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14th Amend. and fundamental rights

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Title: 14th Amend. and fundamental rights


1
14th Amend. and fundamental rights
  • Today we will consider the early evolution of the
    Supreme Courts interpretation of the 14th
    Amendment to recognize fundamental rights
  • The Court declined the opportunity to invoke the
    privileges or immunities clause
  • After some hesitation, the Court used the due
    process clause to apply most of the Bill of
    Rights to the states
  • Ultimately, as we have seen, the Court relied on
    substantive due process as the primary basis for
    fundamental rights/liberties, with the equal
    protection clause also serving a role

2
Implied fundamental rights
  • Due Process Clause
  • Incorporation of (most of) Bill of Rights
  • Substantive due process
  • Equal Protection Clause
  • Fundamental interests

3
14th Amend. and fundamental rights
  • The obvious textual source for fundamental rights
    was the privileges or immunities clause
  • No State shall make or enforce any law which
    shall abridge the privileges or immunities of
    citizens of the United States
  • Amendment XIV, 1
  • But the Supreme Court limited the use of the P or
    I clause in the Slaughter-House cases

4
14th Amendment P or I Clause
  • Original intent unclear
  • To constitutionalize the rights granted in the
    Civil Rights Act of 1866?
  • Would include the right to sue and give evidence,
    the right to make and enforce contracts, the
    right to own and sell real and personal property,
    and the right to full and equal enjoyment of laws
    for the security of person and property (note
    3.c., page 728) (The McDonald Court took this
    view and included the right to bear arms, pages
    S92-S93)
  • To apply the Bill of Rights to the states?
  • To cover some concept of natural or fundamental
    rights of citizenship?

5
14th Amendment P or I Clause
  • Interpretation of the clause was largely settled
    by the Slaughter-House cases
  • What were the facts (page 721)?
  • The Louisiana legislature granted to the Crescent
    City Live-Stock Landing and Slaughter-House
    Company the exclusive right to engage in the
    business of slaughtering animals within an area
    including the City of New Orleans

6
Slaughter-House Cases
  • Why do you suppose the legislature thought it a
    good idea to limit the number of slaughter houses
    in New Orleans?
  • One leading casebook observes that the company
    that got the monopoly bribed New Orleans
    officials and state legislators
  • Other scholars point out that public health
    considerations were important. At the time the
    statute was passed, 1869, there were real
    problems with communicable diseases coming out of
    slaughterhouses, and it was very difficult to
    control the problem when meat slaughtering was
    taking place in many locations and in residential
    neighborhoods.

7
Slaughter-House Cases
  • The Court could have upheld the statute on public
    health grounds
  • That is, rather than rejecting the claim of a
    protected right, it could have invoked a
    compelling state interest
  • Or the Court could have rejected the particular
    right at stake while preserving the P or I clause
    for other rights
  • However, the Court rendered the P or I clause
    inconsequential until Saenz in 1999

8
Slaughter-House Cases
  • What about the commerce clause? Could it have
    been invoked to strike down the statute?
  • Recall the case involving the Schechter chicken
    slaughtering company in 1935. Did the Louisiana
    case also involve the regulation of
    post-interstate commerce?
  • Schechter applied to Congress but not to state
    governments
  • What about Clarkstown and the waste disposal
    monopoly?
  • The LA statute was regulating post-interstate
    commerce
  • In Clarkstown, customers could not patronize
    out-of-state businesses. The LA statute did not
    require customers to buy their meat in New Orleans

9
Slaughter-House Cases
  • How did the Court interpret the P or I clause?
  • Text compared to other text
  • The first sentence of the amendment refers to
    citizenship of the United States and of the state
    of residence (All persons born or naturalized in
    the United States . . . are citizens of the
    United States and of the State wherein they
    reside (overriding Dred Scott))
  • The P or I clause only refers to national
    citizenship (No State shall make or enforce any
    law which shall abridge the privileges or
    immunities of citizens of the United States)
  • Hence, the P or I clause protects only rights of
    national citizenship

10
Slaughter-House Cases
  • What are the rights of national citizenship
    protected by the P or I clause?
  • The Court essentially held that they were rights
    that already had been recognized under national
    law, either because they were expressly
    enumerated in the Constitution or because the
    Supreme Court had already recognized them as
    implied in the nature of a national government
    (pages 723-724)
  • Hence Fields point in dissent (page 724) that
    the Court read the P or I clause as accomplishing
    nothing since the Supremacy Clause already took
    care of the rights recognized under the
    majoritys view of the clause

11
Slaughter-House Cases
  • The Courts reading of the P or I clause is
    problematic also because of its discussion of
    original intent
  • First, the Court observed that the one pervading
    purpose of the 14th Amendment was to secure the
    freedom of the slave race (page 721)
  • Whats the problem with this argument?
  • The text applies to all citizens of the United
    States
  • So the Court focused on text to distinguish
    national from state citizenship but ignored text
    and used purpose to further diminish the rights
    granted under the P or I clause

12
Slaughter-House Cases
  • The Court also observed that a broader reading of
    the P or I clause would result in too great a
    shift of power from the state governments to the
    federal government and that such a shift of power
    was clearly not envisioned by the framers of the
    14th Amendment or the states that passed it
  • That was in fact a big part of the 14th
    Amendment, although one of great contention.
    Fields dissent, page 724, makes this point
  • He argued that the P or I clause was supposed to
    do for in-staters what the P I clause of
    Article IV, 2, does for out-of-statersjust as
    the P I clause of Article IV prevents certain
    distinctions between in-staters and
    out-of-staters, the P or I clause was designed to
    prevent the same kinds of distinctions among
    different in-staters.

13
Saenz v. Roe
  • This case gave some content to the P or I clause
  • Recall from Shapiro v. Thompson (page 803) that
  • We have no occasion to ascribe the source of
    the right to travel interstate to a particular
    constitutional provision. It suffices that, as
    Mr. Justice Stewart said for the Court in United
    States v. Guest, 383 U.S. 745, 757758 (1966)
    The constitutional right to travel from one
    State to another . . . occupies a position
    fundamental to the concept of our Federal Union.
    It is a right that has been firmly established
    and repeatedly recognized. . . .
  • In Saenz, the Court connected the right to travel
    more closely to constitutional text

14
Saenz v. Roe
  • What were the facts (webpage)?
  • California had enacted a statute limiting the
    maximum welfare benefits available to newly
    arrived residents.
  • A family that resided in the State for less than
    12 months could receive no more than the amount
    it would have received in the State of the
    family's prior residence
  • Not as bad as the statute in Shapiro, which
    resulted in a full denial of benefits, but there
    still ws a disfavored treatment of new residents

15
Saenz v. Roe
  • Three components of the right to travel
  • The right of a citizen of one State to enter and
    to leave another State
  • Court declined the opportunity to tie this right
    to particular text
  • The right to be treated as a welcome visitor
    rather than an unfriendly alien when temporarily
    present in the second State
  • What is the source of this right?
  • Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article IV,
    2
  • For travelers who become permanent residents of a
    new state, the right to be treated like other
    citizens of that State. 
  • Privileges or Immunities Clause of the 14th
    Amendment

16
Saenz v. Roe
  • Does Saenz suggest a major revitalization of the
    P or I clause?
  • Probably not. Nothing since then
  • Also, the Court observed that it was drawing on
    Justice Millers enumeration of rights protected
    by the P or I clause in Slaughter-House
  • But note Justice Thomas preference for the P or
    I clause over the due process clause for
    identifying fundamental rights (McDonald, pages
    S97-S98)

17
Implied fundamental rights
  • While Slaughter-House sounded the death knell for
    the P or I clause as a source for the recognition
    of fundamental rights, it did not end the
    development of case law recognizing that there
    are fundamental rights implied by the 14th
    Amendment
  • The most natural place to find authority for
    fundamental rights was cut off, but the
    sentiments in favor of such rights bubbled up
    through the due process and equal protection
    clauses
  • For the due process clause, implied fundamental
    rights were recognized through
  • Incorporation of the Bill of Rights
  • Substantive due process

18
Incorporation
  • While incorporation and substantive due process
    are distinct doctrines, they rely on the same
    principles.
  • Incorporated rights are those that are
  • Essential to the concept of ordered liberty
    (later, essential to the American scheme of
    justice, Duncan, page 734)
  • So rooted in the tradition and conscience of our
    people as to be ranked fundamental
  • Palko, page 730

19
Incorporation
  • Incorporation refers to the question whether the
    due process clause of the 14th A. prohibits
    states from violating the rights guaranteed
    against the national government by the Bill of
    Rights
  • Save for the recent 2nd Amendment cases,
    incorporation has largely had historical
    importance
  • The Court had to decide which parts of the Bill
    of Rights should be considered incorporated
  • Almost all of the Bill of Rights have been
    incorporated (except the 3rd Amendments
    protection against quartering of soldiers the
    5th Amendments grand jury indictment
    requirement the 6th Amendment right to a
    unanimous jury verdict, the 7th Amendment right
    to a jury trial in civil cases and the 8th
    Amendments prohibition on excessive fines) (page
    S90).
  • The Court also had to decide whether the rights
    that are incorporated should be applied to the
    states in the same way that they are applied to
    the national government (Yes)

20
Second Amendment
  • A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the
    security of a free State prefatory clause,
  • the right of the people to keep and bear Arms,
    shall not be infringed operative clause.
  • In Heller, the court considered a broad ban on
    the possession of handguns (including possession
    in ones home)

21
Heller on the meaning of the prefatory clause
  • Original intentthe framers recognized that the
    way tyrants eliminated the potential for
    resistance was to take away the peoples arms
  • Post-ratification commentarylegal scholars
    understood that the Second Amendment conferred a
    broad individual right to keep and bear arms.

22
Heller
  • The right of the people refers to all members
    of the political communitynot a subset thereof
    (i.e., not just members of the militia)
  • The right of the people to keep and bear Arms,
    shall not be infringed (2nd Amendment)
  • Congress shall make no law . . . Abridging . . .
    the right of the people peaceably to assemble,
    and to petition the Government for a redress of
    grievance (1st Amendment)
  • The right of the people to be secure in their
    persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
    unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
    violated (4th Amendment)

23
Heller on limits to the Second Amendment right
  • nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast
    doubt on
  • longstanding prohibitions on the possession of
    firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or
  • laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in
    sensitive places such as schools and government
    buildings, or
  • laws imposing conditions and qualifications on
    the commercial sale of arms
  • the sorts of weapons protected were those in
    common use at the time.
  • District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570,
    626-627 (2008)

24
Second Amendment incorporation
  • Footnote 23 in Heller
  • With respect to Cruikshank's continuing
    validity on incorporation, a question not
    presented by this case, we note that Cruikshank
    also said that the First Amendment did not apply
    against the States and did not engage in the sort
    of Fourteenth Amendment inquiry required by our
    later cases. . . .

25
Second Amendment incorporation
  • In McDonald, the Court held that the Second
    Amendment is incorporated against the states
  • The case involved gun control ordinances in
    Chicago and Oak Park, IL that were similar to the
    DC law rejected in Heller
  • What was the standard the Court applied?
  • we must decide whether the right to keep and
    bear arms is fundamental to our scheme of ordered
    liberty, or as we have said in a related context,
    whether this right is deeply rooted in this
    Nations history and tradition (and the Court
    quoted a due process case for the deeply rooted
    principle) (page S91)

26
Second Amendment incorporation
  • Why is the right to bear arms fundamental to our
    scheme of ordered liberty and deeply rooted in
    this Nations history and tradition?
  • Self-defense is a basic right
  • The right to self-defense is most acute in the
    home
  • Handguns are the preferred firearm for
    self-defense in the home
  • According to the legislative history of the 14th
    Amendment, the drafters of the Amendment viewed
    the right to bear arms as a basic right that
    should be guaranteed the newly-freed slaves

27
Carhart
  • Did the statute narrowly enough define the banned
    procedure so that doctors would still be able to
    perform the traditional DE procedure?
  • Did Congress need to include an exception to the
    ban in cases for which a womans physician
    believed the banned procedure would be necessary
    to protect the womans health?

28
Carhart
  • Changes in abortion doctrine
  • The ban on the intact DE/partial birth procedure
    did not serve the states interests in protecting
    the womans health or in preserving fetal life
  • Rather the state invoked abstract interests in
    respecting the dignity of human life and
    protecting the reputation of the medical
    community
  • The Court employed a level of deference not
    usually seen in heightened scrutiny
  • considerations of marginal safety, including
    the balance of risks, are within the legislative
    competence when the regulation is rational and in
    pursuit of legitimate ends (emphasis added)
    (page 892)

29
Privileges and Immunities Clause of Art. IV
  • The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to
    all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the
    several States
  • Art. IV, 2, cl. 1
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