These appeals are from decisions of three-judge District Courts
holding unconstitutional Connecticut, Pennsylvania, or District of
Columbia statutory provisions which deny welfare assistance to
persons who are residents and meet all other eligibility
requirements except that they have not resided within the
jurisdiction for at least a year immediately preceding their
applications for assistance. Appellees' main contention on
reargument is that the prohibition of benefits to residents of less
than one year creates a classification which constitutes an
invidious discrimination denying them equal protection of the laws.
Appellants argue that the waiting period is needed to preserve the
fiscal integrity of their public assistance programs, as persons
who require welfare assistance during their first year of residence
are likely to become continuing burdens on welfare programs.
Appellants also seek to justify the classification as a permissible
attempt to discourage indigents from entering a State solely to
obtain larger benefits, and to distinguish between new and old
residents on the basis of the tax contributions they have made to
the community. Certain appellants rely in addition on the following
administrative and related governmental objectives: facilitating
the planning of welfare budgets, providing an objective test of
residency, minimizing the opportunity for recipients fraudulently
to receive payments from more than one jurisdiction, and
encouraging early entry of new residents into the labor force.
Connecticut and Pennsylvania also argue that Congress approved the
imposition of the one-year requirement in § 402(b) of the
Social Security Act.
Held:
Page 394 U. S. 619
1. The statutory prohibition of benefits to residents of less
than a year creates a classification which denies equal protection
of the laws because the interests allegedly served by the
classification either may not constitutionally be promoted by
government or are not compelling governmental interests. P.
394 U. S.
627.
2. Since the Constitution guarantees the right of interstate
movement, the purpose of deterring the migration of indigents into
a State is impermissible, and cannot serve to justify the
classification created by the one-year waiting period. Pp.
394 U. S.
629-631.
3. A State may no more try to fence out those indigents who seek
higher welfare payments than it may try to fence out indigents
generally. Pp.
394 U. S.
631-632.
4. The classification may not be sustained as an attempt to
distinguish between new and old residents on the basis of the
contribution they have made to the community through the payment of
taxes because the Equal Protection Clause prohibits the States from
apportioning benefits or services on the basis of the past tax
contributions of its citizens. Pp.
394 U. S.
632-633.
5. In moving from jurisdiction to jurisdiction appellees were
exercising a constitutional right, and any classification which
penalizes the exercise of that right, unless shown to be necessary
to promote a
compelling governmental interest, is
unconstitutional. P.
394 U. S.
634.
6. Appellants do not use and have no need to use the one-year
requirement for the administrative and governmental purposes
suggested, and under the standard of a compelling state interest,
that requirement clearly violates the Equal Protection Clause. Pp.
394 U. S.
634-63.
7. Section 402(b) of the Social Security Act does not render the
waiting period requirements constitutional. Pp.
394 U. S.
638-641.
(a) That section, on its face, does not approve, much less
prescribe, a one-year requirement, and the legislative history
reveals that Congress' purpose was to curb hardships resulting from
excessive residence requirements, and not to approve or prescribe
any waiting period. Pp.
394 U. S.
639-610.
(b) Assuming,
arguendo, that Congress did approve the
use of a one-year waiting period, it is the responsive State
legislation, and not § 402(b), which infringes constitutional
rights. P.
394 U. S.
641.
(c) If the constitutionality of § 402(b) were at issue,
that provision, insofar as it permits the one-year waiting period,
would be unconstitutional, as Congress may not authorize the States
to violate the Equal Protection Clause. P.
394 U. S.
641.
Page 394 U. S. 620
8. The waiting period requirement in the District of Columbia
Code, adopted by Congress as an exercise of federal power, is an
unconstitutional discrimination which violates the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Pp.
394 U. S.
641-642.
No. 9,
270 F.
Supp. 331; No. 33,
279 F.
Supp. 22, and No. 34,
277 F.
Supp. 65, affirmed.
Page 394 U. S. 621
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
These three appeals were restored to the calendar for
reargument. 392 U.S. 920 (1968). Each is an appeal from a decision
of a three-judge District Court holding
Page 394 U. S. 622
unconstitutional a State or District of Columbia statutory
provision which denies welfare assistance to residents of the State
or District who have not resided within their jurisdictions for at
least one year immediately preceding their applications for such
assistance. [
Footnote 1] We
affirm the judgments of the District Courts in the three cases.
I
In No. 9, the Connecticut Welfare Department invoked §
17-2d of the Connecticut General Statutes [
Footnote 2] to
Page 394 U. S. 623
deny the application of appellee Vivian Marie Thompson for
assistance under the program for Aid to Families with Dependent
Children (AFDC). She was a 19-year-old unwed mother of one child
and pregnant with her second child when she changed her residence
in June, 1966, from Dorchester, Massachusetts, to Hartford,
Connecticut, to live with her mother, a Hartford resident. She
moved to her own apartment in Hartford in August, 1966, when her
mother was no longer able to support her and her infant son.
Because of her pregnancy, she was unable to work or enter a work
training program. Her application for AFDC assistance, filed in
August, was denied in November solely on the ground that, as
required by § 17-2d she had not lived in the State for a year
before her application was filed. She brought this action in the
District Court for the District of Connecticut, where a three-judge
court, one judge dissenting, declared § 17-2d
unconstitutional.
270 F.
Supp. 331 (1967). The majority held that the waiting period
requirement is unconstitutional because it "has a chilling effect
on the right to travel."
Id. at 336. The majority also
held that the provision was a violation of the Equal Protection
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because the denial of relief to
those resident in the State for less than a year is not based on
any permissible purpose, but is solely designed, as "Connecticut
states quite frankly," "to protect its fisc by discouraging entry
of those who come needing relief."
Id. at 336-337. We
noted probable jurisdiction. 389 U.S. 1032 (1968).
In No. 33, there are four appellees. Three of them -- appellees
Harrell, Brown, and Legrant -- applied for and were denied AFDC
aid. The fourth, appellee Barley, applied for and was denied
benefits under the program for Aid to the Permanently and Totally
Disabled. The denial in each case was on the ground that the
applicant had not resided in the District of Columbia for one
year
Page 394 U. S. 624
immediately preceding the filing of her application, as required
by § 3-203 of the District of Columbia Code. [
Footnote 3]
Appellee Minnie Harrell, now deceased, had moved with her three
children from New York to Washington in September, 1966. She
suffered from cancer, and moved to be near members of her family
who lived in Washington.
Appellee Barley, a former resident of the District of Columbia,
returned to the District in March, 1941, and was committed a month
later to St. Elizabeths Hospital as mentally ill. She has remained
in that hospital ever since. She was deemed eligible for release in
1965, and a plan was made to transfer her from the hospital to a
foster home. The plan depended, however, upon Mrs. Barley's
obtaining welfare assistance for her support. Her application for
assistance under the program for Aid to the Permanently and Totally
Disabled was denied because her time spent in the hospital did not
count in determining compliance with the one-year requirement.
Appellee Brown lived with her mother and two of her three
children in Fort Smith, Arkansas. Her third child was living with
appellee Brown's father in the District of Columbia. When her
mother moved from Fort Smith to Oklahoma, appellee Brown, in
February, 1966, returned to the District of Columbia, where she had
lived as a child. Her application for AFDC assistance was approved
insofar as it sought assistance for the child, who
Page 394 U. S. 625
had lived in the District with her father but was denied to the
extent it sought assistance for the two other children.
Appellee Legrant moved with her two children from South Carolina
to the District of Columbia in March, 1967, after the death of her
mother. She planned to live with a sister and brother in
Washington. She was pregnant and in ill health when she applied for
and was denied AFDC assistance in July, 1967.
The several cases were consolidated for trial, and a three-judge
District Court was convened. [
Footnote 4] The court, one judge dissenting, held §
3-203 unconstitutional.
279 F. Supp.
22 (1967). The majority rested its decision on the ground that
the one-year requirement was unconstitutional as a denial of the
right to equal protection secured by the Due Process Clause of the
Fifth Amendment. We noted probable jurisdiction. 390 U.S. 940
(1968).
In No. 34, there are two appellees, Smith and Foster, who were
denied AFDC aid on the sole ground that they had not been residents
of Pennsylvania for a year prior to their applications, as required
by § 432(6) of the
Page 394 U. S. 626
Pennsylvania Welfare Code. [
Footnote 5] Appellee Smith and her five minor children
moved in December, 1966, from Delaware to Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, where her father lived. Her father supported her and
her children for several months until he lost his job. Appellee
then applied for AFDC assistance and had received two checks when
the aid was terminated. Appellee Foster, after living in
Pennsylvania from 1953 to 1965, had moved with her four children to
South Carolina to care for her grandfather and invalid grandmother,
and had returned to Pennsylvania in 1967. A three-judge District
Court for the F,astern District of Pennsylvania, one judge
dissenting, declared § 432(6) unconstitutional.
277 F. Supp.
65 (1967). The majority held that the classification
established by the waiting period requirement is "without rational
basis and without legitimate purpose or function," and therefore a
violation of the Equal Protection Clause.
Id. at 67. The
majority noted further that, if the purpose of the statute was "to
erect a barrier against the movement of indigent persons into the
State or to
Page 394 U. S. 627
effect their prompt departure after they have gotten there," it
would be "patently improper and its implementation plainly
impermissible."
Id. at 67-68. We noted probable
jurisdiction. 390 U.S. 940 (1968).
II
There is no dispute that the effect of the waiting period
requirement in each case is to create two classes of needy resident
families indistinguishable from each other except that one is
composed of residents who have resided a year or more, and the
second of residents who have resided less than a year, in the
jurisdiction. On the basis of this sole difference, the first class
is granted, and the second class is denied, welfare aid upon which
may depend the ability of the families to obtain the very means to
subsist -- food, shelter, and other necessities of life. In each
case, the District Court found that appellees met the test for
residence in their jurisdictions, as well as all other eligibility
requirements except the requirement of residence for a full year
prior to their applications. On reargument, appellees' central
contention is that the statutory prohibition of benefits to
residents of less than a year creates a classification which
constitutes an invidious discrimination denying them equal
protection of the laws. [
Footnote
6] We agree. The interests which appellants assert are promoted
by the classification either may not constitutionally be promoted
by government or are not compelling governmental interests.
III
Primarily, appellants justify the waiting period requirement as
a protective device to preserve the fiscal integrity of state
public assistance programs. It is asserted that people who require
welfare assistance during their first
Page 394 U. S. 628
year of residence in a State are likely to become continuing
burdens on state welfare programs. Therefore, the argument runs, if
such people can be deterred from entering the jurisdiction by
denying them welfare benefits during the first year, state programs
to assist long-time residents will not be impaired by a substantial
influx of indigent newcomers. [
Footnote 7]
There is weighty evidence that exclusion from the jurisdiction
of the poor who need or may need relief was the specific objective
of these provisions. In the Congress, sponsors of federal
legislation to eliminate all residence requirements have been
consistently opposed by representatives of state and local welfare
agencies who have stressed the fears of the States that elimination
of the requirements would result in a heavy influx of individuals
into States providing the most generous benefits.
See,
e.g., Hearings on H.R. 10032 before the House Committee on
Ways and Means, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., 309-310, 644 (1962); Hearings
on H.R. 6000 before the Senate Committee on Finance, 81st
Cong.,
Page 394 U. S. 629
2d Sess., 324-327 (1950). The sponsor of the Connecticut
requirement said in its support:
"I doubt that Connecticut can and should continue to allow
unlimited migration into the state on the basis of offering instant
money and permanent income to all who can make their way to the
state regardless of their ability to contribute to the
economy."
H.B. 82, Connecticut General Assembly House Proceedings,
February Special Session, 1965, Vol. II, pt. 7, p. 3504. In
Pennsylvania, shortly after the enactment of the one-year
requirement, the Attorney General issued an opinion construing the
one-year requirement strictly because "[a]ny other conclusion would
tend to attract the dependents of other states to our
Commonwealth." 1937-1938 Official Opinions of the Attorney General,
No. 240, p. 110. In the District of Columbia case, the
constitutionality of § 3-203 was frankly defended in the
District Court and in this Court on the ground that it is designed
to protect the jurisdiction from an influx of persons seeking more
generous public assistance than might be available elsewhere.
We do not doubt that the one-year waiting period device is well
suited to discourage the influx of poor families in need of
assistance. An indigent who desires to migrate, resettle, find a
new job, and start a new life will doubtless hesitate if he knows
that he must risk making the move without the possibility of
falling back on state welfare assistance during his first year of
residence, when his need may be most acute. But the purpose of
inhibiting migration by needy persons into the State is
constitutionally impermissible.
This Court long ago recognized that the nature of our Federal
Union and our constitutional concepts of personal liberty unite to
require that all citizens be free to travel throughout the length
and breadth of our land uninhibited by statutes, rules, or
regulations which unreasonably burden or restrict this movement.
That
Page 394 U. S. 630
proposition was early stated by Chief Justice Taney in the
Passenger
Cases, 7 How. 283,
48 U. S. 492
(1849):
"For all the great purposes for which the Federal government was
formed, we are one people, with one common country. We are all
citizens of the United States; and, as members of the same
community, must have the right to pass and repass through every
part of it without interruption, as freely as in our own
States."
We have no occasion to ascribe the source of this right to
travel interstate to a particular constitutional provision.
[
Footnote 8] It suffices that,
as MR. JUSTICE STEWART said for the Court in
United States v.
Guest, 383 U. S. 745,
383 U. S.
757-758 (166):
"The constitutional right to travel from one State to another .
. . occupies a position fundamental to the concept of our Federal
Union. It is a right that has been firmly established and
repeatedly recognized."
". . . [T]he right finds no explicit mention in the
Constitution. The reason, it has been suggested, is
Page 394 U. S. 631
that a right so elementary was conceived from the beginning to
be a necessary concomitant of the stronger Union the Constitution
created. In any event, freedom to travel throughout the United
States has long been recognized as a basic right under the
Constitution."
Thus, the purpose of deterring the in-migration of indigents
cannot serve as justification for the classification created by the
one-year waiting period, since that purpose is constitutionally
impermissible. If a law has
"no other purpose . . . than to chill the assertion of
constitutional rights by penalizing those who choose to exercise
them, then it [is] patently unconstitutional."
United States v. Jackson, 390 U.
S. 570,
390 U. S. 581
(1968).
Alternatively, appellants argue that, even if it is
impermissible for a State to attempt to deter the entry of all
indigents, the challenged classification may be justified as a
permissible state attempt to discourage those indigents who would
enter the State solely to obtain larger benefits. We observe first
that none of the statutes before us is tailored to serve that
objective. Rather, the class of barred newcomers is all-inclusive,
lumping the great majority who come to the State for other purposes
with those who come for the sole purpose of collecting higher
benefits. In actual operation, therefore, the three statutes enact
what, in effect, are nonrebuttable presumptions that every
applicant for assistance in his first year of residence came to the
jurisdiction solely to obtain higher benefits. Nothing whatever in
any of these records supplies any basis in fact for such a
presumption.
More fundamentally, a State may no more try to fence out those
indigents who seek higher welfare benefits than it may try to fence
out indigents generally. Implicit in any such distinction is the
notion that indigents who enter a State with the hope of securing
higher welfare benefits are somehow less deserving than indigents
who do not
Page 394 U. S. 632
take this consideration into account. But we do not perceive why
a mother who is seeking to make a new life for herself and her
children should be regarded as less deserving because she
considers, among others factors, the level of a State's public
assistance. Surely such a mother is no less deserving than a mother
who moves into a particular State in order to take advantage of its
better educational facilities.
Appellants argue further that the challenged classification may
be sustained as an attempt to distinguish between new and old
residents on the basis of the contribution they have made to the
community through the payment of taxes. We have difficulty seeing
how long-term residents who qualify for welfare are making a
greater present contribution to the State in taxes than indigent
residents who have recently arrived. If the argument is based on
contributions made in the past by the long-term residents, there is
some question, as a factual matter, whether this argument is
applicable in Pennsylvania, where the record suggests that some 40%
of those denied public assistance because of the waiting period had
lengthy prior residence in the State. [
Footnote 9] But we need not rest on the particular facts
of these cases. Appellants' reasoning would logically permit the
State to bar new residents from schools, parks, and libraries or
deprive them of police and fire protection. Indeed, it would permit
the State to apportion all benefits and services according to the
past tax contributions of its
Page 394 U. S. 633
citizens. The Equal Protection Clause prohibits such an
apportionment of state services. [
Footnote 10]
We recognize that a State has a valid interest in preserving the
fiscal integrity of its programs. It may legitimately attempt to
limit its expenditures, whether for public assistance, public
education, or any other program. But a State may not accomplish
such a purpose by invidious distinctions between classes of its
citizens. It could not, for example, reduce expenditures for
education by barring indigent children from its schools. Similarly,
in the cases before us, appellants must do more than show that
denying welfare benefits to new residents saves money. The saving
of welfare costs cannot justify an otherwise invidious
classification. [
Footnote
11]
In sum, neither deterrence of indigents from migrating to the
State nor limitation of welfare benefits to those regarded as
contributing to the State is a constitutionally permissible state
objective.
IV
Appellants next advance as justification certain administrative
and related governmental objectives allegedly served by the waiting
period requirement. [
Footnote
12] They argue
Page 394 U. S. 634
that the requirement (1) facilitates the planning of the welfare
budget; (2) provides an objective test of residency; (3) minimizes
the opportunity for recipients fraudulently to receive payments
from more than one Jurisdiction, and (4) encourages early entry of
new residents into the labor force.
At the outset, we reject appellants' argument that a mere
showing of a rational relationship between the waiting period and
these four admittedly permissible state objectives will suffice to
justify the classification.
See Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic
Gas Co., 220 U. S. 61,
220 U. S. 78
(1911);
Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U.
S. 603,
363 U. S. 611
(1960);
McGowan v. Maryland, 366 U.
S. 420,
366 U. S. 426
(1961). The waiting period provision denies welfare benefits to
otherwise eligible applicants solely because they have recently
moved into the jurisdiction. But in moving from State to State or
to the District of Columbia appellees were exercising a
constitutional right, and any classification which serves to
penalize the exercise of that right, unless shown to be necessary
to promote a compelling governmental interest, is unconstitutional.
Cf. Skinner v. Oklahoma, 316 U. S. 535,
316 U. S. 541
(1942);
Korematsu v. United States, 323 U.
S. 214,
323 U. S. 216
(1944);
Bates v. Little Rock, 361 U.
S. 516,
361 U. S. 524
(1960);
Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.
S. 398,
374 U. S. 406
(1963).
The argument that the waiting period requirement facilitates
budget predictability is wholly unfounded. The records in all three
cases are utterly devoid of evidence that either State or the
District of Columbia, in fact, uses the one-year requirement as a
means to predict the number of people who will require assistance
in the budget year. None of the appellants takes a census of new
residents or collects any other data that would reveal the number
of newcomers in the State less than a year.
Page 394 U. S. 635
Nor are new residents required to give advance notice of their
need for welfare assistance. [
Footnote 13] Thus, the welfare authorities cannot know
how many new residents come into the jurisdiction in any year, much
less how many of them will require public assistance. In these
circumstances, there is simply no basis for the claim that the
one-year waiting requirement serves the purpose of making the
welfare budget more predictable. In Connecticut and Pennsylvania,
the irrelevance of the one-year requirement to budgetary planning
is further underscored by the fact that temporary, partial
assistance is given to some new residents [
Footnote 14] and full assistance is given to
other new residents under reciprocal agreements. [
Footnote 15] Finally, the claim that a
one-year waiting requirement is used for planning purposes is
plainly belied by the fact that the requirement is not also imposed
on applicants who are long-term residents, the group that receives
the bulk of welfare payments. In short, the States rely on methods
other than the one-year requirement to make budget estimates. In
No. 34, the Director of the Pennsylvania Bureau of Assistance
Policies and Standards testified that, based on experience in
Pennsylvania and elsewhere, her office had already estimated how
much the elimination of the one-year requirement would cost and
that the estimates of costs of other changes in regulations "have
proven exceptionally accurate."
Page 394 U. S. 636
The argument that the waiting period serves as an
administratively efficient rule of thumb for determining residency
similarly will not withstand scrutiny. The residence requirement
and the one-year waiting period requirement are distinct and
independent prerequisites for assistance under these three
statutes, and the facts relevant to the determination of each are
directly examined by the welfare authorities. [
Footnote 16] Before granting an application, the
welfare authorities investigate the applicant's employment,
housing, and family situation and in the course of the inquiry
necessarily learn the facts upon which to determine whether the
applicant is a resident. [
Footnote 17]
Page 394 U. S. 637
Similarly, there is no need for a State to use the one-year
waiting period as a safeguard against fraudulent receipt of
benefits; [
Footnote 18] for
less drastic means are available, and are employed, to minimize
that hazard. Of course, a State has a valid interest in preventing
fraud by any applicant, whether a newcomer or a long-time resident.
It is not denied, however, that the investigations now conducted
entail inquiries into facts relevant to that subject. In addition,
cooperation among state welfare departments is common. The District
of Columbia, for example, provides interim assistance to its former
residents who have moved to a State which has a waiting period. As
a matter of course, District officials send a letter to the welfare
authorities in the recipient's new community "to request the
information needed to continue assistance." [
Footnote 19] A like procedure would be an
effective safeguard against the hazard of double payments. Since
double payments can be prevented by a letter or a telephone call,
it is unreasonable to accomplish this objective by the blunderbuss
method of denying assistance to all indigent newcomers for an
entire year.
Pennsylvania suggests that the one-year waiting period is
justified as a meals of encouraging new residents to join the labor
force promptly. But this logic would also require a similar waiting
period for long-term residents of the State. A state purpose to
encourage employment
Page 394 U. S. 638
provides no rational basis for imposing a one-year waiting
period restriction on new residents only.
We conclude therefore that appellants in these cases do not use
and have no need to use the one-year requirement for the
governmental purposes suggested. Thus, even under traditional equal
protection tests, a classification of welfare applicants according
to whether they have lived in the State for one year would seem
irrational and unconstitutional. [
Footnote 20] But, of course, the traditional criteria do
not apply in these cases. Since the classification here touches on
the fundamental right of interstate movement, its constitutionality
must be judged by the stricter standard of whether it promotes a
compelling state interest. Under this standard, the
waiting period requirement clearly violates the Equal Protection
Clause. [
Footnote 21]
V
Connecticut and Pennsylvania argue, however, that the
constitutional challenge to the waiting period requirements must
fail because Congress expressly approved the imposition of the
requirement by the States as part of the jointly funded AFDC
program.
Section 402(b) of the Social Security Act of 1935, as amended,
42 U.S.C. § 602(b), provides that:
"The Secretary shall approve any [state assistance] plan which
fulfills the conditions specified in subsection
Page 394 U. S. 639
(a) of this section, except that he shall not approve any plan
which imposes as a condition of eligibility for aid to families
with dependent children, a residence requirement which denies aid
with respect to any child residing in the State (1) who has resided
in the State for one year immediately preceding the application for
such aid, or (2) who was born within one year immediately preceding
the application, if the parent or other relative with whom the
child is living has resided in the State for one year immediately
preceding the birth."
On its face, the statute does not approve, much less prescribe,
a one-year requirement. It merely directs the Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare not to disapprove plans submitted by the
States because they include such a requirement. [
Footnote 22] The suggestion that Congress
enacted that directive to encourage state participation in the AFDC
program is completely refuted by the legislative history of the
section. That history discloses that Congress enacted the directive
to curb hardships resulting from lengthy residence requirements.
Rather than constituting an approval or a prescription of the
requirement in state plans, the directive was the means chosen by
Congress to deny federal funding to any State which persisted in
stipulating excessive residence requirements as a condition of the
payment of benefits.
One year before the Social Security Act was passed, 20 of the 45
States which had aid to dependent children programs required
residence in the State for two or more years. Nine other States
required two or more years of
Page 394 U. S. 640
residence in a particular town or county. And 33 jurisdictions
required at least one year of residence in a particular town or
county. [
Footnote 23]
Congress determine to combat this restrictionist policy. Both the
House and Senate Committee Reports expressly stated that the
objective of § 402(b) was to compel "[l]iberality of residence
requirement." [
Footnote 24]
Not a single instance can be found in the debates or committee
reports supporting the contention that § 402(b) was enacted to
encourage participation by the States in the AFDC program. To the
contrary, those few who addressed themselves to waiting period
requirements emphasized that participation would depend on a
State's repeal or drastic revision of existing requirements. A
congressional demand on 41 States to repeal or drastically revise
offending statutes is hardly a way to enlist their cooperation.
[
Footnote 25]
Page 394 U. S. 641
But even if we were to assume,
arguendo, that Congress
did approve the imposition of a one-year waiting period, it is the
responsive
state legislation which infringes
constitutional rights. By itself § 402(b) has absolutely no
restrictive effect. It is therefore not that statute, but only the
state requirements which pose the constitutional question.
Finally, even if it could be argued that the constitutionality
of § 402(b) is somehow at issue here, it follows from hat we
have said that the provision, insofar as it permits the one-year
waiting period requirement, would be unconstitutional. Congress may
not authorize the States to violate the Equal Protection Clause.
Perhaps Congress could induce wider state participation in school
construction if it authorized the use of joint funds for the
building of segregated schools. But could it seriously be contended
that Congress would be constitutionally justified in such
authorization by the need to secure state cooperation? Congress is
without power to enlist state cooperation in a joint federal-state
program by legislation which authorizes the States to violate the
Equal Protection Clause.
Katzenbach v. Morgan,
384 U. S. 641,
384 U. S. 651,
n. 10 (1966).
VI
The waiting period requirement in the District of Columbia Code
involved in No. 33 is also unconstitutional, even though it was
adopted by Congress as an exercise of federal power. In terms of
federal power, the discrimination created by the one-year
requirement violates the Due
Page 394 U. S. 642
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
"[W]hile the Fifth Amendment contains no equal protection
clause, it does forbid discrimination that is 'so unjustifiable as
to be violative of due process.'"
Schneider v. Rusk, 377 U. S. 163,
377 U. S. 168
(1964);
Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 U.
S. 497 (1954). For the reasons we have stated in
invalidating the Pennsylvania and Connecticut provisions, the
District of Columbia provision is also invalid -- the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits Congress from denying
public assistance to poor persons otherwise eligible solely on the
ground that they have not been residents of the District of
Columbia for one year at the time their applications are filed.
Accordingly, the judgments in Nos. 9, 33, and 34 are
Affirmed.
* Together with No. 33,
Washington et al. v. Legrant et
al., on appeal from the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia, argued May 1, 1968, and No. 34,
Reynolds
et al. v. Smith et al., on appeal from the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, argued May
1-2, 1968, both reargued on October 23-24, 198.
[
Footnote 1]
Accord: Robertson v. Ott, 284 F.
Supp. 735 (D.C. Mass.1968);
Johnson v. Robinson, Civil
No. 67-1883 (D.C.N.D.Ill., Feb. 20, 1968);
Ramos v. Health and
Social Services Bd., 276 F.
Supp. 474 (D.C.E.D. Wis.1967);
Green v. Dept. of Pub.
Welfare, 270 F.
Supp. 173 (D.C. Del.1967).
Contra: Waggoner v.
Rosenn, 286 F.
Supp. 275 (D.C.M.D.Pa.1968);
see also People ex rel.
Heydenreich v. Lyons, 374 Ill. 557, 30 N.E.2d 46 (1940).
All but one of the appellees herein applied for assistance under
the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program, which
was established by the Social Security Act of 1935. 49 Stat. 627,
as amended, 42 U.S.C. §§ 601-609. The program provides
partial federal funding of state assistance plans which meet
certain specifications. One appellee applied for Aid to the
Permanently and Totally Disabled which is also jointly funded by
the States and the Federal Government. 42 U.S.C. §§
1351-1355.
[
Footnote 2]
Conn.Gen.Stat.Rev. § 17-2d (1965 Supp.), now § 17-2c,
provides:
"When any person comes into this state without visible means of
support for the immediate future and applies for aid to dependent
children under chapter 301 or general assistance under part I of
chapter 308 within one year from his arrival, such person shall be
eligible only for temporary aid or care until arrangements are made
for his return, provided ineligibility for aid to dependent
children shall not continue beyond the maximum federal residence
requirement."
An exception is made for those persons who come to Connecticut
with a
bona fide job offer or are self-supporting upon
arrival in the State and for three months thereafter. 1 Conn.
Welfare Manual c. II, §§ 219.1-219.2 (1966).
[
Footnote 3]
D.C.Code Ann. § 3-23 (1967) provides:
"Public assistance shall be awarded to or on behalf of any needy
individual who either (a) has resided in the District for one year
immediately preceding the date of filing his application for such
assistance; or (b) who was born within one year immediately
preceding the application for such aid, if the parent or other
relative with whom the child is living has resided in the District
for one year immediately preceding the birth; or (c) is otherwise
within one of the categories of public assistance established by
this chapter."
See D.C. Handbook of Pub. Assistance Policies and
Procedures, HPA-2, EL 9.1, I, III (1966) (hereinafter cited as D.C.
Handbook).
[
Footnote 4]
In
Ex parte Cogdell, 342 U. S. 163
(1951), this Court remanded to the Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia Circuit to determine whether 28 U.S.C. §
2282, requiring a three-judge court when the constitutionality of
an Act of Congress is challenged, applied to Acts of Congress
pertaining solely to the District of Columbia. The case was mooted
below, and the question has never been expressly resolved .
However, in
Berman v. Parker, 348 U. S.
26 (1954), this Court heard an appeal from a three-judge
court in a case involving the constitutionality of a District of
Columbia statute. Moreover, three-judge district courts in the
District of Columbia have continued to hear cases involving such
statutes.
See, e.g., Hobson v. Hansen, 265 F.
Supp. 902 (1967). Section 2282 requires a three-judge court to
hear a challenge to the constitutionality of "
any Act of
Congress." (Emphasis supplied.) We see no reason to make an
exception for Acts of Congress pertaining to the District of
Columbia.
[
Footnote 5]
Pa.Stat., Tit. 62, § 432(6) (1968).
See also
Pa.Pub. Assistance Manual §§ 3150-3151 (1962). Section
432(6) provides:
"Assistance may be granted only to or in behalf of a person
residing in Pennsylvania who (i) has resided therein for at least
one year immediately preceding the date of application; (ii) last
resided in a state which, by law, regulation or reciprocal
agreement with Pennsylvania, grants public assistance to or in
behalf of a person who has resided in such state for less than one
year; (iii) is a married woman residing with a husband who meets
the requirement prescribed in subclause (i) or (ii) of this clause,
or (iv) is a child less than one year of age whose parent, or
relative with whom he is residing, meets the requirement prescribed
in subclause (i), (ii) or (iii) of this clause or resided in
Pennsylvania for at least one year immediately preceding the
child's birth. Needy persons who do not meet any of the
requirements stated in this clause and who are transients or
without residence in any state, may be granted assistance in
accordance with rules, regulations, and standards established by
the department."
[
Footnote 6]
This constitutional challenge cannot be answered by the argument
that public assistance benefits are a "privilege," and not a
"right."
See Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.
S. 398,
374 U. S. 404
(1963).
[
Footnote 7]
The waiting period requirement has its antecedents in laws
prevalent in England and the American Colonies centuries ago which
permitted the ejection of individuals and families if local
authorities thought they might become public charges. For example,
the preamble of the English Law of Settlement and Removal of 1662
expressly recited the concern, also said to justify the three
statutes before us, that large numbers of the poor were moving to
parishes where more liberal relief policies were in effect.
See
generally Coll, Perspectives in Public Welfare: The English
Heritage, 4 Welfare in Review, No. 3, p. 1 (1966). The 1662 law and
the earlier Elizabethan Poor Law of 1601 were the models adopted by
the American Colonies. Newcomers to a city, town, or county who
might become public charges were "warned out" or "passed on" to the
next locality. Initially, the funds for welfare payments were
raised by local taxes, and the controversy as to responsibility for
particular indigents was between localities in the same State. As
States -- first alone and then with federal grants -- assumed the
major responsibility, the contest of nonresponsibility became
interstate.
[
Footnote 8]
In
Corfield v. Coryell, 6 F. Cas. 546, 552 (No. 3230)
(C.C.E.D.Pa. 1825),
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
75 U. S. 180
(1869), and
Ward v.
Maryland, 12 Wall. 418, 430 (1871), the right to
travel interstate was grounded upon the Privileges and Immunities
Clause of Art. IV, § 2.
See also
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 79
(1873);
Twining v. New Jersey, 211 U. S.
78,
211 U. S. 97
(1908). In
Edwards v. California, 314 U.
S. 160,
314 U. S. 181,
314 U. S.
183-185 (1941) (DOUGLAS and Jackson, JJ., concurring),
and
Twining v. New Jersey, supra, reliance was placed on
the Privileges and Immunities Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See also Crandall v.
Nevada, 6 Wall. 35 (1868). In
Edwards v.
California, supra, and the
Passenger
Cases, 7 How. 283 (1849), a Commerce Clause
approach was employed.
See also Kent v. Dulles, 357 U.
S. 116,
357 U. S. 125
(1958);
Aptheker v. Secretary of State, 378 U.
S. 500,
378 U. S.
505-506 (1964);
Zemel v. Rusk, 381 U. S.
1,
381 U. S. 14
(1965), where the freedom of Americans to travel outside the
country was grounded upon the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment.
[
Footnote 9]
Furthermore, the contribution rationale can hardly explain why
the District of Columbia and Pennsylvania bar payments to children
who have not lived in the jurisdiction for a year regardless of
whether the parents have lived in the jurisdiction for that period.
See D.C.Code § 3-203; D.C. Handbook, EL 9.1, I(C)
(1966); Pa.Stat., Tit. 62, § 432(6) (1968). Clearly, the
children who were barred would not have made a contribution during
that year.
[
Footnote 10]
We are not dealing here with state insurance programs which may
legitimately tie the amount of benefits to the individual's
contributions.
[
Footnote 11]
In
Rinaldi v. Yeager, 384 U. S. 305
(1966), New Jersey attempted to reduce expenditures by requiring
prisoners who took an unsuccessful appeal to reimburse the State
out of their institutional earnings for the cost of furnishing a
trial transcript. This Court held the New Jersey statute
unconstitutional because it did not require similar repayments from
unsuccessful appellants given a suspended sentence, placed on
probation, or sentenced only to a fine. There was no rational basis
for the distinction between unsuccessful appellants who were in
prison and those who were not.
[
Footnote 12]
Appellant in No. 9, the Connecticut Welfare Commissioner,
disclaims any reliance on this contention. In No. 34, the District
Court found as a fact that the Pennsylvania requirement served none
of the claimed functions.
277 F.
Supp. 65, 68 (1967).
[
Footnote 13]
Of course, such advance notice would inevitably be unreliable,
since some who registered would not need welfare a year later while
others who did not register would need welfare.
[
Footnote 14]
See Conn.Gen.Stat.Rev. § 17-2d now § 17-2c,
and Pa.Pub. Assistance Manual § 3154 (1968).
[
Footnote 15]
Both Connecticut and Pennsylvania have entered into open-ended
interstate compacts in which they have agreed to eliminate the
durational requirement for anyone who comes from another State
which has also entered into the compact. Conn.Gen.Stat.Rev. §
17-21a (1968); Pa.Pub. Assistance Manual § 3150, App. I
(1966).
[
Footnote 16]
In Pennsylvania, the one-year waiting period requirement, but
not the residency requirement is waived under reciprocal
agreements. Pa.Stat., Tit. 62, § 432(6) (1968); Pa.Pub.
Assistance Manual § 3151.21 (1962). 1 Conn.Welfare Manual, c.
II, § 220 (1966), provides that "[r]esidence within the state
shall mean that the applicant is living in an established place of
abode and the plan is to remain." A person who meets this
requirement does not have to wait a year for assistance if he
entered the State with a
bona fide job offer or with
sufficient funds to support himself without welfare for three
months.
Id. at § 219.2.
HEW Handbook of Pub. Assistance Administration, pt. IV, §
3650 (1946), clearly distinguishes between residence and duration
of residence. It defines residence, as is conventional, in terms of
intent to remain in the jurisdiction, and it instructs interviewers
that residence and length of residence "are two distinct aspects. .
. ."
[
Footnote 17]
See, e.g., D.C. Handbook, chapters on Eligibility
Payments, Requirements, Resources, and Reinvestigation for an
indication of how thorough these investigations are.
See
also 1 Conn.Welfare Manual, c. I (1967); Pa.Pub. Assistance
Manual §§ 3170-3330 (1962).
The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare has proposed
the elimination of individual investigations, except for spot
checks, and the substitution of a declaration system, under which
the
"agency accepts the statements of the applicant for or recipient
of assistance, about facts that are within his knowledge and
competence . . . as a basis for decisions regarding his eligibility
and extent of entitlement."
HEW, Determination of Eligibility for Public Assistance
Programs, 33 Fed.Reg. 17189 (1968).
See also Hoshino,
Simplification of the Means Test and its Consequences, 41
Soc.Serv.Rev. 237, 241-249 (1967); Burns, What's Wrong With Public
Welfare?, 36 Soc.Serv.Rev. 111, 114-115 (1962). Presumably the
statement of an applicant that he intends to remain in the
jurisdiction would be accepted under a declaration system.
[
Footnote 18]
The unconcern of Connecticut and Pennsylvania with the one-year
requirement as a means of preventing fraud is made apparent by the
waiver of the requirement in reciprocal agreements with other
States.
See n 15,
supra.
[
Footnote 19]
D.C. Handbook, RV 2.1, I, II(b) (1967).
See also
Pa.Pub. Assistance Manual § 3153 (1962).
[
Footnote 20]
Under the traditional standard, equal protection is denied only
if the classification is "without any reasonable basis,"
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., 220 U. S.
61,
220 U. S. 78
(1911);
see also Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U.
S. 603 (1960).
[
Footnote 21]
We imply no view of the validity of waiting period or residence
requirements determining eligibility to vote, eligibility for
tuition-free education, to obtain a license to practice a
profession, to hunt or fish, and so forth. Such requirements may
promote compelling state interests on the one hand, or, on the
other, may not be penalties upon the exercise of the constitutional
right of interstate travel.
[
Footnote 22]
As of 1964, 11 jurisdictions imposed no residence requirement
whatever for AFDC assistance. They were Alaska, Georgia, Hawaii,
Kentucky, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont, Guam, Puerto
Rico, and the Virgin Islands.
See HEW, Characteristics of
State Public Assistance Plans under the Social Security Act (Pub.
Assistance Rep. No. 50, 1964 ed.).
[
Footnote 23]
Social Security Board, Social Security in America 235-236
(1837).
[
Footnote 24]
H.R.Rep. No. 615, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 24; S.Rep. No. 628,
74th Cong., 1st Sess., 35. Furthermore, the House Report cited
President Roosevelt's statement in his Social Security Message that
"People want decent homes to live in; they want to locate them
where they can engage in productive work. . . ." H.R.Rep.
supra at 2. Clearly this was a call for greater freedom of
movement.
In addition to the statement in the above Committee report,
see the remarks of Rep. Doughton (floor manager of the
Social Security bill in the House) and Rep. Vinson. 79 Cong.Rec.
5474, 5602-5603 (1935). These remarks were made in relation to the
waiting period requirements for old-age assistance, but they apply
equally to the AFDC program.
[
Footnote 25]
Section 402(b) required the repeal of 30 state statutes which
imposed too long a waiting period in the State or particular town
or county and 11 state statutes (as well as the Hawaii statute)
which required residence in a particular town or county.
See Social Security Board, Social Security in America
235-236 (1937).
It is apparent that Congress was not intimating any view of the
constitutionality of a one-year limitation. The constitutionality
of any scheme of federal social security legislation was a matter
of doubt at that time in light of the decision in
Schechter
Poultry Cop. v. United States, 295 U.
S. 495 (1935). Throughout the House debates, congressmen
discussed the constitutionality of the fundamental taxing
provisions of the Social Security Act,
see, e.g., 79
Cong.Rec. 5783 (1935) (remarks of Rep. Cooper), but not once did
they discuss the constitutionality of § 402(b).
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, concurring.
In joining the opinion of the Court, I add a word in response to
the dissent of my Brother HARLAN, who, I think, has quite
misapprehended what the Court's opinion says.
The Court today does
not "pick out particular human
activities, characterize them as
fundamental,' and give them
added protection. . . ." To the contrary, the Court simply
recognizes, as it must, an established constitutional right, and
gives to that right no less protection than the Constitution itself
demands.
"The constitutional right to travel from one State to another .
. . has been firmly established and repeatedly recognized."
United States v. Guest, 383 U. S. 745,
383 U. S. 757.
This constitutional right, which, of course, includes the right of
"entering and abiding in any State in the Union,"
Truax v.
Raich, 239 U. S. 33,
239 U. S. 39, is
not a mere conditional liberty subject to regulation and
control under conventional
Page 394 U. S. 643
due process or equal protection standards. [
Footnote 2/1]
"[T]he right to travel freely from State to State finds
constitutional protection that is quite independent of the
Fourteenth Amendment."
United States v. Guest, supra, at
383 U. S. 760,
n. 17. [
Footnote 2/2] As we made
clear in
Guest, it is a right broadly assertable against
private interference as well as governmental action. [
Footnote 2/3] Like the right of
association,
NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U.
S. 449, it is a virtually unconditional personal right,
[
Footnote 2/4] guaranteed by the
Constitution to us all.
It follows, as the Court says, that
"the purpose of deterring the in-migration of indigents cannot
serve as justification for the classification created by the
one-year waiting period, since that purpose is constitutionally
impermissible."
And it further follows, as the Court says, that any
other purposes offered in support of a
Page 394 U. S. 644
law that so clearly impinges upon the constitutional right of
interstate travel must be shown to reflect a compelling
governmental interest. This is necessarily true whether the
impinging law be a classification statute to be tested against the
Equal Protection Clause, or a state or federal regulatory law, to
be tested against the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth or Fifth
Amendment. As MR. JUSTICE HARLAN wrote for the Court more than a
decade ago,
"[T]o justify the deterrent effect . . . on the free exercise .
. . of their constitutionally protected right . . . a '. . .
subordinating interest of the State must be compelling.'"
NAACP v. Alabama, supra, at
357 U. S.
463.
The Court today, therefore, is not "contriving new
constitutional principles." It is deciding these cases under the
aegis of established constitutional law. [
Footnote 2/5]
[
Footnote 2/1]
By contrast, the "right" of international travel has been
considered to be no more than an aspect of the "liberty" protected
by the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Kent v.
Dulles, 357 U. S. 116,
357 U. S. 125;
Aptheker v. Secretary of State, 378 U.
S. 500,
378 U. S.
505-506. As such, this "right," the Court has held, can
be regulated within the bounds of due process.
Zemel v.
Rusk, 381 U. S. 1.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The constitutional right of interstate travel was fully
recognized long before adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See the statement of Chief Justice Taney in the
Passenger
Cases, 7 How. 283,
48 U. S.
492:
"For all the great purposes for which the Federal government was
formed, we are one people, with one common country. We are all
citizens of the United States, and, as members of the same
community, must have the right to pass and repass through every
part of it without interruption, as freely as in our own
States."
[
Footnote 2/3]
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN was alone in dissenting from this square
holding in
Guest. Supra at
394 U. S.
762.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The extent of emergency governmental power temporarily to
prevent or control interstate travel,
e.g., to a disaster
area, need not be considered in these cases.
[
Footnote 2/5]
It is to be remembered that the Court today
affirms the
judgments of three different federal district courts, and that, at
least four other federal courts have reached the same result.
See ante at
394 U. S. 622,
n. 1.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK joins,
dissenting.
In my opinion the issue before us can be simply stated: may
Congress, acting under one of its enumerated powers, impose minimal
nationwide residence requirements or authorize the States to do so?
Since I believe that Congress does have this power and has
constitutionally exercised it in these cases, I must dissent.
I
The Court insists that § 402(b) of the Social Security Act
"does not approve, much less prescribe, a one-year requirement."
Ante at
394 U. S. 639.
From its reading of the legislative history it concludes that
Congress did not intend to authorize the States to impose residence
requirements.
Page 394 U. S. 645
An examination of the relevant legislative materials compels, in
my view, the opposite conclusion,
i.e., Congress intended
to authorize state residence requirements of up to one year.
The Great Depression of the 1930's exposed the inadequacies of
state and local welfare programs and dramatized the need for
federal participation in welfare assistance.
See J. Brown,
Public Relief 1929-1939 (1940). Congress determined that the Social
Security Act, containing a system of unemployment and old-age
insurance as well as the categorical assistance programs now at
issue, was to be a major step designed to ameliorate the problems
of economic insecurity. The primary purpose of the categorical
assistance programs was to encourage the States to provide new and
greatly enhanced welfare programs.
See, e.g., S.Rep. No.
628, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 5-6, 18-19 (1935); H.R.Rep. No. 615,
74th Cong., 1st Sess., 4 (1935). Federal aid would mean an
immediate increase in the amount of benefits paid under state
programs. But federal aid was to be conditioned upon certain
requirements so that the States would remain the basic
administrative units of the welfare system and would be unable to
shift the welfare burden to local governmental units with
inadequate financial resources.
See Advisory Commission on
Intergovernmental Relations, Statutory and Administrative Controls
Associated with Federal Grants for Public Assistance 9-26 (1964).
Significantly, the categories of assistance programs created by the
Social Security Act corresponded to those already in existence in a
number of States.
See J. Brown, Public Relief 1929-1939,
at 26-32. Federal entry into the welfare area can therefore be best
described as a major experiment in "cooperative federalism,"
King v. Smith, 392 U. S. 309,
392 U. S. 317
(1968), combining state and federal participation to solve the
problems of the depression.
Page 394 U. S. 646
Each of the categorical assistance programs contained in the
Social Security Act allowed participating States to impose
residence requirements as a condition of eligibility for benefits.
Congress also imposed a one-year requirement for the categorical
assistance programs operative in the District of Columbia.
See H.R.Rep. No. 891, 74th Cong., 1st Sess. (1935)
(old-age pensions); H.R.Rep. No. 201, 74th Cong., 1st Sess. (1935)
(aid to the blind). The congressional decision to allow the States
to impose residence requirements and to enact such a requirement
for the District was the subject of considerable discussion. Both
those favoring lengthy residence requirements [
Footnote 3/1] and those opposing all requirements
[
Footnote 3/2] pleaded their case
during the congressional hearings on the Social Security Act. Faced
with the competing claims of States which feared that abolition of
residence requirements would result in an influx of persons seeking
higher welfare payments and of organizations which stressed the
unfairness of such requirements to transient workers forced by the
economic dislocation of the depression to seek work far from their
homes, Congress chose a middle course. It required those States
seeking federal grants for categorical assistance to reduce their
existing residence requirements to what Congress viewed as an
acceptable maximum. However, Congress accommodated state fears by
allowing the States to retain minimal residence requirements.
Congress quickly saw evidence that the system of welfare
assistance contained in the Social Security Act including residence
requirements was operating to encourage States to expand and
improve their categorical
Page 394 U. S. 647
assistance programs. For example, the Senate was told in
1939:
"The rapid expansion of the program for aid to dependent
children in the country as a whole since 1935 stands in marked
contrast to the relatively stable picture of mothers' aid in the
preceding 4-year period from 1932 through 1935. The extension of
the program during the last 3 years is due to Federal contributions
which encouraged the matching of State and local funds."
S.Rep. No. 734, 76th Cong., 1st Sess., 29 (1939). The trend
observed in 1939 continued as the States responded to the federal
stimulus for improvement in the scope and amount of categorical
assistance programs.
See Wedemeyer & Moore, The
American Welfare System, 54 Calif.L.Rev. 326, 347-356 (1966).
Residence requirements have remained a part of this combined
state-federal welfare program for 34 years. Congress has adhered to
its original decision that residence requirements were necessary in
the face of repeated attacks against these requirements. [
Footnote 3/3] The decision to retain
residence requirements, combined with Congress' continuing desire
to encourage wider state participation in categorical assistance
programs, indicates to me that Congress has authorized the
imposition by the States of residence requirements.
II
Congress has imposed a residence requirement in the District of
Columbia and authorized the States to impose similar requirements.
The issue before us must therefore be framed in terms of whether
Congress may
Page 394 U. S. 648
create minimal residence requirements, not whether the States,
acting alone, may do so.
See Prudential Insurance Co. v.
Benjamin, 328 U. S. 408
(1946);
In re Rahrer, 140 U. S. 545
(1891). Appellees insist that a congressionally mandated residence
requirement would violate their right to travel. The import of
their contention is that Congress, even under its "plenary"
[
Footnote 3/4] power to control
interstate commerce, is constitutionally prohibited from imposing
residence requirements. I reach a contrary conclusion, for I am
convinced that the extent of the burden on interstate travel, when
compared with the justification for its imposition, requires the
Court to uphold this exertion of federal power.
Congress, pursuant to its commerce power, has enacted a variety
of restrictions upon interstate travel. It has taxed air and rail
fares and the gasoline needed to power cars and trucks which move
interstate. 26 U.S.C. § 4261 (air fares); 26 U.S.C. §
3469 (1952 ed.), repealed in part by Pub.L. 87-508, § 5(b), 76
Stat. 115 (rail fares); 26 U.S.C. § 4081 (gasoline). Many of
the federal safety regulations of common carriers which cross state
lines burden the right to travel. 45 U.S.C. §§ 1-43
(railroad safety appliances); 49 U.S.C. § 1421 (air safety
regulations). And Congress has prohibited by criminal statute
interstate travel for certain purposes.
E.g., 18 U.S.C.
§ 1952. Although these restrictions operate as a limitation
upon free interstate movement of persons, their constitutionality
appears well settled.
See Texas Pacific R. Co. v. Rigsby,
241 U. S. 33,
241 U. S. 41
(1916);
Southern R. Co. v. United States, 222 U. S.
20 (1911);
United States v. Zizzo, 338 F.2d .77
(C.A. 7th Cir., 1964),
cert. denied, 381 U.S. 915 (1965).
As the Court observed in
Zemel v. Rusk, 381 U. S.
1,
381 U. S. 14
(1965),
"the fact that a liberty cannot be inhibited without due
Page 394 U. S. 649
process of law does not mean that it can under no circumstances
be inhibited."
The Court's right to travel cases lend little support to the
view that congressional action is invalid merely because it burdens
the right to travel. Most of our cases fall into two categories:
those in which state-impose restrictions were involved,
see,
e.g., Edwards v. California, 314 U. S. 160
(1941);
Crandall v.
Nevada, 6 Wall. 35 (1868), and those concerning
congressional decisions to remove impediments to interstate
movement,
see, e.g., United States v. Guest, 383 U.
S. 745 (1966). Since the focus of our inquiry must be
whether Congress would exceed permissible bounds by imposing
residence requirements, neither group of cases offers controlling
principles.
In only three cases have we been confronted with an assertion
that Congress has impermissibly burdened the right to travel.
Kent v. Dulles, 357 U. S. 116
(1958), did invalidate a burden on the right to travel; however,
the restriction was voided on the nonconstitutional basis that
Congress did not intend to give the Secretary of State power to
create the restriction at issue.
Zemel v. Rusk, supra, on
the other hand, sustained a flat prohibition of travel to certain
designated areas and rejected an attack that Congress could not
constitutionally impose this restriction.
Aptheker v. Secretary
of State, 378 U. S. 500
(1964), is the only case in which this Court invalidated on a
constitutional basis a congressionally imposed restriction.
Aptheker also involved a flat prohibition, but in
combination with a claim that the congressional restriction
compelled a potential traveler to choose between his right to
travel and his First Amendment right of freedom of association. It
was this Hobson's choice, we later explained, which forms the
rationale of
Aptheker. See Zemel v. Rusk, supra,
at
381 U. S. 16.
Aptheker thus contains two characteristics distinguishing
it from the appeals now before the Court: a combined
Page 394 U. S. 650
infringement of two constitutionally protected rights and a flat
prohibition upon travel. Residence requirements do not create a
flat prohibition, for potential welfare recipients may move from
State to State and establish residence wherever they please. Nor is
any claim made by appellees that residence requirements compel them
to choose between the right to travel and another constitutional
right.
Zemel v. Rusk, the most recent of the three cases,
provides a framework for analysis. The core inquiry is "the extent
of the governmental restriction imposed" and the "extent of the
necessity for the restriction."
Id. at
381 U. S. 14. As
already noted, travel itself is not prohibited. Any burden inheres
solely in the fact that a potential welfare recipient might take
into consideration the loss of welfare benefits for a limited
period of time if he changes his residence. Not only is this burden
of uncertain degree, [
Footnote 3/5]
but appellees themselves assert there is evidence that few welfare
recipients have, in fact, been deterred by residence requirements.
See Harvith, The Constitutionality of Residence Tests for
General and Categorical Assistance Programs, 54 Calif.L.Rev. 567,
615-618 (1966); Note, Residence Requirements in State Public
Welfare Statutes, 51 Iowa L.Rev. 1080, 1083-1085 (1966).
The insubstantiality of the restriction imposed by residence
requirements must then be evaluated in light of the possible
congressional reasons for such requirements.
See, e.g., McGowan
v. Maryland, 366 U. S. 420,
366 U. S.
425-427 (1961). One fact which does emerge with clarity
from the legislative history is Congress' belief that a program of
cooperative federalism combining federal aid with
Page 394 U. S. 651
enhanced state participation would result in an increase in the
scope of welfare programs and level of benefits. Given the
apprehensions of many States that an increase in benefits without
minimal residence requirements would result in an inability to
provide an adequate welfare system, Congress deliberately adopted
the intermediate course of a cooperative program. Such a program,
Congress believed, would encourage the States to assume greater
welfare responsibilities and would give the States the necessary
financial support for such an undertaking. Our cases require only
that Congress have a rational basis for finding that a chosen
regulatory scheme is necessary to the furtherance of interstate
commerce.
See, e.g., Katzenbach v. McClung, 379 U.
S. 294 (1964);
Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.
S. 111 (1942). Certainly, a congressional finding that
residence requirements allowed each State to concentrate its
resources upon new and increased programs of rehabilitation
ultimately resulting in an enhanced flow of commerce as the
economic condition of welfare recipients progressively improved is
rational, and would justify imposition of residence requirements
under the Commerce Clause. And Congress could have also determined
that residence requirements fostered personal mobility. An
individual no longer dependent upon welfare would be presented with
an unfettered range of choices, so that a decision to migrate could
be made without regard to considerations of possible economic
dislocation.
Appellees suggest, however, that Congress was not motivated by
rational considerations. Residence requirements are imposed, they
insist, for the illegitimate purpose of keeping poor people from
migrating. Not only does the legislative history point to an
opposite conclusion, but it also must be noted that "[i]nto the
motives which induced members of Congress to [act] . . . this Court
may not enquire."
Arizona v. California, 283 U.
S. 423,
283 U. S. 455
(1931). We do not attribute
Page 394 U. S. 652
an impermissible purpose to Congress if the result would be to
strike down an otherwise valid statute.
United States v.
O'Brien, 391 U. S. 367,
391 U. S. 33
(1968);
McCray v. United States, 195 U. S.
27,
195 U. S. 56
(1904). Since the congressional decision is rational and the
restriction on travel insubstantial, I conclude that residence
requirements can be imposed by Congress as an exercise of its power
to control interstate commerce consistent with the constitutionally
guaranteed right to travel.
Without an attempt to determine whether any of Congress'
enumerated powers would sustain residence requirements, the Court
holds that congressionally imposed requirements violate the Due
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. It thus suggests that, even
if residence requirements would be a permissible exercise of the
commerce power, they are "so unjustifiable as to be violative of
due process."
Ante at
394 U. S. 642.
While the reasons for this conclusion are not fully explained, the
Court apparently believes that, in the words of
Bolling v.
Sharpe, 347 U. S. 497,
347 U. S. 500
(1954), residence requirements constitute "an arbitrary
deprivation" of liberty.
If this is the import of the Court's opinion, then it seems to
have departed from our precedents. We have long held that there is
no requirement of uniformity when Congress acts pursuant to its
commerce power.
Sunshine Anthracite Coal Co. v. Adkins,
310 U. S. 381,
310 U. S. 401
(1940);
Currin v. Wallace, 306 U. S.
1,
306 U. S. 13-14
(1939). [
Footnote 3/6] I do not
suggest that Congress is completely free when legislating under one
of its enumerated powers to enact wholly arbitrary classifications,
for
Bolling v. Sharpe, supra, and
Schneider v.
Rusk, 377 U. S. 163
(1964),
Page 394 U. S. 653
counsel otherwise. Neither of these cases, however, is authority
for invalidation of congressionally imposed residence requirements.
The classification in
Bolling required racial segregation
in the public schools of the District of Columbia, and was thus
based upon criteria which we subject to the most rigid scrutiny.
Loving v. Virginia, 388 U. S. 1, 11
(1967).
Schneider involved an attempt to distinguish
between native-born and naturalized citizens solely for
administrative convenience. By authorizing residence requirements,
Congress acted not to facilitate an administrative function, but to
further its conviction that an impediment to the commercial life of
this Nation would be removed by a program of cooperative federalism
combining federal contributions with enhanced state benefits.
Congress, not the courts, is charged with determining the proper
prescription for a national illness. I cannot say that Congress is
powerless to decide that residence requirements would promote this
permissible goal, and therefore must conclude that such
requirements cannot be termed arbitrary.
The Court, after interpreting the legislative history in such a
manner that the constitutionality of § 402(b) is not at issue,
gratuitously adds that § 402(b) is unconstitutional. This
method of approaching constitutional questions is sharply in
contrast with the Court's approach in
Street v. New York,
ante at
394 U. S.
585-590. While, in
Street, the Court strains to
avoid the crucial constitutional question, here it summarily treats
the constitutionality of a major provision of the Social Security
Act when, given the Court's interpretation of the legislative
materials, that provision is not at issue. Assuming that the
constitutionality of § 402(b) is properly treated by the
Court, the cryptic footnote in
Katzenbach v. Morgan,
384 U. S. 641,
384 U. S.
651-652, n. 10 (1966), does not support its conclusion.
Footnote 10 indicates that Congress is without power to undercut
the equal protection guarantee of racial equality in the guise of
implementing
Page 394 U. S. 654
the Fourteenth Amendment. I do not mean to suggest otherwise.
However, I do not understand this footnote to operate as a
limitation upon Congress' power to further the flow of interstate
commerce by reasonable residence requirements. Although the Court
dismisses § 402(b) with the remark that Congress cannot
authorize the States to violate equal protection, I believe that
the dispositive issue is whether under its commerce power Congress
can impose residence requirements.
Nor can I understand the Court's implication,
ante at
394 U. S. 638,
n. 21, that other state residence requirements such as those
employed in determining eligibility to vote do not present
constitutional questions. Despite the fact that, in
Drueding v.
Devlin, 380 U. S. 125
(1965), we affirmed an appeal from a three-judge District Court
after the District Court had rejected a constitutional challenge to
Maryland's one-year residence requirement for presidential
elections, the rationale employed by the Court in these appeals
would seem to require the opposite conclusion. If a State would
violate equal protection by denying welfare benefits to those who
have recently moved interstate, then it would appear to follow that
equal protection would also be denied by depriving those who have
recently moved interstate of the fundamental right to vote. There
is nothing in the opinion of the Court to explain this dichotomy.
In any event, since the constitutionality of a state residence
requirement as applied to a presidential election is raised in a
case now pending,
Hall v. Beals, No. 950, 1968 Term, I
would await that case for a resolution of the validity of state
voting residence requirements.
III
The era is long past when this Court, under the rubric of due
process, has reviewed the wisdom of a congressional decision that
interstate commerce will be fostered by the enactment of certain
regulations.
Compare
Page 394 U. S. 655
Adkins v. Children's Hospital, 261 U.
S. 525 (1923),
with United States v. Darby,
312 U. S. 100
(1941). Speaking for the Court in
Helvering v. Davis,
301 U. S. 619,
301 U. S. 644
(1937), Mr. Justice Cardozo said of another section of the Social
Security Act:
"Whether wisdom or unwisdom resides in the scheme of benefits
set forth . . . is not for us to say. The answer to such inquiries
must come from Congress, not the courts. Our concern here, as
often, is with power, not with wisdom."
I am convinced that Congress does have power to enact residence
requirements of reasonable duration or to authorize the States to
do so and that it has exercised this power.
The Court's decision reveals only the top of the iceberg.
Lurking beneath are the multitude of situations in which States
have imposed residence requirements including eligibility to vote
to engage in certain professions or occupations or to attend a
state supported university. Although the Court takes pains to avoid
acknowledging the ramifications of its decision, its implications
cannot be ignored. I dissent.
[
Footnote 3/1]
See, e.g., Hearings on H.R. 4120 before the House
Committee on Ways and Means, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 831-832,
861-871 (1935).
[
Footnote 3/2]
See, e.g., Hearings on S. 1130 before the Senate
Committee on Finance, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 522-540, 643, 656
(1935).
[
Footnote 3/3]
See, e.g., Hearings on H.R. 10032 before the House
Committee on Ways and Means, 87th Cong., 2d Sess., 355, 385-405,
437 (1962); Hearings on H.R. 6000 before the Senate Committee on
Finance, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., 142-143 (1950).
[
Footnote 3/4]
See, e.g., Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. v. United
States, 379 U. S. 241,
379 U. S.
256-260 (1964)
[
Footnote 3/5]
The burden is uncertain because indigents who are disqualified
from categorical assistance by residence requirements are not left
wholly without assistance. All of the appellees in these cases
found alternative sources of assistance after their
disqualification.
[
Footnote 3/6]
Some of the cases go so far as to intimate that, at least in the
area of taxation, Congress is not inhibited by any problems of
classification.
See Helvering v. Lerner Stores Corp.,
314 U. S. 463,
314 U. S. 468
(1941);
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis, 301 U.
S. 548,
301 U. S. 584
(1937);
LaBelle Iron Works v. United States, 256 U.
S. 377,
256 U. S. 392
(1921).
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
The Court today holds unconstitutional Connecticut,
Pennsylvania, and District of Columbia statutes which restrict
certain kinds of welfare benefits to persons who have lived within
the jurisdiction for at least one year immediately preceding their
applications. The Court has accomplished this result by an
expansion of the comparatively new constitutional doctrine that
some state statutes will be deemed to deny equal protection of the
laws unless justified by a "compelling" governmental interest, and
by holding that the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause imposes a
similar limitation on federal enactments. Having decided that the
"compelling interest" principle
Page 394 U. S. 656
is applicable, the Court then finds that the governmental
interests here asserted are either wholly impermissible or are not
"compelling." For reasons which follow, I disagree both with the
Court's result and with its reasoning.
I
These three cases present two separate but related questions for
decision. The first, arising from the District of Columbia appeal,
is whether Congress may condition the right to receive Aid to
Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) and Aid to the Permanently
and Totally Disabled in the District of Columbia upon the
recipient's having resided in the District for the preceding year.
[
Footnote 4/1] The second,
presented in the Pennsylvania and Connecticut appeals, is whether a
State may, with the approval of Congress, impose the same
conditions with
Page 394 U. S. 657
respect to eligibility for AFDC assistance. [
Footnote 4/2] In each instance, the welfare
residence requirements are alleged to be unconstitutional on two
grounds: first, because they impose an undue burden upon the
constitutional right of welfare applicants to travel interstate;
second, because they deny to persons who have recently moved
interstate and would otherwise be eligible for welfare assistance
the equal protection of the laws assured by the Fourteenth
Amendment (in the state cases) or the analogous protection afforded
by the Fifth Amendment (in the District of Columbia case). Since
the Court basically relies upon the equal protection ground, I
shall discuss it first.
Page 394 U. S. 658
II
In upholding the equal protection argument, [
Footnote 4/3] the Court has applied an equal
protection doctrine of relatively recent vintage: the rule that
statutory classifications which either are based upon certain
"suspect" criteria or affect "fundamental rights" will be held to
deny equal protection unless justified by a "compelling"
governmental interest.
See ante at
394 U. S. 627,
394 U. S. 634,
394 U. S.
638.
The "compelling interest" doctrine, which today is articulated
more explicitly than ever before, constitutes an increasingly
significant exception to the long-established rule that a statute
does not deny equal protection if it is rationally related to a
legitimate governmental objective. [
Footnote 4/4] The "compelling interest" doctrine has two
branches. The branch which requires that classifications based upon
"suspect" criteria be supported by a compelling interest apparently
had its genesis in cases involving racial classifications, which
have, at least since
Korematsu v. United States,
323 U. S. 214,
323 U. S. 216
(1944), been regarded as inherently "suspect." [
Footnote 4/5] The criterion of "wealth" apparently
was added to the list of "suspects" as an alternative justification
for the rationale in
Harper
Page 394 U. S. 659
v. Virginia Bd. of Elections, 383 U.
S. 663,
383 U. S. 668
(1966), in which Virginia's poll tax was struck down. The criterion
of political allegiance may have been added in
Williams v.
Rhodes, 393 U. S. 23
(1968). [
Footnote 4/6] Today the
list apparently has been further enlarged to include
classifications based upon recent interstate movement, and perhaps
those based upon the exercise of any constitutional right, for the
Court states,
ante at
394 U. S.
634:
"The waiting period provision denies welfare benefits to
otherwise eligible applicants solely because they have recently
moved into the jurisdiction. But, in moving . . . , appellees were
exercising a constitutional right, and any classification which
serves to penalize the exercise of that right, unless shown to be
necessary to promote a compelling governmental interest, is
unconstitutional. [
Footnote
4/7]"
I think that this branch of the "compelling interest" doctrine
is sound when applied to racial classifications, for, historically,
the Equal Protection Clause was largely a product of the desire to
eradicate legal distinctions founded upon race. However, I believe
that the more recent extensions have been unwise. For the reasons
stated in my dissenting opinion in
Harper v. Virginia Bd. of
Elections, supra, at
383 U. S. 680,
383 U. S.
683-686, I do not consider wealth a "suspect" statutory
criterion. And when, as in
Williams v. Rhodes, supra, and
the present case, a classification is based upon the exercise of
rights guaranteed against state infringement by the Federal
Constitution, then there is no need for any resort to the Equal
Protection Clause; in such instances, this Court may properly and
straightforwardly invalidate any undue burden upon those rights
under the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause.
See,
e.g., my separate opinion in
Williams v. Rhodes,
supra, at
393 U. S.
41.
Page 394 U. S. 660
The second branch of the "compelling interest" principle is even
more troublesome. For it has been held that a statutory
classification is subject to the "compelling interest" test if the
result of the classification may be to affect a "fundamental
right," regardless of the basis of the classification. This rule
was foreshadowed in
Skinner v. Oklahoma, 316 U.
S. 535,
316 U. S. 541
(1942), in which an Oklahoma statute providing for compulsory
sterilization of "habitual criminals" was held subject to "strict
scrutiny" mainly because it affected "one of the basic civil
rights." After a long hiatus, the principle reemerged in
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533,
377 U. S.
561-562 (1964), in which state apportionment statutes
were subjected to an unusually stringent test because "any alleged
infringement of the right of citizens to vote must be carefully and
meticulously scrutinized."
Id. at
377 U. S. 562.
The rule appeared again in
Carrington v. Rash,
380 U. S. 89,
380 U. S. 96
(1965), in which, as I now see that case, [
Footnote 4/8] the Court applied an abnormally severe
equal protection standard to a Texas statute denying certain
servicemen the right to vote, without indicating that the statutory
distinction between servicemen and civilians was generally
"suspect." This branch of the doctrine was also an alternate ground
in
Harper v. Virginia Bd. of Elections, supra, see 383
U.S. at
383 U. S. 670,
and apparently was a basis of the holding in
Williams v.
Rhodes, supra. [
Footnote 4/9]
It
Page 394 U. S. 661
has reappeared today in the Court's cryptic suggestion,
ante at
394 U. S. 627,
that the "compelling interest" test is applicable merely because
the result of the classification may be to deny the appellees
"food, shelter, and other necessities of life," as well as in the
Court's statement,
ante at
394 U. S. 638,
that,
"[s]ince the classification here touches on the fundamental
right of interstate movement, its constitutionality must be judged
by the stricter standard of whether it promotes a
compelling state interest. [
Footnote 4/10]"
I think this branch of the "compelling interest" doctrine
particularly unfortunate and unnecessary. It is unfortunate because
it creates an exception which threatens to swallow the standard
equal protection rule. Virtually every state statute affects
important rights. This Court has repeatedly held, for example, that
the traditional equal protection standard is applicable to
statutory classifications affecting such fundamental matters as the
right to pursue a particular occupation, [
Footnote 4/11] the right to receive greater or smaller
wages [
Footnote 4/12] or to work
more or less hours, [
Footnote
4/13] and the right to inherit property. [
Footnote 4/14] Rights such as these are, in
principle, indistinguishable from those involved here, and to
extend the "compelling interest" rule to all cases in which such
rights are affected would go far toward making this Court a
"super-legislature." This branch of the doctrine is also
unnecessary. When the right affected is one assured by
Page 394 U. S. 662
the Federal Constitution, any infringement can be dealt with
under the Due Process Clause. But when a statute affects only
matters not mentioned in the Federal Constitution and is not
arbitrary or irrational, I must reiterate that I know of nothing
which entitles this Court to pick out particular human activities,
characterize them as "fundamental," and give them added protection
under an unusually stringent equal protection test.
I shall consider in the next section whether welfare residence
requirements deny due process by unduly burdening the right of
interstate travel. If the issue is regarded purely as one of equal
protection, then, for the reasons just set forth, this nonracial
classification should be judged by ordinary equal protection
standards. The applicable criteria are familiar and well
established. A legislative measure will be found to deny equal
protection only if "it is without any reasonable basis and
therefore is purely arbitrary."
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic
Gas Co., 220 U. S. 61,
220 U. S. 78
(1911). It is not enough that the measure results incidentally "in
some inequality," or that it is not drawn "with mathematical
nicety,"
ibid.; the statutory classification must instead
cause "different treatments . . . so disparate, relative to the
difference in classification, as to be wholly arbitrary."
Walters v. City of St. Louis, 347 U.
S. 231,
347 U. S. 237
(1954). Similarly, this Court has stated that, where, as here, the
issue concerns the authority of Congress to withhold
"a noncontractual benefit under a social welfare program . . . ,
the Due Process Clause [of the Fifth Amendment] can be thought to
interpose a bar only if the statute manifests a patently arbitrary
classification, utterly lacking in rational justification."
Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U. S. 603,
363 U. S. 611
(1960).
For reasons hereafter set forth,
see infra at
394 U. S.
672-677, a legislature might rationally find that the
imposition of a welfare residence requirement would aid in the
accomplishment of at least four valid governmental objectives.
Page 394 U. S. 663
It might also find that residence requirements have advantages
not shared by other methods of achieving the same goals. In light
of this undeniable elation of residence requirements to valid
legislative aims, it cannot be said that the requirements are
"arbitrary" or "lacking in rational justification." Hence, I can
find no objection to these residence requirements under the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment or under the
analogous standard embodied in the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment.
III
The next issue, which I think requires fuller analysis than that
deemed necessary by the Court under its equal protection rationale,
is whether a one-year welfare residence requirement amounts to an
undue burden upon the right of interstate travel. Four
considerations are relevant:
First, what is the
constitutional source and nature of the right to travel which is
relied upon?
Second, what is the extent of the
interference with that right?
Third, what governmental
interests are served by welfare residence requirements?
Fourth, how should the balance of the competing
considerations be struck?
The initial problem is to identify the source of the right to
travel asserted by the appellees. Congress enacted the welfare
residence requirement in the District of Columbia, so the right to
travel which is invoked in that case must be enforceable against
congressional action. The residence requirements
challenged in the Pennsylvania and Connecticut appeals were
authorized by Congress in 42 U.S.C. § 602(b), so the right to
travel relied upon in those cases must be enforceable against the
States even though they have acted with congressional approval.
In my view, it is playing ducks and drakes with the statute to
argue, as the Court does,
ante at
394 U. S.
639-641, that Congress did not mean to
approve
these state residence
Page 394 U. S. 664
requirements. In 42 U.S.C. § 602(b), quoted more fully
ante at
394 U. S.
638-639, Congress directed that:
"[t]he Secretary shall approve any [state assistance] plan which
fulfills the conditions specified in subsection (a) of this
section, except that he shall not approve any plan which imposes as
a condition of eligibility for [AFDC aid] a residence requirement
[equal to or greater than one year]."
I think that, by any fair reading, this section must be regarded
as conferring congressional approval upon any plan containing a
residence requirement of up to one year.
If any reinforcement is needed for taking this statutory
language at face value, the overall scheme of the AFDC program and
the context in which it was enacted suggest strong reasons why
Congress would have wished to approve limited state residence
requirements. Congress determined to enlist state assistance in
financing the AFDC program, and to administer the program primarily
through the States. A previous Congress had already enacted a
one-year residence requirement with respect to aid for dependent
children in the District of Columbia. [
Footnote 4/15] In these circumstances, I think it only
sensible to conclude that, in allowing the States to impose limited
residence conditions despite their possible impact on persons who
wished to move interstate, [
Footnote
4/16] Congress was motivated by a desire to encourage state
participation in
Page 394 U. S. 665
the AFDC program, [
Footnote
4/17] as well as by a feeling that the States should at least
be permitted to impose residence requirements as strict as that
already authorized for the District of Columbia. Congress therefore
had a genuine federal purpose in allowing the States to use
residence tests. And I fully agree with THE CHIEF JUSTICE that this
purpose would render § 602(b) a permissible exercise of
Congress' power under the Commerce Clause, unless Congress were
prohibited from acting by another provision of the
Constitution.
Nor do I find it credible that Congress intended to refrain from
expressing approval of state residence requirements because of
doubts about their constitutionality or their compatibility with
the Act's beneficent purposes. With respect to constitutionality, a
similar residence requirement was already in effect for the
District of Columbia, and the burdens upon travel which might be
caused by such requirements must, even in 1935, have been regarded
as within the competence of Congress under its commerce power. If
Congress had thought residence requirements entirely incompatible
with the aims of the Act, it could simply have provided that state
assistance plans containing such requirements should not be
approved at all, rather than having limited approval to plans
containing residence requirements of less than one year. Moreover,
when Congress, in 1944, revised the AFDC program in the District of
Columbia to conform with the standards of the Act, it chose to
condition eligibility upon one year's residence, [
Footnote 4/18] thus strongly indicating that
Page 394 U. S. 666
it doubted neither the constitutionality of such a provision nor
its consistency with the Act's purposes. [
Footnote 4/19] Opinions of this Court and of individual
Justices have suggested four provisions of the Constitution as
possible sources of a right to travel enforceable against the
federal or state governments: the Commerce Clause; [
Footnote 4/20] the Privileges and
Immunities Clause of Art. IV, § 2; [
Footnote 4/21] the Privileges and Immunities Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment; [
Footnote
4/22] and the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
[
Footnote 4/23] The Commerce
Clause can be of no assistance to these appellees, since that
clause grants plenary power to Congress, [
Footnote 4/24] and Congress either enacted or approved
all of the residence requirements here challenged. The Privileges
and Immunities Clause of Art. IV, § 2 [
Footnote 4/25] is irrelevant, for it appears settled
that this clause neither limits federal power nor prevents a State
from distinguishing among its own citizens, but simply "prevents a
State from discriminating against citizens of other States in favor
of its own."
Hague v. CIO, 307 U.
S. 496,
307 U. S. 511
(1939) (opinion of Roberts, J.);
See
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 77
(1873). Since Congress enacted the District of Columbia residence
statute, and since the Pennsylvania and Connecticut appellees were
residents
Page 394 U. S. 667
and therefore citizens of those States when they sought welfare,
the clause can have no application in any of these cases.
The Privileges and Immunities Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
provides that: "No State shall make or enforce any law which shall
abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United
States." It is evident that this clause cannot be applicable in the
District of Columbia appeal, since it is limited in terms to
instances of state action. In the Pennsylvania and Connecticut
cases, the respective States did impose and enforce the residence
requirements. However, Congress approved these requirements in 42
U.S.C. § 602(b). The fact of congressional approval, together
with this Court's past statements about the nature of the
Fourteenth Amendment Privileges and Immunities Clause, leads me to
believe that the clause affords no additional help to these
appellees, and that the decisive issue is whether Congress itself
may impose such requirements. The view of the Privileges and
Immunities Clause which has most often been adopted by the Court
and by individual Justices is that it extends only to those
"privileges and immunities" which "arise or grow out of the
relationship of United States citizens to the national government."
Hague v. CIO, 307 U. S. 496,
307 U. S. 520
(1939) (opinion of Stone, J.). [
Footnote 4/26] On the authority of
Crandall v.
Nevada, 6 Wall. 35 (1868), those privileges and
immunities have repeatedly been said to include the right to travel
from State to State, [
Footnote
4/27] presumably for the reason assigned in
Crandall:
that state restrictions on travel
Page 394 U. S. 668
might interfere with intercourse between the Federal Government
and its citizens. [
Footnote 4/28]
This kind of objection to state welfare residence requirements
would seem necessarily to vanish in the face of congressional
authorization, for, except in those instances when its authority is
limited by a constitutional provision binding upon it (as the
Fourteenth Amendment is not), Congress has full power to define the
relationship between citizens and the Federal Government.
Some Justices, notably the dissenters in the
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 83,
83 U. S. 111,
83 U. S. 124
(1873) (Field, Bradley, and Swayne, JJ., dissenting), and the
concurring Justices in
Edwards v. California, 314 U.
S. 160,
314 U. S. 177,
314 U. S. 181
(1941) (DOUGLAS and Jackson, JJ., concurring), have gone further
and intimated that the Fourteenth Amendment right to travel
interstate is a concomitant of federal citizenship which stems from
sources even more basic than the need to protect citizens in their
relations with the Federal Government. The
Slaughter-House
dissenters suggested that the privileges and immunities of national
citizenship, including freedom to travel, were those natural rights
"which of right belong to the citizens of all free governments," 16
Wall. at
83 U. S. 98
(Field, J.). However, since such rights are "the rights of citizens
of any free government,"
id. at
83 U. S. 114
(Bradley, J.), it would appear that they must be immune from
national, as well as state, abridgment. To the extent that they may
be validly limited by Congress, there would seem to be no reason
why they may not be similarly abridged by States acting with
congressional approval.
The concurring Justices in
Edwards laid emphasis not
upon natural rights, but upon a generalized concern for the
functioning of the federal system, stressing that to
Page 394 U. S. 669
allow a State to curtail "the rights of national citizenship
would be to contravene every conception of national unity," 314
U.S. at
314 U. S. 181
(DOUGLAS, J.), and that, "[i]f national citizenship means less than
[the right to move interstate], it means nothing."
Id. at
314 U. S. 183
(Jackson, J.). However, even under this rationale, the clause would
appear to oppose no obstacle to congressional delineation of the
rights of national citizenship, insofar as Congress may do so
without infringing other provisions of the Constitution. Mr.
Justice Jackson explicitly recognized in
Edwards that:
"The right of the citizen to migrate from state to state . . . [is]
subject to all constitutional limitations imposed by the federal
government,"
id. at
314 U. S. 184.
And nothing in the nature of federalism would seem to prevent
Congress from authorizing the States to do what Congress might
validly do itself. Indeed, this Court has held, for example, that
Congress may empower the States to undertake regulations of
commerce which would otherwise be prohibited by the negative
implications of the Commerce Clause.
See Prudential Ins. Co. v.
Benjamin, 328 U. S. 408
(1946). Hence, as has already been suggested, the decisive question
is whether Congress may legitimately enact welfare residence
requirements, and the Fourteenth Amendment Privileges and
Immunities Clause adds no extra force to the appellees' attack on
the requirements.
The last possible source of a right to travel is one which does
operate against the Federal Government: the Due Process Clause of
the Fifth Amendment. [
Footnote
4/29] It is now settled
Page 394 U. S. 670
that freedom to travel is an element of the "liberty" secured by
that clause. In
Kent v. Dulles, 357 U.
S. 116,
357 U. S.
125-126 (1958), the Court said:
"The right to travel is a part of the 'liberty' of which the
citizen cannot be deprived without due process of law under the
Fifth Amendment. . . . Freedom of movement across frontiers . . .
and inside frontiers as well, was a part of our heritage. . .
."
The Court echoed these remarks in
Aptheker v. Secretary of
State, 378 U. S. 500,
378 U. S.
505-506 (1964), and added:
"Since this case involves a personal liberty protected by the
Bill of Rights, we believe that the proper approach to legislation
curtailing that liberty must be that adopted by this Court in
NAACP v. Button, 371 U. S. 415, and
Thornhill
v. Alabama, 310 U. S. 88. . . ."
"[S]ince freedom of travel is a constitutional liberty closely
related to rights of free speech and association, we believe that
appellants . . . should not be required to assume the burden of
demonstrating that Congress could not have written a statute
constitutionally prohibiting their travel."
Id. at
378 U. S.
516-517. However, in
Zemel v. Rusk,
381 U. S. 1 (1965),
the First Amendment cast of the
Aptheker opinion was
explained as having stemmed from the fact that Aptheker was
forbidden to travel because of "expression or association on his
part,"
id. at
381 U. S. 16. The
Court noted that Zemel was "not being forced to choose between
membership in an organization and freedom to travel,"
ibid., and held that the mere circumstance that Zemel's
proposed journey to Cuba might be used to collect information of
political and social significance was not enough to bring the case
within the First Amendment category.
Finally, in
United States v. Guest, 383 U.
S. 745 (1966), the Court again had occasion to consider
the right of
Page 394 U. S. 671
interstate travel. Without specifying the source of that right,
the Court said:
"The constitutional right to travel from one State to another .
. . occupies a position fundamental to the concept of our Federal
Union. It is a right that has been firmly established and
repeatedly recognized. . . . [The] right finds no explicit mention
in the Constitution. The reason, it has been suggested, is that a
right so elementary was conceived from the beginning to be a
necessary concomitant of the stronger Union the Constitution
created. In any event, freedom to travel throughout the United
States has long been recognized as a basic right under the
Constitution."
Id. at
383 U. S.
757-758. (Footnotes omitted.) I therefore conclude that
the right to travel interstate is a "fundamental" right which, for
present purposes, should be regarded as having its source in the
Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
The next questions are: (1) To what extent does a one-year
residence condition upon welfare eligibility interfere with this
right to travel?, and (2) What are the governmental interests
supporting such a condition? The consequence of the residence
requirements is that persons who contemplate interstate changes of
residence, and who believe that they otherwise would qualify for
welfare payments, must take into account the fact that such
assistance will not be available for a year after arrival. The
number or proportion of persons who are actually deterred from
changing residence by the existence of these provisions is unknown.
If one accepts evidence put forward by the appellees, [
Footnote 4/30] to the effect
Page 394 U. S. 672
that there would be only a minuscule increase in the number of
welfare applicants were existing residence requirements to be done
away with, it follows that the requirements do not deter an
appreciable number of persons from moving interstate.
Against this indirect impact on the right to travel must be set
the interests of the States, and of Congress with respect to the
District of Columbia, in imposing residence conditions. There
appear to be four such interests. First, it is evident that a
primary concern of Congress and the Pennsylvania and Connecticut
Legislatures was to deny welfare benefits to persons who moved into
the jurisdiction primarily in order to collect those benefits.
[
Footnote 4/31] This seems to me
an entirely legitimate objective. A legislature is certainly not
obliged to furnish welfare assistance to every inhabitant of the
jurisdiction, and it is entirely rational to deny benefits to those
who enter primarily in order to receive them, since this will make
more funds available for those whom the legislature deems more
worthy of subsidy. [
Footnote
4/32]
Page 394 U. S. 673
A second possible purpose of residence requirements is the
prevention of fraud. A residence requirement provides an objective
and workable means of determining that an applicant intends to
remain indefinitely within the jurisdiction. It therefore may aid
in eliminating fraudulent collection of benefits by nonresidents
and persons already receiving assistance in other States. There can
be no doubt that prevention of fraud is a valid legislative goal.
Third, the requirement of a fixed period of residence may help in
predicting the budgetary amount which will be needed for public
assistance in the future. While none of the appellant jurisdictions
appears to keep data sufficient to permit the making of detailed
budgetary predictions in consequence of the requirement, [
Footnote 4/33] it is probable that, in
the event of a very large increase or decrease in the number of
indigent newcomers, the waiting period would give the legislature
time to make needed adjustments in the welfare laws. Obviously,
this is a proper objective. Fourth, the residence requirements
conceivably may have been predicated upon a legislative desire to
restrict welfare payments financed in part by state tax funds to
persons who have
Page 394 U. S. 674
recently made some contribution to the State's economy, through
having been employed, having paid taxes, or having spent money in
the State. This too would appear to be a legitimate purpose.
[
Footnote 4/34]
The next question is the decisive one: whether the governmental
interests served by residence requirements outweigh the burden
imposed upon the right to travel. In my view, a number of
considerations militate in favor of constitutionality. First, as
just shown, four separate, legitimate governmental interests are
furthered by residence requirements. Second, the impact of the
requirements upon the freedom of individuals to travel interstate
is indirect and, according to evidence put forward by the appellees
themselves, insubstantial. Third, these are not cases in which a
State or States, acting alone, have attempted to interfere with the
right of citizens to travel, but one in which the States have acted
within the terms of a limited authorization by the National
Government, and in which Congress itself has laid down a like rule
for the District of Columbia. Fourth, the legislatures which
enacted these statutes have been fully exposed to the arguments of
the appellees as to why these residence requirements are unwise,
and have rejected them. This is not, therefore, an instance in
which legislatures have acted without mature deliberation.
Fifth, and of longer-range importance, the field of welfare
assistance is one in which there is a widely recognized need for
fresh solutions and consequently for experimentation. Invalidation
of welfare residence
Page 394 U. S. 675
requirements might have the unfortunate consequence of
discouraging the Federal and State Governments from establishing
unusually generous welfare programs in particular areas on an
experimental basis, because of fears that the program would cause
an influx of persons seeking higher welfare payments. Sixth and
finally, a strong presumption of constitutionality attaches to
statutes of the types now before us. Congressional enactments come
to this Court with an extremely heavy presumption of validity.
See, e.g., 25 U. S.
Maryland, 12 Wheat. 419,
25 U. S. 436
(1827);
Insurance Co. v. Glidden Co., 284 U.
S. 151,
284 U. S. 158
(1931);
United States v. Butler, 297 U. S.
1,
297 U. S. 67
(1936);
United States v. National Dairy Corp.,
372 U. S. 29,
372 U. S. 32
(1963). A similar presumption of constitutionality attaches to
state statutes, particularly when, as here, a State has acted upon
a specific authorization from Congress.
See, e.g., Powell v.
Pennsylvania, 127 U. S. 678,
127 U. S.
684-685 (1888);
United States v. Des Moines N. &
R. Co., 142 U. S. 510,
142 U. S.
544-545 (1892).
I do not consider that the factors which have been urged to
outweigh these considerations are sufficient to render
unconstitutional these state and federal enactments. It is said,
first, that this Court, in the opinions discussed,
supra,
at
394 U. S.
669-671, has acknowledged that the right to travel
interstate is a "fundamental" freedom. Second, it is contended that
the governmental objectives mentioned above either are ephemeral or
could be accomplished by means which do not impinge as heavily on
the right to travel, and hence that the requirements are
unconstitutional because they "sweep unnecessarily broadly and
thereby invade the area of protected freedoms."
NAACP v.
Alabama, 377 U. S. 288,
377 U. S. 307
(1964). The appellees claim that welfare payments could be denied
those who come primarily to collect welfare by means of less
restrictive provisions, such as New York's
Page 394 U. S. 676
Welfare Abuses Law; [
Footnote
4/35] that fraud could be prevented by investigation of
individual applicants or by a much shorter residence period; that
budgetary predictability is a remote and speculative goal, and that
assurance of investment in the community could be obtained by a
shorter residence period or by taking into account prior intervals
of residence in the jurisdiction.
Taking all of these competing considerations into account, I
believe that the balance definitely favors constitutionality. In
reaching that conclusion, I do not minimize the importance of the
right to travel interstate. However, the impact of residence
conditions upon that right is indirect and apparently quite
insubstantial. On the other hand, the governmental purposes served
by the requirements are legitimate and real, and the residence
requirements are clearly suited to their accomplishment. To abolish
residence requirements might well discourage highly worthwhile
experimentation in the welfare field. The statutes come to us
clothed with the authority of Congress and attended by a
correspondingly heavy presumption of constitutionality. Moreover,
although the appellees assert that the same objectives could have
been achieved by less restrictive means, this is an area in which
the judiciary should be especially slow to fetter the judgment of
Congress and of some 46 state legislatures [
Footnote 4/36] in the choice of methods. Residence
requirements have
Page 394 U. S. 677
advantages, such as administrative simplicity and relative
certainty, which are not shared by the alternative solutions
proposed by the appellees. In these circumstances, I cannot find
that the burden imposed by residence requirements upon ability to
travel outweighs the governmental interests in their continued
employment. Nor do I believe that the period of residence required
in these cases -- one year -- is so excessively long as to justify
a finding of unconstitutionality on that score.
I conclude with the following observations. Today's decision, it
seems to me, reflects to an unusual degree the current notion that
this Court possesses a peculiar wisdom all its own whose capacity
to lead this Nation out of its present troubles is contained only
by the limits of judicial ingenuity in contriving new
constitutional principles to meet each problem as it arises. For
anyone who, like myself, believes that it is an essential function
of this Court to maintain the constitutional divisions between
state and federal authority and among the three branches of the
Federal Government, today's decision is a step in the wrong
direction. This resurgence of the expansive view of "equal
protection" carries the seeds of more judicial interference with
the state and federal legislative process, much more indeed than
does the judicial application of "due process" according to
traditional concepts (
see my dissenting opinion in
Duncan v. Louisiana, 391 U. S. 145,
391 U. S. 171
(1968)), about which some members of this Court have expressed
fears as to its potentialities for setting us judges "at large."
[
Footnote 4/37] I consider it
particularly unfortunate that this judicial roadblock to the powers
of Congress in this field should occur at the very threshold of the
current discussions regarding the "federalizing" of these aspects
of welfare relief.
[
Footnote 4/1]
Of the District of Columbia appellees, all sought AFDC
assistance except appellee Barley, who asked for Aid to the
Permanently and Totally Disabled. In 42 U.S.C. § 602(b),
Congress has authorized "States" (including the District of
Columbia,
see 42 U.S.C. § 1301(a)(1)) to require up
to one year's immediately prior residence as a condition of
eligibility for AFDC assistance.
See n.
394
U.S. 618fn4/15|>15,
infra. In 42 U.S.C.
§§ 1352(b)(1) and 1382(b)(2), Congress has permitted
"States" to condition disability payments upon the applicant's
having resided in the State for up to five of the preceding nine
years. However, D.C.Code § 3-203 prescribes a one-year
residence requirement for both types of assistance, so the question
of the constitutionality of a longer required residence period is
not before us.
Appellee Barley also challenged in the District Court the
constitutionality of a District of Columbia regulation which
provided that time spent in a District of Columbia institution as a
public charge did not count as residence for purposes of welfare
eligibility. The District Court held that the regulation must fall
for the same reasons as the residence statute itself. Since I
believe that the District Court erred in striking down the statute,
and since the issue of the regulation's constitutionality has been
argued in this Court only in passing, I would remand appellee
Barley's cause for further consideration of that question.
[
Footnote 4/2]
I do not believe that the Pennsylvania appeal presents the
additional question of the validity of a residence condition for a
purely state-financed and state-authorized public assistance
program. The Pennsylvania welfare eligibility provision,
Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 62, § 432 (196), states:
"Except as hereinafter otherwise provided . . . needy persons of
the classes defined in clauses (1) and (2) of this section shall be
eligible for assistance: "
"(1) Persons for whose assistance Federal financial
participation is available to the Commonwealth as . . . aid to
families with dependent children, . . . and which assistance is not
precluded by other provisions of law."
"(2) Other persons who are citizens of the United States. . .
."
"
* * * *"
"(6) Assistance may be granted only to or in behalf of a person
residing in Pennsylvania who (i) has resided therein for at least
one year immediately preceding the date of application. . . ."
As I understand it, this statute initially divides Pennsylvania
welfare applicants into two classes: (1) persons for whom federal
financial assistance is available and not precluded by other
provisions of federal law (if state law, including the residence
requirement, were intended, the "Except as hereinafter otherwise
provided" proviso at the beginning of the entire section would be
surplusage); (2) other persons who are citizens. The residence
requirement applies to both classes. However, since all of the
Pennsylvania appellees clearly fall into the first or federally
assisted class, there is no need to consider whether residence
conditions may constitutionally be imposed with respect to the
second or purely state-assisted class.
[
Footnote 4/3]
In characterizing this argument as one based on an alleged
denial of equal protection of the laws, I do not mean to disregard
the fact that this contention is applicable in the District of
Columbia only through the terms of the Due Process Clause of the
Fifth Amendment. Nor do I mean to suggest that these two
constitutional phrases are "always interchangeable,"
see
Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 U. S. 497,
347 U. S. 499
(1954). In the circumstances of this case, I do not believe myself
obliged to explore whether there may be any differences in the
scope of the protection afforded by the two provisions.
[
Footnote 4/4]
See, e.g., Rapid Transit Corp. v. City of New York,
303 U. S. 573,
303 U. S. 578
(1938).
See also infra at
394 U. S.
662.
[
Footnote 4/5]
See Loving v. Virginia, 388 U. S.
1,
388 U. S. 11
(1967);
cf. Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 U.
S. 497,
347 U. S. 499
(1954).
See also Hirabayashi v. United States,
320 U. S. 81,
320 U. S. 100
(1943);
Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.
S. 356 (1886).
[
Footnote 4/6]
See 394
U.S. 618fn4/9|>n. 9,
infra.
[
Footnote 4/7]
See 394
U.S. 618fn4/9|>n. 9,
infra.
[
Footnote 4/8]
I recognize that, in my dissenting opinion in
Harper v.
Virginia Bd. of Elections, supra, at
383 U. S. 683,
I characterized the test applied in
Carrington as "the
traditional equal protection standard." I am now satisfied that
this was too generous a reading of the Court's opinion.
[
Footnote 4/9]
Analysis is complicated when the statutory classification is
grounded upon the exercise of a "fundamental" right. For then the
statute may come within the first branch of the "compelling
interest" doctrine because exercise of the right is deemed a
"suspect" criterion and also within the second because the statute
is considered to affect the right by deterring its exercise.
Williams v. Rhodes, supra, is such a case insofar as the
statutes involved both inhibited exercise of the right of political
association and drew distinctions based upon the way the right was
exercised. The present case is another instance, insofar as welfare
residence statutes both deter interstate movement and distinguish
among welfare applicants on the basis of such movement.
Consequently, I have not attempted to specify the branch of the
doctrine upon which these decisions rest.
[
Footnote 4/10]
See 394
U.S. 618fn4/9|>n. 9,
supra.
[
Footnote 4/11]
See, e.g., Williamson v. Lee Optical Co., 348 U.
S. 483 (1955);
Kotch v. Board of River Pilot
Comm'rs, 330 U. S. 552
(1947).
[
Footnote 4/12]
See, e.g., Bunting v. Oregon, 243 U.
S. 426 (1917).
[
Footnote 4/13]
See, e.g., Miller v. Wilson, 236 U.
S. 373 (1915).
[
Footnote 4/14]
See, e.g., Ferry v. Spokane, P. & S. R. Co.,
258 U. S. 314
(1922).
[
Footnote 4/15]
See 44 Stat. 758, § 1.
[
Footnote 4/16]
The arguments for and against welfare residence requirements,
including their impact on indigent migrants, were fully aired in
congressional committee hearings.
See, e.g., Hearings on
H.R. 4120 before the House Committee on Ways and Means, 74th Cong.,
1st Sess., 831-832, 861-871 (1935); Hearings on S. 1130 before the
Senate Committee on Finance, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 522-540, 643,
656 (1935).
[
Footnote 4/17]
I am not at all persuaded by the Court's argument that Congress'
sole purpose was to compel "
[l]iberality of residence
requirement.'" See ante at 394 U. S. 640.
If that was the only objective, it could have been more effectively
accomplished by specifying that, to qualify for approval under the
Act, a state assistance plan must contain no residence
requirement.
[
Footnote 4/18]
See Act to provide aid to dependent children in the
District of Columbia § 3, 58 Stat. 277 (1944). In 1962, this
Act was repealed and replaced by D.C.Code § 3-203, the
provision now being challenged.
See 76 Stat. 914.
[
Footnote 4/19]
Cf. ante at
394 U. S.
639-641 and nn. 24-25.
[
Footnote 4/20]
See, e.g., Edwards v. California, 314 U.
S. 160 (1941); the
Passenger
Cases, 7 How. 283 (1849).
[
Footnote 4/21]
See, e.g., Corfield v. Coryell, 6 F. Cas. 546 (No.
3230) (1825) (Mr. Justice Washington).
[
Footnote 4/22]
See, e.g., Edwards v. California, 314 U.
S. 160,
314 U. S. 177,
314 U. S. 181
(1941) (DOUGLAS and Jackson, JJ., concurring);
Twining v. New
Jersey, 211 U. S. 78,9
211 U. S. 7 (1908)
(dictum).
[
Footnote 4/23]
See, e.g., Kent v. Dulles, 357 U.
S. 116,
357 U. S.
125-127 (1958);
Aptheker v. Secretary of State,
378 U. S. 500,
378 U. S.
505-506 (1964).
[
Footnote 4/24]
See, e.g., Prudential Ins. Co. v. Benjamin,
328 U. S. 408,
328 U. S. 423
(1946).
See also Maryland v. Wirtz, 392 U.
S. 183,
392 U. S.
193-199 (1968).
[
Footnote 4/25]
"The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges
and Immunities of Citizens in the several States."
[
Footnote 4/26]
See Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 79
(1873);
In re Kemmler, 136 U. S. 436,
136 U. S. 448
(1890);
McPherson v. Blacker, 146 U. S.
1,
146 U. S. 38
(1892);
Giozza v. Tiernan, 148 U.
S. 657,
148 U. S. 661
(1893);
Duncan v. Missouri, 152 U.
S. 377,
152 U. S. 382
(1894);
Twining v. New Jersey, 211 U. S.
78,
211 U. S. 97-98
(1908).
[
Footnote 4/27]
See, e.g., Slaughter-House Cases, supra, at
83 U. S. 79;
Twining v. New Jersey, supra, at
211 U. S.
97.
[
Footnote 4/28]
The
Crandall Court stressed the "right" of a citizen to
come to the national capital, to have access to federal officials,
and to travel to seaports.
See 6 Wall. at
73 U. S. 44. Of
course,
Crandall was decided before the enactment of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
[
Footnote 4/29]
Professor Chafee has suggested that the Due Process Clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment may similarly protect the right to travel
against state interference.
See Z. Chafee, Three Human
Rights in the Constitution of 1787, p. 192 (1956). However, that
clause surely provides no greater protection against the States
than does the Fifth Amendment clause against the Federal
Government; so the decisive question still is whether Congress may
enact a residence requirement.
[
Footnote 4/30]
See Brief for Appellees in o. 33, pp. 49-51 and n. 70;
Brief for Appellees in No. 34, p. 24, n. 11; Supplemental Brief for
Appellees on Reargument 27-30.
[
Footnote 4/31]
For Congress,
see, e.g., Problems of Hungry Children in
the District of Columbia, Hearings before the Subcommittee on
Public Health, Education, Welfare, and Safety of the Senate
Committee on the District of Columbia, 85th Cong., 1st Sess. For
Connecticut,
see Connecticut General Assembly, 1965 Feb.
Spec.Sess., House of Representatives Proceedings, Vol. II, pt. 7,
at 3505. For Pennsylvania,
see Appendix in No. 34, pp.
96a-98a.
[
Footnote 4/32]
There is support for the view that enforcement of residence
requirements can significantly reduce welfare costs by denying
benefits to those who come solely to collect them. For example, in
the course of a long article generally critical of residence
requirements, and after a detailed discussion of the available
information, Professor Harvith has stated:
"A fair conclusion seems to be that, in at least some states, it
is not unreasonable for the legislature to conclude that a useful
saving in welfare costs may be obtained by residence tests
discouraging those who would enter the state solely because of its
welfare programs. In New York, for example, a one percent saving in
welfare costs would amount to several million dollars."
Harvith, The Constitutionality of Residence Tests for General
and Categorical Assistance Programs, 54 Calif.L.Rev. 567, 618
(1966). (Footnotes omitted.)
See also Helvering v. Davis,
301 U. S. 619,
301 U. S. 644
(1937).
For essentially the same reasons, I would uphold the Connecticut
welfare regulations which except from the residence requirement
persons who come to Connecticut with a
bona fide job offer
or with resources sufficient to support them for three months.
See 1 Conn. Welfare Manual, c. II, §§
219.1-219.2 (1966). Such persons are very unlikely to have entered
the State primarily in order to receive welfare benefits.
[
Footnote 4/33]
For precise prediction to be possible, it would appear that a
residence requirement must be combined with a procedure for
ascertaining the number of indigent persons who enter the
jurisdiction and the proportion of those persons who will remain
indigent during the residence period.
[
Footnote 4/34]
I do not mean to imply that each of the above purposes
necessarily was sought by each of the legislatures that adopted
durational residence requirements. In Connecticut, for example, the
welfare budget is apparently open-ended, suggesting that this State
is not seriously concerned with the need for more accurate
budgetary estimates.
[
Footnote 4/35]
That law, N.Y.Soc.Welfare Law § 139-a, requires public
welfare officials to conduct a detailed investigation in order to
ascertain whether a welfare
"applicant came into the state for the purpose of receiving
public assistance or care and accordingly is undeserving of and
ineligible for assistance. . . ."
[
Footnote 4/36]
The figure may be variously calculated. There was testimony
before the District Court in the Pennsylvania case that 46 States
had some form of residence requirement for welfare assistance.
Appendix in No. 34, pp. 92a-93a. It was stipulated in the
Connecticut case that, in 1965, 40 States had residence
requirements for aid to dependent children. Appendix to Appellant's
Brief in No. 9, p. 45a.
See also ante at
394 U. S.
639-640 and n. 22.
[
Footnote 4/37]
Cf. Harper v. Virginia Bd. of Elections, 383 U.
S. 663,
383 U. S. 670,
383 U. S.
675-680 (BLACK, J., dissenting).