Constitutional Law Flashcards

1
Q

Judicial Power

A

Source: Article 3
Limit: Actual cases and controversies
Doctrine: Justiciability, whether lawsuit is capable of judicial resolution as a case or controversy, depends on:
- What it requests (no advisory opinions)
- When it is brought (ripe and not moot) and
- Who brings it (someone with standing)
Additional doctrines limit federal court review: political question, sovereign immunity and abstention.
Special Rules govern Supreme Court Review

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2
Q

Advisory Opinions

A

Federal Courts may not render advisory opinions which lack,
- An actual dispute between adverse parties
- Any legally binding effect between the parties on the parties
Declaratory Judgments are not advisory opinions

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3
Q

Ripeness

A

too early
Federal courts may only decide controversies that are ripe for judicial review
Application: a request for pre enforcement review of law are not ripe unless:
- Substantial hardship in absence of review (the more the better) and issues on the record are fit for review (the more legal than factual the better

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4
Q

Mootness

A

Live if
- For the case of injunctive and declaratory relief challenged law or conduct continues to injure
- For damages plaintiff not made whole from injury
Exceptions: though injury has passed, not moot if:
- Injury is capable of repetition yet evades review because of inherently limited duration
- Defendant voluntarily stops challenged activity but may restart at will or
- In class actions, one plaintiff suffers ongoing Injury

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5
Q

Standing

A

Plaintiff must have standing to sue which consists of:
A. Injury
B. Causation
C. Redressability

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6
Q

Injury/ Standing

A

What: almost any harm counts
Ex: Physical, economic, environmental, loss of constitutional or statutory rights
Not: Ideological objections or generalized grievances as citizen or taxpayer
Ex:
- Citizen may not sue to force government to obey laws
- Taxpayer may not sue over how government spends tax reviews
EXCEPTIONS:
- Taxpayer challenge to his or her own tax liability
- Congressional spending in violation of establishment clause
A. Not executive spending
B. Not tax credits for contributions for private (including parochial) tuition

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7
Q

When must injury occur for standing?

A

injury must have occurred or will imminently occur

- Injunctive or declaratory relief: must show likelihood of future harm

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8
Q

Who must be injured for standing?

A

injury must be suffered personally by plaintiff rather than those not before court
- No third party standing

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9
Q

Third Party Standing Exceptions

A

Close Relationship:
1. Plaintiff Injured
2. Third Party unable or unlikely to sue
3. Plaintiff can adequately represent third party
Organizations (on behalf of members):
1. Members have standing
2. Members injury related to purpose of organization
3. Members participation not required (eg not seeking individualized damages)
Free Speech Overbreadth (party whose speech can be censored on behalf of those whose speech cannot):
1. Substantial overbreadth in terms of laws legitimate to illegitimate sweep
2. Not Commercial Speech

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10
Q

Legislative Standing

A

legislators may challenge acts that injure them personally, rather than the legislature generally

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11
Q

Causation for Standing

A

Plaintiff must show that injury is fairly traceable to defendant
Ex: no causation where parents of black public school children challenged IRS failure to deny tax breaks to discriminatory private schools, claiming breaks caused public schools to be less integrated

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12
Q

Redressability for Standing

A

Plaintiff must show that favorable court decision can remedy the harm (ie through money damages or an injunction)
Ex: No redressability where mother challenged states failure to prosecute for nonpayment of child support, claiming loss of child support from lack or prosecution

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13
Q

Political Question Doctrine

A

Federal Courts will not decide political questions

  • Committed by the constitution to the political branches of government or
  • Incapable of or inappropriate for judicial resolution
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14
Q

Examples of Political Questions

A
  1. Guarantee Clause (article IV, Section 4): challenges to a states government as not a “republican form of government”
  2. Foreign Affairs: Challenges to President’s conduct of foreign policy and command decisions
  3. Impeachment Process: Challenges to procedures used by senate to remove officials
  4. Partisan Gerrymandering: Challenges to drawing election districts on a partisan basis
  5. Elections and qualifications of members of congress
  6. Seating of delegates at national political convention
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15
Q

Sovereign Immunity

A

11th amendment/ Federalism

Barred:
State as defendant where lawsuit is federal and state courts (and agencies)

Exceptions:
State as defendant and
Lawsuit involves-
1. Waiver (Ex: some have waived under tort claim acts)
2. Plaintiff- other states or feds
3. Bankruptcy proceedings
4. Clear abrogation by congress under 14 amendment powers to prevent discrimination

Not barred: 
Where Defendant is State Officials and
Lawsuit involves
1. Injunctive Relief 
2. Money damages from own pocket 
Defendant- Local government
Lawsuit: Any
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16
Q

Abstention

A
  1. Federal courts may decline to decide a federal constitutional claim that turns on an unsettled question of state law
    Ex: Equal protection claim that depends on meaning of ambiguous new state immigration law
  2. Federal courts generally may not enjoin pending state judicial or administrative proceedings
    Ex: criminal trial allegedly in violation of Due process
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17
Q

Supreme Court Review

A

Final Judgment Rule: Supreme Court only hears a case after there has been a final judgment by the highest state court capable of rendering a decision, a federal court of appeals, or (in special statutory situations) a three-judge district court

Independent and Adequate State Grounds: Supreme Court will not review a federal question if the state court decision rests on an independent and adequate state law ground

  • Independent and Adequate (separate and sufficient) State Grounds exists if outcome would be the same regardless of how the federal question is decided
  • If it would be decided the same as state, there is no reason for supreme court to review
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18
Q

Legislative Power

A

Source: Article 1 of constitution
Limit: Enumerated Powers
- Unlike states, congress has no general police power to pass laws
Exceptions: federal land, Indian reservations, DC

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19
Q

Necessary and Proper Clause

A

Not a basis of legislative power
Allows congress to choose any rational means to carry out an enumerated power, as long as means not prohibited by Constitution
Ex: Article I gives Congress power to raise and support armies but not to hold a bake sale. Nonetheless Congress may choose the means of a bake sale to help raise and support armies

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20
Q

Enumerated Powers

A

Ex: Citizenship, bankruptcy, federal property, patents and copyright, post offices, coning money, territories and DC, declaring war, raising and supporting armies, providing and maintaining navy

  1. Taxing and Spending Powers
  2. Commerce Power
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21
Q

Enumerated Powers/ Taxing and Spending Powers

A

Congress may tax and spend for to provide for the general welfare (to promote general welfare, not just for general welfare)
- Includes any public purpose not prohibited by constitution, even if not within an enumerated power
Ex: tax on factory carbon emissions (though no enumerated power to regulate environment)
Ex: spending on schools for states following federal educational standards (though no enumerated power to regulate local education)
- Note “Strings” must relate to purpose of spending and not violate constitution
- Have to be related for strings
- Stings must not be so coercive that the state has no choice but to comply (state would have no real choice “bullet to head of states”)

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22
Q

Enumerated Powers/ Commerce Power

A

Congress may regulate commerce with:

  1. Foreign Nations
  2. Indian Tribes
  3. Among the states
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23
Q

Interstate Commerce

A

(among the states)
Broadest and most common basis for regulation
- Channels of interstate commerce: highways, waterways, telephone lines, internet
- Instrumentalities of interstate commerce: planes, trains, automobiles, persons in interstate commerce
- Substantial effect on interstate commerce in aggregate (even purely local activities): growing wheat in backyard for home consumption (effect on national commerce)

Exception: non economic activity in area traditionally regulated by states

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24
Q

Delegation of Power to Agencies

A

may broadly delegate legislative power as long as some intelligible principle guides exercise of delegated power
Ex: Delegation of authority to EPA to regulate air pollutants that “endanger public health or welfare”

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25
Q

Delegation of Power to President

A

no line item veto
Rationale: Violates bicameralism (passage by both chambers) and presentment (giving bill in entirety to president to sign or veto)

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26
Q

Delegation of Power to Congress

A

no legislative veto to void duly enacted laws without bicameralism and presentment
Ex: law providing one chamber of congress may overturn agency regulations

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27
Q

Speech and Debate Clause

A

Members of congress enjoy immunity from civil and criminal liability for legislative acts
Ex: speeches on floor, voting, committee reports
Not: Bribes, speeches and publications outside of congress

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28
Q

Executive Power

A

Domestic Powers

Enforcement: President has power (and duty) to execute laws

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29
Q

Appointment

A
  • Ambassadors, Federal Judges and officers of the United States (ex: cabinet secretaries)
    • President appoints
    • Senate gives advice and consent by majority vote
  • Inferior Officers
  • Congress may vest appointment power in president, department heads or judiciary
  • Ex: Undersecretary of State, assistant attorney general, independent counsel
  • Congress may not appoint executive branch officials
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30
Q

Removal

A
  • President may remove high-level executive officers (eg cabinet secretaries) at will (president appoints, he can fire at will)
  • Congress may limit presidential removal of other executive officials to good cause
  • Congress may not remove executive officials except through the impeachment process
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31
Q

Pardon

A

President may pardon anyone accused or convicted of a federal crime
- Accused means he can pardon prospective people
Exception: no power to pardon crimes underlying impeachment by house of representatives
Does not cover civil liability

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32
Q

Foreign Powers

A
  1. War

2. Treaties and Executive Agreements

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33
Q

Foreign Powers/ War

A

Congress alone has the power to declare war
President as commander in chief has broad discretion to deploy troops internationally to protect American lives and property (eg Vietnam)
- Challenges may be non-justicible as a political question
- Congress checks through power of the purse

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34
Q

Foreign Powers/ Treaties and Executive Agreements

A
  • President negotiates treaties, negotiates executive agreements
  • Senate 2/3 vote to approve treaties, not applicable executive agreements
  • State law trumps existing and future treaties, trumps existing and future executive agreements
  • Federal law trumps existing (not future) treaties, federal law always trumps executive agreements
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35
Q

Impeachment

A

Congress may impeach the president, vice-president, referral judges, and all officers of the United States for treason, bribery, other high crimes and misdemeanors
Process:
- House passes articles of impeachment by majority vote
- Senate convicts by 2/3 vote
- Removal requires both

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36
Q

Presidential Immunity and Executive Privileges

A
  1. Absolute Immunity from civil damages fro any actions arguably within official responsibilities
  2. No Immunity from private suits (even while in office for conduct prior to taking office
  3. Executive Privilege protects confidentiality of presidential communications
    - Privilege may yield if outweighed by other important government interest
    Ex: need for evidence in criminal trial
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37
Q

Federalism

A

Federalism
10th amendment: powers not granted to United States or prohibited to the states are reserved to the states or the people
1. General police powers: reserved to states
2. Anti-Commandeering principle: Congress cannot compel states to enact or administer federal programs

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38
Q

Supremacy Clause

A
  1. Supremacy Clause of Article VI makes federal law preempt inconsistent state and local news
    - Federal Law: Constitution, statutes, regulations, treaties, executive agreements
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39
Q

Preemption

A

Express: Congress expressly says so
Implied conflict: impossible to follow both federal and state law. State law impedes federal law
Implied field: extensive federal regulation indicates congressional intent to occupy the field

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40
Q

Dormant Commerce Clause

A

Dormant Commerce Clause: Prohibits state laws that discriminate against or unduly burden interstate commerce

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41
Q

Privileges and Immunities of Article IV

A

prohibits state laws that discriminate against out of state united states citizens re:

  • An important commercial activity (livelihood)
  • Fundamental Rights
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42
Q

Privileges and Immunities of 14 Amendment

A

prohibits state laws that interfere with

  • Interstate Travel
  • Right to petition the government
  • Not protect the bill of rights (rights)
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43
Q

Dormant Commerce Clause vs Privileges and Immunities of Article IV

A

Dormant Commerce Clause:
Who is protected: all out of staters (including aliens and corporations)
What protected: interstate commerce
How protected:
- Discriminatory laws (favoring in state over out of state commerce are invalid unless:
- Necessary to achieve important government purpose (unrelated to economic protectionism and
- No less discriminatory alternatives
- Non-discriminatory laws (evenly applied to in-state and out of state commerce) are valid unless burden on interstate commerce clearly outweighs non-protectionist benefits
Exceptions: Congressional approval and market participant (state acting as buyer as seller)

Privileges and Immunities of Article IV
Who protected: US Citizens (not aliens or corporations)
What protected: important commercial activities and fundamental rights
How Protected:
- Discriminatory laws (favoring in state over out of state citizens) are invalid unless:
- Necessary to achieve important government purpose (unrelated to economic protectionism) and
- No Less discriminatory alternatives
Exceptions: None

Dormant Commerce clause and Privileges and Immunity of Article IV are mutually reinforcing rather than mutually exclusive restrictions on state discrimination against out of stators
- State law can violate both, one or the other, or none

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44
Q

State Taxation of Interstate Commerce

A

State Taxation of Interstate Commerce
Like state regulation of interstate commerce, subject to commerce clause challenge
Discriminatory Taxes: Generally Invalid
Non-Discriminatory Taxes: Generally ok if
1. Substantial nexis (relationship) between taxpayer and state and
2. Fairly apportioned to business done or benefits received in state

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45
Q

Federal Immunity

A

States may not tax or regulate the federal government (including agents and activities) without its consent
Ex: state may not required contractor to obtain state license to build facilities on federal air force base, nor assess property tax on base

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46
Q

Fundamental Right to Interstate Travel (Privileges and Immunity of 14th Amendment)

A

Fundamental right to interstate travel
- State to state travel
- Right enter/leave a state
- Equal treatment once become permanent resident of state
Ex: California could not limit first year residents to welfare benefits they would have received in prior state of residence
- No fundamental right to international travel
Right to Petition federal government

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47
Q

Individual Rights

A

Application and Incorporation
Except 13th amendment ban on slavery constitution applies only to state action not private conduct
Bill of Rights originally applied only to federal government
Most protections have been incorporated against states (and their political subdivisions) through the 14th amendment
- Not (yet) 3rd amendment right not to have soldiers quartered in home, 5th amendment right to grand jury indictment, 7th amendment right to jury in civil cases, 8th amendment right against excessive fines

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48
Q

State Action

A

Easy Examples

  1. State law
  2. State officials acting officially (even if unlawfully)

Harder Cases:
1. Public Function
State action exists when private party performs function done by government
- Traditionally and Exclusively

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49
Q

State Involvement

A

Significant state involvement in challenged private conduct (eg assistance, encouragement, supervision, entwinement, or approval) may count as state action

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50
Q

Procedural Due Process

A
  1. 5th amendment Due process clause applies to federal government
  2. 14th amendment Due process Clause applies to states (and localities)
    Individual has right to a fair process when government acts to deprive life, liberty, or property
    Was there a deprivation of life, liberty property?
    Deprivation: Intentional (or perhaps reckless) rather than negligent
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51
Q

Liberty / Procedural Due Process

A
  • Physical Freedom
  • Constitutional and statutory rights
    Ex: termination of parental rights, revocation of drivers license
    Not: mere harm to reputation
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52
Q

Property/ Procedural Due Process

A
  • Real and Personal, tangible and intangible
  • Government entitlement to which an individual has a reasonable expectation of continued receipt
    Ex: Welfare benefits, public education, government licenses, tenured employment or term employment for duration of term
    Not: At Will employment
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53
Q

If deprived what process was due?

A

A. Notice
B. Opportunity to be heard
C. Neutral decision maker

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54
Q

Notice/ Procedural Due Process

A

reasonably calculated to inform person of deprivation
Hearing:
- Predeprevation hearing required unless government shows highly impracticable
Post Deprivation Examples:
- Emergency Institutionalization
- Suspension of drivers license after failed breathalyzer
Balancing Test: determines nature and extent of procedures, considering
- Importance of interest to individual
- Risk of error through procedures used
- Accuracy gain from additional procedures
- Burden on government (eg inefficiency and costs)
Examples:
Termination of parental rights: requires notice, hearing, proof of neglect or misconduct by clear and convincing evidence
Detention of Citizen as Enemy combatant: requires meaningful opportunity to contest factual basis for detention, considering burden on executive in wartime

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55
Q

Neutral Decisionmaker

A

no actual or serious risk of bias

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56
Q

Supreme court often employs levels of scrutiny when laws are challenged as violations of:

A
  1. Equal Protection Clause
  2. Substantive Due Process
  3. Free Speech
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57
Q

Rational Basis

A

legitimate interest rationally related

  • Burden on challenger, presumption that it is valid
  • Government almost always wins
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58
Q

Intermediate Scrutiny

A

Important state interest substantially related

- Burden on state, presumption none

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59
Q

Strict Scrutiny

A

Compelling state interest narrowly tailored (least restrictive)

  • Burden on state, presumption that it is invalid
  • Compelling State Interest: remedying past racial discrimination, national security that is threatened, preventing corruption or appearance of corruption in voting process
  • Government almost always loses
60
Q

Equal Protection

A

14th amendment Equal Protection Clause applies to states (and localities)
5th amendment Due Process Clause has “equal protection component” that applies to federal government
Trigger: government treating people differently (one person is burdened or benefited more)
Steps:
1. What’s the classification?
2. Level of Review

61
Q

Equal Protection Classifications for Rational Basis

A
  • Age
  • Disability
  • Wealth
  • Alienage classifications by Congress
  • Alienage classifications by state related to democratic governances
  • All other classifications
62
Q

Equal Protection Classifications for Intermediate Scrutiny (quasi-suspect)

A
  • Gender
  • Illegitimacy
  • Undocumented alien children by state (assumed)
63
Q

Equal Protection Classifications for Strict Scrutiny (suspect)

A
  • Race
  • National Origin
  • Alienage classifications by state generally
  • Denial of fundamental rights to some
64
Q

How to determine classification for Equal Protection

A
  • Facial
  • Disparate Impact + Discriminatory Intent
  • Impact alone is not enough
65
Q

Race and National Origin / Equal Protection

A

Strict Scrutiny

66
Q

Race and National Origin/ School Integration

A

Strict Scrutiny Review

  • Compelling state interest to want to remedy past racial discrimination by bussing students on racial basis (valid)
  • But can’t use the busing to integrate or diversify schools beyond remedying effects of past legalized segregation in district (ex: racial balancing, cant use race alone to diversify would need to use individualized characteristics)
67
Q

Race and National Origin/ Affirmative Action in Higher Education

A

Strict Scrutiny Review
Compelling state interest to make student body diverse
- Public Law school uses race as one of several factors in admissions to obtain critical mass of minority students to achieve diversity valid. Race is ok as soft factor among several factors
- Public college assigns fixed points on admissible scale for race to help reach same goal, using race automatically to give leg up (quota, point system) is not narrowly tailored, not valid

68
Q

Race and National Origin/ Affirmative Action in Government hiring and contracting

A

Strict Scrutiny Review

  • Agency employs affirmative action to remedy own past discrimination, if its government trying to correct it’s own past remedy then its ok and valid
  • City gives preference to minority contractors to remedy generally societal discrimination, aim cant be to make society more diverse, not valid
69
Q

Alienage/ Equal Protection

A
  • Congressional Classification
    Test: Rational Basis (congress wins)
    Ex: Congress may choose not to extend health care coverage to non-citizens for fiscal reasons
  • State Classification
    Test: Strict Scrutiny
    Ex: state and local governments may not require US citizenship for employment (generally) government benefits, property ownership, or admission to bar
    EXCEPTION: State and local governments may reasonably require US citizenship for activities and positions integral to Democratic self governance
    Ex: Voting, holding elective office, being police officers or public school teachers
    NOT: notary publics
70
Q

Gender / Equal Protection

A

Test: Intermediate Scrutiny
Type of State Interest: Important Interest requires an exceedingly persuasive justification not a role stereotype
Ex: State law entitles only women to alimony/ NO
Ex: State nursing school excludes men / NO
Ex: State military school excludes of women on ground they would not be able to satisfy physical requirements or succeed under its “adversative method”/ NO
Ex: Selective service act requires males by tot females to register for draft / YES
- Deferred to congress expertise of raising armys and waging wars
Ex: Social security formula entitles women to greater benefits to remedy long history of pay discrimination/ YES
- Remedying past gender discrimination
Ex: statutory rape law only makes men liable / Yes
- To make males not do it

71
Q

Legitimacy (non-married children) / Equal Protection

A

Test: Intermediate Scrutiny
Laws based on prejudice (typically denying benefits to all non-marital children) are invalid
Ex: law permitting parents to sue for wrongful death for martial by not nonmarital children
Laws that distinguish among non-martial children may be upheld
Ex: law allowing non-marital children to inherit from father only if paternity was established during father’s lifetime

72
Q

Fundamental Rights / Equal Protection

A

Test: Strict Scrutiny
Ex: Denial of right to marry smokers

73
Q

All other Classifications / Equal Protection

A

Test: Rational Basis
Ex: age, disability, income, intelligence, health, sexual orientation
Notes: Prejudice is not rational, so law denying discrimination protection to homosexuals based on animus was invalidated

74
Q

Substantive Due Process

A

Unenumerated rights are substantive component of liberty protected by:

  • 14th amendment Due Process Clause against states and localities
  • 5th amendment Due Process Clauses against federal government
75
Q

Fundamental Right for Substantive Due Process if:

A
  • Deeply rooted in nations history and tradition

- Implicit in the concept of ordered liberty (essential to free society)

76
Q

How to tell if it’s Due Process or Equal Protection

A

Denying everyone a fundamental right
- Substantive due process problem only
Denying some people a fundamental right
- Substantive due process and equal protection problem

77
Q

Levels of Scrutiny for Substantive Due Process Analysis

A

Fundamental Right: Strict Scrutiny

Non-Fundamental Right: Rational Basis

78
Q

Substantive Due Process Analysis/ Fundamental- Strict Scrutiny

A
  • Marriage
  • Procreation
  • Contraception
  • Custody, Care, and Upbringing of Children
  • Living with Extended Family
  • Interstate Travel
  • Vote
79
Q

Substantive Due Process Analysis/ Fundamental- Undue Burden Test

A
  • Abortion
80
Q

Substantive Due Process Analysis/ NonFundamental- Rational Basis

A
  • Economic Rights
  • Physician-assisted suicide
  • Education
81
Q

Substantive Due Process Analysis/ NonFundamental- Unspecified test (treat as rational basis)

A
  • Private consensual adult sexual intimacy
  • Refuse medical treatment
  • Bear arms
82
Q

Marriage (Divorce)/ Fundamental Rights

A
  • Substantial Interference with right to marry is necessary to trigger strict scrutiny
    Ex: denying marriage to mixed racial couples triggers strict scrutiny under due process as well as equal protection
  • Reasonable requirements to protect rather than hinder right to marry are upheld under rational basis
    Ex: reasonable majority age, proper identification
83
Q

Procreation/ Fundamental Rights

A

Ex: involuntary sterilization of mentally retarded is invalid

84
Q

Contraception/ Fundamental Rights

A

Ex: bans on distribution and use of contraceptives, or limiting sale of pharmacists is invalid

85
Q

Parental Rights / Fundamental Rights

A

Includes custody, care, and upbringing of children

Ex: state may not require public school education or education in English

86
Q

Living With Extended Family/ Fundamental Rights

A

Ex: City may not prohibit extended family (eg cousins) from living in single household

87
Q

Fundamental right to interstate travel/ Fundamental Rights

A

Right to enter and leave a state
Equal treatment once become permanent resident of state
Ex: California could not limit first- year residents of state to welfare benefits they would have received in prior state of residence
- No fundamental right to international travel

88
Q

Right to Vote/ Fundamental Rights

A

Rational Basis For reasonable requirements that protect rather than hinder right to vote
- Age (ex: 18)
- Residency (ex: 50 days) (probably not more then 2 months)
- Citizenship (US citizens)
Strict Scrutiny For onerous or potentially discriminatory restrictions
- Poll Taxes
- Literacy Test
One Person One Vote Principle
- State and Local representatives
- Equal protection requires population of voting districts be substantially equal (be roughly the same)
- Ex: 16% variance upheld as reasonable in light of state interest in preserving political subdivisions
- Federal representatives
- Article I requires population of congressional districts within a state be almost exactly equal (mathematical precision)
- Ex: .7% variance invalidated
Racial Gerrymandering
- Strict Scrutiny if race was predominate factor -ok if remedying past discrimination
Political Gerrymandering
- Likely non-justiciable political question

89
Q

Abortion/ Fundamental Right

A

Pre-viability:
Scope- State may regulate (but not prohibit) abortions to protect mothers health or life of fetus (regulate but not ban)
Test- Undue Burden (ie substantial obstacle on access to abortion)
Post-viability:
Scope- State may prohibit abortions unless necessary to protects mothers life or health
Test- N/A

90
Q

Examples of not Undue Burden for Abortion

A
  • Requiring licenses physician
  • Required informed consent (nature and risk of abortion and childbirth, gestational age)
  • Requiring 24 hour waiting period after informed consent
  • Required parental consent for minor (with judicial bypass option)
  • Banning partial-birth abortions
  • Not funding abortions
91
Q

Examples of Undue Burden for Abortion

A
  • Requiring spousal notification or consent
  • Requiring extensive recordkeeping and reporting of abortions not directed at maternal health or not sufficiently protective of privacy
92
Q

Unspecified Rights / Fundamental Rights

A

Private Consensual Adult Sexual Intimacy
Ex: no legitimate state interest in criminal bad on same-sex sodomy

Refuse Medical Treatment

  • Competent adult may refuse lifesaving medical treatment
  • State may require clear and convincing evidence of individuals wish, and may prevent family members from terminating treatment
  • No right to physician-assistant suicide (states can pass law to give you right)
  • State may compel vaccination against contagious diseases

Bear Arms
Second amendment protects right of individual at least to have handgun in home for self-defense

93
Q

Takings

A

Federal government (5th amendment clause) and states (14th amendment due process) may not take private property unless:
Taking Requirements
1. For Public Use
2. Just compensation

94
Q

Taking Requires:

A

Physical Taking: Occupation or Confiscation ,even tiny or temporary
- Physical Occupation of Land, Temporary Floodings are not takings unless it’s permanent
Development Exception: traditional conditions on property development are not takings if benefits are roughly proportional to burdens

Emergency Exception: Taking less likely to be found, even for complete and permanent deprivation, if pursuant to public emergency such as war

Regulatory taking: Regulations on use that not merely diminish but leave no economically viable use

  • Putting time limit on building is ok (even 4 years)
  • Ok if you can’t build certain things but can build other
95
Q

Public Use for Taking

A

Public Purposes: any legitimate public purpose counts ie any purpose that government reasonably believes will benefit public

  • Can confiscate property in blighted area for sale to private company as part of cities economic redevelopment plan
  • Breakup of property from oligopoly of landholders for resale to remedy economic and social evils from concentration of land ownership
96
Q

Just Compensation

A

Fair market value at the time of the taking (benefit to government is irrelevant

97
Q

Contract Clause / Retroactive Legislation (article I)

A
  • State and local laws only
  • Not
    1. Federal government (impairment may implicate procedural due process)
    2. Judicial decisions

Tests: Contracts Clause
Private Contracts: Substantial Impairment of existing rights invalid unless
- Important government purpose
- Reasonably related means
Public Contracts: Stricter test (intermediate or strict scrutiny)

98
Q

Ex Post Facto Laws

A

Neither state nor federal government may pass legislation that retroactively alters criminal liability to:

  • Criminalizing act that was innocent when done
  • Makes crime greater than when committed
  • Set greater punishment than when act was done
  • Reducing the evidence required to convict from what was required at time of act
99
Q

Bills of Attainder

A
  • Neither state nor federal government may pass legislation that designates particular individuals (by name or description) for punishment without judicial trial
    Punishment: Traditional sanctions (eg death, prison, fines, confiscation) and punitive measures (eg exclusion from employment and benefits)
    Ex: Federal law denying salary payments to federal employees that House of Representatives determined to be subversive
    Ex: Federal law required CEOS of firms that sold more than $10billion in repackaged subprime mortgages in past decade to pay “bail out fee” of $10 million
100
Q

First Amendment

A
  1. Is it speech?
  2. Is the speech protected or unprotected?
    General Restriction:
    - Content Based = Strict Scrutiny
    - Content Neutral = Intermediate Scrutiny
    Public Property:
    - Public Forum= Third Amendment
    - Nonpublic Forum= Reasonable not viewpoint based (strict scrutiny)
    Public School:
    - Student Speech= substantial disruption (unless pro drug use)
    - School Speech= Reasonably related to legit pedagogical concern
    Public Employment
    - Private Concern or pursuant to job duties= no protection
    - Public Concern= balancing test
  3. Is the restriction vague, overbroad, or a prior restraint?
101
Q

Speech:

A

Is it speech at all? Words, symbols and expressive conduct are speech
- Message does not have to be clear words (dancing, jibberish)
Expressive Conduct
- Conduct that is inherently expressive
- Conduct that is
- Intended to convey message and
- Reasonably likely to be perceived as conveying message

Arson? No 
Flag burning? Yes
Ballet? Yes
Nude Dancing? Yes
Ordinary Clothing?  No 
Black Arm Band? Yes
102
Q

Unprotected and Protected Speech

A

The freedom of speech protected by the first amendment does not induce certain categories of unprotected speech
Two categories receive only partial protection under their own special test:
- Defamation and Commercial Speech
All other expression receives full first amendment protection

103
Q

Examples of Unprotected Speech:

A
  • Incitement
  • Fighting Words
  • True Threats
  • Obscenity
  • Child Pornography
  • Defamation with actual malice
  • Commercial Speech (false, misleading, or illegal) Pa
104
Q

Examples of Partly Protected Speech:

A
  • Defamation about public officials, public figures or matters of public concern
  • Commercial Speech (not false, misleading or illegal)
105
Q

Examples of Protected Speech:

A

All other Speech

106
Q

Incitement Test

A

Advocacy of lawless action that is:

  1. Intend to produce imminent lawless action and
  2. Likely to produce such action
    - Mere Advocacy of lawless is protected speech (need imminent) (fully protected)
107
Q

Fighting Words

A

Words likely to provoke an immediate violent response

108
Q

True Threats

A

Words intend to convey to someone a serious threat of bodily harm

109
Q

Obscenity

A

Depiction of sexual conduct that taken as a whole by contemporary community standards
1. Appeals to the prurient in sex,
2. Is patently offensive and
3. Lacks serious social value by national standards
- Mere nudity, soft-core pornography, and dirty words are not obscene
- Right to privacy extends to possession of obscenity at home, which may not be banned
- Sexual explicit or indecent speech that is not obscene may nonetheless be subject to zoning:
a. Protect children and unwilling adults from exposure or
b. To prevent neighborhood crime and decay
c. Ample alternatives must exist for the speech
Ex: Band on adult bookstores and theaters within 1,000 foot of neighborhoods, schools, churches, and parks, leaving less than 5% of city for such speech is valid
Ex: Daytime ban on indecent radio broadcasts such as George Carlin’s seven dirty words monologue is valid

110
Q

Child Pornography:

A

Depiction of child engaging in sexual conduct, whether or not obscene

  • Must be actual children (not virtual or adult actors)
  • In home possession may be banned
111
Q

Defamation:

A

To promote robust public debate, 1st amendment bar recovery under state defamation law for speech made without actual malice about

  1. Public Official
  2. Public Figures or
  3. Public Concern
112
Q

Defamation / Actual Malice

A
  1. Knowledge of falsehood

2. Reckless disregard for the truth

113
Q

Public Officials/ Defamation

A
  1. Holding or running for elective office (at any level)

2. Public employees in positions of public importance (eg. Prosecutor, police officer)

114
Q

Public Figures/ Defamation

A
  1. Assumed roles of prominence in society
  2. Achieved pervasive fame and notoriety
  3. Thrust themselves into particular public controversies to influence their resolution
115
Q

Public Concerns/ Defamation

A

Matters important to society and democracy

116
Q

How to apply Defamation Claims

A

For defamation claims, identify
- Type of Plaintiff (public official, public figure, or private figure) and
- Subject matter of the alleged defamation (public of private concern)
Those will determine
- Whether the plaintiff must prove actual malice (in addition to proving defamation_ and
- What damages plaintiffs may recover

117
Q

Public Official, Public Figure, any subject matter:

A

1st amendment standard- Actual Malice

Damages- Any

118
Q

Private Figure, Public Concern:

A

1st amendment standard- actual malice or negligence

Damages (actual malice) presumed and punitive/ (negligence) actual

119
Q

Private Figure, Private Concern:

A

1st amendment standard- no actual malice

Damages- any

120
Q

Commercial Speech

A
- Advertising, Brand Promotion
Unprotected
1. False Commercial Speech
2. Misleading Commercial Speech 
3. Illegal product or service 
- Can all be censored or banned 
Protected: all other commercial speech
121
Q

Commercial Speech Test (Intermediate Scrutiny)

A
  1. Substantial government interest (eg consumer protection)

2. Narrowly Tailored reasonable fit rather than least restrictive

122
Q

General Speech Restrictions

A

restrictions on protected speech that are generally applicable (not limited to public property, public schools, or public employees) are reviewed as follows
General Free Speech Test
Content based- Strict Scrutiny
Content neutral- Intermediate Scrutiny

Content based restrictions suppress speech because of the message or harm that message may produce (censorship)
Content-neutral restrictions suppress speech for reasons unrelated to the message
- Often Channels speech on basis of time, place, or manner

123
Q

First Amendment Levels of Scrutiny/ Intermediate Scrutiny

A

Ends- important interest
Means- narrowly tailored (substantially related)
Burden- State
Result- Usually valid

124
Q

First Amendment Levels of Scrutiny/ Strict Scrutiny

A

Ends: Compelling Interest
Means: Narrowly tailored (least restrictive)
Burden: State
Result: Usually invalid

125
Q

Speech Restrictions on Government Property

A

Public Forums: Government property open to public for all kinds of expressive activity by:
A. Tradition its open to free speech (can’t be taken away by government) or
B. Purposeful designation (can be taken away by government)
Ex: Parks, streets, sidewalks, college kiosks (traditional: parks, street, sidewalk)
Nonpublic Forums (Limited Public Forums)
Government property not open generally for public speech but limited to speech (if any) related to the purpose of the property
Ex: classes, mailboxes, airports

126
Q

Public Forums, Content Based get what type of Scrutiny?

A

Strict Scrutiny

127
Q

Public Forums, Content Neutral get what type of Scrutiny?

A

Intermediate Scrutiny

128
Q

NonPublic Forums, Content Sased and Content Neutral get what type of scrutiny?

A

reasonable in light of nature of forum (strict scrutiny if viewpoint based)

129
Q

Viewpoint Based Discrimination

A

limits speech to one-side of subject (always subject to strict scrutiny)

130
Q

Public Schools/ Student Speech Test- Personal Student Speech

A

cannot be censored absent evidence of substantial disruption

Exception: speech promoting illegal drug use does not require showing any disruption

131
Q

Public Schools/ Student Speech Test- School Speech (including opted student speech):

A

Can be censored if reasonably related to legitimate teaching concern

132
Q

Public Employment/ Unprotected Speech

A
  1. Matters of private concern at the workplace

2. Pursuant to official duties

133
Q

Public Employment/ Protected Speech

A

Matters of public concern (not made pursuant to official duties)

134
Q

Public Employee Speech Test

A

balances speech value v. state interest in efficient operation

135
Q

Vagueness

A

Law is void for vagueness if persons of common intelligence cannot tell what is speech is prohibited and what is permitted
Ex: ban on opprobrious and offensive words

136
Q

Overbreadth

A

Law is invalid as overbroad if it prohibits a substantial amount of speech that the government may not suppress
Ex: Ban on all “first amendment activities” at LAX
- Third party standing is allowed (plaintiff whose speech may be censored raises non-commercial speech claim on behalf of others whose speech may not be censored)

137
Q

Prior Restraints

A

Licensing schemes (eg permits) or injunctions that prevents speech before it occurs rather than punishing speech afterwards
Disfavored: historically, prior restraints have been greatly disfavored. No special tests, but harder for government to win
- Content-based prior restraints= very strict scrutiny
Ex:
1. Injunctive against publication of pentagon papers based on speculative harm to war effort was invalid: Not Valid
2. Injunction against publication of D-Day before attack: Valid
- Licensing systems must have sufficiently definite standards to cabin discretion as well as prompt judicial review of denials
Ex:
1. Parade Permits given at discretion of city official without any standards: Not Valid
2. Parade Permits given to all who pay reasonable fee for security and sanitation: Valid

138
Q

Press, expressive associations (eg. Political parties, NAACP), and corporations (engaging in non-commercial speech)

A

are generally treated the same as other speakers

139
Q

Free Exercise Clause

A

Religion: traditional religion as well as beliefs that play role in life of believer similar to the role that religion plays in life of traditional adherents
- To decide religious claims, government (including courts) may inquire into the sincerity of religious beliefs but not their truth

Discriminatory Laws: Strict Scrutiny
Natural laws of general applicability: not subject to free exercise clause

Discriminatory Laws:

  • Not Neutral with respect to religion
  • Not generally applicable but target at religion generally or a religion in particular
140
Q

Establishment Clause

A

Court has not settled on single test, so government may violate under one more test

  1. Neutrality Test
  2. Coercion test
  3. Lemon test
  4. Endorsement Test
  5. History and Tradition Approach
141
Q

Neutrality Test/ Establishment Clause

A

Government must remain neutral with respect to religion, neither favoring nor disfavoring it.
Ex:
- Neutral: providing police and fire protection to churches on same basis as to secular community
- Favor: Exemption of religious publications but not others from sales tax
- Disfavor: allow all student groups, except religious ones, afterhours access to school meeting rooms

142
Q

Coercion Test/ Establishment Clause

A

Government may not directly or indirectly coerce individuals to exercise (or refrain form exercising) religion
Ex:
- Direct: Fines for not attending church
- Indirect: Providing for clergy invocation and benediction at middle-school graduation

143
Q

Lemon Test/ Establishment Clause

A
  1. Primary Purpose is sectarian (religious)
  2. Primary Effect is sectarian (religious)
  3. Excessive entanglement between government and religion
    Ex:
    - Purpose: posting copies of ten commandments on walls of public school classrooms has a primarily sectarian purpose, despite legislate statement to contrary
    - Effect: reciting Lords prayer at beginning of public school day
    - Entanglement: paying salaries of teachers of secular subjects in parochial schools, because of excessive entanglement in constant monitoring to ensure non-sectarian teaching
144
Q

Endorsement Test/ Establishment Clause

A

From standpoint of a reasonable and informed observer government must not appear to endorse or disapprove of religion, making it seem relevant to a persons standing in the political community
Ex:
- Endorsement: lone display of nativity scene on courthouse steps
- Non-Endorsement: Display of crèche surrounded by Santa, reindeer, elephant, clown, candy cane, teddy bear, and other nonsectarian holiday symbols

145
Q

History and Tradition Approach/ Establishment Clause

A

Sometimes the court sets aside the above principles and finds that a state religious display or practice is a tolerable acknowledgement of the role religion has played in the history and tradition of the nation
- Helps if the display or practice has been around for awhile or is in historical setting