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					 Concepts in constitutional law 
					 
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				United States Constitutional Law is the body of law governing "the interpretation and implementation of the United States Constitution." It defines the scope and application of the terms of the Constitution and covers areas of law such as the relationship between the federal government and state governments, the rights of individuals, and other fundamental aspects of the application of government authority in the United States..
  The following list of topics is provided as an overview and introduction to United States constitutional law.
   Federalism and Federal Powers 
  Federal Courts -- an appellate decision on a mixed Federal/State matter may be held off if 	a state can independently decide the issue.  If a state decides a state issue under 	both the federal and state constitutions, the Supreme Court may exercise review of 	the federal issues presented 
  Federal Courts jurisdiction -- Congress has exclusive control over the jurisdiction of the 	lower courts.
  Supreme Court -- only Federal Court to be created by Constitution.  Appellate jurisdiction 	of the Supreme Court is statutory, not Constitutional.
  Preemption -- Federal Intent or Federal Regulation to fill the “entire sphere” of subject 	preempts state regulation.
  Supremacy Clause -- in fields of concurrent powers, valid acts of Congress prevail over 	state or local actions in direct conflict
  Federal Powers -- states have no power to regulate the activities of the Federal 	Government unless Congress consents to the regulation.  Likewise, the Federal 	Government cannot commandeer state governments to enforce Federal laws.
  District of Columbia -- Congress has exclusive power to exercise legislation concerning it
  Executive agreements -- override state law, but since they are not ratified by the Senate, 	do not override Federal law
  Foreign Affairs -- is a non-justiciable area over which the Federal Courts will not exercise 	jurisdiction under the doctrine of “political questions.”  
  War Authority -- individuals may be required to register and submit to examinations to 	facilitate conscription
  Property Clause -- Congress has the power to make all needful rules respecting the 	territory or other (movable and relocatable) property of the US
  Speech and Debate Clause -- (Art. I, sec. 6) absolute libel privilege
  Delegation -- Congress may delegate powers to the executive branch if adequate 	standards are established to govern it.  Congress might appoint officials to 	exercise the type of power it might delegate to one of its own committees, but it 	MAY NOT appoint members of an agency or commission with administrative 	powers.
  Necessary and Proper -- this clause, however popular, has no inherent power; it must be 	linked with another clause/power to be valid
  General Welfare -- While it states “tax and spend for the general welfare,“ this clause 	does not give Congress unfettered power to spend or impound money as it 	pleases.  Some payments are seen as property rights and cannot be terminated at 	will (disability et al)
  Taxing Power -- Article I, sec. 8.  If Congress has no power to regulate the activity taxed, 	then its legitimacy depends on the tax as a revenue raising measure only
  Standing -- Requires the plaintiff have an injury that will be remedied by a decision in his 	favor.  It cannot be based on the “public welfare” at large, this must be a 	rectifiable injury to an “individual.”  However, members of an environmental 	group, if they actually use a contested woodland, etc, do have standing.
  Association Standing -- 1) injury in fact to members, 2) injury related to the association’s 	purpose, 3) neither the nature of the claim nor the relief requested requires 	participation of the individual members of the suit
  Ripeness -- A case brought “too early.“ The Federal Courts will not hear a case unless 	there is an immediate 	threat of harm or a person has been harmed.  (e.g. A suit to 	enjoin a law that will 	not take effect for 2 years is not ripe for adjudication.).  The 	opposite of “moot,” which is a case brought too late. 
   Restrictions on Federal Powers 
  Bill of Attainder -- any form of legislative punishment of a named group or individual 	without judicial trial.  Can be legislative punishment for party membership 	(Landrum-Griffin Act)
  Ex Post Facto -- 1) increasing penalties for crime from the penalty in effect when the 	crime committed.  2) retroactive changes in evidence/procedure that operate to the 	disadvantage of the accused by making conviction easier
  Fifth Amendment Takings -- 1) physical takings.  Government regulations that grant 		permanent physical occupation of land is a taking (e.g. cable wires) or 2) leaving 	no economically reasonably viable use.  Leaving land worthless.  It is a question 	of degree, for instance, farmers complaining under the takings clause might be 	able to grow alternate crops, etc.
  Tenth Amendment -- Federal interference with state functions unconst.  However, the 	Fed. Govt can regulate working conditions of state and local employees.  The 10th 	Amendment does NOT authorise plenary power to states regarding allocation of 	public funds, but the Tenth Amendment is the basis for the state’s power to levy 	ad valorem taxes
  Eleventh Amendment -- a state cannot be sued in Federal Court by its own citizens, or by 	citizens of another state, unless it consents
  Thirteenth Amendment -- applies to private conduct.  Has been construed to prohibit both 	public and private racial discrimination in housing
   Restrictions on State Powers 
  Privileges & Immunities -- Article IV applies to privileges of state citizens, usually 	important commercial activities or civil libs/fundamental rights.  One state cannot 	discriminate between its own citizens and citizens of other states in regard to 	these, except where “substantial justification” arise or no less restrictive means are 	available.  Fourteenth Amendment P&I applies to rights of national citizenship 	and is rare.
  Residency Requirements -- look at the right being affected.  Residency for indigent 	treatment at hospitals was found to be too great a deprivation, and also a burden 	on the “right to travel.”
  Impairment of Contracts (state a party) -- a state may not retroactively alter a contract to 	which it was a party or pass legislation that reduces the contractual burden on 	itself.  Such attempts will be met with strict scrutiny.
  Impairment of Contracts (state not a party) -- generally a state police power argument will 	override a competing Federal contract clause argument.  A state may enact 	legislation that impairs contracts under certain conditions (like voiding unfair real 	estate terms, etc)
  Commerce Clause -- a state CAN burden interstate commerce if 1) the statute is 	reasonable and non-discriminatory upon balancing the 2) benefit to state against 	the burden imposed and that 3) no less restrictive alternatives to regulation are 	available.
  Commerce Clause -- states cannot levy duties on import/exports except what is necessary 	for executing its inspection laws.  An exception lies when imported goods are 	unpackaged and mingled with other goods
  Commerce Clause --  states can have a “license tax” on local activities separate from the 	interstate commerce of which they are a part, as long as the fee is 1) non-	discriminatory and 2) not too burdensome
  Eminent Domain -- may be delegated directly or indirectly to a private person or 	enterprise subject to the requirements that the taking be 1) for a public use, and 2) 	just compensation given.  Condemnee must be given notice and hearing.  	However, if property taken under “police power” of the state, then NO 	compensation necessary.
   Due Process, Equal Protection, Free Speech, etc 
  Procedural Due Process -- general acts of the legislature, unlike individualized 	adjudication, do not give affected parties the right to a hearing
  Due Process Clause of 14th Amendment -- protects personal choice in matters of marriage 	and family life.  (it can invalidate state laws restricting grandchildren from living 	w/ grandparents)  
  Substantive Due Process -- as applied to states through the 14th Amendment usually deals 	with “fundamental rights,” such as voting, travel, privacy, 1st Amendment
  Rights applicable to states under 14th Amendment -- 1, 4, 5, 6, 8th Amendments (no right 	to grand jury in criminal proceedings or any jury at all in civil)
  “Reasonableness” of Speech Regulations --  Vagueness:  when regulation of speech bars 	a substantial amount of protected speech in its legitimate scope, it is invalid.  	Overbreadth:  if regulation bans a broad range of speech at a particular location 	or under particular circumstances.  (like within 50 feet of a polling place, etc.)
  “Speech Permits” -- allowing unfettered discretion to city officials is violative of the First 	Amendment.  Such as those that prohibit ALL religious groups.  Such are “void in 	its face” and therefore the speaker need not apply for it.
  Prior Restraint -- the government cannot suppress or restrict speech in advance of its 	publication or utterance, except in serious emergencies (Nat’l security).
  Rights of Press v. Rights of Accused -- “gag orders” on press issued by the criminal 	courts usually unconstitutional
  TPM restrictions in a non-public forum -- most public property actually are non-public 	forums.  Regulation in non-public forums must be 1) viewpoint neutral, 2) 	rationally related to a legitimate government interest.  Advertising on city property 	(buses, buildings) falls under this standard, and banning picketing in front of 	homes is acceptable.
  TPM restrictions in a public forum and designated public forums -- 1) must be 	content/viewpoint neutral, 2) narrowly tailored to a significant government 	interest, 3) leaves open alternative channels of communication
  Police halting an assembly -- only when imminent violence and serious disorder must be 	stopped.  Then the police’s first duty is to protect the speaker from the crowd.  	Arresting speaker first is not valid.
  Restrictions on Commercial Advertising:  1) serves a substantial governmental interest, 2) 	directly advances that interest, 3) narrowly tailored to serve it; no more extensive 	than necessary.  Furthermore, taxes applicable to only the press or based on the 	content of a publication will not be upheld
  Obscenity --  standard is still the average person using contemporary community (local) 	standards.  Some redeeming value not enough, it must have serious literary, 	artistic, political or scientific value.
  Freedom of Speech in Solicitation -- a “balancing test” used.  Weigh the rights of free 	speech against the state’s police power interest in protecting safety, welfare, and 	privacy.  Measure should be reasonable and non-discriminatory and no less drastic 	alternates are available.  (such as the requirement of homeowner’s consent on 	commerical door to door solicitation)
  Physical Disability -- not a suspect class, have no fundamental rights.
  Affirmative Action -- race based affirmative action is subject to strict scrutiny
  Sex Discrimination -- the plaintiff must show discriminatory purpose not merely 	discriminatory effect
  Right to Privacy -- generally encompasses the entire field of family relations
  Equal Protection -- mere licensing by a state/local government is insufficient to constitute 	state action
  Election Law -- Ballot restrictions based on political affiliation (“disaffiliation laws”) are 	subject to strict scrutiny, but ballot restrictions based on age or prohibitions 	against holding multiple offices are judged under the rational basis test
  Discriminatory Primaries -- a state will be held responsible for a party’s racial 	discrimination under the 14th Amendment.  Also the 15th Amendment prohibits 	racial discrimination in the primaries, as political party affairs that affect the 	general election are not simply “private clubs.”
  Alienage -- Restrictions based on alienage are subject to strict scrutiny, unless where a 	state or local government discriminates against aliens for jobs involving “self 	government” issues (police, teachers, etc), then rational basis used.  Congress is 	provided more leeway to discriminate against aliens than state governments in 	practice.
  Establishment Clause:  all three must be met 1) secular purpose, 2) no effect of 	advancing/inhibiting religion, 3) excessive entaglement with religion.  Any federal 	preference for one religion over another will be reviewed under Strict scrutiny.  	Tax credits for parochial schools invalid even when it includes ALL private 	schools.
  Religious Figures -- can hold government office.  Not a per se violation of the 	establishment clause
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