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Contracts Clause

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Toll revenue can be used for other transit purposes. Severity ... US Trust v. NJ (1977) Significant & Legitimate Public Purpose. Concede yes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Contracts Clause


1
  • Contracts Clause

2
Article I, Section 10, Par. 1
  • No state shall pass any law impairing the
    obligation of contracts
  • Compare Art. VI, 1
  • All Debts contracted and Engagements entered
    into, before the Adoption of this Constitution,
    shall be as valid against the United States under
    this Constitution, as under the Confederation
  • continuity of debt
  • motivating factor behind contracts clause
  • Compare CSA constitution
  • no law of Congress shall discharge any debt
    contracted before the passage of the same

3
Article I, Section 10, Par. 1
  • No state shall pass any law impairing the
    obligation of contracts
  • Does not apply to
  • Contracts not yet formed (future contracts)
  • So, liberty of contract jurisprudence had to be
    based on econ. subst. DP, not contracts clause
  • Lochner subsumed contracts clause, even where it
    would apply
  • Federal laws
  • But, sanctity of (existing) contracts is an
    element of 5th Amd Due Process.

4
Home Bldg Ln v. Blaisdell (1934)
  • Background
  • Between 1930 and 1935, 750,000 farms were lost
    through foreclosure and bankruptcy sales

5
Home Bldg Ln v. Blaisdell (1934)
  • Minnesota Mortgage Moratorium Law
  • Extending redemption period (postponing sale)
  • Affects (supercedes) terms of existing contracts
  • Does law impair obligations of contract?

severity of interference
express and impled terms
qualitative analysis
e.g. good faith, public policy, sovereign right
to change law
  • must harmonize constl prohibition with
    necessary residuum of state power

6
Home Bldg Ln v. Blaisdell (1934)
  • Harmonizing
  • Balancing of public private interests
  • Note interpretivist methodology used by Hughes
  • Severity of impairment
  • Contract rights/obligations
  • Contract remedies
  • Temporary delay in foreclosure
  • Strength of public interest
  • Emergency measure
  • Court approves

greater interference
lesser interference
appearance of deference during Lochner era
7
Energy Reserves v. KS Power (1983)
  • Substantial impairment of K relationship?
  • Private contract term
  • Escalator clause for price of natural gas (per
    FERC)
  • State law
  • Price Control (abates escalator clause in
    contract)
  • If not, end of inquiry
  • If so, how severe an impairment?
  • Degree affects level of judicial scrutiny
  • Greater the impairment, the greater the state
    justification
  • Expectations of parties (background principles)
  • Look to extent of regulation already in place
  • Escalator clause itself evidence of heavy
    regulation

protection of resonable expections is a common
theme
8
Energy Reserves v. KS Power (1983)
  • Does state have significant public purpose?
  • Ends analysis
  • Private/special interest legislation wont count
  • The broader the impact of the law, the more
    efficacious is the political process for curing
    abuse
  • Windfall profits?
  • protection of consumers is legit significant
    interest
  • Is impairment reasonable (justified)?
  • Means analysis
  • Is adjustment of rights/remedies appropriate
  • Is this a legal or a policy question?

9
Allied Str. Steel v. Spannaus (1978)
  • Is there substantial impairment of contract?
  • Contract terms
  • Vesting of pension rights amounts specified by
    K
  • Company reserves right to amend/terminate plan
  • MN Private Pension Benefits Protection Act
  • Imposes pension funding charge if company
    leaves
  • Law requires ASS to pay pension benefits despite
    K
  • Degree of impairment
  • Expectations (background of govt regulation)
  • Some pension regulation under IRC (pre ERISA)
  • Severe (accelerated funding obligations)
  • Is it retroactive (i.e., apply to terms already
    executed)?

10
Allied Str. Steel v. Spannaus (1978)
  • ENDS Is there a significant public purpose?
  • Stewart not a broad, generalized economic or
    social problem
  • Compare to Blaisdell or ERG ( of persons
    benefited)
  • How does the Ct. judicially know that retiree
    benefits are not as important (a public interest)
    as gas prices?
  • MEANS Is this impairment justified?
  • Not specifically answered. Implied not.
  • Compare ERISA, enacted Sept 2, 1974
  • MN law enacted April 9, 1974
  • Should this be treated as a preemption case?

11
Allied Str. Steel v. Spannaus (1978)
  • Brennan, White, Marshall (dissent)
  • CC applies only where law abrogates obligation
  • MN law doesnt affect any obligations (but
    rights)
  • Use SDP where law imposes new obligations
  • Exxon Corp v. Eagerton (1983)
  • Per Marshall
  • Distinguishes between generally applicable
    economic regulation (SDP) and those directed at
    contractual obligations
  • Only the latter trigger the Contracts Clause

12
US Trust v. NJ (1977)
  • Substantial impairment of contract?
  • Contract terms
  • Bonds issued to fund bridge secured by toll
    revenue
  • State law
  • Toll revenue can be used for other transit
    purposes
  • Severity
  • Affects marketability of bonds (hence their
    value)
  • Background principles
  • Reserved powers/inalienability doctrine means
    that the state can change underlying law to meet
    needs
  • But here, state made a promise not to change the
    law
  • Remedy/obligation distinction reinforced

13
US Trust v. NJ (1977)
  • Significant Legitimate Public Purpose
  • Concede yes
  • Is this impairment appropriate?
  • Recall, severity of impairment determines the
    degree of justification required
  • Deference not appropriate when states own
    contractual obligations are rewritten by law
  • Stateacts in dual capacity proprietary and
    sovereign
  • Court applies strict scrutiny wrt state Ks
  • Modification neither necessary nor reasonable
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