Constitutional Law Outline
Constitutional Law Outline
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
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I. FEDERAL JUDICIAL POWER
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a. Requirement for cases and controversies. 4 justiciability doctrines:
i. Standing
1. Definition: issue is whether P is the proper party to bring a matter to the ct for
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adjudication.
2. Requirements:
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a. Injury
i. P must allege and prove that he has been injured or imminently
will be injured (imminent threat of injury).
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1. Ps only may assert injuries that they personally have
suffered.
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T 2. Ps seeking injunctive or declaratory relief must show a
likelihood of future harm.
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ii. TIP: if a question asks which P has the best standing, look for
answer where P has personally suffered injury. If more than one P
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suffered injury personally, then look for P that suffered an
economic, dollar and cents, injury.
b. Causation and redressability
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i. A P cannot assert claims of third parties who are not before the
ct.
1. Exception 1: third party standing is allowed if there is a
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purpose;
c. Neither the claim nor relief requires participation of
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individual members.
d. No generalized grievances
i. P must not be suing solely as a citizen or as a taxpayer interested
in having the gov’t follow the law.
ii. TIP: question will say P is suing as a “citizen” or as a “taxpayer.”
iii. Exception: taxpayers have standing to challenge gov’t
expenditures as pursuant to federal statutes as violating the
Establishment Clause.
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ii. Ripeness
1. May the federal ct grant pre-enforcement review of a statute or regulation?
2. TIP: whenever you see a request for declaratory judgment, always consider
ripeness.
3. 2 criteria S Ct looks to in determining ripeness:
a. The hardship that will be suffered without pre-enforcement review; and
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b. The fitness of the issues and the record for judicial review (does the fed ct
have everything it needs to decide the issue?).
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iii. Mootness
1. If events after the filing of a lawsuit end the P’s injury, the case must be dismissed
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as moot.
a. Exception 1: wrong capable of repetition but evading review
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i. Injury is over before fed ct proceedings are completed. Think of
Roe v. Wade. Wrong capable of repetition because she could
become pregnant again and seek an abortion.
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b. Exception 2: voluntary cessation
i. If D voluntarily halts the offending practice, but is free to resume it
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at any time, the case will not be dismissed as moot.
2. Some constitutional claims are left to the political branches to resolve. The
3. Appeals exist only for S Ct review of decisions by 3-judge federal district cts.
a. If a federal statute says that there is APPEAL to the S Ct, the S Ct is
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law claim.
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c. Lower federal ct review
i. Federal cts (and state cts) may not hear suits against state governments.
1. The principle of sovereign immunity
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a. The 11th Am bars suits against states in federal ct.
i. It doesn’t matter if P is from that state or from another state;
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whether suit is for an injunction or for money.
b. Sovereign immunity bars suits against states in state cts or federal
agencies.
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2. 4 exceptions (states may be sued under the following circumstances):
a. Waiver is permitted (must be explicit)
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b. States may be sued pursuant to federal laws adopted under section 5 of the
T 14th Am. Congress cannot authorize suits against states under other
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c. The federal gov’t may sue state governments.
d. Bankruptcy proceedings
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3. Suits against state officers are allowed
a. For injunctive relief;
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N c. State officers may not be sued if it is the state treasury that will be paying
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retroactive damages.
ii. Abstention (rarely tested)
1. Federal cts may not enjoin pending state ct proceedings.
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authority.
iii. The taxing/spending power and the commerce power
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c. Congress may regulate economic activities that have a substantial effect
on IC. (In the area of non-economic activity, a substantial effect cannot be
based on cumulative impact).
iv. The 10 Am as a limit on Congressional powers. The 10th Am states that all powers not
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granted to the US, nor prohibited to the states, are reserved to the states or the people.
1. Congress cannot compel state regulatory or legislative action.
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a. ALWAYS on MBE.
b. Note: Congress can induce state gov’t action by putting strings on grants,
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so long as the conditions are expressly stated and relate to the purpose of
the spending program.
2. Congress may prohibit harmful commercial activity by state governments.
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v. Congress’ power under section 5 of the 14th Am.
1. Congress may not create new rights or expand the scope of rights. Congress may
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act only to prevent or remedy violations of rights recognized by the cts and such
laws must be proportionate and congruent to remedying constitutional
violations.
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b. Delegation of powers
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i. No limit exists on Congress’ ability to delegate legislative power.
3. A line-item veto is where President attempts to veto part of the bill while signing
the rest into law.
iii. Congress may not delegate executive power to itself or its officers.
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a. Foreign policy
i. Treaties
1. Agreements between the US and a foreign country that are negotiated by the
President and are effective when ratified by the Senate.
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controls.
c. If a treaty conflicts with the US Constitution, it is invalid.
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iii. The President has broad powers as commander in chief to use American troops in
foreign countries.
iv. TIP:
1. Best answer: political question.
2. Second best answer: president wins.
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IS SENATE CONFLICTS CONFLICTS CONFLICTS
APPROVAL WITH STATE WITH WITH
REQUIRED? LAW FEDERAL CONSTITUTION
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STATUTE
TREATIES YES TREATY WHICHEVER CONSTITUTION
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CONTROLS WAS CONTROLS
ADOPTED
LAST IN
TIME
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CONTROLS
EXECUTIVE NO EXECUTIVE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION
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AGREEMENTS AGREEMENT
CONTROLS
STATUTE
CONTROLS
CONTROLS
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b. Domestic affairs
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i. The appointment and removal power
1. The appointment power
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N United States.
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c. Congress may not give itself or its officers the appointment power.
2. The removal power
a. Rule: Unless removal is limited by statute, the president may fire any
executive branch office.
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iii. The President has absolute immunity to civil suits for money damages for any actions
while in office. However, the president does not have immunity for actions that occurred
prior to taking office.
iv. The president has executive privilege for presidential papers and conversations, but such
privilege must yield to other important gov’t interests.
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v. The president has the power to pardon those accused or convicted of federal crimes.
1. Exception: when there has been an impeachment. If a person is impeached by the
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House, there can never be a pardon for the offenses that led to the impeachment.
vi. TIPS:
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1. President may pardon only as to federal crimes, NEVER as to STATE LAW
crimes.
2. President may only pardon as to criminal liability, NEVER as to CIVIL liability.
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IV. FEDERALISM
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a. Preemption (4-6 MBE)
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i. The Supremacy Clause of Art VI provides that the Constitution, and laws and treaties
made pursuant to it, are the supreme law of the land.
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ii. Express preemption
1. If a federal statute explicitly says that federal law is exclusive in a field, then state
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and local laws are preempted.
iii. Implied preemption
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1. If federal and state laws are mutually exclusive, federal law preempts state law.
N a. States may set environmental standards stricter than federal law unless
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3. If Congress evidences a clear intent to preempt state law, federal law preempts
state law.
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iv. States may not tax or regulate federal gov’t activity (inter-governmental immunity).
1. Unconstitutional to pay a state tax out of the federal treasury.
2. Fact pattern
a. Mom and pops store privately owned that operated on federal land. May
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the state tax it? Yes, since the tax liability is owed by the private owners
and not by the federal treasury.
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1. Analysis if the law does NOT discriminate:
a. The privileges and immunities clause of Art IV does not apply.
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b. If the law burdens IC, it violates the DCC if its burdens exceed its
benefits.
2. Analysis if the law DOES discriminate against out-of-staters:
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a. If the law burdens IC, it violates the DCC unless it is necessary to
achieve an important gov’t purpose.
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i. Exception 1: Congressional approval
ii. Exception 2: the market participant exception. A state or local
gov’t may prefer its own citizens in receiving benefits from gov’t
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programs or in dealing with government-owned businesses.
1. Less tuition for in-staters and more tuition for out-of-
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staters. This is ok because in-staters have been paying taxes
N iii. Corporations and aliens cannot use the privileges and immunities
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clause.
iv. The discrimination must be necessary to achieve an important
gov’t purpose.
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This state or local government’s action DOES This state or local government’s action DOES NOT
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Violates the Privileges and Immunities Clause of Art Privileges and Immunities Clause of Art IV is
IV if it discriminates against individuals with regard to inapplicable.
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Exceptions: congressional approval and the Corporations and aliens cannot sue under it.
market participant exception No exceptions.
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ii. A state may only tax activities if there is a substantial nexus to the state.
iii. State taxation of interstate businesses must be fairly apportioned.
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d. Full faith and credit. Courts in one state must give full faith and credit to judgment of courts in
another state, so long as:
i. The ct that rendered the judgment had jdx over the parties and the subject matter.
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ii. The judgment was on the merits.
iii. The judgment is final.
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V. THE STRUCTURE OF THE CONSTITUTION’S PROTECTION OF INDIVIDUAL
LIBERTIES
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a. Is there gov’t action?
i. The constitution applies only to gov’t action. Private conduct need not comply with the
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T Constitution.
ii. Congress, by statute, may apply constitutional norms to private conduct.
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1. The 13th Am can be used to prohibit private race discrimination.
2. The commerce power can be used to apply constitutional norms to private
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conduct.
3. Congress cannot use section 5 of the 14th Am to regulate private behavior.
iii. Exceptions: situations where private conduct must comply with the Constitution:
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racially discriminate.
iv. There is no state action when a private school that is over 99%
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e. The Eighth Amendment right against excessive fines.
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c. Levels of scrutiny
i. Rational basis test: law upheld if rationally related to a legitimate gov’t purpose.
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1. Rationally related means
2. Legitimate conceivable purpose
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3. Burden of proof on challenger
ii. Intermediate scrutiny: law upheld if substantially related to an important gov’t purpose.
1. Substantially related means
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2. Important actual purpose
3. Burden of proof on gov’t
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iii. Strict scrutiny: law upheld if necessary to achieve a compelling gov’t purpose.
T 1. Necessary means
PT ED C 2. Compelling actual purpose
3. Must ask whether this is least restrictive alternative
4. Burden of proof on gov’t
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alternative
N analysis?
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scrutiny purpose
Strict scrutiny Necessary Compelling actual Yes Government
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purpose
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3. Government negligence is NOT sufficient for a deprivation of due process.
Generally, there must be intentional government action or at least reckless action
for liability to exist. However, in emergency situations, the gov’t is liable under
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due process only if its conduct shocks the conscience.
4. Generally, the government’s failure to protect people from privately inflicted
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harms does not deny due process.
a. Only if a person is physically in gov’t custody or if the gov’t literally
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creates the danger does the gov’t have any duty to provide protection.
ii. What procedures are required?
1. TEST Balance:
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a. The importance of the interest to the individual
b. The ability of additional procedures to increase the accuracy of the fact-
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finding
review.
i. Grossly excessive punitive damages violate due process.
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Has the government deprived a person of life, liberty (a significant freedom secured by the Constitution or
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YES NO
What procedures must government supply? Government need not provide procedural due process.
BALANCE:
1. Importance of the interest to the individual;
2. Ability of additional procedures to increase the
accuracy of the fact finding; and
3. The government’s interests.
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i. Possessory taking – gov’t confiscation or physical occupation of
property is a taking.
ii. Regulatory taking – gov’t regulation is a taking if it leaves no
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reasonable economically viable use of the property.
b. Notes
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i. Gov’t conditions on development of property must be justified by a
benefit that is roughly proportionate to the burden imposed;
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otherwise it is a taking.
ii. A property owner may bring a takings challenge to regulations that
existed at the time the property was acquired.
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iii. Temporarily denying an owner use of property is not a taking so
long as the government’s action is reasonable.
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c. Is it for public use?
N a. Applies only to state and local interference with already existing contracts.
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existing K?
ii. If so, is the law a reasonably and narrowly tailored means of
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a. Prior to viability, states may not prohibit abortions, but may regulate
abortions so long as they do not create an undue burden on the ability to
obtain abortions.
i. A 24-hr waiting period is not an undue burden.
ii. Requirement that abortion be performed by a licensed physician is
not an undue burden.
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iii. The prohibition of partial birth abortions is not an undue burden
b. After viability, states may prohibit abortions unless necessary to protect
the woman’s life or health.
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c. The government has no duty to subsidize abortions or provide abortions in
public hospitals.
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d. Spousal consent and notification laws are unconstitutional.
e. State may require parental notice and/or consent for an unmarried
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minor’s abortion so long as it creates an alternative procedure where a
minor can obtain an abortion by going before a judge who can approve the
abortion by finding it would be in the minor’s best interests or that she is
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mature enough to decide for herself.
f. The right to privacy protects a right to engage in private consensual
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homosexual activity.
for another.
RATIONAL BASIS
review)
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VII. EQUAL PROTECTION
a. An approach to equal protection questions
i. What is the classification?
ii. What level of scrutiny should be applied?
iii. Does this law meet the level of scrutiny?
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b. Constitutional provisions concerning equal protection
i. The EPC of the 14th Am applies only to state and local governments.
1. TIP: the 14th Am NEVER applies to the federal gov’t.
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ii. EP is applied to the federal gov’t through the DPC of the 5th Am.
c. Race and national origin classifications
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i. SS is used
ii. How is the existence of a racial classification proven?
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1. The classification exists on the face of the law.
2. If the law is facially neutral, proving a racial classification requires demonstrating
both discriminatory impact AND discriminatory intent.
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a. Ex: discriminatory use of peremptory challenges based on race denies EP.
iii. How should racial classifications benefiting minorities be treated?
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1. SS is used
i. IS is used
equal protection.
iii. How should gender classifications benefiting women be treated?
1. IS is used
2. Gender classifications benefiting women that are based on role stereotypes will
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not be allowed.
3. Gender classifications benefiting women that are designed to remedy past
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i. Generally, SS is used
ii. Only a RB test is used for alienage classifications that concern self-government and the
democratic process.
1. Voting, serving on a jury, being a police officer, a teacher, or a probation officer.
iii. Only a RB test is used for Congressional discrimination against aliens.
iv. It appears that IS is used for discrimination against undocumented alien children.
1. Ex: Law that said that children of citizens and documented aliens receive public
education for free, but children of undocumented aliens must pay for it was held
unconstitutional.
f. Discrimination against non-marital children
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i. IS is used
ii. Laws that deny a benefit to all non-marital children, but grant it to all marital children are
unconstitutional.
g. RB review is used for all other types of discrimination under the Constitution
i. Age discrimination
ii. Disability discrimination
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iii. Wealth discrimination
iv. Economic regulations
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v. Sexual orientation discrimination
h. Fundamental rights protected under EP
i. The right to travel
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1. Laws that prevent people from moving into a state must meet SS.
2. Durational residency requirements must meet SS.
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a. 50 days is the longest amount allowed for voting durational residency.
3. Restrictions on foreign travel need meet only the RB test.
ii. The right to vote
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1. Laws that deny some citizens the right to vote must meet SS.
a. ONLY one instance where S Ct approved a property ownership
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requirement: water district election.
T 2. One-person – one-vote must be met for all state and local elections.
PT ED C 3. At-large elections are constitutional unless there is proof of a discriminatory
purpose.
4. The use of race in drawing election district lines must meet SS.
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a. If gov’t uses race as a predominant factor in drawing up election district
lines, the gov’t must meet SS.
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the message)
2. Content-neutral laws burdening speech generally need only meet IS.
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ii. Prior restraints (judicial order or an administrative system that stops speech before it
occurs)
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1. Ct orders suppressing speech must meet SS. Procedurally proper ct orders must
be complied with until they are vacated or overturned. A person who violates a ct
order is barred from later challenging it.
a. TIP: Gag orders on the press to prevent prejudicial pre-trial publicity are
NOT allowed.
2. The gov’t can require a license for speech only if there is an important reason for
licensing and clear criteria leaving almost no discretion to the licensing authority.
Licensing schemes must contain procedural safeguards such as prompt
determination of requests for licenses and judicial review.
iii. Vagueness and overbreadth
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1. Vagueness
a. A law is unconstitutionally vague if a reasonable person cannot tell what
speech is prohibited and what is allowed.
2. Overbreadth
a. A law is unconstitutionally overbroad if it regulates substantially more
speech than the constitution allows to be regulated.
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3. Fighting words laws are unconstitutionally vague and overbroad.
a. TIP: Law protecting fighting words is unconstitutionally vague and broad
– always pick this answer if fact pattern has sympathetic victim and nasty
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speaker.
iv. Symbolic speech
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1. The gov’t can regulate conduct that communicates if it has an important
interest unrelated to suppression of the message and if the impact on
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communication is no greater than necessary to achieve the government’s
purpose.
2. Ex: flag burning is constitutionally protected speech.
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3. Ex: draft card burning is NOT protected speech.
4. Ex: nude dancing is NOT protected speech.
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5. Ex: burning a cross is protected speech unless done with intent to threaten.
3. Child pornography may be completely banned, even if not obscene (to be child
pornography, children must be used in production of the material).
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4. The gov’t may not punish private possession of obscene materials; but the gov’t
may punish private possession of child pornography.
5. The gov’t may seize the assets of businesses convicted of violating obscenity
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laws.
6. Profane and indecent speech is generally protected by the First Amendment
a. Exception: over the broadcast media
i. Less discretion with cable media because people choose to bring
cable into their homes.
b. Exception: in schools
iii. Commercial speech
1. Advertising for illegal activity, and false and deceptive ads are not protected by
the First Amendment.
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2. True commercial speech that inherently risks deception can be prohibited.
a. The gov’t may prevent professionals from advertising or practicing under
a trade name.
b. The gov’t may prohibit attorney, in-person solicitation of clients for
profit.
i. Unless lawyer is offering free representation. 1st Am also protects
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right of lawyer to send letters to clients.
c. The gov’t may NOT prohibit accountants from in-person solicitation of
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clients for profit.
3. Other commercial speech can be regulated if IS is met.
4. Gov’t regulation of commercial speech must be narrowly tailored, but it does
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not need to be the least restrictive alternative.
iv. Defamation
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1. If the P is a public official or running for public office, P can recover for
defamation by proving FALSITY of the statement and actual MALICE.
2. If P is a public figure, P can recover for defamation by proving FALSITY of the
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statement and actual MALICE.
3. If P is a private figure and the matter is of public concern, that state may allow P
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to recover for defamation by proving falsity and negligence by D. However, P
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actual malice
Private figure, matter of Unclear – negligence Compensatory for actual Unclear – burden on D to
private concern injury; presumed or prove truth
punitive damages do not
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5. Privacy
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a. The gov’t may not create liability for the truthful reporting of information
that was lawfully obtained from the gov’t.
b. Liability is not allowed if the media broadcasts a tape of an illegally
intercepted call, if the media did not participate in the illegality and it
involves a matter of public importance.
c. The gov’t may limit its dissemination of info to protect privacy.
6. Speech by gov’t employees on the job in the performance of their duties is not
protected by the 1st Am.
7. Other governmental restrictions based on the content of speech must meet SS.
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c. What places are available for speech?
i. Public forums (gov’t properties that the gov’t is constitutionally required to make
available for speech)
1. Regulations must be subject matter and viewpoint neutral, or if not, SS must be
met.
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2. Regulations must be a time, place, or manner regulation that serves an important
gov’t purpose and leaves open adequate alternative places for communication.
3. Gov’t regulation of public forums need not use the least restrictive alternative.
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4. City officials cannot have discretion to set permit fees for public demonstrations.
ii. Limited public forums (gov’t properties that the gov’t could close to speech, but chooses
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to open to speech).
1. The same rules apply as for public forums.
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2. Ex: Schools are non-public forums on nights and weekends, but if they choose to
open for speech, they are limited public forums on nights and weekends.
iii. Non-public forums (gov’t properties that the gov’t constitutionally can and does close to
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speech)
1. The gov’t can regulate speech in non-public forums so long as the regulation is
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reasonable and viewpoint neutral.
T 2. Ex:
PT ED C a. Military bases
b. Areas outside prisons and jails
c. Advertising space on city buses
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d. Sidewalks on post office property
e. Airports
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N distribution of literature.
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iv. There is no 1st Am right of access to private property for speech purposes.
1. This includes privately-owned shopping centers.
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allowed?
Public forums Yes Yes Time, place, or Important
(sidewalks, parks) manner
Limited public Yes Yes Time, place, or Important
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opens to speech)
Non-public forums No Yes Reasonable Legitimate
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(military bases,
airports)
Private property NO FIRST RIGHT TO USE PRIVATE FOR SPEECH
AMENDMENT PROPERTY PURPOSES
d. Freedom of association
i. Laws that prohibit or punish group membership must meet SS. To punish membership
in a group, it must be proven that the person:
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1. Actively affiliated with the group;
2. Knowing of its illegal activities; and
3. With the specific intent of furthering those illegal activities.
ii. Laws that require disclosure of group membership, where such disclosure would chill
association, must meet SS.
iii. Laws that prohibit a group from discriminating are constitutional unless they interfere
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with intimate association or expressive activity.
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e. Freedom of religion
i. The free exercise clause
1. The free exercise clause cannot be used to challenge a neutral law of general
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applicability (tested more often than the other).
2. The gov’t may NOT deny benefits to individuals who quit their jobs for religious
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reasons.
ii. The establishment clause
1. TEST
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a. There must be a secular purpose for the law
b. The effect must be neither to advance nor inhibit religion
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c. There must not be excessive entanglement with religion
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4. The gov’t may give assistance to parochial schools, so long as it is not used for
religious instruction. The gov’t may provide parents vouchers which they use in
parochial schools.
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D IT O D
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