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con law special cases

cases for my con law final
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Last updated: April 28, 2026
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Case
Opinion
Reasoning
Carter v. Carter Coal - Majority
Sutherland
Local activites, no matter how great the effect on interstate commerce, are inherently secondary and indirect to it.
Carter v. Carter Coal - Dissent
Cardozo
"The power is as broad as the need that evokes it"
US v. Lopez - Majority
Rehnquist
The activity being regulated is not substantially related to interstate commerce.
US v. Lopez - Concurrence
Kennedy
If the regulation is going towards an activity traditionally seen as under state control, Congress should be more restricted. Fed/state balance must be respected.
US v. Lopez - Concurrence
Thomas
Substantial effects test is too broad and we should be using the original meaning of commerce.
US v. Lopez - Dissent
Stevens
Guns are articles of commerce that the government has a substantial interest in regulating.
US v. Lopez - Dissent
Souter
Rational basis test should be used because Congress deserves deference. Creating a distinction between economic/noneconomic reverts the court back to the direct/indirect conflict.
US v. Lopez - Dissent
Breyer
Use rational basis test because Congress deserves leeway. Using rational basis, there is clearly a rational relationship between gun violence in schools and interstate commerce.
Kassel v. Consolidated Freightways - Plurality
Powell
Balancing test between the state interest and the burden on interstate commerce
Kassel v. Consolidated Freightways - Concurrence
Brennan
The actual purpose behind the statute is protectionist and should therefore be impermissible.
Kassel v. Consolidated Freightways - Dissent
Rehnquist
Balancing test does not allow for nuance. Must look at whether the asserted justification is pretext for discrimination. If it isn't, there should be a rational basis test applied.
Youngstown Sheet and Tube - Majority
Black
Clear lines on what each branch of the government has the power to do.
Youngstown Sheet and Tube - Concurrence
Frankfurter
Look to history! History is the gloss with which life has written on the Constitution.
Youngstown Sheet and Tube - Concurrence
Jackson
Creates the three ebbs of Presidential power
Youngstown Sheet and Tube - Dissent
Vinson
The immediacy and threat of the danger must be considered. POTUS should be able to take these actions because Congress does not act fast enough.
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld - Plurality
O'Connor
POTUS can detain citizens and some DP is required. Cites Youngstown saying we cannot give POTUS unlimited powers during war.
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld - Concurrence
Souter
AUMF does not give the power to detain.
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld - Dissent
Scalia
Habeas Corpus has not been suspended, so Hamdi should get a full trial. Narrow ruling.
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld - Dissent
Thomas
Federal government is acting within the bounds of its war powers and should get deference.
US v. Nixon - Majority
Burger
It is the court's duty to say what the law is. If there is no claim of a need to protect military, diplomatic, or national security interests, there cannot be absolute, unqualified POTUS immunity.
Morrison v. Olson - Majority
Rehnquist
The statute does not take power from the Executive and give it to Congress. It simply limits the Executive's power which is not a SOP issue.
Morrison v. Olson - Dissent
Scalia
This is a purely executive power and the statute is depriving POTUS of exclusive control. So, the act is definitely unconstitutional.
Dred Scott v. Sanford - Majority
Taney
Black people were not included in the "citizens" described in the Constitution, so they can't be citizens. Federal law cannot deprive someone of their property without due process so the LT law was unconstitutional.
Brown v. Board of Ed - Majority
Warren
Intangible factors must be considered when determining if things are equal. One intangible factor is the psychological toll that segregation causes, so schools can never be separate but equal. Schools must desegregate with "all deliberate speed".
McClesky v. Kemp - Majority
Powell
Must prove discriminatory intent, discriminatory impact is not enough.
McClesky v. Kemp - Dissent
Brennan
Statistical evidence is not enough on its own, but Georgia's racist history should also be taken into consideration. Majority fears "too much justice".
Case
Opinion
Reasoning
Parents Involved v. Seattle School District - Plurality
Roberts
There are only two compelling interest for race-based decision-making in education and neither are present here. EPC protects people not groups.
Parents Involved v. Seattle School District - Concurrence
Thomas
Racial imbalance is not segregation. Constitution is color-blind.
Parents Involved v. Seattle School District - Concurrence
Kennedy
Plurality is simplifying the issue. Schools should use race-conscious decision-making like where to build schools or allocate funds, not based on individual children.
Parents Involved v. Seattle School District - Dissent
Stevens
Court is reading Brown in a color-blind way that goes against what it stands for.
Parents Involved v. Seattle School District - Dissent
Breyer
Schools should be able to adopt race-conscious measures if they are inclusionary. This is narrowly tailored and there are more than 2 compelling interests.
Griswold v. Connecticut - Majority
Douglas
The right to privacy is within the penumbra of the BOR within amendments 1,3,4,5, and 9.
Griswold v. Connecticut - Concurrence
Goldberg
The 9th amendment provides for implied rights and the right of privacy within the marriage is a long held belief.
Griswold v. Connecticut - Concurrence
Harlan II
DP and the BOR do not need to be interconnected. The BOR can stand on its own by judging if something violates the basic values implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.
Griswold v. Connecticut - Concurrence
White
The state's stated interest for the law does not logically follow from the restriction.
Griswold v. Connecticut - Dissent
Black
A right to privacy is not in the constitution and we should not read the constitution as a living document.
Griswold v. Connecticut - Dissent
Stewart
The law is silly but that does not make it unconstitutional.
Roe v. Wade - Majority
Blackmun
The right to an abortion fits under the right to privacy. Creates a trimester framework to illustrate when states can impose restrictions.
Roe v. Wade - Dissent
White
Misuse of judicial review
Roe v. Wade - Dissent
Rehnquist
Abortions aren't private in a way that would include them in the quasi-right to privacy.
Lawrence v. Texas - Majority
Kennedy
Freedom extends beyond spatial bounds and includes an autonomy of self. Look at history and societal views in America and abroad.
Lawrence v. Texas - Concurrence
O'Connor
This is an EPC issue, not DP. Morality is not sufficient to pass rational basis+ test.
Lawrence v. Texas - Dissent
Scalia
Morality is a legitimate government interest. This should be decided democratically.
Lawrence v. Texas - Dissent
Thomas
The law is silly but not unconstitutional. Just like Stewart in Griswold.
McCulloch v. Maryland - Majority
Marshall
The Constitution is a living document that gives implied powers to Congress under the necessary and proper clause. The sovereignty of the state is subordinate to the constitution.
Marbury v. Madison - Majority
Marshall
Constitution is the supreme law of the land. SCOTUS can review laws and deem them unconstitutional.
Sebelius - Plurality
Roberts
Individual mandate goes against the CC because Congress cannot force someone to operate in an economic activity.
Sebelius - Concurrence
Ginsburg
This is not inactivity because everyone will interact with the healthcare system at some point.
Sebelius - Dissent
Scalia
This is inactivity and cannot be regulated. The whole of ACA should be struck down.
DeShaney v. Winnebago Social Services - Majority
Rehnquist
The purpose of the DP clause is to protect people from the state, not to protect private individuals from each other. The state has no affirmative duty to protect except for those whose freedom they limit (prisoners).
DeShaney v. Winnebago Social Services - Dissent
Brennan
The state DID take action. They documented Josh's injuries and took steps that made other bystanders believe they did not need to help anymore.
DeShaney v. Winnebago Social Services - Dissent
Blackmun
A natural level of sympathy should be applied to the case and this level of strict formalism goes against the 14A.
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