the first part of the project is about the subject of venture capital and the second part is about into to us system law. - Management
I will conclude myself: 
you have to write about 700 words answering the questions: Question 1: Identify and explain two potential features of preferred stock that are considered venture-capital friendly. In other words, explain two preferred-stock features that you would object to if you were representing an entrepreneur. 
Question 2: Why are most Silicon Valley startups c-corporations rather than LLCs? 
and other 700 word answering the questions: 
question 1 : Why does Congress have the authority to regulate a private employer’s actions, such as prohibiting an employer’s ability to choose which employees to hire and fire based on race? 
Question 2: Describe Congress’ Spending Powers. What limits have the courts applied to Congress’ Spending Powers with respect to joint federal-state program funding? Why do those limits exist?
Im studying in the university and my grades are very high.....I will be very grateful if you could keep on that grades :)
cause I still dont know you but Im sure you will do a great job and I have some more projects
I sent you. its two different subjects so pay attention and dont mix it up. you can write even more then 1500 words (I will be happy!).
the works is relying on the stuff that I sent you
the first part of the project is about the subject of venture capital and the second part is about into to us system law.
The Client is Israeli But I think the paper is on US law.
	 1	
SUPREME	COURT	OF	THE	UNITED	STATES	
5	U.S.	137	
Marbury	v.	Madison	
Mr.	Chief	Justice	MARSHALL	delivered	the	opinion	of	the	Court.	
[In	the	last	weeks	of	his	administration,	President	John	Adams	nominated	the	plaintiff,	William	
Marbury,	to	serve	as	a	justice	of	the	peace,	a	low-level	judicial	officer.	The	Senate	confirmed	
him,	and	all	that	remained	to	be	done	was	for	Secretary	of	State	John	Marshall	to	deliver	a	
physical	document,	called	a	commission,	to	Marbury.	
President	Adams,	knowing	that	his	political	party	would	soon	lose	both	the	presidency	and	the	
majority	of	the	House	and	Senate,	rushed	to	nominate	as	many	judges	as	he	could.	He	
nominated	Marshall,	the	man	who	was	to	deliver	the	commission	to	Marbury,	to	serve	as	Chief	
Justice	of	the	United	States	Supreme	Court.		
In	the	end-of-administration	rush,	Thomas	Jefferson	succeeded	Adams	as	President	before	the	
physical	proof	of	confirmation,	called	a	commission,	was	delivered	to	Marbury.		James	Madison,	
the	defendant	in	this	case,	was	the	successor	to	Marshall	as	Secretary	of	State.	Madison	refused	
to	deliver	the	commission,	thus	preventing	Marbury	from	becoming	a	justice	of	the	peace.		
Marbury	petitioned	the	United	States	Supreme	Court	to	issue	an	order,	called	a	writ	of	
mandamus,	which	would	have	forced	Madison	to	deliver	the	commission.	Madison	responded	
that	the	United	States	Supreme	Court	did	not	have	the	power	to	order	him	to	deliver	the	
commission.	Chief	Justice	John	Marshall,	the	very	same	man	who	neglected	to	deliver	the	
commission,	proceeded	to	write	perhaps	the	most	famous	opinion	in	United	States	history.]	
	.	.	.	The	peculiar	delicacy	of	this	case,	the	novelty	of	some	of	its	circumstances,	and	the	real	
difficulty	attending	the	points	which	occur	in	it	require	a	complete	exposition	of	the	principles	
on	which	the	opinion	to	be	given	by	the	Court	is	founded.	
.	.	.	 	
In	the	order	in	which	the	Court	has	viewed	this	subject,	the	following	questions	have	been	
considered	and	decided.	
1.	Has	the	applicant	a	right	to	the	commission	he	demands?	
2.	If	he	has	a	right,	and	that	right	has	been	violated,	do	the	laws	of	his	country	afford	
him	a	remedy?	
3.	If	they	do	afford	him	a	remedy,	is	it	a	mandamus	issuing	from	this	court?	
	 2	
[I.]	
The	first	object	of	inquiry	is:	
1.	Has	the	applicant	a	right	to	the	commission	he	demands?	
[Madison	argued	that	Thomas	Jefferson,	the	new	President,	could	withdraw	the	commission,	
since	it	had	never	been	delivered.]	
[Marbury’s]	right	originates	in	an	act	of	Congress	passed	in	February,	1801,	concerning	the	
District	of	Columbia.	
After	dividing	the	district	into	two	counties,	the	eleventh	section	of	this	law	enacts,	
that	there	shall	be	appointed	in	and	for	each	of	the	said	counties	such	number	of	
discreet	[sic]	persons	to	be	justices	of	the	peace	as	the	President	of	the	United	States	
shall,	from	time	to	time,	think	expedient,	to	continue	in	office	for	five	years.		
It	appears	from	the	affidavits	that,	in	compliance	with	this	law,	a	commission	for	William	
Marbury	as	a	justice	of	peace	for	the	County	of	Washington	was	signed	by	John	Adams,	then	
President	of	the	United	States,	after	which	the	seal	of	the	United	States	was	affixed	to	it,	but	
the	commission	has	never	reached	the	person	for	whom	it	was	made	out.	
In	order	to	determine	whether	he	is	entitled	to	this	commission,	it	becomes	necessary	to	
inquire	whether	he	has	been	appointed	to	the	office.	For	if	he	has	been	appointed,	the	law	
continues	him	in	office	for	five	years,	and	he	is	entitled	to	the	possession	of	those	evidences	of	
office,	which,	being	completed,	became	his	property.	
The	second	section	of	the	second	article	of	the	Constitution	declares,	
The	President	shall	nominate,	and,	by	and	with	the	advice	and	consent	of	the	Senate,	
shall	appoint	ambassadors,	other	public	ministers	and	consuls,	and	all	other	officers	of	
the	United	States,	whose	appointments	are	not	otherwise	provided	for.	
The	third	section	declares,	that	He	shall	commission	all	the	officers	of	the	United	States.	
An	act	of	Congress	directs	the	Secretary	of	State	to	keep	the	seal	of	the	United	States,	to	make	
out	and	record,	and	affix	the	said	seal	to	all	civil	commissions	to	officers	of	the	United	States	to	
be	appointed	by	the	President,	by	and	with	the	consent	of	the	Senate,	or	by	the	President	
alone;	provided	that	the	said	seal	shall	not	be	affixed	to	any	commission	before	the	same	shall	
have	been	signed	by	the	President	of	the	United	States.	
	 3	
These	are	the	clauses	of	the	Constitution	and	laws	of	the	United	States	which	affect	this	part	of	
the	case.	They	seem	to	contemplate	three	distinct	operations:	
1.	The	nomination.	This	is	the	sole	act	of	the	President,	and	is	completely	voluntary.	
2.	The	appointment.	This	is	also	the	act	of	the	President,	and	is	also	a	voluntary	act,	
though	it	can	only	be	performed	by	and	with	the	advice	and	consent	of	the	Senate.	
3.	The	commission.	To	grant	a	commission	to	a	person	appointed	might	perhaps	be	
deemed	a	duty	enjoined	by	the	Constitution.	He	shall,	says	that	instrument,	
commission	all	the	officers	of	the	United	States.	
The	acts	of	appointing	to	office	and	commissioning	the	person	appointed	can	scarcely	be	
considered	as	one	and	the	same,	since	the	power	to	perform	them	is	given	in	two	separate	and	
distinct	sections	of	the	Constitution.		
.	.	.	
Some	point	of	time	must	be	taken	when	the	power	of	the	Executive	over	an	officer,	not	
removable	at	his	will,	must	cease.	That	point	of	time	must	be	when	the	constitutional	power	of	
appointment	has	been	exercised.	And	this	power	has	been	exercised	when	the	last	act	required	
from	the	person	possessing	the	power	has	been	performed.	This	last	act	is	the	signature	of	the	
commission.		
.	.	.	
The	commission	being	signed,	the	subsequent	duty	of	the	Secretary	of	State	is	prescribed	by	
law,	and	not	to	be	guided	by	the	will	of	the	President.	He	is	to	affix	the	seal	of	the	United	States	
to	the	commission,	and	is	to	record	it.	
.	.	.	
It	is	therefore	decidedly	the	opinion	of	the	Court	that,	when	a	commission	has	been	signed	by	
the	President,	the	appointment	is	made,	and	that	the	commission	is	complete	when	the	seal	of	
the	United	States	has	been	affixed	to	it	by	the	Secretary	of	State.	
.	.	.	
The	discretion	of	the	Executive	is	to	be	exercised	until	the	appointment	has	been	made.	But	
having	once	made	the	appointment,	his	power	over	the	office	is	terminated	in	all	cases,	where	
by	law	the	officer	is	not	removable	by	him.	The	right	to	the	office	is	then	in	the	person	
appointed,	and	he	has	the	absolute,	unconditional	power	of	accepting	or	rejecting	it.	
	 4	
Mr.	Marbury,	then,	since	his	commission	was	signed	by	the	President	and	sealed	by	the	
Secretary	of	State,	was	appointed,	and	as	the	law	creating	the	office	gave	the	officer	a	right	to	
hold	for	five	years	independent	of	the	Executive,	the	appointment	was	not	revocable,	but	
vested	in	the	officer	legal	rights	which	are	protected	by	the	laws	of	his	country.	
To	withhold	the	commission,	therefore,	is	an	act	deemed	by	the	Court	not	warranted	by	law,	
but	violative	of	a	vested	legal	right.	
[II.]	
This	brings	us	to	the	second	inquiry,	which	is:	
2.	If	he	has	a	right,	and	that	right	has	been	violated,	do	the	laws	of	his	country	afford	him	a	
remedy?		
The	very	essence	of	civil	liberty	certainly	consists	in	the	right	of	every	individual	to	claim	the	
protection	of	the	laws	whenever	he	receives	an	injury.	One	of	the	first	duties	of	government	is	
to	afford	that	protection.	In	Great	Britain,	the	King	himself	is	sued	in	the	respectful	form	of	a	
petition,	and	he	never	fails	to	comply	with	the	judgment	of	his	court.	
In	the	third	volume	of	his	Commentaries,	page	23,	Blackstone	states	two	cases	in	which	a	
remedy	is	afforded	by	mere	operation	of	law.	
In	all	other	cases,	he	says,	
it	is	a	general	and	indisputable	rule	that	where	there	is	a	legal	right,	there	is	also	a	legal	
remedy	by	suit	or	action	at	law	whenever	that	right	is	invaded.	
.	.	.		
The	Government	of	the	United	States	has	been	emphatically	termed	a	government	of	laws,	and	
not	of	men.	It	will	certainly	cease	to	deserve	this	high	appellation	if	the	laws	furnish	no	remedy	
for	the	violation	of	a	vested	legal	right.	
.	.	.		
Is	the	act	of	delivering	or	withholding	a	commission	to	be	considered	as	a	mere	political	act	
belonging	to	the	Executive	department	alone,	for	the	performance	of	which	entire	confidence	
is	placed	by	our	Constitution	in	the	Supreme	Executive,	and	for	any	misconduct	respecting	
which	the	injured	individual	has	no	remedy?	
	 5	
That	there	may	be	such	cases	is	not	to	be	questioned,	but	that	every	act	of	duty	to	be	
performed	in	any	of	the	great	departments	of	government	constitutes	such	a	case	is	not	to	be	
admitted.	
.	.	.	
By	the	Constitution	of	the	United	States,	the	President	is	invested	with	certain	important	
political	powers,	in	the	exercise	of	which	he	is	to	use	his	own	discretion,	and	is	accountable	only	
to	his	country	in	his	political	character	and	to	his	own	conscience.	To	aid	him	in	the	
performance	of	these	duties,	he	is	authorized	to	appoint	certain	officers,	who	act	by	his	
authority	and	in	conformity	with	his	orders.	
In	such	cases,	their	acts	are	his	acts;	and	whatever	opinion	may	be	entertained	of	the	manner	in	
which	executive	discretion	may	be	used,	still	there	exists,	and	can	exist,	no	power	to	control	
that	discretion.	The	subjects	are	political.	They	respect	the	nation,	not	individual	rights,	and,	
being	entrusted	to	the	Executive,	the	decision	of	the	Executive	is	conclusive.	The	application	of	
this	remark	will	be	perceived	by	adverting	to	the	act	of	Congress	for	establishing	the	
Department	of	Foreign	Affairs.	This	officer,	as	his	duties	were	prescribed	by	that	act,	is	to	
conform	precisely	to	the	will	of	the	President.	He	is	the	mere	organ	by	whom	that	will	is	
communicated.	The	acts	of	such	an	officer,	as	an	officer,	can	never	be	examinable	by	the	
Courts.	
But	when	the	Legislature	proceeds	to	impose	on	that	officer	other	duties;	when	he	is	directed	
peremptorily	to	perform	certain	acts;	when	the	rights	of	individuals	are	dependent	on	the	
performance	of	those	acts;	he	is	so	far	the	officer	of	the	law,	is	amenable	to	the	laws	for	his	
conduct,	and	cannot	at	his	discretion,	sport	away	the	vested	rights	of	others.	
The	conclusion	from	this	reasoning	is	that,	where	the	heads	of	departments	are	the	political	or	
confidential	agents	of	the	Executive,	merely	to	execute	the	will	of	the	President,	or	rather	to	act	
in	cases	in	which	the	Executive	possesses	a	constitutional	or	legal	discretion,	nothing	can	be	
more	perfectly	clear	than	that	their	acts	are	only	politically	examinable.	But	where	a	specific	
duty	is	assigned	by	law,	and	individual	rights	depend	upon	the	performance	of	that	duty,	it	
seems	equally	clear	that	the	individual	who	considers	himself	injured	has	a	right	to	resort	to	the	
laws	of	his	country	for	a	remedy.	
If	this	be	the	rule,	let	us	inquire	how	it	applies	to	the	case	under	the	consideration	of	the	Court.			
The	power	of	nominating	to	the	Senate,	and	the	power	of	appointing	the	person	nominated,	
are	political	powers,	to	be	exercised	by	the	President	according	to	his	own	discretion.	When	he	
has	made	an	appointment,	he	has	exercised	his	whole	power,	and	his	discretion	has	been	
completely	applied	to	the	case.	If,	by	law,	the	officer	be	removable	at	the	will	of	the	President,	
then	a	new	appointment	may	be	immediately	made,	and	the	rights	of	the	officer	are	
terminated.	But	as	a	fact	which	has	existed	cannot	be	made	never	to	have	existed,	the	
appointment	cannot	be	annihilated,	and	consequently,	if	the	officer	is	by	law	not	removable	at	
	 6	
the	will	of	the	President,	the	rights	he	has	acquired	are	protected	by	the	law,	and	are	not	
resumable	by	the	President.	They	cannot	be	extinguished	by	Executive	authority,	and	he	has	
the	privilege	of	asserting	them	in	like	manner	as	if	they	had	been	derived	from	any	other	
source.	
The	question	whether	a	right	has	vested	or	not	is,	in	its	nature,	judicial,	and	must	be	tried	by	
the	judicial	authority.	.	.	.	
.	.	.	
[III.]	
It	remains	to	be	inquired	whether,	
3.	He	is	entitled	to	the	remedy	for	which	he	applies.	This	depends	on:	
1.	The	nature	of	the	writ	applied	for,	and	
2.	The	power	of	this	court.	
[III.A.]	
1.	The	nature	of	the	writ.	
Blackstone,	in	the	third	volume	of	his	Commentaries,	page	110,	defines	a	mandamus	to	be	
a	command	issuing	in	the	Kings	name	from	the	Court	of	Kings	Bench,	and	directed	to	
any	person,	corporation,	or	inferior	court	of	judicature	within	the	Kings	dominions	
requiring	them	to	do	some	particular	thing	therein	specified	which	appertains	to	their	
office	and	duty,	and	which	the	Court	of	Kings	Bench	has	previously	determined,	or	at	
least	supposes,	to	be	consonant	to	right	and	justice.	
Lord	Mansfield,	in	3	Burrows,	1266,	in	the	case	of	The	King	v.	Baker	et	al.,	states	with	much	
precision	and	explicitness	the	cases	in	which	this	writ	may	be	used.	
Whenever,	says	that	very	able	judge,	
there	is	a	right	to	execute	an	office,	perform	a	service,	or	exercise	a	franchise	(more	
especially	if	it	be	in	a	matter	of	public	concern	or	attended	with	profit),	and	a	person	is	
kept	out	of	possession,	or	dispossessed	of	such	right,	and	has	no	other	specific	legal	
remedy,	this	court	ought	to	assist	by	mandamus,	upon	reasons	of	justice,	as	the	writ	
expresses,	and	upon	reasons	of	public	policy,	to	preserve	peace,	order	and	good	
government.	
	 7	
In	the	same	case,	he	says,	
this	writ	ought	to	be	used	upon	all	occasions	where	the	law	has	established	no	specific	
remedy,	and	where	in	justice	and	good	government	there	ought	to	be	one.	
In	addition	to	the	authorities	now	particularly	cited,	many	others	were	relied	on	at	the	bar	
which	show	how	far	the	practice	has	conformed	to	the	general	doctrines	that	have	been	just	
quoted.	
This	writ,	if	awarded,	would	be	directed	to	an	officer	of	government,	and	its	mandate	to	him	
would	be,	to	use	the	words	of	Blackstone,	
to	do	a	particular	thing	therein	specified,	which	appertains	to	his	office	and	duty	and	
which	the	Court	has	previously	determined	or	at	least	supposes	to	be	consonant	to	right	
and	justice.	
Or,	in	the	words	of	Lord	Mansfield,	the	applicant,	in	this	case,	has	a	right	to	execute	an	office	of	
public	concern,	and	is	kept	out	of	possession	of	that	right.	
These	circumstances	certainly	concur	in	this	case.	
Still,	to	render	the	mandamus	a	proper	remedy,	the	officer	to	whom	it	is	to	be	directed	must	be	
one	to	whom,	on	legal	principles,	such	writ	may	be	directed,	and	the	person	applying	for	it	
must	be	without	any	other	specific	and	legal	remedy.	
1.	With	respect	to	the	officer	to	whom	it	would	be	directed.	The	intimate	political	relation,	
subsisting	between	the	President	of	the	United	States	and	the	heads	of	departments,	
necessarily	renders	any	legal	investigation	of	the	acts	of	one	of	those	high	officers	peculiarly	
irksome,	as	well	as	delicate,	and	excites	some	hesitation	with	respect	to	the	propriety	of	
entering	into	such	investigation.	Impressions	are	often	received	without	much	reflection	or	
examination,	and	it	is	not	wonderful	that,	in	such	a	case	as	this,	the	assertion	by	an	individual	of	
his	legal	claims	in	a	court	of	justice,	to	which	claims	it	is	the	duty	of	that	court	to	attend,	should,	
at	first	view,	be	considered	by	some	as	an	attempt	to	intrude	into	the	cabinet	and	to	
intermeddle	with	the	prerogatives	of	the	Executive.	
It	is	scarcely	necessary	for	the	Court	to	disclaim	all	pretensions	to	such	a	jurisdiction.	An	
extravagance	so	absurd	and	excessive	could	not	have	been	entertained	for	a	moment.	The	
province	of	the	Court	is	solely	to	decide	on	the	rights	of	individuals,	not	to	inquire	how	the	
Executive	or	Executive	officers	perform	duties	in	which	they	have	a	discretion.	Questions,	in	
their	nature	political	or	which	are,	by	the	Constitution	and	laws,	submitted	to	the	Executive,	
can	never	be	made	in	this	court.	
But,	if	this	be	not	such	a	question;	if	so	far	from	being	an	intrusion	into	the	secrets	of	the	
cabinet,	it	respects	a	paper	which,	according	to	law,	is	upon	record,	and	to	a	copy	of	which	the	
	 8	
law	gives	a	right,	on	the	payment	of	ten	cents;	if	it	be	no	intermeddling	with	a	subject	over	
which	the	Executive	can	be	considered	as	having	exercised	any	control;	what	is	there	in	the	
exalted	station	of	the	officer	which	shall	bar	a	citizen	from	asserting	in	a	court	of	justice	his	
legal	rights,	or	shall	forbid	a	court	to	listen	to	the	claim	or	to	issue	a	mandamus	directing	the	
performance	of	a	duty	not	depending	on	Executive	discretion,	but	on	particular	acts	of	
Congress	and	the	general	principles	of	law?	
.	.	.	
[III.B]	
This,	then,	is	a	plain	case	of	a	mandamus,	either	to	deliver	the	commission	or	a	copy	of	it	from	
the	record,	and	it	only	remains	to	be	inquired:	
Whether	it	can	issue	from	this	Court.	
The	act	to	establish	the	judicial	courts	of	the	United	States	authorizes	the	Supreme	Court	to	
issue	writs	of	mandamus,	in	cases	warranted	by	the	principles	and	usages	of	law,	to	any	courts	
appointed,	or	persons	holding	office,	under	the	authority	of	the	United	States.	
The	Secretary	of	State,	being	a	person,	holding	an	office	under	the	authority	of	the	United	
States,	is	precisely	within	the	letter	of	the	description,	and	if	this	Court	is	not	authorized	to	
issue	a	writ	of	mandamus	to	such	an	officer,	it	must	be	because	the	law	is	unconstitutional,	and	
therefore	absolutely	incapable	of	conferring	the	authority	and	assigning	the	duties	which	its	
words	purport	to	confer	and	assign.	
The	Constitution	vests	the	whole	judicial	power	of	the	United	States	in	one	Supreme	Court,	and	
such	inferior	courts	as	Congress	shall,	from	time	to	time,	ordain	and	establish.	This	power	is	
expressly	extended	to	all	cases	arising	under	the	laws	of	the	United	States;	and	consequently,	in	
some	form,	may	be	exercised	over	the	present	case,	because	the	right	claimed	is	given	by	a	law	
of	the	United	States.	
In	the	distribution	of	this	power.	it	is	declared	that	
The	Supreme	Court	shall	have	original	jurisdiction	in	all	cases	affecting	ambassadors,	
other	public	ministers	and	consuls,	and	those	in	which	a	state	shall	be	a	party.	In	all	
other	cases,	the	Supreme	Court	shall	have	appellate	jurisdiction.	
It	has	been	insisted	at	the	bar,	that,	as	the	original	grant	of	jurisdiction	to	the	Supreme	and	
inferior	courts	is	general,	and	the	clause	assigning	original	jurisdiction	to	the	Supreme	Court	
contains	no	negative	or	restrictive	words,	the	power	remains	to	the	Legislature	to	assign	
original	jurisdiction	to	that	Court	in	other	cases	than	those	specified	in	the	article	which	has	
been	recited,	provided	those	cases	belong	to	the	judicial	power	of	the	United	States.	
	 9	
.	.	.	If	Congress	remains	at	liberty	to	give	this	court	appellate	jurisdiction	where	the	Constitution	
has	declared	their	jurisdiction	shall	be	original,	and	original	jurisdiction	where	the	Constitution	
has	declared	it	shall	be	appellate,	the	distribution	of	jurisdiction	made	in	the	Constitution,	is	
form	without	substance.	
.	.	.	
When	an	instrument	organizing	fundamentally	a	judicial	system	divides	it	into	one	Supreme	and	
so	many	inferior	courts	as	the	Legislature	may	ordain	and	establish,	then	enumerates	its	
powers,	and	proceeds	so	far	to	distribute	them	as	to	define	the	jurisdiction	of	the	Supreme	
Court	by	declaring	the	cases	in	which	it	shall	take	original	jurisdiction,	and	that	in	others	it	shall	
take	appellate	jurisdiction,	the	plain	import	of	the	words	seems	to	be	that,	in	one	class	of	cases,	
its	jurisdiction	is	original,	and	not	appellate;	in	the	other,	it	is	appellate,	and	not	original.	If	any	
other	construction	would	render	the	clause	inoperative,	that	is	an	additional	reason	for	
rejecting	such	other	construction,	and	for	adhering	to	the	obvious	meaning.	
To	enable	this	court	then	to	issue	a	mandamus,	it	must	be	shown	to	be	an	exercise	of	appellate	
jurisdiction,	or	to	be	necessary	to	enable	them	to	exercise	appellate	jurisdiction.	
It	has	been	stated	at	the	bar	that	the	appellate	jurisdiction	may	be	exercised	in	a	variety	of	
forms,	and	that,	if	it	be	the	will	of	the	Legislature	that	a	mandamus	should	be	used	for	that	
purpose,	that	will	must	be	obeyed.	This	is	true;	yet	the	jurisdiction	must	be	appellate,	not	
original.	
It	is	the	essential	criterion	of	appellate	jurisdiction	that	it	revises	and	corrects	the	proceedings	
in	a	cause	already	instituted,	and	does	not	create	that	case.	Although,	therefore,	a	mandamus	
may	be	directed	to	courts,	yet	to	issue	such	a	writ	to	an	officer	for	the	delivery	of	a	paper	is,	in	
effect,	the	same	as	to	sustain	an	original	action	for	that	paper,	and	therefore	seems	not	to	
belong	to	appellate,	but	to	original	jurisdiction.	Neither	is	it	necessary	in	such	a	case	as	this	to	
enable	the	Court	to	exercise	its	appellate	jurisdiction.	
The	authority,	therefore,	given	to	the	Supreme	Court	by	the	act	establishing	the	judicial	courts	
of	the	United	States	to	issue	writs	of	mandamus	to	public	officers	appears	not	to	be	warranted	
by	the	Constitution,	and	it	becomes	necessary	to	inquire	whether	a	jurisdiction	so	conferred	
can	be	exercised.	
The	question	whether	an	act	repugnant	to	the	Constitution	can	become	the	law	of	the	land	is	a	
question	deeply	interesting	to	the	United	States,	but,	happily,	not	of	an	intricacy	proportioned	
to	its	interest.	It	seems	only	necessary	to	recognise	certain	principles,	supposed	to	have	been	
long	and	well	established,	to	decide	it.	
That	the	people	have	an	original	right	to	establish	for	their	future	government	such	principles	
as,	in	their	opinion,	shall	most	conduce	to	their	own	happiness	is	the	basis	on	which	the	whole	
American	fabric	has	been	erected.	The	exercise	of	this	original	right	is	a	very	great	exertion;	nor	
	 10	
can	it	nor	ought	it	to	be	frequently	repeated.	The	principles,	therefore,	so	established	are	
deemed	fundamental.	And	as	the	authority	from	which	they	proceed,	is	supreme,	and	can	
seldom	act,	they	are	designed	to	be	permanent.	
This	original	and	supreme	will	organizes	the	government	and	assigns	to	different	departments	
their	respective	powers.	It	may	either	stop	here	or	establish	certain	limits	not	to	be	
transcended	by	those	departments.	
The	Government	of	the	United	States	is	of	the	latter	description.	The	powers	of	the	Legislature	
are	defined	and	limited;	and	that	those	limits	may	not	be	mistaken	or	forgotten,	the	
Constitution	is	written.	To	what	purpose	are	powers	limited,	and	to	what	purpose	is	that	
limitation	committed	to	writing,	if	these	limits	may	at	any	time	be	passed	by	those	intended	to	
be	restrained?	The	distinction	between	a	government	with	limited	and	unlimited	powers	is	
abolished	if	those	limits	do	not	confine	the	persons	on	whom	they	are	imposed,	and	if	acts	
prohibited	and	acts	allowed	are	of	equal	obligation.	It	is	a	proposition	too	plain	to	be	contested	
that	the	Constitution	controls	any	legislative	act	repugnant	to	it,	or	that	the	Legislature	may	
alter	the	Constitution	by	an	ordinary	act.	
Between	these	alternatives	there	is	no	middle	ground.	The	Constitution	is	either	a	superior,	
paramount	law,	unchangeable	by	ordinary	means,	or	it	is	on	a	level	with	ordinary	legislative	
acts,	and,	like	other	acts,	is	alterable	when	the	legislature	shall	please	to	alter	it.	
If	the	former	part	of	the	alternative	be	true,	then	a	legislative	act	contrary	to	the	Constitution	is	
not	law;	if	the	latter	part	be	true,	then	written	Constitutions	are	absurd	attempts	on	the	part	of	
the	people	to	limit	a	power	in	its	own	nature	illimitable.	
Certainly	all	those	who	have	framed	written	Constitutions	contemplate	them	as	forming	the	
fundamental	and	paramount	law	of	the	nation,	and	consequently	the	theory	of	every	such	
government	must	be	that	an	act	of	the	Legislature	repugnant	to	the	Constitution	is	void.	
This	theory	is	essentially	attached	to	a	written	Constitution,	and	is	consequently	to	be	
considered	by	this	Court	as	one	of	the	fundamental	principles	of	our	society.	It	is	not,	therefore,	
to	be	lost	sight	of	in	the	further	consideration	of	this	subject.	
If	an	act	of	the	Legislature	repugnant	to	the	Constitution	is	void,	does	it,	notwithstanding	its	
invalidity,	bind	the	Courts	and	oblige	them	to	give	it	effect?	Or,	in	other	words,	though	it	be	not	
law,	does	it	constitute	a	rule	as	operative	as	if	it	was	a	law?	This	would	be	to	overthrow	in	fact	
what	was	established	in	theory,	and	would	seem,	at	first	view,	an	absurdity	too	gross	to	be	
insisted	on.	It	shall,	however,	receive	a	more	attentive	consideration.	
It	is	emphatically	the	province	and	duty	of	the	Judicial	Department	to	say	what	the	law	is.	Those	
who	apply	the	rule	to	particular	cases	must,	of	necessity,	expound	and	interpret	that	rule.	If	
two	laws	conflict	with	each	other,	the	Courts	must	decide	on	the	operation	of	each.	
	 11	
So,	if	a	law	be	in	opposition	to	the	Constitution,	if	both	the	law	and	the	Constitution	apply	to	a	
particular	case,	so	that	the	Court	must	either	decide	that	case	conformably	to	the	law,	
disregarding	the	Constitution,	or	conformably	to	the	Constitution,	disregarding	the	law,	the	
Court	must	determine	which	of	these	conflicting	rules	governs	the	case.	This	is	of	the	very	
essence	of	judicial	duty.	
If,	then,	the	Courts	are	to	regard	the	Constitution,	and	the	Constitution	is	superior	to	any	
ordinary	act	of	the	Legislature,	the	Constitution,	and	not	such	ordinary	act,	must	govern	the	
case	to	which	they	both	apply.	
Those,	then,	who	controvert	the	principle	that	the	Constitution	is	to	be	considered	in	court	as	a	
paramount	law	are	reduced	to	the	necessity	of	maintaining	that	courts	must	close	their	eyes	on	
the	Constitution,	and	see	only	the	law.	
This	doctrine	would	subvert	the	very	foundation	of	all	written	Constitutions.	It	would	declare	
that	an	act	which,	according	to	the	principles	and	theory	of	our	government,	is	entirely	void,	is	
yet,	in	practice,	completely	obligatory.	It	would	declare	that,	if	the	Legislature	shall	do	what	is	
expressly	forbidden,	such	act,	notwithstanding	the	express	prohibition,	is	in	reality	effectual.	It	
would	be	giving	to	the	Legislature	a	practical	and	real	omnipotence	with	the	same	breath	which	
professes	to	restrict	their	powers	within	narrow	limits.	It	is	prescribing	limits,	and	declaring	that	
those	limits	may	be	passed	at	pleasure.	
That	it	thus	reduces	to	nothing	what	we	have	deemed	the	greatest	improvement	on	political	
institutions	--	a	written	Constitution,	would	of	itself	be	sufficient,	in	America	where	written	
Constitutions	have	been	viewed	with	so	much	reverence,	for	rejecting	the	construction.	But	the	
peculiar	expressions	of	the	Constitution	of	the	United	States	furnish	additional	arguments	in	
favour	of	its	rejection.	
The	judicial	power	of	the	United	States	is	extended	to	all	cases	arising	under	the	Constitution.			
Could	it	be	the	intention	of	those	who	gave	this	power	to	say	that,	in	using	it,	the	Constitution	
should	not	be	looked	into?	That	a	case	arising	under	the	Constitution	should	be	decided	
without	examining	the	instrument	under	which	it	arises?	
This	is	too	extravagant	to	be	maintained.	
In	some	cases	then,	the	Constitution	must	be	looked	into	by	the	judges.	And	if	they	can	open	it	
at	all,	what	part	of	it	are	they	forbidden	to	read	or	to	obey?	
.	.	.	
It	is	also	not	entirely	unworthy	of	observation	that,	in	declaring	what	shall	be	the	supreme	law	
of	the	land,	the	Constitution	itself	is	first	mentioned,	and	not	the	laws	of	the	United	States	
generally,	but	those	only	which	shall	be	made	in	pursuance	of	the	Constitution,	have	that	rank.	
	 12	
Thus,	the	particular	phraseology	of	the	Constitution	of	the	United	States	confirms	and	
strengthens	the	principle,	supposed	to	be	essential	to	all	written	Constitutions,	that	a	law	
repugnant	to	the	Constitution	is	void,	and	that	courts,	as	well	as	other	departments,	are	bound	
by	that	instrument.	
The	rule	must	be	discharged.	
California Judicial Branch 
Page 1 of 6 
FACT SHEET January 2014 
 
California Judicial Branch 
The California court system—the largest in the nation, with more than 2,000 
judicial officers, approximately 17,000 court employees, and nearly 8.5 
million cases—serves over 38 million people. The state Constitution vests 
the judicial power of California in the Supreme Court, Courts of Appeal, and 
superior courts. The Constitution also provides for the formation and 
functions of the Judicial Council, the policymaking body for the state courts 
and other agencies. 
Supreme Court 
The Supreme Court of California is the state’s highest court. Its decisions are binding 
on all other California courts. The court conducts regular sessions in San Francisco, 
Los Angeles, and Sacramento; it also occasionally holds special sessions elsewhere. 
Membership, qualifications  
One Chief Justice and six associate justices are appointed by the Governor, confirmed 
by the Commission on Judicial Appointments, and confirmed by the public at the 
next general election. A justice also comes before the voters at the end of his or her 
12-year term. To be eligible for appointment, a person must have been a member of 
the State Bar of California or a judge of a court in this state for at least 10 years. 
Jurisdiction 
The Supreme Court has original jurisdiction in proceedings for extraordinary relief in 
the form of mandamus, certiorari, and prohibition. The court also has original juris-
diction in habeas corpus proceedings. 
The state Constitution gives the Supreme Court the authority to review decisions of 
the state Courts of Appeal. This reviewing power enables the Supreme Court to 
decide important legal questions and to maintain uniformity in the law. The court 
selects specific issues for review, or it may decide all the issues in a case. The Consti-
tution also directs the high court to review all cases in which a trial court has pro-
  ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE 
OF THE COURTS 
455 Golden Gate Avenue 
San Francisco, CA 
94102-3688 
Tel 415-865-4200 
TDD 415-865-4272 
Fax 415-865-4205 
www.courts.ca.gov 
 
California Judicial Branch 
Page 2 of 6 
nounced a judgment of death. Under state law, these cases are automatically appealed 
directly from a trial court to the Supreme Court. 
The Supreme Court adopts rules governing the conduct of judges, both on and off 
the bench, and the conduct of judicial candidates in their campaigns. These rules are 
known as the Code of Judicial Ethics. 
The Supreme Court has discretionary review of decisions by the Commission on 
Judicial Performance to admonish, censure, or remove a judge for misconduct. The 
Supreme Court also reviews the recommendations of the State Bar of California 
concerning the disciplining of attorneys for misconduct. The only other matters 
coming directly to the Supreme Court are appeals from decisions of the Public 
Utilities Commission. 
The Supreme Court received 9,237 filings during fiscal year 2011–2012. Decisions of 
the Supreme Court are published in the California Official Reports and are available 
online at www.courtinfo.ca.gov/opinions.htm. 
Courts of Appeal 
Established by a constitutional amendment in 1904, the Courts of Appeal are Cali-
fornia’s intermediate courts of review. California has six appellate districts (three of 
which have multiple divisions) and a total of 105 justices. The district headquarters 
are situated as follows: First Appellate District, San Francisco; Second Appellate 
District, Los Angeles; Third Appellate District, Sacramento; Fourth Appellate 
District, San Diego; Fifth Appellate District, Fresno; and Sixth Appellate District, San 
Jose. The Legislature has constitutional authority to create new appellate districts and 
divisions. 
Membership, qualifications 
Each district (or division, in the case of the First, Second, and Fourth Appellate 
Districts) has a presiding justice and two or more associate justices. Appellate justices 
are appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Commission on Judicial 
Appointments. The same rules that govern the selection of Supreme Court justices 
apply to those serving on the Courts of Appeal. 
Jurisdiction 
Courts of Appeal have appellate jurisdiction in cases where superior courts have origi-
nal jurisdiction and in certain other cases prescribed by statute. Like the Supreme 
http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/opinions
California Judicial Branch 
Page 3 of 6 
Court, they have original jurisdiction in habeas corpus, mandamus, certiorari, and 
prohibition proceedings. There were 24,118 filings in the Courts of Appeal during 
fiscal year 2011–2012. 
The Courts of Appeal also receive appeals (technically, writ proceedings) from 
decisions of the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board, the Agricultural Labor 
Relations Board, and the Public Employment Relations Board. Cases are decided by 
three-judge panels. Decisions of the panels, known as opinions, are published in the 
California Appellate Reports if they meet certain criteria. In general, an opinion is 
published if it establishes a new rule of law, involves a legal issue of continuing public 
interest, criticizes existing law, or makes a significant contribution to legal literature. 
During fiscal year 2011–2012, approximately 8 percent of Court of Appeal opinions 
were certified as meeting the criteria for publication. 
Superior Courts 
Prior to June 1998, California’s trial courts consisted of superior and municipal 
courts, each with its own jurisdiction and with its number of judges fixed by the 
Legislature. On June 2, 1998, California voters approved a constitutional amendment 
permitting the judges in each county to unify their superior and municipal courts 
into a single superior court with jurisdiction over all case types. The goal of court uni-
fication is to improve services to the public by consolidating court resources, offering 
greater flexibility in case assignments, and saving taxpayer dollars. By February 2001, 
judges in all 58 counties had voted to unify their trial courts. 
Membership, qualifications 
The superior courts have1,7051 authorized judges and 342 (in terms of full-time 
equivalents) authorized commissioners and referees. The California Legislature 
determines the number of judges in each court. Superior court judges serve six-year 
terms and are elected by county voters on a nonpartisan ballot at a general election. 
Vacancies are filled through appointment by the Governor. A superior court judge 
must have been an attorney admitted to practice law in California or have served as a 
judge of a court of record in this state for at least 10 years immediately preceding 
election or appointment. 
                                                 
1 In 2007, AB 159 (Stats. 2007, ch. 722) created an additional 50 judgeships, pending appropriation by 
the Legislature. Funding has been delayed for these judgeships, so although the 50 judgeships are 
included in the total number of authorized judgeships, they are ineligible to be filled until funding is 
provided. 
California Judicial Branch 
Page 4 of 6 
Jurisdiction 
Superior courts have trial jurisdiction over all criminal and civil cases. During 2011–
2012, 8.5 million cases were filed in these courts.  
Court System Agencies 
The Constitution also provides for agencies concerned with judicial administration: 
Judicial Council, Commission on Judicial Appointments, Commission on Judicial 
Performance, and Habeas Corpus Resource Center. Their duties are described below. 
Judicial Council 
Chaired by the Chief Justice, the Judicial Council is the governing body of the Cali-
fornia courts. The California Constitution directs the Judicial Council to provide 
policy guidelines to the courts, make recommendations annually to the Governor and 
Legislature, and adopt and revise California Rules of Court in the areas of court 
administration, practice, and procedure. The council performs its constitutional and 
other functions with the support of its staff agency, the Administrative Office of 
the Courts. 
New judicial members of the council and its committees are selected through a nomi-
nating procedure intended to attract applicants from throughout the legal system and 
to result in a membership that is diverse in experience, gender, ethnic background, 
and geography.  
The 21 voting members of the Judicial Council consist of the Chief Justice, 14 
judicial officers appointed by the Chief Justice, 4 attorney members appointed by the 
State Bar Board of Trustees, and 1 member from each house of the Legislature. The 
council also has approximately 11 advisory members who include court executives or 
administrators, the chair of the council’s Trial Court Presiding Judges Advisory 
Committee, and the president of the California Judges Association. Staggered terms, 
with one-third of the council’s membership changing each year, ensure continuity 
while creating opportunities for new participation and input. The council performs 
most of its work through internal committees and advisory committees and task 
forces. 
Commission on Judicial Appointments  
The Governor’s appointees to the Supreme Court and the Courts of Appeal must be 
confirmed by the Commission on Judicial Appointments. The commission has three 
California Judicial Branch 
Page 5 of 6 
members: the Chief Justice, the Attorney General, and the senior presiding justice of 
the Court of Appeal of the affected appellate district or—when a Supreme Court 
appointee is being considered—the state’s senior presiding justice of the Courts of 
Appeal. The commission convenes after the Governor nominates or appoints a 
person to fill a vacancy on either the Supreme Court or a Court of Appeal. The 
commission holds one or more public hearings to review the appointee’s qualifica-
tions and may confirm or veto the appointment. No appellate appointment is final 
until the commission has filed its approval with the Secretary of State.  
Commission on Judicial Performance 
The California Constitution provides for a Commission on Judicial Performance, 
which deals with the censure, removal, retirement, or public or private 
admonishment of judges and commissioners for either misconduct or inability to 
perform their duties on account of permanent disability. The commission has 
authority to conduct proceedings against any California judge after it investigates 
cases of willful misconduct in office, persistent failure or inability to perform the 
duties of office, habitual intemperance, conduct prejudicial to the administration of 
justice that may be detrimental to the judicial office itself, or a disability of a 
permanent character that seriously interferes with performance of duties. 
Effective March 1, 1995, Proposition 190 (passed in the November 1994 election) 
authorized the commission to remove, retire, or censure a judge. Automatic Supreme 
Court review was eliminated, although the court is permitted discretionary review. All 
commission proceedings are required to be public after formal charges are filed. The 
commission is composed of 11 members: 1 justice of a Court of Appeal and 2 judges 
appointed by the Supreme Court, 4 members appointed by the Governor (2 attorneys 
and 2 nonattorney public members), 2 public members appointed by the Assembly 
Speaker, and 2 public members appointed by the Senate Rules Committee. 
Appointments are for four-year terms.  
Habeas Corpus Resource Center 
The Habeas Corpus Resource Center handles state and federal habeas corpus pro-
ceedings in capital cases and provides training and resources for private attorneys who 
take these cases. 
California Judicial Branch 
Page 6 of 6 
California Attorneys 
State Bar of California 
The State Bar of California is a public corporation, established within article VI, the 
judicial article, of the California Constitution. The State Bar acts as the administra-
tive arm of the Supreme Court in matters of attorney admission and discipline. With 
nearly 248,000 members, the State Bar of California is by far the largest state bar in 
the country. 
The State Bar’s Committee of Bar Examiners administers the bar examination and 
other requirements for admission to the practice of law and certifies qualified 
applicants to the Supreme Court for admission. 
The State Bar’s Board of Trustees formulates rules of professional conduct that, once 
approved by the Supreme Court, are binding on all California lawyers. 
The State Bar’s Office of Chief Trial Counsel investigates allegations of attorney 
misconduct and may initiate disciplinary proceedings in the State Bar Court, which 
may impose a reproval, or recommend to the Supreme Court that a lawyer be 
disbarred or suspended. Decisions of the State Bar Court are subject to review by the 
Supreme Court. 
Commission on Judicial Nominees Evaluation 
State law requires the State Bar’s Commission on Judicial Nominees Evaluation to 
review the qualifications of persons being considered by the Governor for 
appointment to the courts. 
Contact:  
Office of Communications, 415-865-7740 
Additional resources:  
General court information, www.courts.ca.gov/courts.htm 
Supreme Court, www.courts.ca.gov/supremecourt.htm 
Courts of Appeal, www.courts.ca.gov/courtsofappeal.htm 
Superior courts, www.courts.ca.gov/superiorcourts.htm 
http://www.courts.ca.gov/supremecourt.htm
http://www.courts.ca.gov/courtsofappeal.htm
http://www.courts.ca.gov/superiorcourts.htm
Intro to 
U.S. Law	
Prof. Betsy Candler
Summer 2018
Class 4, July 18 - PM
1
Individual Rights – Equal Protection & Fundamental Rights
7 Cases: 
Loving
Bowers
Romer
Lawrence
Windsor
Hollingsworth
Obergefell
Masterpiece Cakeshop
Review is always substantive (even RB), just a question of how high a level of review the courts will give. 
Marriage
Loving v. Virginia (1967) (invalidated)
State laws that were invalidated:
Boddie v. Connecticut (1971) (invalidated)
Zablocki v. Redhall (1978) (invalidated)
Treatment of Fed Soc Sec Act provisions:
Califano v. Jobst (1977) (upheld)
Bowen v. Owens (1986) (upheld)
Same Sex Marriage
Windsor (2015) (invalidated)
Obergefell (2015) (invalidated)
Lawrence v. Texas (2003) (invalidated)	
Hollingsworth v. Perry (2013) (standing issue – let invalidation remain)
Loving v. Virginia (1967) 
Recap:
VA statute attempting to prevent interracial marriages between a white person and a non-white person. Racial Integrity Act of 
1924.
14th Am – EP Violation
Impermissible race discrimination
Equal Application is not a valid analysis deserving of lesser scrutiny. 
No legit purpose independent of invidious racial discrimination.”
Here, also 14th Am – Due Process Clause violation. 
Marriage is one of the basic civil rights of man. Cites Skinner. 
Under our Constitution, the freedom to marry, or not marry, a person of another race resides with the individual, and cannot be infringed by the State.
Lawrence v. Texas (2003)
Protection for private, consensual, adult sexual activity 
Expressly overruled Bowers v. Hardwick
Bowers (1986) held there was no fundamental right to engage in 
homosexual sodomy OR private consensual homosexual activity
Even though the GA law addressed both same-sex and heterosexual activity, the Court limited its reasoning to homosexual sodomy.
Based on the text, framers’ intent, and history/tradition, there is no right.
Precedent for Obergefell
Lawrence (2003) & Hollingsworth v. Perry (2013) & Windsor (2013)
Hollingsworth:
CA Prop 22 – marriage = a union between 1 man & 1 woman. 
2008 – Cal Supreme Court invalidated Prop 22 based on CA Constitution’s EP Clause.
Nov. 2008 – CA Prop 8 passed, amending CA Constitution to provide that only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized by California.”
This suit arose out of the challenge to Prop 8 as a 14th Am EP Clause violation. State officials did not defend Prop 8 at trial level
Petitioners, official proponents of the measure, intervened to defend it. 
The district court held that Prop 8 violated the Constitution, Ninth Circuit affirmed.
Court ruled that petitioners did not have standing. No merits ruling. 
Windsor (2013)
Same day as Hollingsworth. Leading up to Obergefell (2015).
Justice Kennedy wrote both the Windsor and Obergefell opinions. 
Both are 5-4 decisions.
Swing Vote discussion from More Perfect. (31:49-33:55).
Conservative: Voting Rights, Gun Rights, Class Action
Liberal: Eminent Domain, Environmental Protection, Gay Marriage
Windsor (2013)
Edith Windsor, seeking a refund of the federal taxes paid on the estate of her wife, Thea Spyer, who died in 2009. 
$363,000
She didn’t get the same treatment as a man would have if he had sought the refund because of DOMA – Defense of Marriage Act.
Federal law from 1990s defining marriage as between a man and a woman for federal regulations.
Impacts over 1000 federal laws.
Married in Canada, New York recognized her as married. 
Windsor (2013)
Held:
States have the authority to define marital relationships and DOMA goes against legislative and historical precedent by undermining that authority. 
DOMA denies same-sex couples the rights that come from federal recognition of marriage.
The purpose and effect of DOMA is to impose a disadvantage, a separate status, and so a stigma on same-sex couples in violation of the Fifth Amendments guarantee of Equal Protection.
Classification? Level of Scrutiny?
Obergefell (2015) 
What Scalia warned everyone would happen …
4 states that had limits on same-sex marriage and legal ramifications – licensing and recognition of marriage from another jurisdiction.
Adoption, marriage, surviving spouse on death certificate
Petitioners filed these suits in United States District Courts in their home States. Each District Court ruled in their favor.
On appeal to Sixth Circuit, consolidated and reversed, holding that states have no constitutional obligation to license same-sex marriages or to recognize same-sex marriages performed out of State..
Kennedy’s opinion for the majority. Reversed lower court. 
Dissents: 
CJ Roberts, Scalia, Thomas, Alito. 
Obergefell
14th Am Due Process Clause 
Violated here because the right to marry is a fundamental liberties, and it applies  to same-sex couples as it does to opposite-sex couples.
Marriage
Is inherent to the concept of individual autonomy, 
Protects the most intimate association between two people, 
Safeguards children and families by according legal recognition to building a home and raising children, and 
Has historically been recognized as the keystone of social order. 
14th Am Equal Protection Clause 
Violated here because same-sex couples should not be denied a right protected for opposite-sex couples.
1st Am
Protects the rights of religious organizations to adhere to their principles, but it does not allow states to deny same-sex couples the right to marry on the same terms as those for opposite-sex couples.
Obergefell Dissents
1) CJ Roberts
Social policy and fairness are issues for legislatures.
This decision would allow for a fundamental right to plural marriage. 
Concerned about sincere religious convictions that lead to opposition of gay marriage. 
2) Scalia
Constitutional revision by an unelected committee of nine (actually 5). 
Text and Framers’ Intent – no right to same-sex marriage. 
3) Thomas
Liberty is freedom from govt action, not entitlement to govt benefits. Dignity is innate, it does not come from our govt. 
DP Clause should not be used for substantive rights. 
4) Alito
Constitution is not applicable here. Leave marriage questions to the states.
Not a Fundamental Right – not “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition.” Citing Glucksberg.
Marriage
Loving v. Virginia (1967) (state law criminalizing interracial marriages invalidated)
Boddie v. Connecticut (1971) (state law with no exception or waiver for indigency for divorce filing fees invalidated)
Zablocki v. Redhall (1978) (state law requiring proof of child support payments invalidated)
Califano v. Jobst (1977) (Fed Soc Sec provision treating upheld)
Bowen v. Owens (1986) (Fed Soc Sec provision treating divorced widowed spouses differently from widowed spouses upheld)
Lawrence v. Texas (2003) (state law criminalizing sodomy invalidated)
Hollingsworth v. Perry (2013) (standing issue – let lower court’s invalidation of Prop 8 remain)
Windsor (2015) (Fed DOMA provision that defined marriage as between one man and one woman invalidated)
Obergefell (2015) (state laws failing to provide for or recognize same-sex marriages invalidated)
Equal Protection and Fundamental Rights
Equal Protection:
Is the classification already a suspect or a quasi-suspect class according to SCOTUS?
Yes, suspect – race or national origin = Strict Scrutiny
Yes, quasi-suspect – gender, legitimacy (may sexual orientation?) = Intermediate Scrutiny
No, but I could argue that it should be
Compare to the groups protected above:
Discrete and Insular Minority, Immutable Characteristics, Prone to stigmatizing stereotypes, History of discrimination and political powerlessness.
No = Rational Basis Review (age, income, mental disabilities)
Still ask if there is a discriminatory purpose, can still consider over/under inclusivity (but not too carefully), Is the statute rationally related to a legitimate gov interest? (It can’t be arbitrary.) 
Equal Protection and Fundamental Rights
Fundamental Rights:
Is the liberty at issue already deemed a Fundamental Right? 
Yes = Strict Scrutiny
Privacy, Travel, Voting, Marriage, Procreation
No, but it should be …
Argue why by comparing to those things that are and using the same standards. Look at its history and search for a tradition of protection of the right.
Is it implicit in the concept of ordered liberty?
Is it deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and traditions?
No = Rational Basis
Rational Basis Review
Does the Law have a Legitimate Purpose?
Romer v. Evans
Actual Purpose Required or Conceivable Purpose Sufficient?
Cases where Laws are Deemed Arbitrary and Unreasonable
US Department of Agriculture v. Moreno
Cleburne
Types of Discrimination: Only Rational Basis Review
Age Classifications - Massachusetts Board of Retirement v. Murgia
Discrimination Based on Disability
Wealth Discrimination
Sexual Orientation Discrimination (?)
Intermediate Review: Gender Classifications
Early Cases Approving Gender Disc
Emergence of Intermediate Scrutiny
Frontiero v. Richardson
Craig v. Boren
US v. Virginia
Gender Classifications based on Roles or Stereotypes - Rostker v. Goldberg
Gender Classifications Benefiting Women as a Remedy (Affirmative Action) - Califano v. Webster
Strict Scrutiny: Classifications Based on Race
Race Discrimination and Slavery before the 13th and 14th Amendments - Dred Scot v. Sandford
The Post-Civil War Amendments
Strict Scrutiny for Discrimination based on Race and National Origin
Proving the Existence of a Race or National Origin Classification
Facial Classifications
Race-Specific Classifications that Disadvantage Racial Minorities - Korematsu v. US
Racial Classifications burdening both whites and minorities - Loving v. Virginia, Palmore v. Sidoti
Laws Requiring Separation of the Races - Plessy v. Ferguson
Initial Attack on “Separate but Equal”
Brown v. Board of Education
The Invalidation of Segregation in Other Contexts
Facially Neutral, Discriminatory Impact - McCleskey v. Kemp, City of Mobile
Racial Classifications Benefiting Minorities – Affirmative Action
Emergence of SS as the Test - Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co.
Fisher v. Univ. of Texas at Austin
Fundamental Rights
Fundamental Rights:
Is the liberty at issue already deemed a Fundamental Right? 
Yes = Strict Scrutiny
Privacy, Travel, Voting, Marriage, Procreation
No, but it should be …
Argue why by comparing to those things that are and using the same standards. Look at its history and search for a tradition of protection of the right.
Is it implicit in the concept of ordered liberty?
Is it deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and traditions?
No = Rational Basis
Interpretive Limits: How should the Constitution be interpreted? 
There is no agreement among Justices or Scholars.
Narrowly Circumscribed Discretion vs. Substantial Discretion for the Court
Narrowly Circumscribed = Limit judicial power because democracy means rule by electorally accountable officials.
Originalism, Textualists, Framers’ Specific Intent, Framers’ Abstract Intent (Scalia).
Substantial = Allow for evolution of the Text
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    https://youtu.be/fRym_jyuBc0
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        	One major ethical conflict that may arise in my investigation is the Responsibility to Client in both Standard 3 and Standard 4 of the Ethical Standards for Human Service Professionals (2015).  Making sure we do not disclose information without consent ev
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