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Minnesota Law |
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Minnesota Constitutional Law & Civil Rights
Constitutional Law & Civil Rights
The Role of ConstitutionsConstitutional law is very broad and very complex. It includes the actual constitutional text and amendments, and a huge number of cases which attempt to interpret the words of the state and federal constitutions. In constitutional law, more than in any other area of law, there has been a great deal of interpretation of the original documents. Often, reading the constitution itself is only the very beginning of understanding the law of the constitution on a particular subject. In constitutional law, it is essential to become acquainted with the way courts interpret the documents' provisions. The fact that constitutions are such important documents, and that the courts play such a key role in deciding what the documents say, leads to heated battles over the nomination of justices to sit on the federal and states' Supreme Courts. People care about constitutions and who interprets them because they know that constitutions matter. Despite the importance of constitutional law in our legal system, many of the thorniest issues in constitutional law are of limited interest to the average consumer. Some areas of law that are affected by constitutional analysis are discussed in separate chapters: Employment Law: Individual , Elder & Social Security Law, and Felony & Misdemeanor Criminal Defense. Of great interest to everyone, however, is the constitutional law of civil rights. Thus, this chapter focuses primarily on the civil rights guaranteed by the federal Constitution, and the limitations that government can place on those rights.
Civil RightsOne of the most important concepts in constitutional law is that the rights granted in the Constitution are not absolute. Many powers have limits placed upon them. Most of the rights granted in the Constitution must be exercised responsibly or else they conflict with other rights. Most constitutional law is about defining the limits of powers granted in the Constitution or balancing the rights of individuals whose rights are in conflict.
In reviewing a classification, a court applies one of three different standards to a law or action. Each of these standards asks what the goal of a law is and how well the government has chosen a method to reach that goal. Rational Basis Scrutiny: Rational basis scrutiny is the lowest level of scrutiny the court can apply. Applying this test, a government classification is acceptable so long as it is rationally related to a legitimate government interest. The government interest need not be a particularly good one, so long as it is a goal that the government may legitimately pursue. The classification chosen need not be an especially effective way of reaching that goal, so long as there is a rational connection between the classification and its goal. Because this standard is so low, courts applying this standard almost never overturn the government's classification. Intermediate Scrutiny: Intermediate scrutiny is a rarely used standard of review. Courts applying this standard overturn a government classification unless it is substantially related to an important government interest. Here, the government's interest must be more than legitimate as required by the rational basis test, and the classification chosen must be more carefully tailored to meet that goal. Strict Scrutiny: Strict scrutiny is the highest standard a court can apply in deciding whether a government classification violates a person's right to equal protection. To withstand strict scrutiny, a challenged classification must be necessary to a compelling government interest. Here the means chosen must be so carefully tailored that the action is absolutely necessary and no less restrictive means exist. Also, the government's interest must be compelling, not merely optional or important. Courts applying this standard rarely uphold the challenged classification. Given these three very different standards, the most important question in most equal protection cases is which of these standards the court applies in reviewing a classification. Plaintiffs alleging that a classification violates equal protection almost always lose if the court applies a rational basis test and they almost always win if the court applies strict scrutiny. The standard that applies is determined by the kind of classification the court reviews. Most challenged classifications receive rational basis scrutiny. The following classifications receive special treatment.
Suspect ClassificationsSuspect classifications are subject to strict scrutiny. A classification is called suspect because it is likely to be based on an illegally discriminatory intent. The clearest example of a suspect classification is race. History shows that most laws that use race as a way to classify people are based on racial discrimination and have no legitimate purpose. Racial classifications are automatically suspect, so the court applies the highest level of scrutiny and almost always strikes down racial classifications. There is no fixed list of which classifications are suspect, but the Supreme Court typically treats as suspect any classification based on a trait
Classifications That Infringe Fundamental RightsA number of rights considered fundamental interests also receive the protection of strict scrutiny when a government classification limits these rights. Fundamental interests include most voting rights, marriage, and procreation. For example, suppose a state decides to reduce the amount of money spent on public education by refusing to enroll children born to mixed-race couples. A court reviewing this law would strike it down. Limiting public spending might be a compelling government interest but discouraging mixed-race couples from having children is not necessary to achieve that goal because there are other ways to limit spending that do not infringe the fundamental right to marry and procreate.
Semi-Suspect ClassificationsCourts apply intermediate scrutiny to a limited number of classifications. Gender classifications, classifications that distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate children, and racial classifications intended to benefit a disadvantaged racial group are examples of semi-suspect classifications. For example, suppose a state decides to create an affirmative action program for Asian-American firefighters because it had discriminated against Asian-American firefighters in the past. A court reviewing this classification would likely apply intermediate scrutiny and ask whether the program is substantially related to the important government interest in remedying its past discrimination. The court's decision would likely turn on how well the state tailored the program and how fairly it implemented its provisions.
Procedural Due ProcessProcedural due process is the guarantee that the government will not deprive a person of life, liberty, or property without first giving the person some amount of legal process.The court uses a two-step balancing analysis to decide procedural due process claims. First, it asks whether there is a property or liberty interest at stake. No process is due unless a person has a liberty or property interest at stake. If a court finds that there is a liberty or property interest at stake, it then asks what process the individual deserves, weighing the private interest, the public interest, and the risk of error from the method chosen by the government. The following examples can illustrate this analysis. Example 1: A person applies for a job with the federal government and is turned down with no opportunity for appeal. The applicant claims he or she was denied procedural due process. A court would likely determine that the applicant was not denied procedural due process as he or she had no liberty or property interest in the job yet. Merely hoping for a job does not equal having a property interest in it so no procedural process is due from the government. Example 2: A person working for a state agency is fired after receiving repeated warnings about inadequate job performance and given opportunities to improve. He or she claims a denial of procedural due process. Here a court would likely find that the employee has a legally protected interest in keeping his or her job. The court would then ask whether the employee received adequate process weighing the public interest in having competent employees, the employee's interest in keeping his or her job, and the risk of an unfair termination given the process provided. States are aware of their obligation to provide procedural due process, so they establish detailed procedures for employee evaluations. If the person actually received warnings and reviews were fairly done, the court is likely to find there was no denial of procedural due process. Example 3: A person receiving food stamps is suddenly denied benefits without any right to appeal. He or she claims a denial of procedural due process. Here a court is likely to find the recipient has a legitimate property interest in continuing to receive assistance and that the risk of unfair termination was high because the recipient received no legal process at all.
Substantive Due ProcessSubstantive due process is the right to be free from arbitrary or unreasonable government actions. Modern Supreme Court decisions have used substantive due process analysis to decide challenges to government restrictions on personal rights.
PrivacyThere is no right to privacy specifically mentioned in the Constitution. The words "privacy," "abortion," and "contraception" do not appear in the literal words of the Constitution. However, some court decisions have read a right of privacy into other explicit guarantees, such as freedom of association and freedom from unreasonable searches. The right of privacy includes a right to abortion and contraception. Decisions affecting the right of privacy are almost always controversial and recent cases have cast doubt on how future courts will analyze substantive due process challenges to these rights, but the following general points stand out.
Sexual OrientationCourts do not interpret the right of privacy beyond abortion and contraception to include all forms of sexual activity and personal autonomy. For example, the Supreme Court upheld one state's law criminalizing homosexual activity. Thus, the right of privacy is not broad enough to protect homosexual activity. This is an area where state laws can provide greater protection for a person's civil rights than the federal Constitution provides. Minnesota has state laws that prohibit many forms of discrimination based on sexual orientation.
ObscenityObscenity is not a protected form of free speech, but most non-obscene speech is protected. The reason obscenity is such a controversial area of constitutional law is that people disagree on where the line is between obscene and non-obscene communications. Courts consider a communication obscene if it meets a three-part test:
Private PossessionPrivate possession of obscene material is not punishable. Private possession of obscenity is protected by the right of privacy, so states cannot punish possession, although they are free to punish the distribution or display of obscene material.
ZoningEven though they cannot regulate the content of books, magazines, and entertainment, states and municipalities are given very wide latitude to regulate where bookstores, movie theaters, and places of live entertainment can operate. Here the right of free speech conflicts with the state interest in orderly planning, so the two interests must be accommodated.
Child PornographyThe Supreme Court recognizes that individuals have a free speech interest in materials that portray children in a sexually explicit manner. The Court also recognizes that the state has an important interest in protecting children from sexual exploitation. Therefore, any depictions that use actual children in a sexually explicit manner can be prohibited. Depictions that use older actors pretending to be children or that use idealized drawings are protected speech.
Commercial SpeechCommercial speech is speech that advertises a product or service for profit or for a business purpose. Commercial speech is entitled to much less protection than non-commercial speech. Specifically, misleading commercial speech or commercial speech which is a proposal for an unlawful transaction have no protection under the law. Otherwise, the courts give diminished protection to commercial speech weighing the government's interest in restricting a particular kind of speech, whether that interest is directly advanced by the challenged restriction, and whether a less restrictive option is available.
Freedom of ReligionThe Constitution's guarantee of religious freedom has two thrusts. The federal government is forbidden to establish a state church and individuals are guaranteed the right to freely exercise their religion. Like the other rights discussed in this chapter, these rights are not absolute.
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