Blog

Between 2009 and 2020, Josh published more than 10,000 blog posts. Here, you can access his blog archives.

2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009

ACLU Supports Jacobson v. Massachusetts for Obamacare, but not Ebola

October 27th, 2014

It looks like litigation has been averted over New Jersey’s efforts to quarantine a nurse who was potentially exposed to Ebola. But yesterday, the ACLU was posturing to file a civil rights lawsuit on her behalf. Had a suit been filed, one of the leading precedents the ACLU would have had to challenge was Jacobson v. Massachusetts, a 1905 decision that upheld the state’s power to forcefully inoculate people. (Whenever I teach this case, I stress that we were not dealing with Jenny McCarthy anti-vaxxers, but a different time when vaccines were often lethal). Eugene Kontorovich does a good job explaining why Jacobson is a strong precedent standing in the way of any due process challenge.

While the ACLU would no doubt try to distinguish away Jacobson, and explain why it does not control here, the organization’s own briefs make that a difficult pill to swallow (shot in the arm?).

As my good friend Adam White points out in this post, it was not too long ago that the ACLU was favorably citing Jacobson to support the government’s power to impose on individual liberty. In their Amicus Brief to the Court in the Obamacare case, the ACLU,  joined by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, found that the individual mandate “imposes minimal burdens on liberty.” In support of this argument, the brief favorably cites Jacobson in a footnote, without any criticism:

9 Notably, in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905), the Court repudiated the assertion that a compulsory smallpox vaccination was “hostile to the inherent right of every freeman to care for his own body and health in such way as to him seems best.” Id. at 26. Observing “the fundamental principle that persons and property are subjected to all kinds of re- straints and burdens in order to secure the general comfort, health, and prosperity of the state,” id. (internal quotation marks omitted), the Court upheld the law on the grounds that it promoted public health and safety, id. at 31.

It is really, really difficult to imagine why the ACLU would favorably cite this case. It’s other citations to Cruzan and Glucksberg suffice. Why mention it at all? Perhaps this footnote was added in as an afterthought?

Consider these sweeping renunciation of liberty in Jacobson.

But the liberty secured by the Constitution of the United States to every person within its jurisdiction does not import an absolute right in each person to be, at all times and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint. There are manifold restraints to which every person is necessarily subject for the common good. On any other basis organized society could not exist with safety to its members. Society based on the rule that each one is a law unto himself would soon be confronted with disorder and anarchy. Real liberty for all could not exist under the operation of a principle which recognizes the right of each individual person to use his own, whether in respect of his person or his property, regardless of the injury that may be done to others.

Nor, in view of the methods employed to stamp out the disease of smallpox, can anyone confidently assert that the means prescribed by the State to that end has no real or substantial relation to the protection of the public health and the public safety. Such an assertion would not be consistent with the experience of this and other countries whose authorities have dealt with the disease of smallpox.

As Adam observes, the “temporary quarantines fall far short of mandatory vaccinations that the ACLU endorsed in its argument in defending Obamacare.” In their efforts to defend the Affordable Care Act, they perhaps inadvertently endorsed the very precedent that would justify the types of invasive quarantines being conducted in New Jersey.

Adam’s closing completes the circle, and ties together the ACLU’s recent meandering on other issues of individual liberty, including the First Amendment and religious liberty.

This seems to be something of a trend at the ACLU, where defense of civil liberties has been replaced by defense of Democratic Party policy preferences, in major cases. We see this in a variety of contexts. On free speech, the ACLU now endorses heavy campaign finance regulations — a stark reversal highlighted by former ACLU executive director Ira Glasser and legendary First Amendment Floyd Abrams, and by professors Ron Collins and David Skover in a recent ebook.

On religious liberty, the ACLU filed a brief in the Hobby Lobby case, arguing that religious liberty should be trumped by laws entitling women to employer-funded contraception. More recently, the ACLU has sided with same-sex-marriage activists who demand that individual citizens waive their religious liberties when operating businesses related to weddings: just last week, the ACLU’s blog argued that Las Vegas wedding chapel owners should not be allowed to invoke religious liberty as a basis for refusing to perform wedding services for same-sex couples.

While I’m on the topic, let’s not forget Roe v. Wade’s citation to Buck v. Bell, along with Jacobson v. Massachusetts for the proposition that the state has a paramount concern over rights of individual liberty.

As noted above, a State may properly assert important interests in safeguarding health, in maintaining medical standards, and in protecting potential life. At some point in pregnancy, these respective interests become sufficiently compelling to sustain regulation of the factors that govern the abortion decision. The privacy right involved, therefore, cannot be said to be absolute. In fact, it is not clear to us that the claim asserted by some amici that one has an unlimited right to do with one’s body as one pleases bears a close relationship to the right of privacy previously articulated in the Court’s decisions. The Court has refused to recognize an unlimited right of this kind in the past. Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905) (vaccination); Buck v. Bell, 274 U.S. 200(1927) ( sterilization).

We, therefore, conclude that the right of personal privacy includes the abortion decision, but that this right is not unqualified, and must be considered against important state interests in regulation.

 

 

Yalies Don’t Know About Clerking

October 27th, 2014

According to Yale Law School statistics, 41.5% of the Class of 2013 reported a clerkship as a first job after graduation. That numebr increases to 49% for those who clerked at any time. They even have to separate out their non-clerkship employment because “so many of our graduates clerk after graduation.”

Yet, when Justices Thomas and Sotomayor attended YLS in the 1970s, neither was even aware of clerking. During their recent remarks at YLS, Justice Sotomayor explained that “Until my third year of clerking, I hadn’t heard of clerking, I had’t thought of clerking.” Then-Professor Jose Cabranes first told her about it.

In her memoir, Sotomayor explained:

José Cabranes had advised me to keep my sights on a major law firm in the long term, saying it was a good platform from which to launch into government or any other direction, but that first of all I should clerk. I had heard classmates mention clerking and I knew it was prestigious, but José had to explain to me that it meant working, essentially as a researcher, for a judge. Though I knew he wanted the best for me, clerking sounded tediously academic. How much longer could I live in the library? If I was wary of going to a big firm, I still felt the need to get out in the real world and earn some money. Much later I would realize my naïveté. Especially working with my own clerks, I’ve come to appreciate how clerking for a judge can be the most vital mentoring relationship open to a young lawyer. It has become even more prestigious over the years since I left law school and the most direct stepping-stone to higher levels of legal practice. Many minority students and others who struggle under financial pressure sacrifice the long-term benefits of clerking for better pay in the near term. I advise them to resist that temptation and aim for the necessary grades, journal experience, and mentoring relationships with professors that can open the door to a clerkship. Part of me still regrets not having taken José’s advice at face value.

Justice Thomas had a similar experience, “I think you made a good point. I found out about the clerkship about 2 years after I was gone.”

As I note in my note, From Being One L to Teaching One L, I had no idea what clerking was when I started law school. I had in my mind something similar to Sotomayor–a ministerial, clerical job where I file papers for a judge. It wasn’t until my second year of law school, when a friend told me about his upcoming clerkship, did I begin to realize what it was. Then in my third year, I set the record for applying to the most federal judges–a record that will remain due to the abandonment of the hiring plan, and limits on OSCAR.

The Justices also explain how smart their colleagues were at YLS, and how it humbled them.

SS: I’m not going to repeat what’s in my book. In High School I was near the top of my class, in College, you may have heard, I graduated with Honors. I got to Yale. I learned a deep sense of humility.

CT: Oh yeah

SS: Sitting next to my classmates, listening to them in class, taught me how much smarter so many other people were, and how smart has different faces

CT: By the time I left, I had a sense of confidence of where I needed to be. Sonia is right. There is a lot we didn’t know.

I had a very similar experience the first time I visited YLS. It can very humbling. I still feel like I’m entering Hogwarts whenever I arrive.

New Jersey Withdraws Quarantine Plan After “Federal Officials Signed Off on the Plan.”

October 27th, 2014

Pre-empting a civil rights lawsuit filed by the quarantined nurse, New Jersey has backed off a plan to quarantine all people arriving from West African nations who may have had contact with the ebola virus. Buried in the lede of the New York Times report is this key phrase:

Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, in a brief interview, said that he expected her to be transferred Monday morning after doctors and federal officials signed off on the plan.

Why, you may ask, would federal officials have to “sign off” on the plan. The answer, as I’ve discussed in previous posts, is that the Obama Administration has no doubt taken the position that New Jersey’s quarantine are frustrating federal policy. Therefore, under its reading of the Supremacy Clause in Arizona v. United States, state efforts to tighten enforcement by the federal government is unconstitutional.

Here, the Governor backed off in the face of federal pressure, though I had a feeling the federal government may have sued Christie to stop it, if he declined.

This episode, which is not over as other states are considering similar measures, puts into stark contrast the tension between the state police power, and the federal authority to constrain states by setting its own policy.

Clement: Justices “Really Don’t Care About Your Case or your Client”

October 27th, 2014

Paul Clement stated it clearly:

“At the end of the day, they really don’t care about your case or your client,” he said. “They are really using your case as a vehicle to develop a broader rule on an issue of importance, and I think that is something that one always has to keep in mind.”

You are just a vehicle.

ACLU To File Suit To Release Quarantined Nurse

October 26th, 2014

As I anticipated earlier, the litigation will soon commence. The ACLU is filing a suit on behalf of a nurse, being quarantined by New Jersey, though she is showing no symptoms of ebola.

Lawyers for a nurse quarantined in a New Jersey hospital say they’ll sue to have her released and file a constitutional challenge to state restrictions for health care workers returning to New York and New Jersey after treating Ebola patients in West Africa. Civil liberties attorney Norman Siegel said Kaci Hickox, who was quarantined after arriving Friday at the Newark airport, shows no symptoms and should be released immediately. He and attorney Steven Hyman said the state attorney general’s office had cooperated in getting them access to Hickox.

The Executive Director of the NYCLU is making a frontal assault to Christie’s authority:

“The current order is sweeping in individuals who are asymptomatic and who may never develop symptoms,” Ms. Lieberman said. “I think there is a serious question as to whether the governor has the authority to impose the broad quarantine that he has imposed,” she added.

 

The judge in this case will have a very interesting decision to make. I have this sinking feeling the DOJ may intervene, and this case may go high up.