SDP Economic Liberties
a. 5th amendment; applies to fed government, no deprivation of life liberty, or property w/o due process of the law
b. 14th; no state shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of the law
c. Bill of rights due process rights are incorporated through the due process clause
Way to Analyze SDP
d. Process of analysis
i. Who’s acting state (14th) or fed (5th)?
ii. What is the liberty interest of the individual (characterizing this is where you win)
iii. What is the governmental interest?
iv. Balance 2&3: apply rational basis scrutiny w/economic interest; rational relationship b/w action of the state & interest
1. Legit interest
2. Rationally related -> tailoring prong
Economic liberty cases
i. Lochner v. NY (NY 14th –tried to curb amount of hours bakers could work)
ii. Nebbia v. NY: NY price fixed milk
iii. West Coast Hotel v. Parish (govt established minimum wage for workers…women?)
iv. Williamson v. Lee Optical (OKLA passed statute that opticians couldn’t fit prescription anymore)
Lochner v. NY
1. Lochnerizing: really hard look at state interest state actor (2) freedom to contract (3) public health (4) court held it was rationally related but then applied heightened scrutiny 2. Second-guessed legislature here- no deference to state 3. Dissents: argued it was rationally related; constitution not designed to protect laisse-fair economics
Nebbia v. NY
NY price fixed milk
West Coast Hotel v. Parish
(govt established minimum wage for workers…women?)
Williamson v. Lee Optical
(OKLA passed statute that opticians couldn’t fit prescription anymore)
Family Cases
Family Cases: Strict Scrutiny
Michael H. approach v. McDonald approach
Meyers
(family direction)- law banned teachers from teaching any language but english… teacher taught in German
a. not in constitution, but right to raise family the way you want is your call
Pierce v. Society of Sisters
Griswold v. CT
(is the liberty interest fundamental?) Privacy grounded in penumbras of the constitution
(CT prevented docs from giving contraceptive advice to married couples)
a. Privacy was liberty being deprived
b. State interest to prevent adultery: not compelling and not narrowly tailored
Skinner
Sterilization of thieves
a. Issue was who they determined to sterilize; no rational reason for discriminating against certain prisoners
Marriage Cases
Strict Scrutiny Plus
Cases:
-Loving v. VA
-Zablocki v. Redhail
Zablocki v. Redhail
(law prevented men who owe child support from obtaining marriage license without court consent): State interest was to prevent wards of the state; still not compelling enough to deny marriage
Loving v. VA
: (interracial marriage case): state interest=racial purity. Court obliterated this; No State interest could inhibit freedom to marry.
Privacy Cases
Traditional Strict Scrutiny
Cases:
-Griswold v. CT
-Lawrence v. TX
Lawrence v. TX
(TX anti-sodomy law b/w same sex persons)
a. Overruled Bowers
b. Liberty interest: self expression, privacy, intimacy
c. State interest morality: not compelling; only applied to same sex couples
i. Scrutinized states true intent over stated: legislation (Hammer scrutiny)
abortion cases
require a different framework
Planned Parenthood v. Casey
(Penn Law placed restrictions on obtaining abortions). Changes Trimester standard to viability
a. State interests: traditional test; when weighing the state interest vs. the deprival, the state interest must be narrowly tailored and the only method of protecting that interest
i. So if the state interest is protecting the fetus, then the ONLY way to do it would be to ban abortions
ii. Pre-viability; state does not have sufficiently strong interests to justify placing a substantial obstacles that unduly burden the fundamental right to make decisions about parenthood.
P-P v. Casey Undue Burden Test
Comes from Planned Parenthood v. Casey
24 waiting period; burdensome, but not undue. State has legitimate interest in woman fully contemplating her choices
ii. Requiring husband’s consent is an undue burden. Married woman should not have an additional constraint unmarried women do
iii. Requiring consent for minors is not an undue burden
Roe v. Wade
Used trimester framework to determine who has rights
a. 1st trimester: mom 3rd Tri: state/fetus
Gonzales v. Carthart
Partial birth abortion ban act valid
Procedural Due Process
Don’t mess with process
Case- a. Cleveland board of education v. Loudermill