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Week 6: The Process of Protecting Rights

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The Bill of Rights. Not included initially as inviting the dangers of omission ... Black: The Bill of Rights applies just as much to state gov't as to the feds ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Week 6: The Process of Protecting Rights


1
Week 6 The Process of Protecting Rights
  • Are States Limited by Rights?
  • Which Rights, if So?
  • Are Others Restricted Too?

2
What Rights?
  • First, lets define rights . . .
  • One issue is whether to frame rights as a license
    of persons, or as a limit on government
  • A related issue is encountered in discussing the
    content of rights are they defined in the
    context of government processes, or on individual
    actions and beliefs?

3
The Textual Evidence of Rights
  • I.9 restricting Congress on habeas corpus, bills
    of attainder, ex post facto laws
  • I.10 restricting states on bills of attainder, ex
    post facto laws, and impairment of the
    obligations of K
  • III.2 jury trials for crimes, held in states of
    crime
  • III.3 defining treason and evidence
  • VI no religious test for holding any office

4
The Bill of Rights
  • Not included initially as inviting the dangers of
    omission
  • But fear of silence on rights overcame the fear
    of omitting some
  • Religion establishment, free exercise, speech,
    press, assembly, petition
  • Arms, quartering, unreasonable searches and
    seizures, criminal procedures, due process,
    takings, civil trials, excessive fines and
    punishments,

5
FDRs Third Inaugural -- 1941
  • In the future days which we seek to make secure,
    we look forward to a world founded upon four
    essential human freedoms.
  • The first is freedom of speech and expression
    everywhere in the world.
  • The second is freedom of every person to worship
    God in his own way - everywhere in the world.
  • The third is freedom from want, which, translated
    into world terms, means economic understandings
    which will secure to every nation a healthy
    peacetime life for its inhabitants - everywhere
    in the world.
  • The fourth is freedom from Fear, which,
    translated into world terms, means a world-wide
    reduction of armaments to such a point and in
    such a thorough fashion that no nation will be in
    a position to commit an act of physical
    aggression against any neighbor - anywhere in the
    world.
  • That is no vision of a distant millennium. It is
    a definite basis for a kind of world attainable
    in our own time and generation. That kind of
    world is the very antithesis of the so called new
    order of tyranny which the dictators seek to
    create with the crash of a bomb.

6
Do the Constitutional Protections of Rights Bind
the States?
  • The first look at the question in Barron No
  • When pushed in the Slaughter-House Cases No, yet
    again
  • But gradually, the answer shifts to yes -- the
    Civil War and the resulting amendments made a
    difference . . .
  • Saenz acknowledgement of the change -- and
    portent of the future?

7
The First Incorporated Rights
  • Chicago Co., 1897 takings
  • Twining, 1908 14th Am. due process is the
    vehicle for incorporation
  • Gitlow, 1925 due process protects speech rights
  • Fiske, 1927 speech, press, religion
  • Powell, 1933 Scottsboro trial reversed for lack
    of effective counsel as a due process right

8
The Scottsboro Boys
9
More Images From Powell Price and Bates
10
The Crowd at the First Trial
11
The First Jury
12
Scottsboro Courtroom Spectators
13
New Counsel Liebowitz Appointed
14
Judge Horton and Leibowitz
15
Judge Horton Listens to the Doctor
16
Leibowitz and Patterson
17
Four Released But Five Remain
18
The Incorporation Debate
  • Total incorporationists (Black most notably) vs.
    selective incorporationists
  • Palko and Cardozo (a selective incorporationists)
    Does the right flow from a principle of justice
    so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our
    people as to be ranked as fundamental?

19
More on Which Rights are Incorporated
  • Adamson, 1947 No incorporated Fifth Amendment
    right not to testify
  • (Frankfurter, concurring on grounds of practice
    and precedent, notes an eccentric exception)
  • Black The Bill of Rights applies just as much to
    state govt as to the feds

20
More Recent Additions to the Content of the
Incorporated Rights
  • Oliver criminal defendants right to public
    trial
  • Mapp v. Ohio, 1961 Fourth Amendment freedom
    from unreasonable search and seizure
  • Gideon, 1963 6th Am. Right to Counsel
  • Malloy, 1964 right to take the Fifth
  • Pointer, 1965 right to confront accuser
  • Klopfer, 1967 right to speedy criminal trial
  • Washington, 1967 right to process to obtain
    witnesses
  • Duncan, 1968 right to jury trial on criminal
    charge
  • Williams, 1970 BUT 6-person jury okay for state
    criminal trial, even though 12 for feds
  • Apodaca and Johnson, 1972 AND non-unanimous
    state verdicts okay
  • Also incorporated 3d am, establishment clause
    (Wallace, 1985)

21
Blacks Practical VictorySave for Whats Not
Incorporated
  • Note Blacks concurrence in Duncan claiming
    victory over the selective incorporationists
  • Not (yet?) incorporated 2d Am, 3d Am., 5th Am.
    right to a grand jury in criminal cases, 7th Am.,
    8th Am.

22
Does the Constitution Prevent Others From
Violating Rights?
  • Is the federal government constrained by the 14th
    Amendment jurisprudence? Reverse incorporation .
    . .
  • The current assumption is that the federal and
    state governments ARE bound to respect most
    constitutionally-identified rights
  • But do others (nongovernmental entities and
    persons) also have to respect those rights?
  • Civil Rights Cases, 1883 -- no

23
Exceptions to State Action . . .
  • The exceptions were largely presumed to swallow
    the rule for many decades in the 20th century
    --until the demise of the commerce clause and the
    re-discovery of the Civil Rights cases in U.S.
    v. Morrison

24
The State Action Doctrine Only States Bound to
Respect Rights
  • Emerged in the Civil Rights Cases
  • the prohibitions of the 14th amendment are
    only against state laws and acts done under
    state authority Reaffd in VMI
  • Two consequences of the doctrine
  • 1. emphasis on other powers and laws to reach
    private conduct
  • 2. vigorous exploration of exceptions

25
The Public Functions Exception
  • Marsh, 1946 company town
  • Jackson, 1974
  • Terry, 1953
  • Evans, 1966
  • Logan Valley, 1968
  • Lloyd Corp. v. Tanner, 1972
  • Hudgens, 1976

26
Public Functions Exception Tests
  • Marsh v. Alabama company town
  • Key test from Marsh the more an owner, for his
    advantage, opens up his property for use by the
    public in general, the more do his rights become
    circumscribed by . . . constitutional rights of
    users.
  • Jackson el. utilitys decision to end service
  • Traditionally, exclusively, a govt function?

27
As Applied to Elections
  • Terry v. Adams local political party held to be
    state action
  • Private and public tied together
  • The 15th Amendment as a special factor?
  • Race as a special factor?

28
Private Property for Public Purposes
  • Evans v. Newton Macon devise of white-only park
    is state action
  • Logan Valley shopping center analogous to
    community
  • Lloyd Corp. v. Tanner retreat shopping center
    can prohibit handbills
  • Hudgens v. NLRB Logan Valley dead

29
Another Exception Public and Private
Entanglements
  • State Authorization, Encouragement, and/or
    Facilitation of Private Actors
  • Four main subcategories
  • Judicial actions
  • Regulated entities
  • Subsidized entities
  • Voter initiatives

30
The Entanglement Exception
  • Shelley v. Kraemer, 1948
  • Lugar, 1982
  • Edmonson, 1991
  • Burton, 1961
  • Moose Lodge, 1972
  • Am. Mfrs. Mutual, 1999
  • Norwood, 1973
  • Rendell-Baker, 1982
  • Blum, 1982
  • Reitman, 1967

31
Judicial Entanglement
  • Shelley v. Kraemer restrictive covenants
  • No action by state or local legislatures
  • The Fourteenth Amendment . . . erects no
    shield against merely private conduct, however
    discriminatory or wrongful ... But here there
    was more . . . judicial enforcement
  • Are all judicial decisions state action?

32
Other Judicial Entanglement Examples
  • New York Times v. Sullivan all state libel
    common law decisions must comply with the First
    Amendment
  • Lugar v. Edmondson Oil creditors use of
    attachment subject to due process review
  • Edmondson v. Leesville Concrete civil
    defendants peremptory strikes include overt,
    significant assistance of state actors

33
Highly Regulated Entities
  • Burton v. Wilmington Parking Authority -- lessee
    restaurants discrimination is state action by
    entanglement
  • Moose Lodge liquor license to private club not
    state action by entanglement
  • Am. Manuf. Ins. Co workers comp insurer
    decisions not state action by entanglement
    (compare Jackson)

34
Government-Subsidized Entities
  • Norwood v. Harrison free schoolbooks to
    race-discriminating schools amounts to state
    action
  • Gilmore v. Montgomery sports facilities to
    race-segregating schools amounts to state action
    by entanglement
  • Rendell-Baker v. Kohn firing of teacher at
    publicly funded private school not state action
  • Blum patient discharge/transfer decisions at
    publicly funded nursing home not state action

35
Voter Initiatives Repudiating Rights
  • Reitman v. Mulkey California initiative
    endorsing no COA for housing discrimination held
    state action
  • Washington v. Seattle frustrating school
    desegregation is state action
  • Crawford v. Bd. of Ed no need to go beyond
    constitution to remedy school seg.
  • Romer initiative against gays violates EP

36
Entwinement A New Exception?
  • See in the supplement the 2001 case, Brentwood
    Academy v. Tennessee Secondary School Athletic
    Association
  • Athletic Association regulated competition
    between private and public schools alike, and
    sanctioned Brentwood for recruiting violations
  • Held to be state action as entwinement
  • Different from entanglement by not requiring
    governmental prodding?

37
Next Week Economic Rights
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