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CON LAW 1

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Title: CON LAW 1


1
CON LAW 1
  • Professor Kwan
  • TA Robert Van Maerssen
  • robertvm_at_attbi.com

2
Review Schedule
  • Wednesdays 3-4
  • Room 2203

3
Review Schedule
  • Number of Review Sessions
  • 8 Sessions
  • Dates of Review Sessions
  • 2/19, 2/26
  • 3/5, 3/19, 3/26
  • 4/9, 4/16, 4/23

4
Session Topics
  • 2/19 Intro and Marbury Review ?
  • 2/26 Nature and Scope of the Supreme Courts
    Authority ?
  • 3/5 National Powers and Local Activities ?
  • 3/19 The Commerce Power
  • 3/26 Federalism-Based Restraints on other
    National Powers
  • 4/9 Federal Limits on State Power to Regulate
    (DCC)
  • 4/16 Separation of Powers
  • 4/23 Substantive Due Process

5
Topics of Discussion
  • Judicial Power
  • Article III, Sections 1 and 2
  • Judicial Review
  • Marbury v. Madison
  • Constitutional and Prudential Limits
  • Constitutional
  • Article III, Section 2 Case and Controversy
  • 11th Amendment
  • Prudential
  • Courts own sense of self-restraint in the
    exercise of its judicial review powers
  • Supreme Court Authority to Review State Court
    Judgments
  • Political Restraints on the Supreme Court

6
Judicial Power
  • Article III, Section 1
  • Establishes the judicial power in one supreme
    court and those inferior courts as Congress
    establishes
  • Article III, Section 2
  • Extends judicial power to
  • Original Jurisdiction ambassadors, public
    ministers and counsuls, and where a state shall
    be a party
  • Appellate Jurisdiction all the rest.

7
Topics of Discussion
  • Judicial Power ?
  • Article III, Sections 1 and 2
  • Judicial Review
  • Marbury v. Madison
  • Constitutional and Prudential Limits
  • Constitutional
  • Article III, Section 2 Case and Controversy
  • 11th Amendment
  • Prudential
  • Courts own sense of self-restraint in the
    exercise of its judicial review powers
  • Supreme Court Authority to Review State Court
    Judgments
  • Political Restraints on the Supreme Court

8
Judicial Review
  • Doctrine of Judicial Review
  • Courts have the power to invalidate governmental
    action as repugnant to the Constitution.
  • Marbury v. Madison (1803)
  • The Court declared that it is the Supreme Court,
    not Congress, which has the authority and duty to
    declare a congressional statute unconstitutional
    if the Court thinks the statute violates the
    Constitution
  • Cooper v. Aaron (1958)
  • Recent ruling that the SC is the ultimate or
    supreme interpreter of the Constitution and that
    states cannot overturn the Courts constitutional
    interpretation.
  • Dickerson v. Unites States (2000)
  • The Court held that Congress cannot overturn the
    Courts constitutional interpretation by statute.
  • Taken together, Cooper and Dickerson stand for
    the proposition that neither Congress nor the
    States can act to overturn a decision of the SC
    on an issue of Constitutional Law (except via
    Article V of the Constitution)

9
Topics of Discussion
  • Judicial Power ?
  • Article III, Sections 1 and 2
  • Judicial Review ?
  • Marbury v. Madison
  • Constitutional and Prudential Limits
  • Constitutional
  • Article III, Section 2 Case and Controversy
  • 11th Amendment
  • Prudential
  • Courts own sense of self-restraint in the
    exercise of its judicial review powers
  • Supreme Court Authority to Review State Court
    Judgments
  • Political Restraints on the Supreme Court

10
Const. Prudential Doctrines
  • 1. What constitutional questions may be litigated
    to a federal court?
  • The Political Question Doctrine
  • 2. When may a Constitutional question be
    litigated?
  • Ripeness
  • Mootness
  • Abstention
  • 3.Who may litigate a constitutional claim?
  • Standing

11
Political Question Doctrine
  • Modern Approach Baker v. Carr (1962)
  • Court notes several factors to determine
    justiciability
  • 1. A textually demonstrable constitutional
    commitment of the issue to a coordinate political
    dept (see Nixon v. US)
  • 2. A lack of judicially discoverable and
    manageable standards for resolving it
  • 3. The impossibility of deciding without an
    initial policy determination of the kind clearly
    for nonjudicial discretion
  • 4. The impossibility of a courts undertaking
    independent resolution without expressing lack of
    respect due coordinate branches of government
  • 5. An unusual need for unquestioning adherence to
    a political decision already made or
  • 6. The potentiality of embarrassment from
    multifarious pronouncements by various
    departments on one question.

12
Case or Controversy Requirements 1
  • 1. Advisory Opinions
  • Self-Imposed limits to avoid nonessential
    interpretation of the Constitution.
  • Rescue Army v. Municipal Court of LA
  • 2. Standing
  • Courts scrutinize the parties bringing suit to
    ensure that they have a concrete and
    particularized interest in the case
  • Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife
  • 1. Injury in Fact
  • 2. Causal connection fairly traceable
  • 3. It must be likely that the injury will be
    redressed by a favorable decision

13
Case or Controversy Requirement 2
  • 3. Mootness
  • Requires that an actual controversy must be
    extant at all stages of review, not merely at the
    time the complaint is filed.
  • Exception 1 (Roe v. Wade)
  • Capable of repetition, yet evading review
  • Exception 2 (Friends of Earth v. Laidlaw)
  • Injunctions and returning to his old ways
  • Exception 3
  • Collateral consequences, as in the case of a
    defendant who has already served his sentence.

14
Case or Controversy Requirements 3
  • 4. Ripeness
  • The Court will not anticipate a question of
    constitutional law prior to the necessity of
    deciding upon it or pass judgment upon issues
    that may or may not arise sometime in the future.
  • United Public Workers v. Mitchell (1947)
  • Laird v. Tatum (1972)

15
Topics of Discussion
  • Judicial Power ?
  • Article III, Sections 1 and 2
  • Judicial Review ?
  • Marbury v. Madison
  • Constitutional and Prudential Limits ?
  • Constitutional
  • Article III, Section 2 Case and Controversy
  • 11th Amendment
  • Prudential
  • Courts own sense of self-restraint in the
    exercise of its judicial review powers
  • Supreme Court Authority to Review State Court
    Judgments
  • Political Restraints on the Supreme Court

16
Supreme Court Authority to Review State Court
Judgments
  • The SC may review state court opinions, but only
    to the extent that the decision was based on
    federal law.
  • Martin v. Hunters Lessee (1816)
  • State courts ALONE interpret state law, unless
    the state law is drawn into question on the
    ground of it being repugnant to the Constitution,
    treaties, or laws of the US.
  • If there is an adequate and independent state
    ground for the state courts decision, the SC
    will deny review because a reversal on federal
    grounds would not change the outcome and would
    hence be an advisory opinion.
  • Michigan v. Long (1983)

17
Topics of Discussion
  • Judicial Power ?
  • Article III, Sections 1 and 2
  • Judicial Review ?
  • Marbury v. Madison
  • Constitutional and Prudential Limits ?
  • Constitutional
  • Article III, Section 2 Case and Controversy
  • 11th Amendment
  • Prudential
  • Courts own sense of self-restraint in the
    exercise of its judicial review powers
  • Supreme Court Authority to Review State Court
    Judgments ?
  • Political Restraints on the Supreme Court

18
Political Restraints on the Supreme Court
  • Can Congress take APPELLATE jurisdiction away
    from the Supreme Court? YES!!!
  • Ex Parte McCardle (1869)
  • If Congress wishes to prevent the SC from hearing
    cases involving a particular topic, it may do so
    by excluding such cases from that courts
    appellate jurisdiction.
  • Plaut v. Spendthrift (1995)
  • Congressional power to remove jurisdiction does
    have separation of powers limitations if
    attempted to apply retroactively.

19
Extra Need to Know
  • Marbury v. Madison holding
  • Marshalls justification for judicial review
  • Implications of Bush v. Gore
  • Application of the Political Question Doctrine
  • Standings Enabling Statutes (ok prd/not con)
  • Standings Jus Tertii, Taxpayer Suits
  • Standing in the Political Process

20
Topics of Discussion
  • Nature and Scope of the Supreme Courts Authority
  • REVIEW INFORMATION
  • National Powers and Local Activities
  • Federalism
  • Implied Powers
  • McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
  • State Oversight of the Federal Government
  • U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton (1995)
  • The Commerce Power
  • Introduction

21
REVIEW INFORMATION
  • HANDOUT 1
  • How to approach a problem
  • HANDOUT 2
  • Sample Problem

22
National Powers and Local Activities
  • Federalism
  • Under the Tenth Amendment, all powers not
    delegated to the national government are retained
    by the states and the people.
  • Why???
  • The Constitution was designed to replace the weak
    federal government provided for in the Articles
    of Confederation with a stronger federal
    government, while maintaining a robust
    governmental role for the states.

23
Federalism
  • Congresss Powers
  • Article 1, Section 8
  • The Congress shall have the power to lay and
    collect taxes
  • To borrow money
  • To regulate commerce with foreign Nations,
  • To declare war
  • To promote the Progress of Science and useful
    Arts, by securing for limited times to authors

24
Federalism
  • The States Powers
  • States have broad police powers to legislate for
    the health, morals, and well-being of their
    citizens the federal government does not.
  • Or do they???

25
Implied Powers
  • Implied Powers
  • By the doctrine of Implied Powers, the federal
    government may validly exercise power that is
    ancillary to one of the powers explicitly listed
    in the Constitution, so long as this ancillary
    power does not conflict with specific
    Constitutional prohibitions.
  • Thus, EVERY federal statute must have as its
    basis one of the enumerated powers.

26
Implied Powers
  • McCulloch v. Maryland
  • CJ Marshall made it clear that congressional
    power is not limited to the express grants of
    Article 1, Section 8, but includes such power as
    is necessary and proper to the effectuation of
    the express powers
  • First Holding Congress did have the power to
    charter a national bank.
  • Second Holding State of Maryland lacked the
    power to tax the national bank.

27
Implied Powers
  • The standard set forth in McCulloch is still in
    force today. The Courts will not strike down a
    congressional action (and the Courts will show
    great deference to Congress generally not
    inquiring into the Legislatures motives) so long
    as Congress has employed a means which is not
    prohibited by the Constitution and which is
    rationally related to objectives that are
    themselves within constitutionally-enumerated
    powers.

28
State Oversight of the Federal Government
  • Conversely, the individual states, as states,
    basically have NO power to restrict the federal
    government.
  • Or do they???

29
State Oversight of the Federal Government
  • U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton (1995)
  • A highly divided court 5-4
  • Stevens, writing for the majority, held that the
    power to add qualifications is not within the
    original powers of the States, and thus is not
    reserved to the States by the Tenth Amendment.
  • No State can say that it has reserved what it
    never possessed.

30
State Oversight of the Federal Government
  • U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton (1995)
  • To the dissent, the states have all the powers,
    including any over the federal government, except
    those the Constitution withholds from them.
  • Where the Constitution is silent, the power is
    reserved to the States.

31
State Oversight of the Federal Government
  • Conversely, the individual states, as states,
    basically have NO power to restrict the federal
    government.
  • Or do they??? NO!!!! The states have no power,
    as states, to restrict the federal government.

32
The Commerce Power
  • The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
    1824 to 1936
  • The Decline of Limits on the Commerce Power from
    1937 to 1995
  • New Limits on the Commerce Power Since 1995
  • External Limits on the Commerce Power

33
The Commerce Power
  • Before we dig deep into a lot of history, whats
    the rule?
  • A particular congressional act comes within
    Congress commerce power if both of the following
    are true
  • 1. The activity being regulated substantially
    affects commerce, and
  • 2. The means chosen by Congress is reasonably
    related to Congress objective in regulating.

34
Implied Powers
  • The standard set forth in McCulloch is still in
    force today. The Courts will not strike down a
    congressional action (and the Courts will show
    great deference to Congress generally not
    inquiring into the Legislatures motives) so long
    as Congress has employed a means which is not
    prohibited by the Constitution and which is
    rationally related to objectives that are
    themselves within constitutionally-enumerated
    powers.

35
The Commerce Power
  • Commerce Power Modern Quick and Dirty
  • The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
    1824 to 1936 (3 prongs)
  • The Decline of Limits on the Commerce Power from
    1937 to 1995 (Girls Gone Wild)
  • New Limits on the Commerce Power Since 1995
  • External Limits on the Commerce Power

36
Commerce Power Modern Quick and Dirty
  • Federal power with respect to the regulation of
    commerce is derived from the Commerce Clause
    (Article 1, Section 8, Clause 3).
  • The Commerce Clause grants to Congress the power
    to regulate commerce with foreign nations and
    among the several states, and with the Indian
    tribes.

37
Commerce Power Modern Quick and Dirty
  • Modern Commerce Clause Analysis
  • NLRB v. Jones Laughlin Steel Corp. (1937)
  • The Court articulated in 1937 the modern commerce
    clause analysis, known as the affectation
    doctrine.
  • The Courts position became that Congress has the
    power to regulate any activity, whether it be
    interstate or intrastate in nature, so long as it
    has any appreciable (substantial) effect whatever
    on interstate commerce.

38
Commerce Power Modern Quick and Dirty
  • A particular congressional act comes within
    Congress commerce power if both of the following
    are true
  • The activity being regulated substantially
    affects commerce, and
  • The means chosen by Congress is reasonably
    related to Congress objective in regulating.

39
Commerce Power Modern Quick and Dirty
  • The Court, under U.S. v. Lopez, recognized three
    broad categories of activity where Congress may
    regulate under its commerce power.
  • Congress may regulate the use of the channels of
    interstate commerce.
  • Congress may regulated the instrumentalities of
    interstate commerce.
  • By using the Necessary and Proper Clause in
    connection with the Commerce Clause, Congress may
    regulate any economic activity that has a
    substantial relationship with interstate commerce.

40
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936
  • 1824
  • Gibbons
  • 1887
  • Road Map of Knight, Shreveport, and Swift
  • Morality and Criminality (Mo Cr)
  • Champion Lottery Case, Hippolite, and Hoke
  • The First of the New Deal Cases (1st of ND)
  • Railroad Retirement, Schecter Poulty, and Carter
    Coal
  • FDR Court Packing and the Results (FDR)

41
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1824
  • Up until 1895, the Supreme Court had practically
    no occasion to consider Congresss powers under
    the Commerce Clause.
  • The scope of the Courts discussions arose in
    cases dealing with limits on state action
    affecting interstate commerce.

42
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1824
  • Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
  • Although the Gibbons opinion contained some
    discussion of the Commerce Clause as a limitation
    upon state powers, its principal holding was its
    broad-sweeping view of congressional power under
    the Commerce Clause.
  • Marshall stated that no area of interstate
    commerce is reserved for state control.
  • This means that Congress has NO power over the
    completely internal commerce of a state but DOES
    have power over all interstate commerce.

43
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • So affirmative exercise of the national commerce
    power was rare before 1887.
  • What changed???

44
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • What changed???
  • Congress started to regulate commerce in response
    to industrialization, transportation, and
    communication.
  • These developments gave rise to the Interstate
    Commerce Act of 1887 and the Sherman Anti-Trust
    Act of 1890.

45
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • ROADMAP
  • Knight Sugar Trust Case (1895)
  • Local vs. Interstate
  • Used in the 1930 blocking New Deal legislation
  • Shreveport Rate Case (1914)
  • Local vs. Substantial Economic Effects
  • Used in 1937 to reverse direction in NOT blocking
  • Swift v. United States (1905)
  • Stream of Commerce

46
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • ROADMAP
  • Knight Sugar Trust Case (1895)
  • Local vs. Interstate
  • Used in the 1930 blocking New Deal legislation
  • Shreveport Rate Case (1914)
  • Local vs. Substantial Economic Effects
  • Used in 1937 to reverse direction in NOT blocking
  • Swift v. United States (1905)
  • Stream of Commerce

47
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • US v. Knight (The Knight Sugar Trust Case)
  • Knight (1895) challenged the Sherman Act.
  • Knight case justified national regulation of
    local activities on the basis of their
    relationship to interstate commerce.
  • Knight essentially limited interstate commerce to
    transportation across state lines (thus narrowing
    the position taken by the Court in Gibbons),
    holding that manufacturing and production
    were not interstate commerce.

48
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • Knight Sugar Trust Case
  • The Knight approach looked at the formal, logical
    relationship between the local and the
    interstate.
  • The Knight approach was later used to block New
    Deal legislation in the 1930s.

49
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • ROADMAP
  • Knight Sugar Trust Case (1895)
  • Local vs. Interstate
  • Used in the 1930 blocking New Deal legislation
  • Shreveport Rate Case (1914)
  • Local vs. Substantial Economic Effects
  • Used in 1937 to reverse direction in NOT blocking
  • Swift v. United States (1905)
  • Stream of Commerce

50
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • Houston EW Railway v. US (1914) aka Shreveport
    Rate Case
  • Shreveport Rate challenged the Interstate
    Commerce Act of 1887.
  • Shreveport Rate case justified national
    regulation of local activities on the basis of
    their substantial economic effects.
  • The Court ruled that the Commerce Power
    necessarily embraces the right to control the
    operation of all matters having a close and
    substantial relation and effect on interstate
    traffic and commerce.

51
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • Shreveport Rate Case
  • The Shreveport Rate approach emphasized that
    whenever the interstate and intrastate
    transactions are so related that the government
    of one controls the other, Congress, and not the
    state, must regulate the transactions.
  • The Shreveport Rate approach was later used in
    1937 to reverse direction when the Court was
    deciding the New Deal cases.

52
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • ROADMAP
  • Knight Sugar Trust Case (1895)
  • Local vs. Interstate
  • Used in the 1930 blocking New Deal legislation
  • Shreveport Rate Case (1914)
  • Local vs. Substantial Economic Effects
  • Used in 1937 to reverse direction in NOT blocking
  • Swift v. United States (1905)
  • Stream of Commerce

53
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 --1887
  • Swift Co. v. US (1905)
  • The court held that some local activities are
    controllable because they could themselves by
    vies as in commerce or as an intergral part of
    the current of commerce.
  • Stafford v. Wallace (1922) affirmed Swift
  • The stockyards are but a throat through which
    the current flowsthe stockyards and the sales
    are necessary factors in the middle of this
    current of commerce.

54
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 Mo Cr
  • Congress used the commerce power increasingly in
    the late 19th century not only to deal with the
    emerging problems of a national economy, but also
    with problems of morality and criminality such as
    gambling, prostitution, and theft.

55
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 Mo Cr
  • Champion Lottery Case (1903)
  • Lottery tickets subject of traffic
  • Hippolite Egg (1911)
  • Prevention of physical movement AND...
  • Hoke v. United States (1913)
  • quality of police regulations
  • GREAT ESSAY EXAM ????

56
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 1st of ND
  • The Court initially rejected New Deal regulation
    under the commerce power as seen in
  • Railroad Retirement Board v. Alton (1935)
  • Schechter Poultry v. United States (1935)
  • Carter v. Carter Coal (1936)

57
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 1st of ND
  • FDRs Attempt to Combat the Depression by use of
    the Commerce Power
  • Railroad Retirement Board v. Alton (1935)
  • Retirement and Pension Plan
  • Schechter Poultry v. United States (1935)
  • Codes of Fair Competition
  • Court rejected Swift stream of commerce and
    Shreveport affecting commerce Court utilized a
    direct/indirect analysis.
  • Carter v. Carter Coal (1936)
  • Wage and Hour Requirements

58
The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
1824 to 1936 -- FDR
  • FDR proposed legislation to allow him to appoint
    an extra justice for every justice over 70 years
    old who did not resign.
  • The legislation never passed, but it prompted a
    change in the Courts analysis of New Deal
    legislation.

59
The Decline of Limits on the Commerce Power from
1937 to 1995
  • The Court abandoned the geographical
    (manufacturing is local) and direct vs.
    indirect concepts.
  • The Court opened the floodgates to new
    legislation based on the Commerce Clause, and
    during this time placed virtually no limits on
    Congress power to regulate.

60
The Decline of Limits on the Commerce Power from
1937 to 1995
  • NLRB v. Jones Laughlin Steel Corp (1937)
  • The Court articulated in 1937 the modern commerce
    clause analysis, known as the affectation
    doctrine.
  • The Courts position became that Congress has the
    power to regulate any activity, whether it be
    interstate or intrastate in nature, so long as it
    has any appreciable (substantial) effect whatever
    on interstate commerce.

61
The Decline of Limits on the Commerce Power from
1937 to 1995
  • The Court set virtually no limits on Congress
  • US v. Darby (1937)
  • LOCAL Labor Standards of employees in local
    manufacturing activities
  • Overruled Hammer v. Dagenhart (1918)
  • Wickard v. Filburn (1942)
  • Home-grown and home-consumed wheat (outer limits)
  • Maryland v. Wirtz (1968)
  • de minimus enterprise concept (aggregate,
    cumulative effect)
  • Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining (1981)
  • Courts need only inquire whether the finding is
    rationale
  • Heart of Atlanta Motel v. US (1964)
  • Ban on discrimination in LOCAL public
    accommodations
  • Perez v. US (1971)
  • Intrastate loan sharking enforced by threats of
    violence

62
New Limits on the Commerce Power Since 1995
  • When Justice Rehnquist became the Chief Justice,
    the Court began to emphasize the importance of
    states in the federal system by finding
    limitations to congressional power.

63
New Limits on the Commerce Power Since 1995
  • United States v. Lopez (1995)
  • The Act is this case is a criminal statute
    (knowingly possessing a concealed handgun in High
    School) that has nothing to do with commerce.
  • The only way to find an effect on commerce in
    this case is to pile inference upon inference,
    and the result would be to uphold a general
    police power for Congress
  • Solid Waste v. US Army Corp of Eng (2001)
  • United States v. Morrison (2000)

64
New Limits on the Commerce Power Since 1995
  • The Court, under U.S. v. Lopez, recognized
    (guiding limitations) three broad categories of
    activity where Congress may regulate under its
    commerce power.
  • Congress may regulate the use of the channels of
    interstate commerce.
  • Congress may regulated the instrumentalities of
    interstate commerce.
  • By using the Necessary and Proper Clause in
    connection with the Commerce Clause, Congress may
    regulate any economic activity that has a
    substantial relationship with interstate
    commerce.

65
The Commerce Power
  • Commerce Power Modern Quick and Dirty
  • The Interpretation of the Commerce Power from
    1824 to 1936 (3 prongs)
  • The Decline of Limits on the Commerce Power from
    1937 to 1995 (Girls Gone Wild)
  • New Limits on the Commerce Power Since 1995
  • External Limits on the Commerce Power

66
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • Limits on Congressional Power
  • State Autonomy
  • New York v. United States (1992)
  • Printz v. United States (1997)
  • State Sovereign Immunity
  • Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida (1996)
  • Alden v. Maine (1999)

67
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Autonomy Limits on Congressional Power
  • Until 1976, the Court continued to reject
    challenges to federal regulations allegedly
    interfering with state autonomy.
  • US v. California (1936)
  • The sovereign power of the states is necessarily
    diminished to the extent of the grants of power
    to the federal government in the Constitution.

68
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Autonomy Limits on Congressional Power
  • But then in 1976 the Court held that a federal
    law permissibly based on the commerce power
    nonetheless infringed impermissibly on state
    autonomy.
  • National League of Cities (1976)

69
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Autonomy Limits on Congressional Power
  • In the early 1980s, however, the Court rejected
    challenges based on National League and sustained
    applications of several federal laws.
  • Hodel v. Virginia Surface Mining (1981)
  • FERC v. Mississippi
  • EEOC v. Wyoming

70
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Autonomy Limits on Congressional Power
  • In 1985, National League of Cities was overruled.
  • Garcia v. San Antonio (1985)
  • But the majority in Garcia suggested that some
    judicial intervention might still be appropriate
    to compensate for possible failings in the
    national political process.

71
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Autonomy Limits on Congressional Power
  • Recall in Hodel v . Virginia Surface Mining
    Justice Marshall noted that the challenged
    program did not commandeer the legislative
    processes of the States by directly compelling
    them to enact and enforce a federal regulatory
    scheme.
  • In New York v. US, the Court for the first time
    invalidated a federal law on just such a ground.

72
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Autonomy Limits on Congressional Power
  • New York v. United States (1992)
  • Low-Level Radioactive Waste Policy Amendments Act
  • The Court held that the federal government may
    not compel the states to enact or administer a
    federal regulatory scheme.
  • No matter how great the federal interest, the
    Constitution does not give Congress authority to
    require the states to regulate. Congress must
    regulate directly, not by conscripting state
    governments and state officials cannot give this
    authority by consenting to the federal statute.

73
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Autonomy Limits on Congressional Power
  • Printz v. United States (1997)
  • Gun Control Act
  • Congress cannot compel the states to enact or
    enforce a federal regulatory scheme. Congress
    cannot circumvent that prohibition by
    conscripting the states officers directly. The
    structure of the Constitution gives Congress the
    power to regulate individuals, but not states.

74
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Sovereign Immunity Limits on Congressional
    Power
  • Eleventh Amendment
  • The judicial power of the United States shall not
    be construed to extend to any suit commenced or
    prosecuted against one of the United States by
    Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or
    Subjects of any Foreign States.

75
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Sovereign Immunity Limits on Congressional
    Power
  • Eleventh Amendment
  • The Court has refused to allow Congress, when
    acting under its commerce power, to abrogate a
    states Eleventh Amendment Immunity.

76
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Sovereign Immunity Limits on Congressional
    Power
  • Eleventh Amendment
  • Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida (1976)
  • Indian Gaming Regulatory Act required states to
    negotiate in good faith with an Indian Tribe or
    else the Act allowed the Indian Tribe to sue the
    state in Federal Court to force the state to
    negotiate in good faith.
  • The Court rejected the claim that Congress acting
    under its commerce power could abrogate a states
    Eleventh Amendment immunity.

77
External Limits on the Commerce Power
  • State Sovereign Immunity Limits on Congressional
    Power
  • Eleventh Amendment
  • Alden v. Maine (1999)
  • The Court extended the state sovereign immunity
    bar announced in Seminole Tribe from lawsuits
    against states in federal courts to lawsuits
    against states in state court.
  • The Court held that private citizens cant sue
    states unless states consent.

78
Session Topics
  • 2/19 Intro and Marbury Review ?
  • 2/26 Nature and Scope of the Supreme Courts
    Authority ?
  • 3/5 National Powers and Local Activities ?
  • 3/19 The Commerce Power ?
  • 3/26 Federalism-Based Restraints on other
    National Powers
  • 4/9 Federal Limits on State Power to Regulate
    (DCC)
  • 4/16 Separation of Powers
  • 4/23 Substantive Due Process

79
Federalism-based Restraints on Other National
Powers
  • The Taxing Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • The Spending Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • War, Foreign Affairs, and Federalism

80
The Taxing Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • Like the regulation of interstate commerce, the
    taxing (and spending) powers have been used to
    attempt to influence state regulatory policy
    sometimes as an alternative to regulation under
    the commerce clause that the Court is likely to
    hold unconstitutional.

81
The Taxing Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • Article I, Section 8
  • The Congress shall have the power to lay and
    collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to
    pay the debts and provide for the common defense
    and general welfare of the United States.

82
The Taxing Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • Under the taxing power, Congress is given a
    far-reaching ability to tax in order to raise
    revenue. Congress may also regulate via
    taxation. Even if Congress principle motive is
    to regulate rather than tax, so long as the tax
    produces some meaningful revenue and any
    regulatory provisions accompanying the tax are
    reasonably related to the taxs enforcement, the
    tax will probably be upheld.

83
The Taxing Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • Since every tax has a regulatory effect, the test
    for validity is whether the tax is primarily
    fiscal or regulatory.
  • Bailey v. Drexel Furniture (1922)
  • The Court found that the important thing is the
    motive of Congress.
  • If the purpose is for revenue, then the tax is
    valid.
  • If the tax is primarily to regulate, it is
    unconstitutional

84
The Taxing Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • United States v. Kahriger (1953)
  • The Court found that a federal tax is still valid
    even if it discourages specific activity and
    produces little revenue so long as the tax does
    in reality raise some revenue, it is
    presumptively valid.
  • tax does not cease to be valid merely because
    it discourages or deters the activities taxed.
    Nor is the tax invalid because the revenue
    obtained is negligible

85
The Spending Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • Article I, Section 8
  • The Congress shall have the power to lay and
    collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, to
    pay the debts and provide for the common defense
    and general welfare of the United States.

86
The Spending Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • Congress has authority to impose conditions on
    the receipt of federal funds, even to attain
    objectives it might not be able to attain
    directly.
  • However, the power may not be used to induce the
    States to engage in activities that would
    themselves be unconstitutional.

87
The Spending Power as a Regulatory Tool
  • South Dakota v. Dole (1987)
  • The spending power is not confined to enumerated
    areas, but still must be for the general welfare
    of the United States.
  • The Court lists four limitations
  • The exercise of the spending power must be in
    pursuit of the general welfare as written in
    the Constitution itself.
  • Congress must condition the funding unambiguously
  • Must be related to the federal interest in
    particular national programs or projects.
  • Other constitutional provisions may provide an
    independent bar to the conditional grant of
    federal funds.

88
War, Foreign Affairs, and Federalism
  • Article I, Section 8
  • 1 The Congress shall have Power
  • 11 To declare War
  • 12 To raise and support Armies, but no
    Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a
    longer Term than two Years
  • 13 To provide and maintain a Navy
  • 14 To make Rules for the Government and
    Regulation of the land and naval Forces
  • 15 To provide for calling forth the Militia to
    execute the Laws of the Union, suppress
    Insurrections and repel Invasions
  • 16 To provide for organizing, arming, and
    disciplining, the Militia

89
War, Foreign Affairs, and Federalism
  • Article II, Section 2
  • 1 The President shall be Commander in Chief of
    the Army and Navy of the United States, and of
    the Militia of the several States, when called
    into the actual Service of the United States

90
War, Foreign Affairs, and Federalism
  • Under the Necessary and Proper clause, the
    president and Congress have wide power to prepare
    for and wage war, and to control the after
    effects.
  • Woods v. Cloyd W. Miller (1948)
  • Congress invoked its war power to cope with a
    current condition (Housing and Rent Act) of which
    the war was a direct and immediate cause.

91
War, Foreign Affairs, and Federalism
  • Whenever Article I powers prove insufficient to
    reach a local problem, may the national
    government overcome that obstacle simply by
    making a treaty with a cooperating foreign
    government?
  • Reid v. Covert (1957)
  • This case answered the question that the failed
    Bricker Amendment attempted to answer as to
    unratified executive agreements.
  • No agreement with a foreign nation can confer
    power on Congress, or on any other branch of
    Government, which is free from the restraints of
    the Constitution.

92
Session Topics
  • 2/19 Intro and Marbury Review ?
  • 2/26 Nature and Scope of the Supreme Courts
    Authority ?
  • 3/5 National Powers and Local Activities ?
  • 3/19 The Commerce Power ?
  • 3/26 Federalism-based Restraints on other Nat.
    Powers ?
  • 4/9 Federal Limits on State Power to Regulate
    (DCC)
  • 4/16 Separation of Powers
  • 4/23 Substantive Due Process

93
Federal Limits on State Power to Regulate the
National Economy
  • State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Overview
  • Early Developments
  • Modern Approach
  • The Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article
    IV
  • Congressional Ordering of Federal-State
    Relationships by Preemption and Consent

94
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
- overview
  • The powers of the federal government are, for the
    most part, specifically mentioned in the
    Constitution they are delegated powers.
  • The power of the states is residual i.e., under
    the Tenth Amendment the states have all power not
    specifically given to the federal government.

95
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
(1) - overview
  • Under the DCC, the Court invalidates some
    protectionist state legislation, even in the
    absence of Congressional preemption.
  • For such limitations, the Court has drawn on the
    negative implications of the grant of power to
    Congress to regulate interstate commerce.

96
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
- overview
  • The Supreme Court interprets congressional
    silence on state commerce-related conduct which
    somehow affects interstate commerce and asks
  • Has the state sought to regulate or tax
    interstate commerce in a manner that would be
    better left to Congress?

97
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
(2) - overview
  • A state regulation which affects interstate
    commerce must satisfy each of the following three
    requirements in order to avoid violating the DCC
  • The state regulation must pursue legitimate state
    ends and
  • The state regulation must be rationally related
    to that legitimate state end and
  • The regulatory burden and discrimination imposed
    by the state on interstate commerce must be
    outweighed by the states interest in enforcing
    its regulation.

98
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
(3) - overview
  • Threshold Questions in DCC Analysis
  • Does the challenged state law on its face
    discriminate against out of state interests?
  • If yes, the challenged state law is ipso facto
    unconstitutional,
  • Unless the state can show that the challenged
    state law serves a legitimate local purpose and
    no nondiscriminatory alternative means is
    available.

99
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
(4) - overview
  • Threshold Questions in DCC Analysis
  • If the challenged state law is facially neutral,
    but the challenged state law gives preference to
    local commerce, the Court will look to see if
    there is a protectionist motive.
  • If yes there is a protectionist motive by the
    state legislation, then the challenged state law
    is unconstitutional.

100
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
(5) - overview
  • Threshold Questions in DCC Analysis
  • If the challenged state law is facially neutral,
    does it nonetheless unduly burden interstate
    commerce?
  • Court applies the Pike Balancing Test

101
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
- overview
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws the facially discriminate against
    out-of-state commerce.
  • Laws protectionist in Purpose or Effect
  • Laws that are facially neutral and Pike Balancing

102
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
early development
  • Early Developments
  • Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
  • Purpose Inquiry - Police vs. Commerce
  • Wilson v. Black-Bird (1829)
  • Cooley v. Board of Wardens (1851)
  • Subject Inquiry - Local vs. national subject
    matters

103
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
early development
  • Early Developments
  • Cooley v. Board of Wardens
  • The Court said Congress has absolute power to
    regulate interstate commerce. Congress may
    permit a state to exercise this power, or, in its
    sole discretion, prohibit a state from doing so.
  • Where Congress has acted to prohibit state
    regulation, Congress is said to have preempted
    the field.
  • Even where Congress has not preempted the field,
    the very existence of the Commerce Clause forbids
    state regulation that places an unreasonable
    burden on interstate commerce.
  • The determinative factor is the subject of the
    regulation local subjects are more freely
    regulated by states than national subjects.

104
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
- modern approach
  • Modern Courts Approach
  • Modern dormant commerce clause decisions hold
    unconstitutional some but not all state
    regulations that burden interstate commerce.

105
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws the facially discriminate against
    out-of-state commerce.
  • Laws protectionist in Purpose or Effect
  • Laws that are facially neutral and Pike Balancing

106
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws the facially discriminate against
    out-of-state commerce.
  • Laws, fees, and taxes that facially discriminate
    against interstate commerce are virtually per se
    invalid.
  • Philadelphia v. New Jersey (1978)
  • Law

107
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws the facially discriminate against
    out-of-state commerce.
  • Laws, fees, and taxes that facially discriminate
    against interstate commerce are virtually per se
    invalid.
  • Exception Maine v. Taylor (1986)
  • Out-of-State bait fish.
  • Legitimate local purpose AND no nondiscriminatory
    alternative available

108
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws the facially discriminate against
    out-of-state commerce.
  • Laws, fees, and taxes that facially discriminate
    against interstate commerce are virtually per se
    invalid.
  • Chemical Waste v. Hunt (1992) - Fees
  • West Lynn Creamery v. Healy (1994) Taxes
  • Foster Fountain v. Haydel (1928) In state
    processing requirement
  • Dean Milk v. Madison (1951) Facial
    discrimination by localities is also barred

109
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws protectionist in Purpose or Effect
  • Laws that are protectionist in purpose or
    practical effect are virtually per se invalid.
  • Scenario 1 State barriers to out-of-state
    sellers
  • Scenario 2 State barriers to out-of-state
    buyers

110
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws protectionist in Purpose or Effect
  • Laws that are protectionist in purpose or
    practical effect are virtually per se invalid.
  • Scenario 1 State Barriers to out-of-state
    Sellers
  • States may not protect local economic interests
    by laws that have the effect of limiting access
    to local markets by out-of-state sellers.
  • Baldwin v. Seelig (1935) - purpose
  • Henneford v. Silas Mason (1937) - purpose
  • Bacchus Imports v. Dias (1984) - purpose
  • Hunt v. Washington Apple (1977) - practical
    effect

111
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws protectionist in Purpose or Effect
  • Laws that are protectionist in purpose or
    practical effect are virtually per se invalid.
  • Scenario 2 State Barriers to out-of-state
    Buyers
  • States may not protect local economic interests
    by laws that hamper out-of-state buyers seeking
    access to a states products and resources,
    including natural resources.
  • H.P. Hood Sons v. Du Mond (1949)
  • Sporhase v. Nebraska (1982)

112
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws that are facially neutral and Pike Balancing
  • If a state has a legitimate local purpose for
    regulating and the effects on interstate commerce
    are merely incidental, the regulation will be
    upheld unless the burden clearly exceeds the
    local benefits.
  • Pike v. Bruce Church (1970)
  • Predecessor cases to Pike involved transportation
  • South Carolina Highways v. Barnwell (1938)
  • Southern Pacific v. Arizona (1945)
  • Bibb v. Navajo Freight (1959)

113
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws that are facially neutral and Pike Balancing
  • If a state has a legitimate local purpose for
    regulating and the effects on interstate commerce
    are merely incidental, the regulation will be
    upheld unless the burden clearly exceeds the
    local benefits.
  • State Burdens on Trade
  • State Burdens on Business Entry
  • Market Participant Exception to the DCC

114
Session Topics
  • 2/19 Intro and Marbury Review ?
  • 2/26 Nature and Scope of the Supreme Courts
    Authority ?
  • 3/5 National Powers and Local Activities ?
  • 3/19 The Commerce Power ?
  • 3/26 Federalism-based Restraints on other Nat.
    Powers ?
  • 4/9 Federal Limits on State Power to Regulate
    (DCC)
  • 4/16 Separation of Powers
  • 4/23 Substantive Due Process

115
Federal Limits on State Power to Regulate the
National Economy
  • State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Overview
  • Early Developments
  • Modern Approach ?
  • The Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article
    IV
  • Congressional Ordering of Federal-State
    Relationships by Preemption and Consent

116
The Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article IV
  • Article IV, Section 2
  • The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to
    all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the
    several States.

117
The Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article IV
  • The Privileges and Immunities Clause serves as a
    restraint of state efforts to bar out-of-staters
    from access to local resources.
  • United Building Construction Trade Councils v.
    Mayor and Council of Camden (1984) 2 part test
  • Supreme Court of New Hampshire v. Piper (1985)

118
The Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article IV
  • The Privileges and Immunities Clause prohibits
    discrimination by a state against noncitizens of
    the state with respect to essential activities or
    basic rights, unless justified by a substantial
    reason.
  • To justify an exception, the state must show that
    the nonresidents are a peculiar source of evil
    sought to be avoided, and that the discrimination
    bears a substantial relation to the problem.

119
State Regulation and the Dormant Commerce Clause
- Compared
  • Modern Courts Approach and Answering Exam
    Questions
  • Laws protectionist in Purpose or Effect
  • Laws that are protectionist in purpose or
    practical effect are virtually per se invalid.
  • Scenario 1 State barriers to out-of-state
    sellers
  • Scenario 2 State barriers to out-of-state
    buyers

120
The Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article IV
  • Like the DCC and the Commerce Clause, but
  • Extends to fundamental rights, not to all
    commercial activity.
  • Does not apply to corporations
  • No market-participant exception PI still apply
  • Fundame
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