Con Law Mini Outlines
Con Law Mini Outlines
Con Law Mini Outlines
Salomone/Spring 2011
E Q U A L P R O T E C T I O N A N A L Y S I S
1. Is there state action? (Shelley v. Kraemer, Burton v. WPC, Moose Lodge)
2. What classification is the law making?
a. FACIAL Classifications
i. Race: SS (Korematsu, Adarand)
ii. Sex: IS/EPJ (IS: Craig, EPJ: Hogan, VMI). Real differences: IS (Michael M., Rostker). Or
redefine classification so not sex: RR (Parham)
iii. Illegitimacy: IS
iv. Poverty: RR (San Antonio)
v. Disability: RR (Cleburne)
vi. Sexual Orientation: RR (Romer, Goodridge) – still do HS analysis
vii. New Classification? Argue for heightened scrutiny. Three step inquiry:
1. history of discrimination
2. political powerlessness
3. immutability/no relation to ability to perform
4. (if necessary, Carolene Products “discrete and insular minority”)
b. NONFACIAL Classifications
i. Is there a discriminatory effect on a race or sex classification? (Yick Wo, Gomillion)
1. something in fact pattern will generally show disparate impact.
ii. Is there discriminatory intent? (Palmer, Washington v. Davis)
1. P needs to show that the law/policy implemented because of and not in spite of the
discriminatory outcome (Washington v. Davis, Feeney)
2. Ways to prove intent: (laid out in Arlington Heights)
a. clear pattern unexplainable on other grounds (Yick Wo, Gomillion)
b. historical background of decision (timing of decision, departures from
normal procedure)
c. legislative history (Moreno; but see Fletcher (leg. history irrelevant, could be
passed again with “pure motives”; intrusion into other branches))
3. Once intent proven, burden of proof shifts to gov’t to prove nondiscriminatory
reason for implementing statute. (apply appropriate standard)
iii. If not race or sex, apply RR. Look at who created the policy, whether groups are affected,
and if there is a relationship b/t the policy and the goal of the policy. Is there animus (Romer
– is the statute so broad that there’s no other explanation)?
3. Apply the standard of review: (analogize to cases, bring in facts)
a. State Interests
i. SS – is the interest compelling?
ii. IS – is the interest important?
iii. RR – is the interest legitimate?
b. MeansEnds Fit
i. SS – is the statute narrowly tailored?
ii. IS – is the statute substantially related?
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iii. RR – is the statute rationally related?
c. Is the statute the Least Restrictive Alternative? Required for SS/Good for IS
i. Required for SS
ii. IS – not called LRA, but still works same way where challenger says other ways
gov’t could have done it
d. Last ditch effort for RR... is there animus?
i. always struck down if animus found. (Cleburne, Moreno, Palmore, Romer – only 4 cases ever)
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DISCRIMINATION BASED ON RACE
Carolene Products Footnote 4 (1938)
cases that get SS: statutes directed at particular religious, national, or racial minorities, OR
“discrete and insular minorities”
FACIALLY RACIAL CLASSIFICATION
Korematsu/Hirobayashi (1943)
classification based on race suspect, presumed unconstitutional. Apply SS.
Loving v. Virginia (1967)
antimiscegenation law
EP: racebased classification to marry violates EP clause
DP: fundamental right to marry
gov’t interest not compelling, statute struck down (SS)
Palmore (1984)
state tried to take custody away from white mother who was going to marry a black man
judiciary cannot give effect to prejudice – ANIMUS.
Facial racial animus – SS. Struck down.
FACIALLY NEUTRAL CLASSIFICATIONS
Yick Wo (1886)
administered by public authority with an evil eye (discriminatory intent) and uneven hand
(disparate impact)
EP violation. SS. Struck down.
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Gomillion (1960)
gerrymandering land from square to 30 sided shape in order to keep out the 4 blacks in the
district
Racial gerrymandering unconstitutional
Court deduces intent from the effect; there’s no other conclusion possible
Intent proven from impact = SS. Struck down.
Palmer (1971)
racially segregated swimming pools. All closed to avoid integration.
Court accepts since it is equally applied to everyone
Washington v. Davis (1976)
police exam failing blacks at higher rate than whites
facially neutral laws with disparate racial impact are unconstitutional only upon a showing
that they are contaminated by discriminatory intent
Court says no discriminatory intent even if there was disparate impact. Intent must be because
of, not in spite of discriminatory impact
no intent = RR. Policy upheld.
Arlington Heights (1977)
laid out ways to prove intent. See EP outline.
Feeney (1979)
facially neutral but really sexbased classification/sex based, but neutral, upheld, preference
for veterans, mostly males for municipality jobs
no intent, large impact, upheld.
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION CASES
Bakke (1978)
UC Davis quota system
past discrimination by state actor likely accepted as compelling under SS. No evidence here
that Davis perpetrated discrimination, but suggested that if it had, would be enough for AA
Diversity in education accepted under SS as compelling state interest
Wygant (1986)
teacher’s union policy of “last hiredfirst fired,” but kept some minorities, even though they
should have been first fired.
Court struck down policy under SS
meansends fit problem: layoff policy not adequately connected to employment
discrimination, and puts entire burden of achieving equality on particular individuals (those
fired)
rolemodeling is NOT a compelling gov’t interest
Croson (1989)
30% of construction Ks had to go to MBEs
Court says apply SS to state AA plans
strikes down plan. Random inclusion of other racial groups = not narrowly tailored. No
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specific violation being remedied = no compelling gov’t interest.
Adarand Const. (1995)
whitemale owned company challenged federal policy of awarding bonus to companies who
gave at least 10% of the overall K amount to minorityowned businesses
SS: all racial classifications, whether imposed by federal, state, or local gov’t, must be
analyzed with SS
Grutter v. Bollinger (2003)
white woman sued Univ. of Mich. b/c she was denied admittance to the law school (AA
program)
goal of diverse student body constitutes a compelling gov’t interest
“critical mass” (taking into account factors other than race) ≠ quota system
to be narrowly tailored, AA programs cannot use quota. May consider race or ethnicity a
“plus” in an applicant’s file, without insulating the individual from comparison with all other
candidates for the available seats.
Gratz v. Bollinger (2003)
point system where 20 points are given to applicants who are racial minority is unconst.
SEX DISCRIMINATION
analogized to race cases b/c both immutable characteristics, history of discrimination, and
irrelevant to ability, but women not insular, not a numerical minority, never been enslaved
state cannot rely on overlybroad generalizations about the capacities of men and women
Reed v. Reed (1971)
Preference given to men in administration of estate
RR: in order for a gov’t interest of administrative ease to pass RR, it must be “reasonable, not
arbitrary, and must rest upon some ground of difference having a fair and substantial relation
to the object of the legislation, so that all persons similarly circumstanced shall be treated
alike” [more like IS than RR; gov’t interest of administrative ease usually passes RR]
Frontiero v. Richardson (1973)
Air Force regulation req’d women to provide evidence of their husband’s dependence, men did
not have to provide any evidence and thereby received benefits women did not receive
SS: gov’t interest of administrative convenience never passes SS
Court defines “immutable” as not relevant to ability to perform/contribute
Craig v. Boren (1976)
women must be 18 y.o. to buy beer, men must be 21 y.o. to buy beer
Heightened scrutiny: classification by gender must serve important gov’t objective and must
be substantially related to achievement of those objectives
Balance harm/basis for discrimination against state interest (state interest here – traffic safety)
J.E.B. (1994)
Attorney used his peremptory challenges to eliminate jurors of one sex, state used its
peremptory challenges to eliminate jurors of the other sex
Sexbased peremptory challenges are unconstitutional
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Hogan (1982)
man wanted to go to allwomen RN school
Exceedingly persuasive justification: [IS+?]; gov’t interest of promoting women’s education is
really only to encourage only women to pursue career in nursing
VMI (1996):
State interest in having maleonly military school:
o Adversative method of teaching (S.Ct. rejects b/c while most women won’t like
adversative method, some women will like it – overbroad generalization)
o Diversity of educational benefits (S.Ct. rejects b/c was not propounded by VMI until
after decision in Hogan came out)
Exceedingly persuasive justification:
VWIL program – inferior to VMI
justification cannot be based on overbroad generalizations
Real Differences Cases
when real differences present, Court either:
o Applies IS and statute is justified b/c of real (usually biological) differences
o Redefines classification so it is not sexbased, and then applies RR
Rostker v. Goldberg (1981)
Only men must register for the draft
Upheld b/c S.Ct. gives deference to Congress, only men are eligible for combat, men and
women are not similarly situated, national security is a compelling gov’t interest
Nguyen v. INS (2001)
Automatic citizenship for foreignborn kids of American moms; foreignborn kids of
American dad must apply for citizenship
Real difference = birthed by mom, not dad
State interest in preventing fraud
S.Ct. gives deference to Congress/INS
Disparate Impact Cases
Feeney (1979)
Hiring preference for veterans (men)
When statute not a facial classification, P needs to prove discriminatory intent/purpose and
discriminatory impact under SS/IS
POVERTY – RR
San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriquez (1973)
Poor receiving education, just not receiving as good of an education as wealthier people
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EPC does not require absolute equality
Education is NOT a fundamental right
Court upholds practice under RR – court sees no wealth distinction/discrimination and thus
not subject to heightened scrutiny
DISABILITY – RR
Cleburne v. Cleburne (1985)
City council denied zoning permit to group home for the mentally disabled
Court evaluates based on:
o History of discrimination
o Political powerlessness of group
o Immutability of characteristic/no relation to ability to perform
Classification does not warrant heightened scrutiny, but Court strikes down zoning law
anyway b/c based on “irrational prejudice” of mentally disabled [ANIMUS]
RR+? – Court looks to actual interest and will not accept just any hypothetical reason
Garrett (2001)
analysis of the scope of the ADA
“states are required by the 14th amendment to make special accommodations for the disabled,
so long as their actions towards such individuals are rational”
what does this mean for Cleburne? It’s dicta, but it signals the direction in which the Court is
going.
SEXUAL ORIENTATION – RR
Romer v. Evans (1996)
Amendment to CO Constitution would prohibit antidiscrimination laws and affirmative
action programs
RR – any hypothetical interest is okay, unless there is ANIMUS
State proffers: freedom of association of other citizens and conserving resources to fight
discrimination against other groups.
broad disability upon a single named group
breadth of statute so discontinuous w/ reasons offered, must be ANIMUS
Watkins v. U.S. Army (9th Cir. 1989)
Exclusion of homosexuals from the military struck down b/c of
o Political powerlessness
o History of discrimination
o Gross unfairness (immutability/no relation to ability)
Ct will not give effect to prejudice
Decision later vacated
Baehr v. Lewin (1993)
Ban on samesex marriage was sex discrimination under HI Constitution b/c HI had adopted
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the Equal Rights Amendment (which makes sexdiscrimination get SS)
Today: HI amended Constitution to define marriage as b/n a man and a woman; has not been
challenged in fed ct.
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D U E P R O C E S S A N A L Y S I S
Substantive Due Process: p. 60
ASK:
• Is there a fundamental Right?
o If yes: has the government infringed upon the right?
If yes: Is there sufficient justification for the government’s infringement of a
right?
Is the means sufficiently related to the purpose?
• Under strict scrutiny, the government must show that the law was
necessary to achieve the objective; the government must prove that it
could not attain the goal through an means less restrictive of the right
• Under rational basis: means only has to be a reasonable way to achieve
the goal and the government is not required to use the least restrictive
alternative
1. Is there state action?
a. If yes, frame the right:
i. Plaintiff: frame the right broadly, analogize to other DPC cases, e.g. Lawrence
ii. Def: frame the right very narrowly, factspecific, i.e. Scalia in Moore – no FR to
have unrelated children living in the same home as opposed to right of family
autonomy
b. Look to history and tradition to determine if it is a fundamental right (Palko v. CT, p.
64)
i. Evolutive approach – Lawrence (look at last 50 years), Casey
ii. Nonevolutive approach
2. What standard of review?
a. Fundamental right?
i. No: Rational Review
1. Is the state law rationally related to a legitimate gov’t interest?
a. What is the gov’t interest?
b. Is it legitimate?
c. Is it rationally related to the law?
ii. Yes: Strict Scrutiny
1. Is the state law narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling gov’t interest?
a. What is the gov’t interest?
b. Is it compelling?
c. Is it narrowly tailored?
d. is it the least restrictive alternative? (make up alternatives)
iii. Abortion: Undue Burden
1. Undue burden: strike down (Casey)
2. Not undue burden: RR
iv. Right to sexual intimacy: unclear
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1. Lawrence v. Texas (not sure what standard. Scalia in dissent said Court
applied RR. Case wasn’t that clear). If you’re dealing with right to sexual
intimacy, set out in a sentence or two that there’s a tension, we don’t
know exactly the level of review.
v. Unclear whether a fundamental right?
1. if law will fail under RR, no need to apply SS (Lawrence, Goodridge)
vi. Fundamental Interest?
1. Court has only defined three: voting, education, right to interstate travel
2. When there’s a FI the standard of review somehow gets ratcheted up.
Court haven’t been clear on what it is, but it’s some form of HS
3. Unless one of those three interests come up, don’t make FI argument
4. Voting: SS/IS (Bush v. Gore, Katzenbach v. SC, Katzenbach v. Morgan)
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS CASE
Right to Privacy:
Right to marital privacy (birth control) Griswold
Right to abortion Roe, Casey
Right to privacy in intimate relationships Einsenstadt, Lawrence
Right to marry Zablocki, Turner, Loving
Right to raise and educate children Meyer, Pierce
NOT FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS CASE
Right to contract Slaughterhouse cases
Right to welfare Shapiro, Saenz
Right to get divorced
Right to health care
Economic rights generally Lochner
PRIVILEGES AND IMMUNITIES CLAUSE
Slaughterhouse cases (1873)
Narrows P&I clause – no fundamental right to contract.
2nd sent of 14th A refers only to “citizens of the United State,” therefore the 14th A does not
prohibit a state from abridging the priv & imm of its own citizens. 14th A is specifically
designed to prevent discrimination against blacks; only an extraordinary case will extend that
protection.
ARE SOME RIGHTS “FUNDAMENTAL”?
Skinner v. Oklahoma (1942)
After 3 strikes, convicted felon will be sterilized
Court strikes down statute based on DP – violation of fundamental right to procreate
Marriage and procreation are fundamental rights (survival of the race)
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LOCHNER: FUNDAMENTAL ECONOMIC RIGHTS?
there are no fundamental economic rights
RR for economic legislation
Lochner v. New York (1905)
Statute limiting # of hours bakers could work for health reasons
“RR”: Court does not accept health reasons as any hypothetical reason b/c there are lots of
dangerous jobs; real intent of legislature was to regulate relations b/t master and servant
(essentially using SS)
Overturned: now Court uses RR for economic legislation, not SS used here
West Coast Hotel v. Parrish (1937)
Court upheld minimum wage for women under RR
FUNDAMENTAL PRIVACY RIGHTS
Meyer v. Nebraska (1923)
German teacher case
Parents have fundamental privacy right to raise and educate their children
Court applies RR+, rejected statute b/c law is arbitrary and w/o rational relation to a State
interest (no meansends fit)
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS
Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)
prohibition against the use of birth control by married couples struck down
though Const. does not explicitly protect a general right to privacy, the 1st, 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 9th
Amendments create penumbras, or zones, that establish a right to privacy. Zone of privacy.
Marital privacy is a fundamental right, deeply rooted in history and tradition.
Court overrules statute, uses SS.
Eisenstadt v. Baird (1972)
prohibition against the use of birth control for unmarried couples struck down
Court articulated the privacy right in terms of an individual’s life choices
“if the right to privacy means anything, it is the right of the individual, married or single, to be
free from unwarranted governmental intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a
person as the decision whether to bear or beget a child”
focus on it as an individual rather than a marital right really sets the stage for later “intimate
relationship” cases (Lawrence)
Roe v. Wade (1973)
right to abortion comes from right of privacy
state interest in protecting women’s life and potential life of the fetus
woman’s interest in autonomy, bodily integrity
Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health (1983)
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law requiring D&E abortions be performed in hospitals struck down
burden on women seeking abortions not reasonably related to health/safety interests of state
Harris v. McRae (1980)
Gov’t has no affirmative obligation to pay for abortions
RR: wealth not a suspect class and no fundamental right infringed.
Webster v. Reproductive Health (1989)
after 20th week of pregnancy, MD required to perform viability test before performing abortion
upheld b/c state interests in ensuring no abortions are performed on viable fetuses
Casey (1992)
undue burden standard – law has the purpose/effect of placing a substantial obstacle in
woman’s way of seeking an abortion. If undue burden, struck down.
if no undue burden, use RR b/c state has interest in life from conception
Court gets rid of trimester approach and replaces it with viability approach (state can put
some obstacles in the way of a woman seeking an abortion, as long as it is done win the
interest of protecting potential human life)
Provisions of PA law: (1) Informed consent – upheld; (2) 24 hour waiting period – upheld; (3)
Reporting requirement for MDs – upheld; (4) Parental consent for minors w/ bypass option –
upheld; (5) spousal consent – struck down (Court leary of time when women considered
property of her husband)
Stenberg v. Carhart (2000)
statute banning partial birth abortion struck down b/c did not contain exception for health of
the mother
Rust v. Sullivan (1991)
Clinics receiving federal funding cannot discuss abortion w/ patients (“gag rule”)
Court focuses on funding – if clinic accepts funding, then it must consent to the gov’t terms.
o Doctrine of Unconstitutional Conditions? Gov’t cannot condition a waiver of your
constitutional rights on receipt of funding. Court says this is a law about funding, not
abortion. FAIR – would have had to be 1st Am. violation
MARRIAGE
Zablocki v. Redhail (1978)
statute preventing people with outstanding child support obligations from receiving marriage
licenses struck down
Right to marry is a fundamental right, but Court applies “important and closelytailored”
standard (IS+?)
Turner v. Safely (1987)
ban on inmates getting married struck down
RR (b/c prison setting) ban did not serve purpose – no safety issue and marriage has social
value, legitimizes kids, etc.
Goodridge v. Dept. of Health (MA SJC, 2003)
Ban on samesex marriage struck down under RR for EPC and DPC, no need to use SS
State interests: providing a favorable setting for procreation; ensuring the optimal setting for
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child rearing; preserving scarce state and private financial resources
full faith and credit clause: judgments and decrees given full faith and credit b/t states, but if
it violates the state’s public policy, the state does not have to recognize it
INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS/HOMOSEXUAL SODOMY
Bowers (1986)
prohibition on sodomy, Court frames issue as right to homosexual sodomy and upholds law;
morality as a legitimate state interest
overturned by Lawrence
Lawrence v. Texas (2003)
right to engage in personal/intimate relationships; right to private intimate sexual conduct
with a consenting adult; right to choice of relationships
law fails even RR
evolutive approach to history and tradition – past 50 years as most important guide.
“Emerging awareness”
FUNDAMENTAL INTERESTS
Court asks:
o What is the state interest?
o What is the right at issue?
Welfare/health care – necessity of life (BUT economic rights are NOT fundamental)
Tuition/divorce – portability issue (you can get your degree at an instate rate and then
move out of state after you graduate)
Fundamental Right to Education – NO
how could you argue that there should be one? Connect it to other FR – a predicate for other FR like
right to vote.
San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriquez (1973)
Poor receiving education, just not receiving as good of an education as wealthier people
EPC does not require absolute equality
Education is NOT a fundamental right, so doesn’t get SS
Court upholds practice under RR – court sees no wealth distinction/discrimination and thus
not subject to heightened scrutiny
Plyer (1982)
TX passed law allowing state to withhold funds from school districts that taught children of
illegal aliens
Court recognized education as a fundamental interest, even though it’s not a FR.
Political process concerns, punishing kids for status of parents, absolute bar to education,
permanent underclass
Fundamental Right to Travel – P&I Clause
Shapiro v. Thompson (1969)
no welfare benefits if resident of state for less than one year
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struck down
welfare benefits NOT a fundmantal right, but necessity of life = fundamental interest
EPC: cannot parcel out something so important in an unequal way
P&I Clause: protects fundmental right to interstate travel
Saenz v. Roe (1999)
CA limited new residents to amount of welfare that had been receiving in their old state
State interests in saving $, administrative efficiency, avoiding becoming a “welfare magnet”
would be accepted under RR, but not SS
Citizenship clause – equates citizenship with residence. Does not allow for degrees of
citizenship based on length of residence
Voting
lots of inconsistency
usually SS, always some form of HS
Bush v. Gore (2000)
voting for president NOT a fundamental right, BUT once state gives people that right, it must
be given equally and therefore it becomes a fundamental interest
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F E D E R A L I S M – C O M M E R C E C L A U S E
1. Does the statute create a cause of action against a private individual?
2. Is the harm being regulated within Congress’ Commerce Clause power?
Lopez factors for determining if interstate commerce
a. Channel?
i. jurisdictional hook? (Darby, Heart of Atlanta)
b. Instrumentality?
i. National transportation and communication systems. (Shreveport)
c. Substantial Relationship?
i. actual economic activity? (Lopez, Morrison) – no inferences upon inferences
ii. area traditionally regulated to State law?
iii. close and substantial relationship to interstate commerce? (Shreveport Rate Case,
Heart of Atlanta)
iv. Fact finding (Morrison)
1. Court is skeptical of Congress’ fact finding
2. Fact finding must be in the statute itself, not just legislative history
3. no “inferences upon inferences”
v. Direct effect on interstate commerce? (Heart of Atlanta)
1. aggregate effect test permitted (w/ direct link) (Wickard)
3. If yes to Channels, Instrumentalities, OR substantial relation, the law is within
Congress’ Commerce Clause power
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PRE1937 CASES (ANTIFEDERALIST)
EC Knight (1895)
direct v. indirect effects on commerce (replaced with close and substantial relationship test
later)
manufacture of goods ≠ not commerce
Sherman Antitrust Act applicable to direct restraints on interstate commerce, not indirect
restraints like manufacturing
Shreveport Rate Case (1914)
Congress can regulated intrastate commerce when there is a close and substantial
relationship to interstate commerce
wherever the interstate and intrastate transactions of carriers are so related that the governing
of one involves the control of the other, it’s Congress, not the State, that can prescribe the final
rule
1937 – 1995 (FEDERALIST)
National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin (1937)
manufacture = commerce; looks to effect on commerce (direct and substantial relationship)
gets rid of categorical approach
Darby (1941)
Congress regulating wages under Fair Labor Standards Act
substantial relation/effect on interstate commerce
Court holds Congress can regulate something that affects interstate commerce, directly
connects wages/hours of employment with interstate commerce
Wickard (1942)
aggregation effect: if everyone grew more than quota, price would be driven down
Heart of Atlanta (1964)
Title II upheld under Commerce Clause b/c interstate travel (and thereby interstate
commerce) affected if people are NOT traveling b/c no where to eat or sleep (substantial
relationship)
McClung (Ollie’s BBQ) (1964)
discrimination in restaurants posed significant burdens on the “interstate flow of food and
upon the movement of products generally"
direct and highly restrictive effect upon interstate travel by blacks. Discourages travel and
obstructs interstate commerce.
does the restaurant serve or offer to server interstate travelers or serve food a substantial
portion of which has moved in interstate commerce?
1995 – PRESENT (ANTIFEDERALIST)
Lopez (1995)
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Federal GunFree School Zone Act struck down
need economic activity – gun in school zone NOT economic
3 types of Commerce Clause cases:
o jurisdictional hook (Darby, Heart of Atlanta)
o instrumentalities (Shreveport Rate Case)
o substantial relation to interstate commerce (Jones & Laughlin)
Rehnquist doesn’t want to have to rely on “inferences upon inferences” in fact finding
Morrison (2000)
Violence Against Women Act struck down
struck down b/c
o gender motivated crimes not economic;
o no jurisdictional hook
o effects of gender motivated violence on interstate commerce too attenuated
statute did not regulated activity that substantially affected interstate commerce nor did it
redress a harm caused by the state
slippery slope: if gender violence affects interstate commerce, surely violence as a whole has a
greater effect – do we want Congress regulating that?
Congress tried to make it an antidiscrimination statute by focusing on gender law, tried to
model on Heart of Atlanta
Court moving away from standards (substantial relationship) to formal categories (activity
must be economic)
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1. Is Congress trying to create a cause of action against the state?
a. No: if against private individual, must use Commerce Clause/some other Article I power
2. If yes, has Congress abrogated 11th Amendment sovereign immunity?
a. if No: cannot use 14th amendment; cannot use Commerce Clause b/c Congress cannot
abrogate state sovereign immunity under the Commerce Clause (Seminole Tribe, Florida
Prepaid)
3. Is Congress enforcing a 14th Am. Right? EPC, DPC, P&I Clause, or Citizenship Clause?
a. What standard of review under each party’s framing of the right?
i. Is Congress aiming to prohibit only action that would be unconstitutional under
this standard of review?
ii. Don’t apply standard, just note, if RR can only remedy irrational state action,
IS/SS – Congress has more leeway.
4. Congruence & Proportionality analysis (Boerne, Kimel)
Must be C&P between the injury to be prevented or remedied and the means adopted to that end.
a. Does the law directly act on the obstruction?
i. is it overbroad? (Romer)
ii. National solution to a regional problem? (South Carolina v. Katzenbach voting)
b. Is the law remedial or substantive in nature? (Boerne)
i. Is Congress asking the State to recognize a fundamental right that already exists
in the Constitution?
1. Yes = remedial = OK
2. No = creating new right = substantive = struck down
c. Fact finding to support congruence and proportionality? Point out weaknesses in fact
finding (Morrison)
i. is there enough fact finding to support Congress’ view of the harm? (Boerne)
ii. Animus?
1. Yes: struck down b/c never passes RR
th
§ 5 of the 14 Amendment:
Congress can only pass a law to remedy a law that is unconstitutional
gives Congress remedial (NOT substantive) power
state action requirement (no cause of action against a private individual)
Vs. Commerce Clause:
o Gives Congress plenary (full and unlimited) power b/c enumerated in Const.
o Applies to private individuals AND state officials (BUT no suits by individuals
directly against states, only through 4 exceptions)
Congruence & Proportionality: Court looks at:
o fact finding: actual instances of documented bias by states
o whether statute aimed at states or private individuals
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CONGRESS’ CIVIL RIGHTS ENFORCEMENT POWER UNDER §5
The Civil Rights Cases (1883)
State action requirement: Congress cannot enact a public accommodations statute b/c no state
action
US v. Guest (1966)
Court rule § 5 authorized Congress to make it a crime for white supremacists to conspire to
deprive blacks of the civil rights.
Undercut (not overruled b/c dicta) The Civil Rights Cases
factual finding of state action, but 6 votes saying no state action requirement.
South Carolina v. Katzenbach (1966)
Voting Rights Act of 1965 prevented states from using “tests or devices” to deny citizens right
to vote
Congress narrowlytailored its response by limiting law to southern states; less of a power
grab by Congress
Court upholds statute under § 2 of 15th amendment (voting)
RR: applying McCulloch’s broad view of Congressional authority
Katzenbach v. Morgan (1966)
NY statute denying voting rights to Puerto Rican Americans through language req’ts
Lassiter has already ruled language re’t constitutional under § 2 of 15th
Court finds law unconstitutional under § 5 of 14th – clear state action
substantive v. remedial power of Congress
o Substantive: Congress can “enforce” apart from judiciary
o Remedial: (Harlan’s dissent) needs to be a judicial determination of unconstitutionality
before Congress can act
Boerne v. Flores (1997)
RFRA: law of general application addressing freedom of religious exercise; Congress assumed
Court would use SS when evaluating
Congress can engage in remedial enforcement but NOT substantive interpretation of the
Const.
History of discrimination: longstanding problem, Congressional documentation and fact
finding
o BUT Congress’s findings of fact do NOT have enough examples of bias by the states (no
modern day examples)
Congressional statutes must have congruence and proportionality between the injury
Congress wants to remedy and the means used (statute)
Court says RFRA NOT congruent and proportional b/c it affects every level of gov’t and is a
blanket ban
RR b/c laws of general application affecting religious exercise w/o animus get RR (only SS
when there is animus)
SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY
Hans (1890)
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Con Law Outline
Salomone/Spring 2011
Court extends sovereign immunity to say that citizens cannot sue state in which they reside in
Federal court
Exceptions to sovereign immunity:
o can sue state officer in official capacity for injunctive relief, not damages
o explicit waiver by state
o can bring a suit against municipalities, subdivisions
o Federal gov’t can bring suit against the state
Fitzpatrick
Additional exception: Congress can abrogate a state’s sovereign immunity under § 5 power.
Look to congruence and proportionality to do this.
can do this b/c 14th amendment passed after 11th
Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida (1996)
overruled Union Gas; Congress cannot abrogate state sovereign immunity under the
Commerce Clause
Florida Prepaid v. College Savings Bank (1999)
Patent Remedy Act subjected states to patent infringement lawsuits
Court agreed Patent Remedy Act fell under Congress’ Article I (Commerce Clause and Patent
Clause) authority, but that Congress could not abrogate state immunity under that power.
Congress could have abrogated under §5 power, but the statute did not meet Boerne’s
congruence and proportionality test
o Congress failed to prove in their findings that there was a due process issue
Kimel (2000)
Age Discrimination in Employment Act
age only gets RR, so Congress can only remedy discrimination that would fail RR
not responsive to unconstitutional behavior
Congress did not identify any pattern of age discrimination by the States
Garrett (2001)
portion of ADA forbidding states from engaging in employment discrimination against the
disabled
Court held Congress exceeded its § 5 power
no record of state discrimination that shows state actively discriminating.
RR+? (Cleburne) Is Congress granting greater protections to this group than would be afforded
under the Const.? This is where you’re applying RR, it is going to fail.
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