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Constitutional Limits on Sex-Based Discrimination

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I. Paternalism Pre-1971 Foundation of US system was English Common Law. Operated under 3 basic assumptions about women s place in social order – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Constitutional Limits on Sex-Based Discrimination


1
Constitutional Limits on Sex-Based
Discrimination
  • Eco 336

2
I. Paternalism Pre-1971
  • Foundation of US system was English Common Law
  • Operated under 3 basic assumptions about womens
    place in social order
  • Dependence on men was necessary and proper for
    women
  • Property management and public affairs best left
    to men
  • Interests of a husband and wife were identical
    and were expressed by his will and self-interest.
  • Married womans relationship to her husband was
    something better than his dog, a little dearer
    than his horse (Kay West, p. 11)

3
Paternalism Pre-1971
  • Therefore the English Common Law System denied to
    married women any separate rights to their
    personal property, income, children, or bodies.
  • Married Women couldnt initiate divorce
  • Married Women couldnt make a legal contract
  • Married Women could work, but had no right to
    their wages.
  • Married Women could not serve on juries.
  • Surest route to property for a woman was
    widowhood, although the amount received depended
    large on adult male relatives.
  • Marital Rape Exemption Kay West, pp 1154-1156

4
I. Paternalism (cont)
  • Classifications and the Law
  • Our legal system classifies persons and treats
    them differently under the law.
  • Examples?
  • Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment was
    the basis for sex discrimination lawsuits in
    cases where plaintiffs have claimed that a
    statute or governmental action constituted a
    denial of equal protection.
  • No persons shall be denied equal protection of
    the laws.

5
14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause
  • All persons born or naturalized in the United
    States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof,
    are citizens of the United States and of the
    State wherin they reside. No State shall make or
    enforce any law which shall abridge the
    privileges or immunities of citizens of the
    United States nor shall any State deprive any
    person of life, liberty, or property, without due
    process of law nor deny to any person within its
    jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

6
14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause
  • Equal protection, not equal treatment.
  • Can treat people differently if there is a
    compelling reason.
  • Ensures that the law is applied in a
    non-arbitrary matter.
  • Similarly situated people treated similarly.
  • Course grades
  • The 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868 as part
    of the Reconstruction Amendments and in reaction
    to
  • Dred Scott v Sanford, 1857 Blacks not citizens,
    so do not deserve equal treatment to whites.

7
I. Paternalism (cont)
  • Equal Protection tests
  • RATIONAL BASIS TEST
  • REASONABLE RELATIONSHIP TEST (Kay, pp 29)
  • Pre-1971
  • The law must establish a reasonable relationship
    between the goal and the means of attaining the
    goal.
  • Question Is sex a reasonable basis upon which
    to achieve the goal? More generally, is there a
    reasonable connection between the classification
    (age, sex, intelligence), and the public purpose
    of the law?
  • Burden of proof on the plaintiff (person
    challenging must prove it unconstitutional).

8
Paternalism (Cont)
  • Important Court Cases
  • (15th Amendment, 1870, Right to vote cannot be
    denied based on color, race, servitude)
  • Bradwell v Illinois, 1873
  • Myra Bradwells application for a license to
    practice law had been denied by the Illinois
    Supreme Court solely because she was a woman.
  • Man is, or should be, womens protector and
    defender. The natural and proper timidity and
    delicacy which belongs to the female sex
    evidently units it for many of the occupations of
    civil life. The constitution of the family
    organization, which is founded in the divine
    ordinance, as well as in the nature of things,
    indicates the domestic sphere as that which
    properly belongs to the domain and functions of
    woman hood

9
Bradwell v. Illinois (1873)
  • Discriminatory legislation was rational because
    of perceived physical limitations and social
    functions of women. Rational relationship
    between the law the the government objective of
    protecting women.

10
I. Paternalism (Cont)
  • Important Court Cases (cont)
  • Mueller v Oregon (1908)
  • Oregon law prohibited employment of women in any
    mechanical establishment, factory, or laundry
    more than 10 hours/day.
  • See handout for excerpt from ruling.
  • Law was upheld as constitutional because women
    were emotionally and physically weaker.
  • Rational relationship between law and government
    objective of protecting women.
  • Upheld women-only protective legislation.
  • Why are women skeptical of laws designed to
    protect them?

11
I. Paternalism (cont)
  • (19th Amendment Womens Right to Vote, 1920)
  • Important Court Cases (cont)
  • Goesaert v. Cleary (1948)
  • Michigan law denied women the right to tend bar
  • Allowed women to serve as waitresses but not
    bartenders EXCEPT for the wives and daughters of
    male tavern owners.
  • Plaintiff challenged the law on the exception for
    wives and daughters (rather than discrimination
    against women per se.)
  • There was a rational basis for the exemption for
    wives and daughter.

12
Ia. Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896
  • Segregated railroad cars in Louisiana
  • Supreme Court upheld law of separate but equal.
  • If colored race takes this as a sign of
    inferiority, thats their problem.
  • However, pre-1954 (Brown v. BOE), the Supreme
    Court ruled separate AND unequal was a violation
    of 14th amendment

13
Ib. Brown v. Board of Education, 1956
  • Facts, Issues?
  • SC ruled that separate but equal is also a
    violation of 14th amendment.
  • Separate facilities conferred a badge of
    psychological inferiority

14
Ic. Perry v. Schwarzenegger, 2010
  • Proposition 8 (CA ballot initiative banning
    same-sex marriage) unconstitutional because of
    lack of reliable evidence that allowing same-sex
    couples to marry will have any negative effects
    on society or on the institution of marriage.
    (CA Justice Walker)
  • The argument that banning same-sex marriage
    promoted childrens welfare was unconvincing,
    too, since the evidence showed without a doubt
    that gay and lesbian parents could raise kids as
    effectively as straight ones.
  • Walker held that the ban on same-sex marriage did
    not pass even the most minimal scrutiny under
    equal protection law, because it denied a
    fundamental rightthe right to marry the person
    one chosewithout a legitimate (much less
    compelling) reason.
  • Tradition alone would not suffice marriage had
    changed in all sorts of ways, and there were
    plenty of traditions that had outworn their
    welcome. For more info http//www.newyorker.com/
    online/blogs/newsdesk/perry-v-schwarzenegger/

15
II. Turning Point - 1971
  • Reed v. Reed (1971)
  • FACTS, ISSUES?
  • First time the Court invalidated a statute on
    grounds of sex discrimination.
  • Is administrative ease an important enough
    objective to justify classification based on sex?
  • No relationship between the government objective
    (best executor of will) and the means (preference
    given to men). Not a rational relationship
    between law and government objective.

16
II. Turning Point - 1971
  • Sex as a Suspect Classification
  • Frontiero v. Richardson (1973)
  • FACT, ISSUES?
  • What differentiates sex from such nonsuspect
    statutes as intelligence or physical disability,
    and aligns it with the recognized suspect
    criteria, is that sex characteristic frequently
    bears no relation to ability to perform or
    contribute to society. As a result, statutory
    distinctions between the sexes often have the
    effect of invidiously relegating the entire
    class of females to inferior legal status without
    regard to the actual capabilities of its
    members.
  • Like Reed v. Reed, a departure from traditional
    rational bases analysis.

17
II. Turning Point - 1971
  • New Equal Protection Test Craig test
  • Craig v. Boren (1976)
  • FACTS, ISSUES?
  • New standard to test constitutionality of
    statute.
  • Law must have a substantial relationship to the
    achievement of an important govt objective.
  • So raised the bar/standard for sex discrimination
    cases must pass a stricter test.
  • Although not strictest test of strict
    scrutiny reserved for discrimination based on
    race, ethnicity.
  • Intermediate (heightened) scrutiny test.
  • Exceedingly persuasive reason to justify
    classification based on sex. (VMI)
  • Overwhelm us with a mighty good reason.

18
Other Craig/Intermediate/Middle Tier Cases
  • Darryl Olesen, Jr (Plaintiff) v Board of
    Education of School District, Illinois
    (Defendant), 1987
  • The school district forbids all gang activities
    at the schools, including the wearing of gang
    symbols, jewelry and emblems.
  • The wearing of earrings by male students is
    included in that ban. Olesen, a senior at Bremen
    H.S., wishes to wear an earring and claims the
    schools policy violates his right to equal
    protection under the 14th amendement (The ban
    does not forbid earrings on girls).
  • Court Ruling and reason

19
Other Craig/Intermediate/Middle Tier Cases
  • Nikki Craft, et al (Plaintiffs) v. Donald Hodel,
    et al (Defendants), 1988
  • The plaintiffs, who are women, contend that a
    National Park Service regulation prohibiting
    public nudity particularly the exposure of
    female breasts at the Cape Cod National
    Seashore, violates their right to equal
    protectioninsofar as it permits males to walk
    and play and swim shirtfree upon the Seashore
    whereas it denies women the same rights.
  • Court ruling and reason

20
Summary
  • The Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment
    has declined in significance as a format for
    expanding womens rights.

21
SC Justice Scalias views on 14 amendment and Sex
Discrimination
  • In widely quoted comments in the current issue of
    California Lawyer, Scalia said the EPC of the
    14th Amendment does not protect against
    discrimination on the basis of gender. Read
    http//www.callawyer.com/story.cfm?eid913358evid
    1
  • That boils down to the idea that women are not
    part of the Constitution. Womens Enews, 1/7/11

22
Women and Employment
  • I. The Equal Pay Act of 1963
  • Prohibits employers from discriminating between
    employees on the basis of sex by paying wages to
    employeesat a rate less than the rate at which
    he pays wages to employees of the opposite
    sexfor equal work on jobs the performance of
    which requires equal skill, effort, and
    responsibility, and which are performed under
    similar working conditions
  • Deficient as an anti-discrimination tool why?
  • Since job content is a matter determined by the
    particular employer, whether two job
    classifications entail equal worknecessarily
    must be decided on a case-by-case basis. Kay,
    p. 924. See handouts.

23
Lilly Ledbetter vs. Goodyear Tire, 2006
  • Lilly Ledbetter, a supervisor at Goodyear Tire
    Rubber Co, sued right before she retired,
    claiming that throughout her employment, she had
    received poor evaluations because of her sex,
    resulting in lower pay, and that by the end of
    her 19 years of employment she was earning
    significantly less than her male colleagues
  • The U.S. Supreme Court ruled (5-4) that she had
    waited too long to sue based on legislation
    stating an employee must sue within 180 days of a
    decision involving pay if the employee thinks it
    involved race, sex, etc.
  • Assignment Read Justice Ginsberg dissenting
    opinion in which she states the law runs from the
    date of any paycheck that contains an amount
    affected by a prior discriminatory pay decision

24
Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, 2009
  • A bill to amend title VII of the Civil Rights Act
    of 1964 and the Age Discrimination in Employment
    Act of 1967, and to modify the operation of the
    Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and the
    Rehabilitation Act of 1973, to clarify that a
    discriminatory compensation decision or other
    practice that is unlawful under such Acts occurs
    each time compensation is paid pursuant to the
    discriminatory compensation decision or other
    practice, and for other purposes.

25
II. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • It is unlawful for an employer to discriminate
    against any individual with respect to his
    compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges or
    employment because of such individuals race,
    color, religion, sex, or national origin, and to
    segregate or classify employeesbased on race,
    color, religion, sex, or national origin.
  • Other protected classes?

26
II. Title VII (cont)
  • A. Title VII cases further defining what
    prohibited discrimination
  • Is sex-plus discrimination prohibited under Title
    VII?
  • Defn Discrimination based on sexually-identifiabl
    e factors.
  • Disparate Impact The adverse effect of a
    practice or standard that is neutral and
    non-discriminatory in its intention but,
    nevertheless, disproportionately affects
    individuals having a disability or belonging to a
    particular group based on their age, ethnicity,
    race, or sex.
  • Phillips v. Martin Marietta (1971)
  • Facts, issues, ruling.

27
II. Title VII (cont)
  • Sex-Plus Discrimination (cont)
  • Griggs v. Duke Power Co (1971)
  • Race-Plus Discrimination
  • FACTS, ISSUES?
  • Employer has burden of proving that any given
    requirement must have a manifest relationship to
    the employment in question.
  • Nothing in the Act precludes the use of
    testingCongress has not commanded that the less
    qualified be preferred over the better qualified
    simply because of minority origins. Far from
    disparaging job qualifications as such, Congress
    has made such qualifications the controlling
    factor, so that race, religion, nationality, and
    sex become irrelevant (Kay, p. 585)

28
II. Title VII (cont)
  • Title VII cases further defining what prohibited
    discrimination (cont)
  • Jobs in which religion, sex, or national origin
    is a bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ)
    reasonably necessary to the normal operation of
    that particular business

29
BFOQ
  • Diaz v. Pan Am (1971) see Kay, pp. 785-787
  • Pan Am Women were better are providing
    courteous service and in general making flights
    more pleasurable.
  • Pan Am Customers prefer female flight
    attendants.
  • SC Discriminating based on sex is valid only
    when the essence of the business operation would
    be undermined by not hiring members of one sex
    exclusively.
  • SC Essence of Pan Am business was transporting
    passengers.
  • SC BFOQ should not be based on customer
    preference.

30
II. Title VII (cont)
  • -BFOQ (cont)
  • Dothard v. Rawlinson (1977)
  • FACTS, ISSUES, RULING?
  • Dissenting opinion by Justice Marshall (pp.
    779-783)
  • Some women, like some men, undoubtedly are not
    qualified and do not wish to serve as prison
    guards, but that does no justify the exclusion of
    all women
  • Alldangers with one exception-are inherent
    in a prison setting whatever the gender of the
    guards.
  • perpetuates one of the most insidious of the
    old myths about women that womenare seductive
    sexual objects.
  • P. 781 782
  • Hooters

31
II. Title VII (cont)
  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act (1978)
  • Amendment to Title VII
  • Court cases/History (see Kay pp 746 2nd para on
    p. 741)
  • Geduldig v. Aiello (1974)
  • State of CA did not cover pregnancy/childbirth-rel
    ated medical costs in its disability benefits
    plan. State Supreme Court ruled that
    discrimination on the basis of pregnancy was not
    sex discrimination. Rationale?
  • GE v. Gilbert (1976)
  • GE did not cover pregnancy/childbirth-related
    medical costs in its disability benefits plan.
  • Pregnancy was a sickness, not a disability, so GE
    would pay for those hospital costs, but not
    recovery costs. US Supreme Court ruling similar
    to that in Geduldig.

32
Pregnancy Discrimination ActAmendment to Title
VII1978
  • US Congress decided Courts had misinterpreted
    Title VII. Congress had intended in 1964 to
    prohibit employment discrimination based on
    pregnancy as part of the sex restriction.
  • PDA was intended to correct SCs narrow
    interpretation of Title VII.
  • Prohibits discrimination on the basis of
    pregnancy or a womens ability to become
    pregnant.
  • Women affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or
    related medical conditions shall be treated the
    same for all employment related purposes,
    including receipt of benefits under fringe
    benefit programs and leaves, as other persons not
    so affected by similar in their ability or
    inability to work. Pregnancy related conditions
    should be treated the same as any other medical
    condition covered under any fringe benefit
    program.
  • However, an employer who doesnt provide health
    insurance of other income maintenance benefits
    for temporary periods of nonoccupational
    diability doesnt have to provide these benefits
    for pregnancy related conditions

33
Harassment and the Law
  • Eco 336

34
Legal Questions
  • Is Sexual Harassment a violation of Title VII?
    Yes
  • Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual
    favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a
    sexual nature
  • Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson, 1986
  • Recognized 2 types of SH as violating Title VII
  • 1. Quid Pro Quo
  • (1) submission to such conduct is made either
    explicitly or implicitly a term or condition of
    an individuals employment
  • (2) submission to or rejection of such conduct
    by an individual is used as the basis for
    employment decisions.
  • 2. Hostile Work Environment such conduct has the
    purpose or effect of substantially interfering
    with an individuals work performance or creating
    an intimidating, hostile, or offensive working
    environment.

35
Legal Questions (Cont)
  • Harris V. Forklift Systems, Inc, 1993
  • Further defined hostile work environment.
  • Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services,1998
  • Same-sex harassment is a violation of Title VII.
  • B. When is an employer liable for the sexual
    harassment of an employee vs escape liability?
    AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSE
  • Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 1998
  • Burlington Industries v. Ellerth, 1998
  • Ellerth never filed a sexual harassment complaint
    with Burlington or otherwise informed anyone in
    authority of her supervisors misconduct.
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