CON. LAW Flashcards
Equal Protection Definition
The 14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause protects people against governmental discrimination on the basis of class membership.
Under the 14th Amendment, the state/local/federal governments cannot deny any person of the equal protections of the law.
Applies when the government treats someone different based on that person’s membership in a protected class of people.
Equal Protection Strict Scrutiny
Applies to discrimination against a suspect class, including race, national origin, or alienage.
The government has the burden of showing that the measure was necessary/narrowly tailored to further a compelling government interest.
NECESSARY + COMPELLING
Equal Protection Intermediate Scrutiny
Applies to discriminations made against a quasi-suspect class, such as on the basis of gender or illegitimacy.
The government bears the burden of showing that the measure taken was substantially related to an important.
SUBSTANTIALLY RELATED + IMPORTANT
Rational Basis Review
A court will apply rational basis review in scrutinizing whether the government has infringed upon a non-fundamental right or has discriminated against a non-suspect class, such as wealth, age, disability, or sexual orientation.
The plainitIff must prove that the law is not rationally related to any legitimate government interest.
RATIONALLY RELATED + LEGITIMATE.
State Action Doctrine
Government action is required for a plaintiff to have standing in opposition of an alleged constitutional violation.
When a private actor is performing an action that is traditionally and exclusively a government function, a state action is present.
Procedural Due Process
The 5th Amendment procedural due process clause, as applied to the states by the 14th Amendment, protects people against the governmental deprivation of life, liberty, or property without due process of the law.
Due process = notice and the opportunity to be heard.
To analyze whether due process was adequate, a court will balance (1) the importance of the individual interest and (2) the risk of erroneous deprivation of that interest, against (3) the government’s interest in streamlined procedures.
Substantive Due Process
The 5th Amendment substantive due process clause, as applied to the states by the 14th Amendment, protects rights that are not enumerated in the constitution.
Courts will apply strict scrutiny to determine if the government has infringed upon a fundamental right, such as interstate travel, voting, parental rights, or the right to privacy.
If the right infringed is not considered fundamental (such as economic rights), then rational basis review is applied.
Takings Clause
The 5th Amendment Takings Clause, as applied to the states by the 14th Amendment, protects against the governmental taking of private property for public use without just compensation.
“Taking” = Physical, Regulatory, Conditional Permit/Exaction
“Public Use” = Very broad, any “public purpose”, including for commercial use.
“Just Compensation” = Fair market value.
Regulatory Takings
When a regulation results in:
- Some permanent physical invasion, or
- Deprivation of ALL economically beneficial use of the property,
it is a taking under the 5/14th Amendments.
Courts consider the (1) economic vs. physical impact on the property as well as (2) the duration and character of the regulation.
Conditional Permits/Exactions
When a regulation restricts an owner’s use of their property as a condition to allowing them to develop the land, it is a taking, unless the government shows:
- A logical nexus between the regulation and the government purpose, and
- A “rough proportionality” between the impact of the proposed development and the legitimate government interests served.
Freedom of Speech Definition + Threshold Issues
The First Amendment, applied to the states by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, protects against government regulation of certain speech. In general, the government may not interfere with or distort the marketplace of ideas.
As a threshold issue, government regulations may not be overbroad, vague, or serve as a prior restraint. The First Amendment is also subject to the state action doctrine, requiring an action by the government barring certain exceptions.
Analysis of a regulation’s legality depends on whether the regulation was content-based or content-neutral.
Fighting Words
Fighting words fall outside of the protections of the 1st Amendment, however, what constitutes unprotected fighting words is construed narrowly.
Fighting words must be likely to incite an ordinary person to commit immediate physical retaliation. (More than annoying or offensive) Must be a direct and personal insult, such as hate speech.
Government regulations of “fighting words” are often unconstitutionally overbroad or vague.
Commerce Power
Congress can regulate all channels, instrumentalities, or economic activities that “substantially affect” interstate commerce.
Congress cannot regulate purely intrastate non-economic activity (but may condition federal funding on state enforcement of federal laws under their spending power).
Dormant Commerce Clause
States cannot discriminate against out of state economic actors.
If a state law directly discriminates against out of state economic actors, the state must how that the regulation serves a COMPELLING state interest, and that it is NARROWLY TAILORED to serving that interest.
If a state law only incidentally burdens out of state economic actors, the court will balance the burden imposed on interstate commerce against the local benefits of the law. Law will be upheld unless the burden outweighs the local benefit.
Dormant Commerce Clause Exceptions
If the state is acting as a market participant, or if Congress affirmatively authorized the states to legislate in that area.