Statutory Interpretation: Battle between textualist approaches using period dictionaries
  • Presumption of Consistent Usage: Principle that same word should mean same thing throughout statute

Stakes and Implications

If Government Wins:

  • Strong immunity shield for Postal Service regardless of employee intent
  • Potential closure of courthouse doors for wide range of intentional misconduct
  • Confirmation that postal exception creates hard barrier to liability

If Konan Wins:

  • FTCA exceptions have limits; immunity doesn't protect intentional torts
  • "Negligent" in statute colors interpretation of related terms
  • Opens door for relief against intentional postal employee misconduct

Broader Significance:

  • Masterclass in statutory interpretation and use of historical dictionaries
  • Tension between providing remedy for wrongs vs. protecting essential government services
  • Question of whether immunity should vary based on employee intent