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The Slaughter-House Cases – New Orleans slaughtering monopoly

t Miller1873. Held that a law granting a slaughtering monopoly in New Orleans did not violate the Privileges and Immunitiesof other butchers whose business was harmed by the law.

t Ps argument:

n PICof Article IV, §2, which protects out-of-staters, protects the right to pursue a calling;

n PICof 14th Amendmentextends the reach of the corresponding Article IVclause by applying it to state actions directed at a state’s own citizens; and therefore

n the law is unconstitutional, because the affected butchers are citizens of the U.S., and their right to pursue a calling has been abridged by the law.

t SCt rejected this argument because

n first sentence of 14th Amendmentdistinguishes between state and federal citizenship;

n PICapplies only to the privileges derived from federal citizenship;

n the right to pursue a calling is not derived from federal citizenship; and therefore

n the law is constitutional.

t Analysis.

n Miller’s reading of the provisions renders PICof 14th Amendmenta nullity, because none of the privileges he places within the clause’s protection could have been abridged before the clause was enacted.

n Millernonetheless insisted on his interpretation because a contrary reading, which would empower the federal courts to protect individuals from their own state governments, “radically changes the whole theory of the relations of the State and Federal governments to each other and of both these governments to the people.”

Slaugheter-Houseremains good law

t Although its reasoning is widely criticized, Slaughter-House is still good law.

t Part of the reason may be that modern judges are less confident than Field and Bradley were that they can determine which rights are fundamental, and so they shy away from the broad and vague power that PICseems to confer.

t On the other hand, because of the strengthening of the other provisions of the 14th Amendment, the parade of horribles that Millersets forth (797) pretty accurately describes the regime we now inhabit:

n Any state law may be subject to constitutional challenge, and Congress can pass laws limiting states’ legislative power when it reasonably decides that this is necessary to enforce 14th Amendmentrights (Katzenbach v. Morgan).

n SCt now routinely engages in what John Marshalldismissed as “the extraordinary occupation of affording the people additional protection from the exercise of power by their own governments.” (Barron v. Baltimore)

t Specific result of Slaughter-Housewas reversed de facto during the Lochnerera, when SCt protected economic liberty via the due process clause.

n This made possible a textual defense of Lochner.

n Even if substantive due process really is an oxymoron, it is still arguable that these decisions are justified, because they would have been appropriate under PIC.


Date: 2015-01-02; view: 753


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