Case Of Griswold Vs Connecticut example essay topic
Unfortunately the government of America does have to limit the actions of it's citizens in order to provide a logical system of moral following nation's people. The citizens of America, under federalist regime, are legally obliged to follow the contents of both the Constitution and also the laws of the specific states in which they reside. Every state in America uses the Constitution as a fundamental basis for establishing the laws to which it (the specific state) believes it's statesmen wish to live under. But sometimes the meaning of the Constitution is not crystal clear on the surface level, such as the dealing with the substantive due process which (in the Fourteenth Amendment) states No state shall make or enforce any law which shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law. But what is due process of law and who is responsible for defining it The possible misinterpretation of the Constitution could lead, and has led to the establishment of unjust laws in some states. In the case of Griswold vs. Connecticut, 1965, a U.S. Supreme Court ruling was called forth to determine if the state of Connecticut could involve itself in what the appellants called private affairs.
The conditions of Connecticut law, prior to 1965, stated: Any person who uses any drug, medicinal article or instrument for the purpose of preventing conception shall be fined not less than fifty dollars or imprisoned not less than sixty days nor more than one year or be both fined and imprisoned. (sited from Griswold vs. Connecticut Supreme Court case). And it was under these terms that Estelle T. Griswold, who was the Executive Director of the Planned Parenthood League of Connecticut (PPL C), and C. Lee Buxton, a Medical Director staffed by the League to provide information, were found guilty in the 1962 non jury court case of The State of Connecticut vs. Estelle T. Griswold and C. Lee Buxton. They were found guilty under terms of the state of Connecticut for distributing both advice and articles considered illegal by the state law. They were both fined a sum of one hundred dollars against the claim that the accessory statute as so applied violated the Fourteenth Amendment, (form court case).
Though the law may sound unwise, or even asinine, as Mr. Justice Stewart put it, the Justices had a hard time trying to relate a part of the Constitution which is in direct contradiction of the Connecticut statute. Darien A. McWhirter and Jon D. Bible state in the book Privacy as a Constitutional Right [Connecticut's law] basically said that people who engaged in heterosexual conduct had to leave to God (and the state) the question of whether children would be the result of that conduct, (McWHIRTER / BIBLE 96). This governmental policy of the state of Connecticut may appear absurd and unjust, but in what ways was it unconstitutional Possibly the motives for having the Connecticut Statute, which was originally established in 1879, could be seen in a majority of Roman Catholic followers living in Connecticut. It is noted in Liberty and Sexuality that one New Haven [news] paper, predicting that Griswold and Buxton will win overwhelmingly, had emphasized that Joe Clark [one of the Justices seated on the Supreme Court case] was a young man in his early thirties with no experience before the Supreme Court, (pg. 239). Such prejudices in Connecticut local media possibly display a bitter Roman Catholic attitude towards the case in general.
Thomas Emerson, who represented the appellants in Supreme Court argued It's a religious principle that's being enacted into law, that it is immoral to use contraceptives even within the marriage relation... there is no objective basis for the statutes, (LIBERTY 238) in argument to why the Connecticut statute was not rational or just. After the oral argument had been presented by Thomas Emerson, Justice Stewart questioned what Justice Clark thought about the case, his answer has been recorded as I think it's to reduce the chanced of immorality, to act as a deterrent to sexual intercourse outside of the marital relationship, (LIBERTY 239). But is it right to have such a law that represents, from a specific religion's aspects, what the citizens of a state are allowed to do In democracy there is a strong separation of religion from government, but with the statutes the founders were using pure religious ideology to justify what they thought as morally proper. The many justices, excluding Justice Black and Justice Stewart, agreed that the Connecticut statutes deprived Connecticut citizens of some sort of constitutional right. Five justices went with a decision that the Constitution provided a constitutional right to privacy. Two Justices, Chief Justice Warren and Justice Goldberg, found this right contained within the Bill of Rights penumbras.
The other three, Justice Brennan, Justice Clark and Justice Douglas, justified their decision with the Ninth Amendment. And the use of substantive due process of the Fourteenth Amendment held bearing on two more Justices, Justice Harlan and Justice White, as grounds for their final decisions. Justice Stewart based his stance on the Connecticut statute as I think it is an uncommonly silly law, but as far as finding it unjust in the course of opinion the court refers to no less than six Amendments to the Constitution: the First, the Third, the Fourth, the Ninth, and the Fourteenth. But the court does not say which of these Amendments, if any, it thinks is infringed by the Connecticut law, he could not. Justice Stewart's observation that the Connecticut statute, in his mind, did not directly contradict any part of the Constitution was a minority position in the final verdict. And with seven of the nine Justices voting to have the Connecticut law changed, Griswold and her associate won the case.
The aftermath of Griswold has brought to light many questions. Since the argument made was that the contraceptives are to be use within one's own home, the case of Griswold cannot logically be applied to abortion cases. But in Roa vs. Wade such a situation was questioned. The Griswold verdict has been applied to many other claims of privacy violation. From police searching private residencies for pornography considered illegal in certain states (Stanly vs. Georgia), to the case of Katz vs. United States which involved a controversial wiretap on a personal phone line. All the American public knows is that at any moment, what might appear to be an unconstitutional law, may be questioned.
What it does not know is if the Supreme Court Justices can find it unconstitutional. 1) U.S. Supreme Court: Griswold vs. Connecticut 381 U.S. 479.1965. [Online] Available web 9 (11/20/99) 2) Goldman, Jerry. Griswold vs. Connecticut: Abstract. [Online] Available web (11/20/99) 3) McWhirter, Darien A., Jon D. Bible. Privacy as a Constitutional Right.
New York: Quorum Books, 1992.4) G arrow, David J. Liberty and Sexuality. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company 1994.5) Fisher, Louis. Constitutional Rights: Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1990.335.