{"id":51772,"date":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/content.findlaw-admin.com\/ability-legal\/supreme\/legal-commentary\/does-the-second-amendment-bind-the-states.html"},"modified":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","modified_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","slug":"does-the-second-amendment-bind-the-states","status":"publish","type":"supreme","link":"https:\/\/supreme.findlaw.com\/legal-commentary\/does-the-second-amendment-bind-the-states.html","title":{"rendered":"Does the Second Amendment Bind the States?"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-9d6595d7  fl-block-columns fl-sectionWithSidebar fl-container fl-flex fl-flex-wrap fl-gap30\">\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-page-articles   fl-block-column fl-section-main fl-section-main-full-width\">\n        <div class=\"yui-g\" id=\"leftcol-module\">\n      <!-- Right Line of Links Section -->\n      <!-- BEGIN PICTURE INSERTION -->\n      <!-- BEGIN TITLE AND AUTHOR INSERTION -->\n      <table>\n        <tr>\n\n          <td width=\"100\" rowspan=\"3\" class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/michael-dorf-archive\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https://supreme.findlaw.com/static/f/images\/writ\/michael.dorf.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Michael C. Dorf\"><\/a><\/td>\n\n          <td class=\"wititle\"><h1>Does the Second Amendment Bind the States?<\/h1><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/michael-dorf-archive\" class=\"graybold\"><h2>By MICHAEL C. DORF <\/h2><br><\/a><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"widate\">Wednesday, October 6, 2009<\/td>\n\n        <\/tr>\n      <\/table>\n\n  <p>In 2008, in <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/\" rel=\"noopener\">District of Columbia v.  Heller<\/a><\/em>, the Supreme Court invalidated a Washington, D.C. handgun ban as  applied to home possession by a law-abiding citizen. The 5-4 majority said that the Second  Amendment protects an individual right to possess firearms for  self-defense. Although recognizing the  government&#8217;s ability to regulate firearms possession, Justice Scalia&#8217;s opinion  for the Court found that a complete ban on handguns went too far.<\/p>\n      \n  <p> <em>Heller <\/em>involved the District of  Columbia, an arm of the federal government.  Accordingly, the case did not provide an opportunity for the Court to  rule on whether the Second Amendment limits <u>state<\/u> and <u>local<\/u> gun  control laws. Three Nineteenth Century  precedents say that the Second Amendment does not limit state (or by  implication, local) gun control laws.  However, as the <em>Heller <\/em>Court  observed in a footnote, those cases pre-date Twentieth Century cases setting  forth the modern approach to determining which provisions of the Bill of Rights  apply to the states. The Court thereby  invited gun right advocates to challenge state and local laws. They readily accepted the invitation.<\/p>\n  <p> Last week,  the Court announced that it would hear a case, <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.chicagoguncase.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2009\/06\/mcdonald_cert_petition1.pdf\" rel=\"noopener\">McDonald  v. Chicago<\/a><\/em>, posing the question whether the Second Amendment applies to  the states and their sub-divisions. In  lawyer&#8217;s jargon, <em>McDonald <\/em>requires  the Court to say whether the Fourteenth Amendment &#8220;incorporates&#8221; the Second  Amendment against the states. As I shall  explain in this column, the case poses an intellectual challenge for the  Justices who were in the <em>Heller <\/em>majority. To see why, we will need to begin by  reviewing the story of how other constitutional rights came to be incorporated  against the states.<\/p>\n  <!-- 300x250 AD -->\n    \n  <p><strong>The Original Bill of  Rights Limited the Federal Government, But Not the States<\/strong><\/p>\n  \n  <p> Two  provisions of the Bill of Rights&#8211;the First Amendment, which specifically  refers to &#8220;Congress,&#8221; and the second clause of the Seventh Amendment, which  refers to federal courts&#8211;make clear by their language that they are only  limits on federal action. The balance of  the Bill of Rights, however, sets out rights of the People that, taken at face  value, could be said to bar infringements by the states and their sub-divisions  as well as by the federal government.<\/p>\n  <p> Yet that  was not how the Bill of Rights was originally understood. In the first Congress, James Madison proposed  an amendment that would bar states from violating &#8220;the equal rights of  conscience, or the freedom of the press, or the trial by jury in criminal  cases.&#8221; The proposal was defeated,  largely because Madison&#8217;s fellow representatives saw the Bill of Rights as a  check on the federal government alone.  State constitutions, they thought, already provided whatever rights were  needed against state (and local) violations.<\/p>\n  <p> The Supreme  Court confirmed that the original Bill of Rights only limited the federal  government in the 1833 case of <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/\" rel=\"noopener\">Barron v. City of Baltimore<\/a><\/em>.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>Incorporation Against  the States Via the Privileges or Immunities Clause?<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p> There  matters stood until 1868, when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted. It states, in relevant part: &#8220;No State shall  make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of  citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life,  liberty, or property, without due process of law.&#8221;<\/p>\n  <p> The  Privileges or Immunities Clause appears to be a quite natural way of saying  that the Bill of Rights, formerly only a limit on the federal government, is  now a limit on the states as well. Under  this straightforward reading, the &#8220;privileges or immunities of citizens of the  United States&#8221;&#8211;that is, the rights set forth in the Bill of Rights&#8211;are  protected against each &#8220;State.&#8221;<\/p>\n  <p> And in  fact, there is pretty good evidence that the Privileges or Immunities Clause  was expected to incorporate the Bill of Rights against the states. Article IV of the original Constitution  protects against interstate discrimination with regard to &#8220;all Privileges and  Immunities of Citizens in the several States.&#8221;  That Privileges <u>and<\/u> Immunities Clause was famously interpreted by  Justice Bushrod Washington (a nephew of the first President) in the case of <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.scribd.com\/doc\/12830419\/Corfield-v-Coryell-opinion\" rel=\"noopener\">Corfield  v. Coryell<\/a> <\/em>as encompassing those fundamental rights enjoyed by  &#8220;citizens of all free governments.&#8221; The  framers and ratifiers of the Fourteenth Amendment were well aware of <em>Corfield<\/em>, and by choosing to parallel  the Article IV language, they can be understood to have intended to adopt its approach.<\/p>\n  <p> Nonetheless,  the Supreme Court rejected that broad reading of the Privileges or Immunities  Clause shortly after its adoption. In  the 1872 <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/\" rel=\"noopener\">Slaughterhouse Cases<\/a><\/em>, the  Court read the Clause very narrowly, essentially as protection for rights that  were already protected by the language and structure of the pre-Fourteenth  Amendment Constitution. From that moment  forward, the Privileges or Immunities Clause has been treated as nearly a dead  letter.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>Incorporation Via the  Due Process Clause<\/strong> <\/p>\n  <p> Yet as most  Americans know, the Bill of Rights <u>does<\/u> limit the states and their  subdivisions. State officials cannot ban  political rallies or coerce confessions from criminal suspects without  violating the First and Fifth Amendments, respectively. Given <em>Barron <\/em>and <em>Slaughterhouse<\/em>, what makes  these and other provisions of the Bill of Rights applicable to the states?<\/p>\n  <p> The answer  is the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In a series of Twentieth Century cases, the  Court held that most of the provisions of the Bill of Rights do limit the  states after all. For example, in order  to deprive a person of his life, due process means that a trial by jury must be  given, as set forth in the Sixth Amendment.  To deprive a person of her freedom from unreasonable searches and  seizures, due process means that the probable cause and warrant requirements of  the Fourth Amendment must be honored.<\/p>\n  <p> The Due  Process Clause works well as a basis for incorporation of the procedural rights  in the foregoing examples. But it  provides an awkward textual basis for incorporating more substantive rights,  like the First Amendment&#8217;s protection for speech and the press. Those rights do not merely require the  government to provide trials for political dissidents; they forbid prosecution  for sedition outright.<\/p>\n  <p> Nonetheless,  under a doctrine that has come to be known as &#8220;substantive due process,&#8221; the  Court has held that the Due Process has a substantive component. Under this approach, no amount of fair  process suffices to infringe certain fundamental substantive liberties, so that  any unwarranted substantive infringement is, ipso facto, a violation of due  process.<\/p>\n  <p> Academics  and Supreme Court Justices alike have long been troubled by the seemingly  oxymoronic character of the substantive due process doctrine. The late law professor and dean John Hart Ely  likened it to &#8220;green pastel redness.&#8221; The  late Justice Hugo Black tried to get around the doctrine by arguing that the Fourteenth  Amendment as a whole, including the Privileges or Immunities Clause,  accomplishes incorporation. And in his  dissenting opinion in the 1999 case of <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/\" rel=\"noopener\">Saenz v. Roe<\/a><\/em>, Justice  Clarence Thomas suggested that the <em>Slaughterhouse  Cases <\/em>might be overruled and, if that were to occur, then some of the work  now done by the Due Process Clause could be shifted to the Privileges or  Immunities Clause.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>Incorporation and  Textualism<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p> Despite the  criticisms, the Due Process Clause remains the basis for incorporation of most  of the provisions of the Bill of Rights.  And that, in turn, poses a jurisprudential problem for the  self-described textualists in the <em>Heller <\/em>majority&#8211;especially <em>Heller<\/em>&#8216;s author, Justice Antonin Scalia.<\/p>\n  <p> Justice  Scalia has been one of the most vocal critics of substantive due process, which  is, after all, the basis for the Court&#8217;s recognition of unenumerated rights  such as those protecting abortion and same-sex sexual conduct. The Constitution does not mention these  rights, Scalia says, and therefore the Court has no business recognizing or  enforcing them.<\/p>\n  <p> Yet the  Constitution also does not mention a right to firearms possession <u>as a limit  on the states<\/u>. The way that right  will limit the states, if it does limit them, is via substantive due process  or, if the Court chooses to overrule the <em>Slaughterhouse  Cases<\/em>, via the Privileges or Immunities Clause. Neither doctrinal path will offer a sound  basis for distinguishing between enumerated and unenumerated rights.<\/p>\n  <p> To be sure,  the incorporation of enumerated rights <u>feels<\/u> more textually rooted than  the recognition of unenumerated rights, because it begins with the text of the  Bill of Rights. However, it does not end  there. Justice Black argued that the  Bill of Rights should be incorporated &#8220;jot for jot,&#8221; so that any right against  the federal government would be enforceable to an equal degree against the  states. He lost that battle along both  fronts: The Court applies some unenumerated rights (such as contraception and  abortion) against the states, even as it does not apply some of the rights that  are enumerated in the Bill of Rights against the states.<br>\n      <br>\n   How did the  Court decide which provisions of the Bill of Rights to incorporate? It asked, as the Court said in the 1968 case  of <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/\" rel=\"noopener\">Duncan v. Louisiana<\/a><\/em>,  which rights are &#8220;fundamental to the American scheme of justice.&#8221; And under that test, most but not all of the  provisions of the Bill of Rights were incorporated. The rights not incorporated include those  described in the seldom-used Third Amendment, the grand jury requirement of the  Fifth Amendment, the civil jury trial right of the Seventh Amendment, and, thus  far, the Second Amendment. (In addition,  the criminal jury trial right of the Sixth Amendment has been interpreted less  strictly with respect to the states than with respect to the federal  government.)<\/p>\n  <p> Accordingly,  if Justice Scalia wants to say that the Second Amendment right to firearms possession  does limit the states, he must either accept the idea that Justices are  qualified to say which rights are more fundamental than others&#8211;a process he  has criticized as unprincipled with respect to unenumerated rights&#8211;or commit  himself to Hugo Black&#8217;s jot-for-jot approach, which would entail massive costs  for the state courts; they would need to greatly expand their use of juries if  the Seventh Amendment were incorporated.  (The first sentence of the Seventh Amendment is not limited by its text  to federal courts, in the way that the second sentence is.)<\/p>\n  <p><strong>Stare Decisis and the  Textualist&#8217;s Dilemma<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p> Might  Justice Scalia and his fellow travelers invoke <u>stare decisis<\/u>&#8211;the  principle of respect for precedent&#8211;as a means of justifying incorporation of  the Second Amendment but not the Seventh Amendment, under the principle that  only the most fundamental enumerated rights apply to the states? The problem is that that move itself would  appear to be unprincipled.<\/p>\n  <p> If the  Court were really to adhere to <u>stare decisis<\/u> in this area, that would  mean upholding the Nineteenth Century cases that hold that the Second Amendment  does <u>not<\/u> apply to the states. If  the Court were instead to say that the Nineteenth Century caseshave already been sapped of their  strength by the modern incorporation cases, then one would have to ask why  Justice Scalia feels free to disregard that same line of modern cases insofar  as it authorizes the recognition of unenumerated rights (such as abortion) as  well as enumerated ones (such as free speech).  A commitment to precedent would not distinguish between these two faces  of modern substantive due process doctrine.  Meanwhile, shifting the basis for the doctrine to the Privileges or  Immunities Clause could hardly be justified in the name of precedent, and even  if it could, the shift would not help: The text of the Privileges or Immunities  Clause does not favor enumerated over unenumerated rights, nor, for that  matter, does it favor incorporating the Second Amendment over the first  sentence of the Seventh Amendment.<\/p>\n  <p> In the end,  Justice Scalia, like Justice Black before him, is a peculiar sort of  textualist. His real commitment is to  avoiding the appearance that judges are finding constitutional rights in their  own subjective values, rather than in the text of the Constitution. Incorporation of the Bill of Rights&#8211;or at  least Black&#8217;s version of jot-for-jot incorporation&#8211;avoids this appearance  because it enables the judge to point to a textual basis for each right  enforced against the states.<\/p>\n  <p> But the  Black\/Scalia version of textualism is peculiar, or at least ironic, because the  text of the Constitution itself points away from it. The Ninth Amendment says that &#8220;enumeration in  the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage  others retained by the people.&#8221; Justice  Scalia and others have tried heroically to escape the plain meaning of this  rejection of their brand of textualism by arguing, among other things, that the  rights retained by the People are not constitutional rights. Yet that is a highly strained reading:  Everywhere else that the Constitution uses the term &#8220;rights,&#8221; including in the  first half of the Ninth Amendment itself, that term clearly refers to constitutional  rights.<\/p>\n  <p> To be sure,  the <em>McDonald <\/em>case does not directly  present any question about unenumerated rights.  In <em>Heller<\/em>, Justice Scalia  emphasized for the Court that the enumerated text of the Second Amendment was  the driving force behind the decision to find an individual right to firearms  possession. In <em>McDonald, <\/em>the Court could simply say that the protections of the  Second Amendment are on par with most of the other protections of the Bill of  Rights. <\/p>\n  <p> That sort  of minimalist decision would not be persuasive, however, for the principles underlying  the incorporation doctrine do not readily admit of the sharp distinction that  Justice Scalia and others would draw between enumerated and unenumerated  rights. That was the core point that  conservative Fourth Circuit Appeals Court Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson made in <a href=\"http:\/\/www.virginialawreview.org\/content\/pdfs\/95\/253.pdf\" rel=\"noopener\">a recent  article<\/a> in the Virginia Law Review.  Judge Wilkinson thought that <em>Heller <\/em>employed the same core methodology as <em>Roe  v. Wade<\/em>, notwithstanding the enumeration in the Second Amendment&#8217;s text of  a &#8220;right to bear arms.&#8221; Given the  contest over the meaning of that language, he said, the right at issue in <em>Heller <\/em>was at best &#8220;ambiguously&#8221;  enumerated, and therefore the very concerns that drive conservatives to question  recognition of unenumerated rights should have, but were not, in play in <em>Heller<\/em>.  Whether they will come into play in <em>McDonald <\/em>remains to be seen.<\/p>\n  <hr size=\"1\">\n\n  <p class=\"authorfoot\">\n<a name=\"bio\" id=\"bio\"><\/a>Michael C. Dorf, a FindLaw columnist is the Robert S. Stevens  Professor of Law at Cornell   University. He is the author of <i>No Litmus Test: Law Versus Politics in the Twenty-First Century<\/i> and he blogs at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.michaeldorf.org\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">michaeldorf.org<\/a>.\n\n\n\n\n\n<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"was-this-helpful\">\n    <div\n            class=\"was-this-helpful__question-container\"\n            aria-labelledby=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n            role=\"group\"\n    >\n        <span\n                id=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__question fl-text-lg-bold\"\n        >Was this helpful?<\/span>\n        <button\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__button fl-text-sm\"\n                aria-label=\"Yes\"\n                value=\"yes\"\n        >\n            <span class=\"was-this-helpful__button-text fl-text-bold\">Yes<\/span>\n            <i class=\"was-this-helpful__button-icon\">\n                <svg width=\"22\" height=\"22\" viewBox=\"0 0 22 22\" fill=\"none\" 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