Posted by Ilya Somin:
Ladies' Night and the 14th Amendment:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2007_07_08-2007_07_14.shtml#1184468560


   [1]Jonathan Adler posts on the extremely weak [2]class action lawsuit
   claiming that ladies nights at private night clubs violate the 14th
   Amendment. Hopefully, the district court will dismiss this seriously
   misguided lawsuit. Attorney Roy Den Hollender's lawsuit is flawed
   because the Fourteenth Amendment clearly does not ban this kind of
   "sex discrimination" by private parties and because certification of
   the class would violate the rules government class action lawsuits.

   First, the constitutional point. I will cover the class action issue
   in a follow-up post.

   The Equal Protection Clause of the [3]Fourteenth Amendment clearly
   says that a "state" may not "deny to any person within its
   jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." The Amendment does not
   ban discrimination by private parties, only that undertaken by states.
   Over the years, courts have sometimes ruled that private racial or sex
   discrimination can be imputed to states in cases where the private
   actor is actually an agent of the government or otherwise closely
   entertwined with it. However, Hollender is claiming that night club
   owners who institute ladies' nights are state actors merely because
   they are regulated and licensed by the government. This theory was
   specifically rejected by the Supreme Court in the [4]Civil Rights
   Cases of 1883, which held that the Fourteenth Amendment did not give
   Congress the power to regulate common carriers, "places of public
   accomodation" (e.g. - hotels, restaurants) despite the fact that most
   such businesses were highly regulated often required to have
   government licenses. In his dissent, Justice John Marshall Harlan
   strongly emphasized the regulated and licensed nature of the
   businesses in question, a consideration that failed to sway the
   majority. Although criticized by many academics, the Civil Rights
   Cases remain binding precedent, and were reaffirmed by the Court in
   [5]United States v. Morrison in 2000.

   Moreover, there is good reason to believe that The Civil Rights Cases
   majority was right to hold that licensing and regulation alone do not
   equate to state action. Almost all important private activities are
   licensed or regulated to some extent. If Hollender's argument
   prevails, all would be subject to the same restrictions on ethnic,
   religious, and sex discrimination as are imposed by the Fourteenth
   Amendment on government. For example, marriage requires a state-issued
   license. On Hollender's theory, therefore, the Constitution would
   forbid individuals from engaging in racial, ethnic, or religious
   discrimination in deciding whom to marry, since the Equal Protection
   Clause surely forbids such discrimination by government. If the state
   bans Jews from marrying non-Jews, that is a clear violation of the
   Fourteenth Amendment under modern doctrine. Yet if licensing is enough
   to turn a private action into state action, then a Jew who marries a
   fellow Jew after rejecting gentile suitors solely on religious grounds
   would be a state actor engaging in unconstitutional discrimination.

   It may be that some extreme forms of licensing or regulation do
   involve the state so pervasively in private activity as to convert
   that activity into state action for Fourteenth Amendment purposes. But
   that cannot be true for all types of regulation and licensing, as
   Hollender's theory requires.

   Hollender is therefore right to foresee an "uphill" battle for his
   suit. He is, wrong, however to attribute his likely difficulties to
   the fact that [6]"he is arguing on behalf of men and not women, whom
   he says the U.S. Supreme Court has given 'preferential treatment for
   past invidious, economic discrimination.'"

   In reality, many of the Supreme Court's most important Equal
   Protection Clause precedents striking down laws that discriminate on
   the basis of sex involved discrimination against men. These include
   landmark decisions such as [7]Craig v. Boren, the 1976 case that
   instituted the current "intermediate scrutiny" standard for government
   sex discrimination, and [8]Mississippi University for Women v. Hogan
   (1982), an important case that ruled that an all-female state
   university was unconstitutional.

   In the area of race discrimination, the Supreme Court has indeed given
   somewhat looser constitutional scrutiny to programs that benefit
   racial minorities as opposed to whites. That is not, however, true of
   programs that discriminate in favor of women relative to those that
   benefit men.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2007_07_08-2007_07_14.shtml#1184277798
   2. http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1184144791036&rss=newswire
   3. 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteenth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
   4. http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=109&invol=3
   5. http://www.oyez.org/cases/1990-1999/1999/1999_99_5/
   6. http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1184144791036&rss=newswire
   7. http://www.oyez.org/cases/1970-1979/1976/1976_75_628/
   8. http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/conlaw/missu.html

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