Constitutional Law - Outline
Constitutional Law - Outline
Constitutional Law - Outline
Associational Standing. Must show: (1) members would have standing to sue on their own; (2) interests are germane to the organizations purpose; (3)
no need for member participation
2.
Taxpayer Standing: (generally establishment clause) Must show: (1) enacted under Congresss taxing and spending power; (2) exceeds some specific
limitation on power
2.
3.
Mootness (actual controversy must exist at all stages of lit., except: wrong capable of repetition but evading review, voluntary cessation)
4.
Decline Jurisdiction?
1.
Political Question
2.
3.
Eleventh Amendment: bars suits against states in federal court. Exceptions, (1) waiver, (2) abrogation under 5, 14 th Am, (3) suits for injunctive relief
against state officers.
4.
AISG: 2 grounds; 1 state 1 federal; reversal on federal ground will not change the result
1.
2.
Executive (foreign and domestic powers and limitations, especially executive privilege)
3.
2.
2.
Sources of power
i.
Commerce Clause: Congress may regulate the channels and instrumentalities of interstate commerce. And, may regulate economic activity that has a
substantial effect on interstate commerce.
ii.
Taxing & Spending: Congress may tax and spend for the general welfare
iii.
Taking Property
1.
Necessary and Proper Clause: Congress may use any means not prohibited by the constitution to carry out its authority.
2.
10th Am: All powers not granted to the US, nor prohibited to the states, are reserved to the states. So, Congress cannot compel state regulatory or
legislative action. But, Congress can induce state gov. action by putting strings on grants, so long as related to spending program.
War: President has no power to declare war, but may act militarily in actual hostilities against the US w/out a congressional declaration of war under his
broad power as Commander-in-Chief to use American troops in foreign affairs. Congress may limit by military appropriations.
2.
Foreign Relations: President has paramount power to represent the US in foreign relations.
i.
Treaties: President has power to enter treaties w/ the consent of 2/3 of the senate
ii.
Executive Agreement: President has power to sign an executive agreement with the head of a foreign country. No Senate consent required.
3.
3.
Preemption: Under the supremacy clause, a federal law is the supreme law of the land, and thus may preempt or supersede state law. (express or
implied
2.
Dormant Commerce Clause: principal that state and local laws are unconstitutional if they place an undue burden on interstate commerce.
i.
Discrimination against out-of-staters presumed undue burden on interstate commerce, unless it is necessary to achieve an important
government purpose
1.
ii.
3.
Absent discrimination if the gov is burdening interstate commerce balance the benefit to the state against ht e burden on interstate
commerce.
Privileges & Immunities Clauses, art. IV: no state may deny to citizens on another state the privileges and immunities of its own citizens. Violated
where state regulation discriminates against individuals with regard to important economic activities or civil liberties unless it is necessary to achieve an
important government interest.
State Action the Constitution only applies if there is action by a state or local gov officer or private individual whose behavior meets the requirements for state
action. E.g. individual or entity perform exclusive public function or has significant state involvement in their activities.
2.
1.
Prior Restraint: (1) gravity of harm justifies restraint; and (2) necessary to prevent harm
2.
Vagueness & Overbreadth: A law is unconstitutionally vague if a reasonable person cannot tell what speech is prohibited and what is allowed. A law is
unconstitutionally overbroad if it regulates substantially more speech than the constitution allows to be regulated.
3.
Symbolic speech is protected (e.g. flag burning, cross burning (unless a threat), expenditures)
4.
Unprotected speech
5.
i.
ii.
Obscenity if (1) appeals to prurient interest, (2) patently offensive under the law, (3) taken as a whole, lacks serious redeeming, artistic, literary,
political or scientific value.
iii.
Public Forums (e.g. sidewalks parks): regulations must be content and viewpoint neutral; may regulate the time, place and manner of speech to serve
important interest. Must leave open adequate alternative places for communication.
ii.
Limited Public Forums (non-public forums gov. opens to speech): same as above
iii.
Non-Public Forums (military bases, airports, schools): gov may regulate so long the regulation is reasonable and viewpoint neutral
6.
Freedom of Association: laws that prohibit or punish membership in a group must meet strict scrutiny. Must prove that the person (1) actively affiliated, (2)
knowing of its illegal activities, (3) with the specific intent to further those activities.
3.
2.
Taking requiring just compensation v. a regulation under police power not requiring just compensation
3.
4.
5.
Religion
1.
Establishment Clause the test: (1) law must have a secular purpose, (2) neither advances nor inhibits religion, (3) no excessive entanglement w/
religion.
2.
Free exercise clause: cant be used to challenge a neutral law of general applicability
Retroactive Legislation
1.
2.
6.
8.
Equal Protection (14th Am) (applies to the fed gov through the due process clause of the 5 th Am)
1.
7.
Levels of Scrutiny
i.
Strict compelling state interest and means necessary to achieve state interest
ii.
iii.
2.
3.
Classification (on its face, or if facially neutral discriminatory impact and intent)
i.
ii.
iii.
Has the government deprived a person of life, liberty (a significant freedom secured by the Constitution or statute), or property (an entitlement to a
continued receipt of a benefit).
2.
What process is due? Balance: (1) importance of interest to the individual, (2) ability of additional procedures to increase the accuracy of the fact
finding; and (3) gov. interest
Substantive due process (14th Am) does the gov have an adequate reason to take away a persons life, liberty or property generally must meet strict
scrutiny.
1.
2.
3.