Generally 20th C. idea that due process means the right to live in a society governed by laws. Bill of rights incorporated into 14th A. due process for States 14th A. framers. some probably believed privliges and immunities were the first eight ammendments, some not, some didn't think about it. - Chem Baron v. Baltimore (1830) bill of rights restricts federal not State conduct. Bill of rights does not apply to the States Slaughter House Cases (1873) Narrowly interprets the privilieges and immunities clause.. removed as a basis for applying the bill of rights to the states. Warren court 1, 4, 5, 6, and 8th. Substantive Due Process Generally Ghost of Lochner Judicial activism is bad Lochner's mode of activism was bad Historical Lochner and Freedom of Contract activist court limits State police power ends with West Coast Hotel Skinner v. OK Modern FN4 representation/renforcement (p690) Ely. prevention of political process failure encouragement of representation of minorities prevent tyranny of majority two tier analysis Right of Privacy/Abortion Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) (p811) Douglas, J. Protects the privacy of married couples. Skinner as precedent sees penumbras and emanations from bill of rights 1,3,4,5,9 Avoidance of 14th A forces reliance on other text ghost of Lochner Goldberg, J. 9th A. isn't surplussage not a font of rights either. like the xth A., supports rights found in 14th A p&i. Harlan, J. Libertarian autonomy/"liberty" in 14th A. urges strict scrutiny fundamental Stuctural Argument 3rd A. intrusion by soldiers historical experience a la Marshall. people are the sovereign, avoiding intrusion of government, autonomy is essential to the people's ability to govern. Eisenstadt v. Baird (1972) (p822) protects like Griswold protects unmarried couples under EP clause rational basis used Roe v. Wade (1973) (p823) Fundamental right to terminate pregnancy Blackmun, J. refuses to resolve the life controversy when science, morality, philosophy cannot. Fundamental Right 14th A., 9th A., Wherever you find it they find in the 14th. unfortunate Two Interests Pregnant woman's health & safety Potential life Both become compelling Trimester Analysis 1st - no special regulation safer than carrying to term 2nd- broader interest in Woman's health more risk 3rd- compelling interest in both state may proscribe abortion After Roe State moral restrictions masquerading as health & safety Minors w/ judicial bypass Fundamental religious/moral reaction Targets doctors/clinics Creation of political movements Since: collapsing of trimester framework with advance in science Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992)(p851) Kennedy, Souter, O'Connor (Reagan/Bush Appts. cater to religious right) Special case, woman not alone in pregnancy free from "undue burden" from the state before viability test Not SS narrow tailoring and compelling interest gone great weight to stare decisis reliance on nation gov'd by Roe State's interest extends into the 1st trimester Informed consent YES 24 hour wait YES Consent with judical bypass YES Recording YES Spousal Notice NO domestic violence undue burden Viability not trimesters Extra expense splits abortion across class lines. Bowers v. Hardwick (1986) (p896) Test Implicit in concept of ordered liberty Due process Deeply rooted in Nation's history & tradition. Self-narrowing investigation White, J. Classification of right decides case "engage in homo sodomy" Right to be let alone - Blackmun Romer v. Evans (1996) (p638) Animus alone motivates Amendment two Bare desire to harm. Kennedy, J. Fails Rational Basis review Another Cleburne Gays have political power (no) Loving Classification is on its face invidious In tension with Bowers Not decided on substantive due process grounds Lawrence v. Texas (Now) Probably gets decided on EP grounds Substantive DP issue debated Hopes to overturn Bowers Can States pass laws just on moral disapproval? Rick Santorum Argument Has some weight. Better to decide on EP grounds? " is whether that fundamental right extends outside the marital context into other unmarried couples who form bonds and have -- and -- for whom sexual intimacy plays an equally important role in their lives. Fundamental Interests Equal Protection Generally procreation, voting, access to courts, and travel Strict-scrutiny test used to violate under EP clause of 14th A. hesitant to expand list Procreation (YES) Buck v. Bell (1927) Holmes, J. Three generations of imbeciles is enough Skinner v. Oklahoma (1942) (p. 736) Douglas, J. Discriminates among people with regard to exercise of fund. right. strict scrutiny. chicken stealers v. embezzlers irrational Education (NO) San Antonio School Dist. v. Rodriguez (1973) (p.795) Powell, J. property tax based revenue leads to differences in local tax rates and school funding. Court rejects the creation of substantive right Court finds no loss of right with absolute deprevation Court rejects class of rich/poor district system does not correpsond tightly enough to income. some poor in rich districts and vis versa No heightened scrutiny without absolute deprivation No equal protection argument wealth discrimination gets rational basis review Marshall, J. advocates sliding scale of scrutiny. p801 as the non-cx right nexus with cx-right becomes closer, the degree of scrutiny should rise Plyer v. Doe (1982) (p. 804) Brennan, J. TX - Undocumented children prohibited from attending unless they pay public education not fund. right not class for heightened scrutiny Rational Basis Plus (see Cleburne) harm of complete denial of education permanent underclass furthers no "substantial" (legitimate?) goal of the State Narrow precedent for immigrant children & education Affirmative Action Battle for Meaning of EP Color Blind O'Connor & Scalia race is irrelevant color blind At least 4 votes after Adarand Anti-Subordination/Remedial Marshall Can't create equality out of inequality stay out of political process Historical History Regents of U.C. v. Bakke (1978)(p554) Numerical set-asides at Davis medical school Brennan, White, Marshall, Blackmun want intermediate scrutiny. burger, Stewart, Rehnquist, Stevens violates CRA 64 Powell, J. Must be within competence of school when remedial strict scrutiny ss even when remedial set aside un-cx. one factor, plus, like Harvard, okay Davis has no interest in remedying prior discrimination although the State does Diversity might be compelling interest valid but set aside not justified. Fullilove v. Klutznick (1980) Upholds AA at Federal level. 10% of federal Public Works funds to minority owned business AA, latino, asians, indians, eskimos, aleuts still no majority for level of scrutiny fully remedial unique position of congress to remedy Stewart, Rehnquist gov't should never act on race. City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co (1989) (p557) O'Connor, J Adopts strict scrutiny for States "standard of review not dependent on the race of those burdened" City hasn't a compelling interest in remedying racial discrimination Same classifications as Fullilove AA 50% of population, .67% of contracts Remedy to particular class harmed cannot ride on Congress’ findings. shouldn't have included the classification from Fullilove not narrowly tailored consider race neutral means Marshall, J. (dissent) shouldn't be s.s in remedial context Perhaps 14thA. S. 5 has strength States don't have. Metro Broadcasting v. FCC diversity is an interest in station licensing benign classifications need intermediate scrutiny (overruled) Adarand Constructors v. Pena (1995) (p574) Strict scrutiny for federal actions in all racial classifications no deference to federal gov't remands for ss analyis not intermediate. leaves undecided the status of diversity as a compelling interest O'Connor, J. Skepticism racial criteria get ss Consistency benefit or burden, same analysis Congruence 5th A. same as 14th Overrules Metro Broadcasting on level of scrutiny Thinks some programs can pass s.s. Stevens, J. (dissent) is difference between benign and invidious Federal gov't actions should not be judged as States or localities. Before Michigan Standard of Review Strict scrutiny Compelling Gov't Interest Remedial Bakke Do institutions have a stake in remedy general discrimination How about their own discrimination? Croson & Adarand SS for feds, findings must be incredibly perfectly tailored Diversity Are broad societal objectives within Michigan's role? Pro Gurin Study
learn better
acclimate to real world
Military Brief
General Schwarzkopf
essential to national security
compelling gov't interest in effective military
Con Stigma harm to majority racialized treatement Standing Does Grutter have standing? How can they prove they have been harmed. Narrow Tailor? Is michigan plan narrowly tailored? "Critical mass" meaningful point system narrow State Action Doctrine Generally Cx applies only to the government. No state action doctrine in 13th A. Private conduct is not reached by the Cx No protection from private wrongs. Civil Rights Cases - CRA 75 un-Cx U.S. v. Morrison (2000) (p199) Violence Against Women Act '94 Congress can't regulate private, non-commercial activity. Reasons Personal Liberty less law = more liberty Other Bodies of Law Protect tort, contract problem , C.L. has no EP clause Gov power > Private Entanglement Exceptions Government authorizes, facilitates, or encourages private, un-Cx conduct Generally some inconsistencies. activism before CRA64 narrowing of doctrine after CRA64 no real test for how much Enforcement Shelly v. Kramer (1948) "To A until such time as he marries a non-white person." Slippery Slope - isn't everything state action Regulation Burton v. Willimington Parking Authority (1961) (p.1527) Gov't in biz with racists Public property could have put 14th A. into contract with Eagle Coffee Shoppe Slippery Slope put 14th A. into State Incorporation documents Subsidy Is intent the test Norwood v. Harrison (1973) (p1530) State Action Intent to undermine integration Rendell-Baker v. Kohn (1982) (p1533) No State Action School for "problem" students, 99% federally funded Teachers fired without due process Public Function Generally Private entity performs traditional exclusive government function Is balancing the test? Marsh v. Alabama (1946) (p1544) Company town of Chickasaw, Alabama Balancing established, never really pursued Jackson v. Metro Edison (1974) (p1540) Private utility turns off power without d.p. would this be different if only A.A. were turned off Equal Protection Attack Outline Is there state action? Violation of Fundamental Rights Source in Bill of Rights Source Implied Rights Incorporation Doctrine Federal Due Process Privacy, Procreation, Family No right to Education Source of Rights Due Process Clause
Casey v. Lochner
Economic/non-economic
Holmes dissent
Implied in DP
Ordered liberty
Analogize to other rights
History and traditions of nation
Welcome constraint on court
FN4
Other Sources
Griswold's penumbras
Goldberg's 9th A.
The People - structural argument
Execute the Type of Review Strict Scrutiny Or Abortion = "undue burden" EP Protected Classes Levels of Scrutiny Rational Basis - Default - poverty Strict Scrutiny - Race, ethnicity, national origin Intermediate Scrutiny - gender RB Plus - mentally retarded Gays & Lesbians
Romer - RB plus?
Bowers
Facially Discriminatory or Impact Facial - Loving Invidious Intent
(Washington v. Davis)
Impact
Arlington Heights
Yick Wo or Gomillion v. Lightfoot
McClesky
Statistics not enough
Multiple Purpose
Feeny
Race Cases - Strict Scrutiny Applied Compelling state interest (Korematsu) Narrowly tailored
Necessary
No other means
Applies
Loving
Affirmative action
Croson & Adarand
Both State and Federal
Within area of competence
Remedy its own discriminatory effects
Gender Middle level applied US v. VA Test Combo Fundamental Rights Denied to Classes Find a right Locate the class Is use of the class appropriate to achieve gov't interest? Skinner v. Oklahoma Eisenstadt (secures privacy for unmarried couples) Continuum analysis Plyler v. Doe.
Nature of class + nature of interest
Power to Enforce See 14th A. Carolene Products Footnote Four Stone, J. There may be narrower scope for operation of the presumption of constitutionality when legislation appears on its face to be within a specific prohibition of the Constitution, such as those of the first ten Amendments, which are deemed equally specific when held to be embraced within the Fourteenth. It is unnecessary to consider now whether legislation which restricts those political processes which can ordinarily be expected to bring about repeal of undesirable legislation, is to be subjected to more exacting judicial scrutiny under the general prohibitions of the Fourteenth Amendment than are most other types of legislation. [right to vote, restraints upon the dissemination of information, interferences with political organizations, prohibition of peaceable assembly] Nor need we enquire whether similar considerations enter into the review of statutes directed at particular religious, or national, or racial minorities. whether prejudice against discrete and insular minorities may be a special condition, which tends seriously to curtail the operation of those political processes ordinarily to be relied upon to protect minorities, and which may call for a correspondingly more searching judicial inquiry.
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