Griswold v Connecticut

Griswold v. Connecticut

Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965), argued 29 Mar. 1965, decided 7 June 1965, by vote of 7 to 2; Douglas for the Court, Goldberg, Harlan, and White concurring, black and Stewart in dissent. Griswold is a curious but important case in American constitutional history. It concerned an “uncommonly silly law” (as Justice Potter Stewart called it) that was technically difficult to challenge on constitutional grounds, as evidenced by the divergent positions of the justices concurring with the majority position. These opinions not only made Griswold one of the most significant decisions of the 1965 term but fueled controversies both about the general character of constitutional lawmaking and about specific rights that have continued decades later.

Evolution of the Dispute.

A Connecticut statue of 1879 made it a crime for any person to use any drug, article, or instrument to prevent conception. This statute had been challenged twice before, in 1943 (Tileston v. Ullman), where the Supreme Court held that the plaintiff lacked standing, and in 1961 (Poe v. Ullman), where the Court determined that the controversy was not ripe because the plaintiff had not been prosecuted (see Ripeness and Immediacy).

By 1965, however, the Court determined to resolve the constitutionality of the statute. Suit was initiated by two members of the Planned Parenthood League of Connecticut. Its executive director and medical director had been convicted of violating the statute by giving information, instruction, and medical advice to married persons regarding means of preventing conception (see Contraception). The conviction was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut.

On appeal, the United States Supreme Court reversed by a 7‐to‐2 margin. The majority determined that: (1) the appellants had standing to raise the constitutional rights of people with whom they had a professional relationship; and (2) the statute was invalid because it infringed on the constitutionally protected right to “privacy” of married persons.

Implied Rights: The New Substantive Due Process?

The majority holding in Griswold to a large extent was positioned within post‐1937 constitutional theory. It protected basic constitutional rights and applied them against the states in conventional fashion under the Fourteenth Amendment, and it mandated a stricter scrutiny for laws that interfere with “fundamental personal rights” than for those that regulate economic relations (see Due Process, Substantive). The Court's more controversial step of applying this logic to fundamental rights—here, of privacy—not expressly enumerated in the Bill of Rights likewise was hardly unprecedented. The Court previously had affirmed the unwritten rights to teach one's child a foreign language (Meyer v. Nebraska, 1923), to send one's children to private schools (Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 1925), to procreate (Skinner v. Oklahoma, 1942), to resist certain invasions of the body (Rochin v. California, 1952), and to travel abroad (Aptheker v. Secretary of State, 1964). What made Griswold a landmark case was the Court's willingness to explicitly justify at length this practice of investing such unenumerated rights with full constitutional status.

It is on this point that the justices were most divided. Indeed, four different lines of justification in defense of unenumerated fundamental rights were outlined by supporters of the majority decision. Justice William O. Douglas, writing for five members of the Court, referred to rights that are implicit in, or peripheral to, other express guarantees in the Bill of Rights. In his famous words, “specific guarantees … have penumbras, formed by emanations from those guarantees that help give them life and substance” (p. 484). Just as the Court earlier had found that First Amendment rights to freedom of speech implied a peripheral “right to freedom of association,” he reasoned, so do the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Ninth Amendments imply “zones of privacy” that form the basis for the general privacy right affirmed in this case.

Justice Arthur Goldberg, joined by Chief Justice Earl Warren and Justice William Brennan, staked out a more expansive approach to justifying the right of privacy. Although he found merit in the penumbra and emanations argument of Douglas, Goldberg argued further that “liberty protects those personal rights that are fundamental, and is not confined to the specific terms of the Bill of Rights.” The Fourteenth Amendment may not incorporate all of the first eight amendments, Goldberg acknowledged. However, the specific “language and history of the Ninth Amendment” provide strong support for judicial incorporation of additional rights “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked fundamental” in our constitutional legacy (p. 487).

Justices John M. Harlan and Byron White advanced positions that, by contrast, severed altogether the link between the Fourteenth Amendment and the Bill of Rights. Harlan rejected the incorporation doctrine as a historically groundless and ineffective check on judicial discretion, while reproaching the “letter or penumbra” logic of Douglas as overly restrictive of future rights development. Instead, he affirmed a commitment to due process and liberty that “stands … on its own bottom,” constrained only by the forces of history and cultural values that bind the court. By this logic, the Connecticut statute violated basic values “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” (p. 500). Justice White rooted his argument in a similarly expansive interpretation of Fourteenth Amendment due process guarantees but focused his attention on the terms of strict scrutiny by which the Court should balance fundamental rights of individuals with compelling state interests in such cases.

The dissents by Justices Hugo Black and Potter Stewart expressed the same disdain for the Connecticut statute as had the majority. However, both denied that the state law infringed upon any fundamental constitutional right. In their view, such a right—whether rooted in the “implied rights” theories of Douglas and Goldberg or, in the “natural justice” positions of Harlan and White—lacked specific constitutional authorization and represented an arbitrary exercise of judicial power that threatened the American system of government (see Judicial Self‐Restraint). “Use of any such broad, unbounded judicial authority would make of this Court's members a day‐to‐day constitutional convention,” argued Black. This would amount to a “great unconstitutional shift of power to the courts which … will be bad for the courts and worse for the country” (p. 520).

Scholarly debate has amplified these disagreements among members of the Court. In particular, many critics of the decision have elaborated Black's charge that the majority was simply offering a new and unwarranted version of the old “substantive due process” doctrine. Why, critics asked, is it less dangerous for Supreme Court justices to impose their personal preferences on legislators and society in matters of personal rights than in matters of economic relations? If the old Lochner logic was wrong, why is this new form of “Lochnerizing” not wrong as well? Moreover, are judges any more qualified to determine one form of rights than another? And is the legitimacy of a “government of laws” no less undermined by unrestrained, arbitrary judicial policy making in one sphere than in another?

Defenders of the majority have ranged even more widely in their arguments than did the justices. Some supporters have emphasized the decision's solid groundings in past judicial practice, theoretical logic, and constitutional text. Indeed, both Douglas and Goldberg explicitly declined the invitation to follow in the substantive due process tradition. “We do not sit as a super‐legislature to determine the wisdom, need, and propriety of laws that touch economic problems, business affairs, or social conditions,” wrote Douglas. The law in question, by contrast, “operates directly on an intimate relation of husband an wife” that long has received constitutional protection (p. 482).

Other supporters of the majority instead have affirmed Justices Harlan and White's unabashed rejection of formalist illusions about textual constraints upon judicial action. They argue that legal interpretation is always discretionary, and that textual constraints on judges are far less important than cultural and political forces. Moreover, many scholars have defended the Court's zealous defense of personal rights as both within its institutional capacities and functionally necessary to maintaining liberty in our modern corporate society. Such arguments were sufficiently compelling that all nine justices, including Stewart, by 1973 had accepted the Court's role in giving the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause a substantive content that exceeds the Bill of Rights, although considerable differences remained about how and when that authority should be exercised.

Privacy Rights: Subsequent Case Law and Theoretical Disputes.

Controversies over the constitutional grounding of unenumerated rights have been paralleled by controversies over the range of practices and relations that such rights protect. Indeed, the majority in Griswold was far more expansive about legal justifications for a right of privacy than about its theoretical content and reach. And while the Court recognized that commitments to privacy have deep roots in American society and its laws, that legacy has provided a vague guide for determining the substantive scope of privacy rights in modern social relations. Not surprisingly, questions regarding conceptual coherence have continued to surround the doctrine.

Critics query whether the logic of “privacy” extends to all social relations—including the sale of contraceptives to unmarried individuals (Carey v. Population Services International, 1977), relations among *homosexuals (Bowers v. Hardwick, 1986), and women's choices regarding abortion (Roe v. Wade, 1973). For example, is it really privacy that is most infringed by regulations restricting the sale and distribution of contraceptives? Do regulations of sales concern privacy more than those on solicitation, which was treated primarily as matter of free speech in Bolger v. Youngs Drug Product Corp. (1983).

Moreover, the privacy doctrine has been increasingly attacked from both ends of the political spectrum. On the one hand, the doctrine as applied to abortion since Roe has continued to provoke the outrage of conservatives over both the expansion of judicial authority and its resulting protections for allegedly immoral individual actions. Ironically, conservatives have rejected the privacy doctrine because it limits state intervention into the lives of citizens.

On the other hand, the privacy doctrine has been assailed from the political left for advancing a far too truncated and archaic liberal understanding of freedom. Critics on the left condemn the Griswold decision for limiting the privacy protection for contraception use to persons bound in conventional marriage relations. This shield for contraception use was extended a few years later to unmarried persons in Eisenstadt v. Baird (1972), but the Court's repeated denial of protection for homosexual relationships has revealed privacy limits as a challenge to traditional norms regarding sexuality (Bowers). Moreover, while the privacy logic has been useful to limit at least some unwanted state intervention in intimate sexual matters, it has also been employed to preclude a positive state role in educating citizens and providing funding essential for the exercise of rights to use birth control and receive an abortion. Some critics thus argue for the need to replace the privacy logic with a more affirmative conception of autonomy rights that is more consistent with the goals of equality and empowerment.

Legacy.

The legacy of the privacy rights doctrine thus points to the perennial problem of Court efforts to deal with changing social needs, values, and interests though invocation of traditional norms long supportive of quite different relationships. The right of privacy affirmed in Griswold still stands, but clearly is jeopardized by increasingly restrictive Court rulings on protections for abortion, its most important doctrinal application.

See also Abortion; Privacy.

Bibliography

Rhonda Copelon , Beyond the Liberal Idea of Privacy: Toward A Positive Right of Autonomy, in Judging the Constitution: Critical Essays on Judicial Lawmaking, edited by Michael W. McCann and Gerald L. Houseman (1989), pp. 287–316.
Allan Dionisopolous and Craig Ducat, eds., The Right to Privacy: Essays and Cases (1976).
Louis Henken , Privacy and Autonomy, Columbia Law Review 74 (1974): 1410–1433.
Symposium on the Griswold Case and the Right of Privacy, Michigan Law Review 64 (1965): 197–282.

Michael W. McCann

Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

KERMIT L. HALL. "Griswold v. Connecticut." The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. 28 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

KERMIT L. HALL. "Griswold v. Connecticut." The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. (May 28, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O184-GriswoldvConnecticut.html

KERMIT L. HALL. "Griswold v. Connecticut." The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. 2005. Retrieved May 28, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O184-GriswoldvConnecticut.html

Learn more about citation styles

Griswold v. Connecticut

GRISWOLD V. CONNECTICUT

Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 85 S. Ct. 1678, 14 L. Ed. 2d 510 (1965), was a landmark Supreme Court decision that recognized that a married couple has a right of privacy that cannot be infringed upon by a state law making it a crime to use contraceptives.

Two Connecticut statutes provided that any person who used, or gave information or assistance concerning the use of, contraceptives was subject to a fine, imprisonment, or both. Estelle T. Griswold, an executive with the state Planned Parenthood League, and a physician who worked at a league center were arrested for violating these laws, even though they gave such information to married couples.

They were convicted and fined $100 each. The state appellate courts upheld their convictions and they appealed to the Supreme Court on the ground that the statutes violated the fourteenth amendment. The Supreme Court recognized that the appellants had standing to raise the issue of the constitutional rights of married couples since they had a professional relationship with such people.

Addressing the propriety of its review of such legislation, the Court reasoned that although it is loath to determine the need for state laws affecting social and economic conditions, these statutes directly affected sexual relations between a married couple and the role of a physician in the medical aspects of such a relationship. Such a relationship is protected from intrusion by the government under the theory of a right to privacy. This right, while not specifically guaranteed by the Constitution, exists because it may be reasonably construed from certain amendments contained in the bill of rights.

The first amendment guarantees of freedom of speech and press implicitly create the right of freedom of association since one must be allowed to freely associate with others in order to fully enjoy these specific guarantees. The third amendment prohibition against the quartering of soldiers in a private home without the owner's consent is an implicit ACKNOWLEDGMENT of the owner's right to privacy. Both the fourth amendment protection against unreasonable searches and seizures and the fifth amendment self-incrimination Clause safeguard a person's privacy in his or her home and life against government demands. The ninth amendment states that the enumerated constitutional rights should not be interpreted as denying any other rights retained by the people.

The Court created the right of privacy from the penumbras of these specific rights, which it deemed created zones of privacy. The statutory regulation of a marital relationship by the state was an invasion of the constitutional right of a married couple to privacy in such a relationship, a relationship that historically American law has held sacred. The means by which the state chose to regulate contraceptives—by outlawing their use, rather than their sale and manufacture—was clearly unrelated to its goal and would detrimentally affect the marital relationship. The question of enforcement of such statutes also was roundly criticized since it would mandate government inquiry into "marital bedrooms."

Because of the invalidity of such laws, the Supreme Court reversed the judgments of the state trial and appellate courts and the convictions of the appellants.

further readings

Yeh, Jessica I., and Sindy S. Chen. 2002. "Contraception." Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 3 (spring): 191–209.

cross-references

"Griswold v. Connecticut" (Appendix, Primary Document); Husband and Wife; Penumbra.

Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Griswold v. Connecticut." West's Encyclopedia of American Law. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. 28 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Griswold v. Connecticut." West's Encyclopedia of American Law. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. (May 28, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3437702048.html

"Griswold v. Connecticut." West's Encyclopedia of American Law. 2005. Retrieved May 28, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3437702048.html

Learn more about citation styles

Griswold v. Connecticut

GRISWOLD V. CONNECTICUT,

GRISWOLD V. CONNECTICUT, 381 U.S. 479 (1965). When the state Planned Parenthood League opened a clinic in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1961, two staff members were arrested and fined under a rarely used law for giving advice and a prescription for a contraceptive to a married couple. The law, a legacy of Anthony Comstock's anti-vice campaign of the late nineteenth century, had been interpreted to ban the use of contraceptives and the opening of public clinics, which meant that women could not attain access to reliable contraception unless they could afford private physicians.

The Supreme Court decision in Griswold v. Connecticut reversed the Connecticut law by extending constitutional protection to the individual's right to Privacy. However, the Supreme Court was uncertain about the source of this right. The plurality opinion, written by Justice William O. Douglas, argued that several provisions of the Bill of Rights combine to create "penumbras"—that is, rights not explicitly set forth but nonetheless guaranteed by implication—and thus protected "zones of privacy." A married couple's choice about parenthood lay within that zone. Two dissenters from the right of privacy, Hugo Black and Potter Stewart, accused the majority of writing their personal opinions into constitutional doctrine and violating the principle of judicial self-restraint. It was a curious decision: No one publicly opposed the legalization of birth control, but many legal scholars agreed with the dissenters' accusations. Eight years later, Roe v. Wade (1973) revealed the explosive potential of Griswold and other privacy decisions as precedents by ruling that the right of privacy included a limited right to elective abortion.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Baer, Judith A. Women in American Law: The Struggle toward Equality from the New Deal to the Present. New York: Holmes and Meier, 1996.

Ball, Howard, and Phillip Cooper. Of Power and Right: Hugo Black, William O. Douglas, and America's Constitutional Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.

Judith A.Baer/a. r.

See alsoBirth Control Movement ; Roe v. Wade .

Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Griswold v. Connecticut." Dictionary of American History. 2003. Encyclopedia.com. 28 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Griswold v. Connecticut." Dictionary of American History. 2003. Encyclopedia.com. (May 28, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3401801806.html

"Griswold v. Connecticut." Dictionary of American History. 2003. Retrieved May 28, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3401801806.html

Learn more about citation styles

Griswold v. Connecticut

Griswold v. Connecticut case decided in 1965 by the U.S. Supreme Court, establishing a right to privacy in striking down a Connecticut ban on the sale of contraceptives. The Court, through Justice William O. Douglas , found a "zone of privacy" created by several amendments to the U.S. Constitution guaranteeing against governmental intrusion into the homes and lives of citizens. The Griswold decision was important in later cases, such as Roe v. Wade .

Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Griswold v. Connecticut." The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.. 2011. Encyclopedia.com. 28 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Griswold v. Connecticut." The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.. 2011. Encyclopedia.com. (May 28, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Griswoldv.html

"Griswold v. Connecticut." The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.. 2011. Retrieved May 28, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Griswoldv.html

Learn more about citation styles

Free newspaper and magazine articles

Griswold v. Connecticut: Birth Control and the Constitutional Right of...
Magazine article from: The Historian; 6/22/2006
Sexual Injustice: Supreme Court Decisions from Griswold to Roe
Magazine article from: The Journal of Southern History; 2/1/2012
Abortion before and after Roe v. Wade: an historical perspective.(symposium...
Magazine article from: Albany Law Review; 3/22/1999

Pictures from Google Image Search

Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture

See more pictures of Griswold v. Connecticut