History of court’s doctrine in fundamental rights jurisprudence
Important: philosophical distinction between liberty and equality rights
First, used due process to create economic liberty rights
No longer exists (repudiated in the 1930s)
Newer category of rights: privacy rights
Sex, marriage, death--domestic, not market sphere rights
Express/enumerated rights v. implied, unwritten constitutional rights
Should court be free to make up rights beyond those expressly stated in the constitution, like right to choice to get an abortion?
In contrast to freedom of speech, in text of constitution
Interpreting abstract clauses like free speech requires just as much additional content as finding constitutional right to privacy or abortion
Calder v. Bull A probate court decreed a will invalid in favor of plaintiffs in error, who stood to obtain property through inheritance. However, the state legislature passed a law enabling defendants in error to obtain a new hearing on the probate court's decree, which resulted in the will being validated in favor of defendants in error, who stood to take under the will. The Court rejected the contention made by plaintiffs in error that the law authorizing the rehearing was an unconstitutional ex post facto law because there was previously no right to a rehearing. The Court defined the ex post facto laws prohibited by the U.S. Constitution to include only those related to crimes, which (1) made an innocent action done before the passing of the law, criminal; (2) aggravated a crime or made it greater than it was when committed; (3) inflicted a greater punishment than the law annexed to the crime when committed; (4) altered the legal rules of evidence, and received less, or different, testimony than the law required at the time of the commission of the offence to convict the offender. Thus, the Court held that the state law at issue did not fall within the constitutional prohibition.
Issue: Should courts be able to strike down statutes based on natural law?
Justice Chase: Cannot uphold laws that take from A to give to B
Unwritten Constitution just as enforceable against the states as anything found in the written constitution
Justice Iredell: Because there is a written constitution, that is it, and that means courts can't call upon principles of natural justice
Ideas of natural justice regulated by no fixed standard
Legislature possessed of equal right inconsistent with abstract principles of justice
Munn v. Illinois Holding: Illinois statute fixing max charges for grain storage did not violate due process
Test: is the private property affected with a public interest?
Slaughterhouse Cases
Who knows what the privileges and immunities of natural citizenship might be?
Free pursuit of livelihood as butcher, not spelled out in constitution, but government interfering with it
Privileges and immunities clause open-ended interpretation to enforce rights that belong to citizens of all free governments
But every law inhibits people's freedom to pursue happiness
Railroad Commission Cases: court sustained state regulation of railroad rates, emphasizing limit of judicial deference
Santa Clara County: corporations = person within 14th amendment due process
Allegeyer v. Louisiana: invalidated statute that prohibited any person from issuing insurance on property in the state with companies that had not been admitted for do business in the state
Lochner v. New York Facts: statute made it illegal for a baker to work more than 60 hours a week
Holding: the due process clauses of the fifth and fourteenth amendments protect liberty of contract and private property against unwarranted government interference
Rationale: statute interferes with the right of contract between the employer and employees
General right to make a contract in business protected by 14th amendment
Police powers that relate to the safety, health, morals, and general welfare of the public are those which may impose on property and liberty of citizens
Question to ask: is this a fair, reasonable, and appropriate exercise of the police power of the state, or is it an unreasonable, unnecessary, and arbitrary interference with the right of the individual to his personal liberty or to enter into those contracts in relation to labor which may seem to him appropriate or necessary for the support of himself and his family?
In this case, the law has nothing to do with public welfare/safety
Not all economic regulation is unconstitutional: regulations that have a direct relation to general welfare of public, exercise of police powers, safety are permissible.
Holmes's dissent:
Majority has the right to embody their opinions in law without interference from the court
Liberty of politics takes priority over liberty of economics
View that ultimately prevails in rationality review--successful groups entitled to keep fruits of political victories
Legacy If court thought a statute simply there to readjust the market in favor of one party, more likely to hold regulation invalid
Contrast:
Holder v. Hardy, where the court upholds a maximum hours law for miners: designed to protect workers in a very dangerous setting from getting hurt.
Muller v. Oregon: court upholds max hour law for women working in industrial labor
Court later renounces the Lochner view
After the New Deal, the court gives into the change in law: not just to unlimited federal power under commerce clause, but to virtually unlimited power of government in general, including state and local governments to regulate the economy with respect to economic liberty rights
What caused the New Deal change?
Economic, political, social factors outside of court
Roosevelt's popular mandate
Threats to pack court
Great depression undermined faith in free market economy
Need for gov't intervention in econ; when need became great, court couldn't stand in way
Internal reasons distinctive to Lochner
Idea that there is such a thing as a free market is a crazy idea
The law is the thing that allows you to have property
Gov't always involved in markets
Pre-New Deal, gov't took a laissez-faire view towards economy
All of a sudden, FDR, massive attempt at regulation, changing distribution of entitlements, market power, wealth
Before gov't pervasively involved in the economy, in New Deal, some measure of common law regulation replaced by statutes and admin regulation, but not more gov't, just changed form of gov't
Realist view challenges the idea of Lochner court that there is something suspicious about taking from A and giving to B
Once you get the idea that gov't played an important role in giving thing to A in first place, fact that giving to be no less problematic than gov't letting A have it
Court has not struck down a law under economic liberty since the New Deal
Nebbia v. New York Court sustains price controls for milk prices
Private rights must yield to public need sometimes
Link to Carolene Products:
Substantive due process
Rationality review for most types of economic and social legislation
Heightened scrutiny for statues that infringe on a limited, fundamental set of rights
Low-level rationality form of due process scrutiny
Same test as in equal protection
Challenged laws, so long as no fundamental right involved, must only be rationally related to a legitimate state interest, court happy to make up public-regarding purpose, or conceivable set of facts to fit classification or the law
What was so wrong with it?
Courts making up value judgments and using them to second guess what legislatures were deciding
In the wake of Lochner, the court really should bring back some component of what it was doing there, naked preferences for some interest groups, without any public-regarding justification or public interested reason behind him
Lesson that the court took form Lochner= Holmes lesson; courts' value judgments ungrounded in the constitution should be trumped by democratic value judgments
Used to think majorities would extract wealth from the wealthy, but that hasn't happened
We live in majoritarian system, would think the minority with disproportionate wealth would be who went wrong, but why don't majorities redistribute?
But courts don't order the redistribution of wealth: no constitutionally grounded power to do that