This is an appeal from a decision of the Arizona Supreme Court
upholding the constitutionality of an Arizona statute requiring a
year's residence in a county as a condition to an indigent's
receiving nonemergency hospitalization or medical care at the
county's expense.
Held: The durational residence requirement, in
violation of the Equal Protection Clause, creates an "invidious
classification" that impinges on the right of interstate travel by
denying newcomers "basic necessities of life."
Shapiro v.
Thompson, 394 U. S. 618. Pp.
415 U. S.
253-270.
(a) Such a requirement, since it operates to penalize indigents
for exercising their constitutional right of interstate migration,
must be justified by a compelling state interest.
Shapiro v.
Thompson, supra; Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.
S. 330. Pp.
415 U. S.
253-262.
(b) The State has not shown that the durational residence
requirement is "legitimately defensible" in that it furthers a
compelling state interest, and none of the purposes asserted as
justification for the requirement -- fiscal savings, inhibiting
migration of indigents generally, deterring indigents from taking
up residence in the county solely to utilize the medical
facilities, protection of longtime residents who have contributed
to the community particularly by paying taxes, maintaining public
support of the county hospital, administrative convenience in
determining
bona fide residence, prevention of fraud, and
budget predictability -- satisfies the State's burden of
justification and insures that the State, in pursuing its asserted
objectives, has chosen means that do not unnecessarily impinge on
constitutionally protected interests. Pp.
415 U. S.
262-269.
108 Ariz. 373,
498 P.2d 461,
reversed and remanded.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, STEWART, WHITE, and POWELL, JJ., joined. BURGER, C.J., and
BLACKMUN, J., concurred in the result. DOUGLAS, J., filed a
separate
Page 415 U. S. 251
opinion,
post, p.
415 U. S. 270.
REHNQUIST, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
415 U. S.
277.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents an appeal from a decision of the Arizona
Supreme Court upholding an Arizona statute requiring a year's
residence in a county as a condition to receiving nonemergency
hospitalization or medical care at the county's expense. The
constitutional question presented is whether this durational
residence requirement is repugnant to the Equal Protection Clause
as applied by this Court in
Shapiro v. Thompson,
394 U. S. 618
(1969).
I
Appellant Henry Evaro is an indigent suffering from a chronic
asthmatic and bronchial illness. In early June, 1971, Mr. Evaro
moved from New Mexico to Phoenix in Maricopa County, Arizona. On
July 8, 1971, Evaro had a severe respiratory attack, and was sent
by his attending physician to appellant Memorial Hospital, a
nonprofit private community hospital. Pursuant to the Arizona
statute governing medical care for indigents, Memorial notified the
Maricopa County Board of Supervisors that it had in its charge an
indigent who might qualify for county care, and requested that
Evaro be transferred to the County's public hospital facility. In
accordance with the approved procedures, Memorial also
Page 415 U. S. 252
claimed reimbursement from the County in the amount of
$1,202.60, for the care and services it had provided Evaro.
Under Arizona law, the individual county governments are charged
with the mandatory duty of providing necessary hospital and medical
care for their indigent sick. [
Footnote 1] But the statute requires an indigent to have
been a resident of the County for the preceding 12 months in order
to be eligible for free nonemergency medical care. [
Footnote 2] Maricopa County refused to admit
Evaro to its public hospital or to reimburse Memorial solely
because Evaro had not been a resident of the County for the
preceding year. Appellees do not dispute that Evaro is an indigent
or that he is a
bona fide resident of Maricopa County.
[
Footnote 3]
This action was instituted to determine whether appellee
Maricopa County was obligated to provide medical care for Evaro or
was liable to Memorial for the costs it incurred because of the
County's refusal to do so. This controversy necessarily requires an
adjudication of the constitutionality of the Arizona durational
Page 415 U. S. 253
residence requirement for providing free medical care to
indigents.
The trial court held the residence requirement unconstitutional
as a violation of the Equal Protection Clause. In a prior
three-judge federal court suit against Pinal County, Arizona, the
District Court had also declared the residence requirement
unconstitutional, and had enjoined its future application in Pinal
County.
Valencano v. Bateman, 323 F.
Supp. 600 (Ariz.1971). [
Footnote 4] Nonetheless, the Arizona Supreme Court upheld
the challenged requirement. To resolve this conflict between a
federal court and the highest court of the State, we noted probable
jurisdiction, 410 U.S. 981 (1973), and we reverse the judgment of
the Arizona Supreme Court.
II
In determining whether the challenged durational residence
provision violates the Equal Protection Clause, we must first
determine what burden of justification the classification created
thereby must meet by looking to the nature of the classification
and the individual interests affected. [
Footnote 5] The Court considered similar durational
Page 415 U. S. 254
residence requirements for welfare assistance in
Shapiro v.
Thompson, 394 U. S. 618
(1969). The Court observed that those requirements created two
classes of needy residents
"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 [was] granted
and second class [was] denied welfare aid upon which may depend the
ability . . . to obtain the very means to subsist -- food, shelter,
and other necessities of life."
Id. at
394 U. S. 627.
The Court found that, because this classification impinged on the
constitutionally guaranteed right of interstate travel, it was to
be judged by the standard of whether it promoted a compelling state
interest. [
Footnote 6] Finding
such an interest wanting, the Court held the challenged residence
requirements unconstitutional.
Appellees argue that the residence requirement before us is
distinguishable from those in
Shapiro, while appellants
urge that
Shapiro is controlling. We agree with appellants
that Arizona's durational residence requirement for free medical
care must be justified by a compelling state interest, and that,
such interests being lacking, the requirement is
unconstitutional.
III
The right of interstate travel has repeatedly been recognized as
a basic constitutional freedom. [
Footnote 7] Whatever
Page 415 U. S. 255
its ultimate scope, however, the right to travel was involved in
only a limited sense in
Shapiro. The Court was there
concerned only with the right to migrate, "with intent to settle
and abide," [
Footnote 8] or, as
the Court put it, "to migrate, resettle, find a new job, and start
a new life."
Id. at
394 U. S. 629.
Even a
bona fide residence requirement would burden the
right to travel, if travel meant merely movement. But, in
Shapiro, the Court explained that "[t]he residence
requirement and the one-year waiting-period requirement are
distinct and independent prerequisites" for assistance, and only
the latter was held to be unconstitutional.
Id. at
394 U. S. 636.
Later, in invalidating a durational residence requirement for voter
registration on the basis of
Shapiro, we cautioned that
our decision was not intended to "cast doubt on the validity of
appropriately defined and uniformly applied
bona fide
residence requirements."
Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.
S. 330,
405 U. S. 342
n. 13 (1972).
IV
The appellees argue that the instant county residence
requirement is distinguishable from the state residence
requirements in
Shapiro, in that the former penalizes, not
interstate, but rather intrastate, travel. Even were we to draw a
constitutional distinction between interstate and
Page 415 U. S. 256
intrastate travel, a question we do not now consider, such a
distinction would not support the judgment of the Arizona court in
the case before us. Appellant Evaro has been effectively penalized
for his interstate migration, although this was accomplished under
the guise of a county residence requirement. What would be
unconstitutional if done directly by the State can no more readily
be accomplished by a county at the State's direction. The Arizona
Supreme Court could have construed the waiting-period requirements
to apply to intrastate, but not interstate, migrants; [
Footnote 9] but it did not do so, and
"it is not our function to construe a state statute contrary to the
construction given it by the highest court of a State."
O'Brien
v. Skinner, 414 U. S. 524,
414 U. S. 531
(1974).
V
Although any durational residence requirement impinges to some
extent on the right to travel, the Court in
Shapiro did
not declare such a requirement to be
per se
unconstitutional. The Court's holding was conditioned, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 638
n. 21, by the caveat that some "waiting period or residence
requirements . . . may not be penalties upon the exercise of the
constitutional right of interstate travel." The amount of impact
required to give
Page 415 U. S. 257
rise to the compelling state interest test was not made clear.
[
Footnote 10] The Court
spoke of the requisite impact in two ways. First, we considered
whether the waiting period would deter migration:
"An indigent who desires to migrate . . . 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."
Id. at
394 U. S. 629.
Second, the Court considered the extent to which the residence
requirement served to penalize the exercise of the right to
travel.
The appellees here argue that the denial of nonemergency medical
care, unlike the denial of welfare, is not apt to deter migration;
but it is far from clear that the challenged statute is unlikely to
have any deterrent effect. A person afflicted with a serious
respiratory ailment, particularly an indigent whose efforts to
provide a living for his family have been inhibited by his
incapacitating illness, might well think of migrating to the clean
dry air of Arizona, where relief from his disease could also bring
relief from unemployment and poverty. But he may hesitate if he
knows that he must make the move without the possibility of falling
back on the State for medical care should his condition still
plague him or grow more severe during his first year of
residence.
It is true, as appellees argue, that there is no evidence in the
record before us that anyone was actually deterred from traveling
by the challenged restriction. But neither did the majority in
Shapiro find any reason
"to dispute the 'evidence that few welfare recipients have, in
fact, been
Page 415 U. S. 258
deterred [from moving] by residence requirements.' Indeed, none
of the litigants had themselves been deterred."
Dunn, 405 U.S. at
405 U. S. 340
(citations omitted). An attempt to distinguish
Shapiro by
urging that a durational residence requirement for voter
registration did not deter travel, was found to be a "fundamental
misunderstanding of the law" in
Dunn, supra, at
405 U. S.
339-340: [
Footnote
11]
"
Shapiro did not rest upon a finding that denial of
welfare actually deterred travel. Nor have other 'right to travel'
cases in this Court always relied on the presence of actual
deterrence. In
Shapiro, we explicitly stated that the
compelling state interest test would be triggered by 'any
classification which serves to
penalize the exercise of
that right [to travel]. . . .'"
(Emphasis in original; footnote omitted.)
Thus,
Shapiro and
Dunn stand for the
proposition that a classification which "operates to
penalize those persons . . . who have exercised their
constitutional right of interstate migration," must be justified by
a compelling state interest.
Oregon v. Mitchell,
400 U. S. 112,
400 U. S. 238
(1970) (separate opinion of BRENNAN, WHITE, and MARSHALL, JJ.)
(emphasis added). Although any durational residence requirement
imposes a potential cost on migration, the Court in
Shapiro cautioned that some
Page 415 U. S. 259
"waiting period[s] . . . may not be penalties." 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 638
n. 21. In
Dunn v. Blumstein, supra, the Court found that
the denial of the franchise, "a fundamental political right,"
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533,
377 U. S. 562
(1964), was a penalty requiring application of the compelling state
interest test. In
Shapiro, the Court found denial of the
basic "necessities of life" to be a penalty. Nonetheless, the Court
has declined to strike down state statutes requiring one year of
residence as a condition to lower tuition at state institutions of
higher education. [
Footnote
12]
Whatever the ultimate parameters of the
Shapiro penalty
analysis, [
Footnote 13] it
is at least clear that medical care is as much "a basic necessity
of life" to an indigent as welfare assistance. [
Footnote 14] And governmental privileges or
benefits necessary to basic sustenance have often been viewed as
being of greater constitutional significance than less essential
forms of governmental entitlements.
See, e.g., Shapiro, supra;
Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U. S. 254,
397 U. S. 264
(1970);
Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp., 395 U.
S. 337,
395 U. S.
340-342 (1969). It would be odd indeed to find that the
State of Arizona was required to afford Evaro welfare assistance to
keep him from the discomfort of inadequate housing or the pangs of
hunger, but could deny him the
Page 415 U. S. 260
medical care necessary to relieve him from the wheezing and
gasping for breath that attend his illness. [
Footnote 15]
Nor does the fact that the durational residence requirement is
inapplicable to the provision of emergency medical care save the
challenged provision from constitutional doubt. As the Arizona
Supreme Court observed, appellant "Evaro was an indigent person who
required continued medical care for the preservation of
his health and wellbeing . . . ," even if he did not require
immediate emergency care. [
Footnote 16] The State could not deny Evaro care
Page 415 U. S. 261
just because, although gasping for breath, he was not in
immediate danger of stopping breathing altogether. To allow a
serious illness to go untreated until it requires emergency
hospitalization is to subject the sufferer to the danger of a
substantial and irrevocable deterioration in his health. Cancer,
heart disease, or respiratory illness, if untreated for a year, may
become all but irreversible paths to pain, disability, and even
loss of life. The denial of medical care is all the more cruel in
this context, falling as it does on indigents who are often without
the means to obtain alternative treatment. [
Footnote 17]
Finally, appellees seek to distinguish
Shapiro as
involving a partially federally funded program. Maricopa County has
received federal funding for its public hospital, [
Footnote 18] but, more importantly, this
Court has held that whether or not a welfare program is federally
funded is irrelevant to the applicability of the
Shapiro
analysis.
Pease v. Hansen, 404 U. S.
70 (1971);
Graham v. Richardson, 403 U.
S. 365 (1971).
Not unlike the admonition of the Bible that, "Ye shall have one
manner of law, as well for the stranger, as for one of your own
country," Leviticus 24:22 (King James Version), the right of
interstate travel must be seen as insuring new residents the same
right to vital government benefits and privileges in the States to
which they migrate as are enjoyed by other residents. The State of
Arizona's durational residence requirement for free medical care
penalizes indigents for exercising their right to migrate
Page 415 U. S. 262
to and settle in that State. [
Footnote 19] Accordingly, the classification created by
the residence requirement, "unless own to be necessary to promote a
compelling governmental interest, is unconstitutional."
Shapiro, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 634.
(Emphasis in original.)
VI
We turn now to the question of whether the State has shown that
its durational residence requirement is "legitimately defensible"
[
Footnote 20] in that it
furthers a compelling state interest. [
Footnote 21] A number of purposes are asserted to be
served by the requirement, and we must
Page 415 U. S. 263
determine whether these satisfy the appellees' heavy burden of
justification, and insure that the State, in pursuing its asserted
objectives, has chosen means that do not unnecessarily burden
constitutionally protected interests.
NAACP v. Button,
371 U. S. 415,
371 U. S. 438
(1963).
A
The Arizona Supreme Court observed:
"Absent a residence requirement, any indigent sick person . . .
could seek admission to [Maricopa County's] hospital, the
facilities being the newest and most modern in the state, and the
resultant volume would cause long waiting periods or severe
hardship on [the] county if it tried to tax its property owners to
support [these] indigent sick. . . ."
108 Ariz. 373, 376,
498 P.2d 461,
464.
The County thus attempts to sustain the requirement as a
necessary means to insure the fiscal integrity of its free medical
care program by discouraging an influx of indigents, particularly
those entering the County for the sole purpose of obtaining the
benefits of its hospital facilities.
First, a State may not protect the public fisc by drawing an
invidious distinction between classes of its citizens,
Shapiro,
supra at
394 U. S. 633,
so appellees must do more than show that denying free medical care
to new residents saves money. The conservation of the taxpayers'
purse is simply not a sufficient state interest to sustain a
durational residence requirement which, in effect, severely
penalizes exercise of the right to freely migrate and settle in
another State.
See Rivera v. Dunn, 329 F.
Supp. 554 (Conn.1971),
aff'd, 404 U.S. 1054
(1972).
Second, to the extent the purpose of the requirement is to
inhibit the immigration of indigents generally,
Page 415 U. S. 264
that goal is constitutionally impermissible. [
Footnote 22] And, to the extent the purpose
is to deter only those indigents who take up residence in the
County solely to utilize its new and modern public medical
facilities, the requirement at issue is clearly overinclusive. The
challenged durational residence requirement treats every indigent,
in his first year of residence, as if he came to the jurisdiction
solely to obtain free medical care. Such a classification is no
more defensible than the waiting period in
Shapiro, supra,
of which the Court said:
"[T]he 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."
394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 631.
Moreover,
"a State may no more try to fence out those indigents who seek
[better public medical facilities] than it may try to fence out
indigents generally."
Ibid. An indigent who considers the quality of public
hospital facilities in entering the State is no less deserving than
one who moves into the State in order to take advantage of its
better educational facilities.
Id. at
394 U. S.
631-632.
It is also useful to look at the other side of the coin -- at
who will bear the cost of indigents' illnesses if the County does
not provide needed treatment. For those newly arrived residents who
do receive at least hospital care, the cost is often borne by
private nonprofit hospitals, like appellant Memorial -- many of
which are already in precarious financial straits. [
Footnote 23] When absorbed
Page 415 U. S. 265
by private hospitals, the costs of caring for indigents must be
passed on to paying patients and "at a rather inconvenient time" --
adding to the already astronomical costs of hospitalization which
bear so heavily on the resources of most Americans. [
Footnote 24] The financial pressures under
which private nonprofit hospitals operate have already led many of
them to turn away patients who cannot pay or to severely limit the
number of indigents they will admit. [
Footnote 25] And, for those indigents who receive no
care, the cost is, of course, measured by their own suffering.
In addition, the County's claimed fiscal savings may well be
illusory. The lack of timely medical care could cause a patient's
condition to deteriorate to a point where more expensive emergency
hospitalization (for which no durational residence requirement
applies) is needed. And the disability that may result from letting
an untreated condition deteriorate may well result in the patient
and his family becoming a burden on the State's welfare rolls for
the duration of his emergency care, or permanently, if his capacity
to work is impaired. [
Footnote
26]
Page 415 U. S. 266
The appellees also argue that eliminating the durational
residence requirement would dilute the quality of services provided
to longtime residents by fostering an influx of newcomers, and thus
requiring the County's limited public health resources to serve an
expanded pool of recipients. Appellees assert that the County
should be able to protect its longtime residents because of their
contributions to the community, particularly through the past
payment of taxes. We rejected this "contributory" rationale both in
Shapiro and in
Vlandis v. Kline, 412 U.
S. 441,
412 U. S. 450
n. 6 (1973), by observing:
"[Such] 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 citizens. The Equal Protection Clause
prohibits such an apportionment of state services."
Shapiro, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S.
632-633 (footnote omitted).
Appellees express a concern that the threat of an influx of
indigents would discourage "the development of modern and effective
[public medical] facilities." It is suggested that whether or not
the durational residence requirement actually deters migration, the
voters think that it protects them from low income families' being
attracted by the county hospital; hence, the requirement is
necessary for public support of that medical facility. A State may
not employ an invidious discrimination to sustain the political
viability of its programs. As we
Page 415 U. S. 267
observed in
Shapiro, supra, at
394 U. S.
641,
"[p]erhaps Congress could induce wider state participation in
school construction if it authorized the use of joint funds for the
building of segregated schools,"
but that purpose would not sustain such a scheme.
See also
Cole v. Housing Authority of the City of Newport, 435 F.2d
807, 812-813 (CA1 1970).
B
The appellees also argue that the challenged statute serves some
administrative objectives. They claim that the one-year waiting
period is a convenient rule of thumb to determine
bona
fide residence. Besides not being factually defensible, this
test is certainly overbroad to accomplish its avowed purpose. A
mere residence requirement would accomplish the objective of
limiting the use of public medical facilities to
bona fide
residents of the County without sweeping within its prohibitions
those
bona fide residents who had moved into the State
within the qualifying period. Less drastic means, which do not
impinge on the right of interstate travel, are available and
employed [
Footnote 27] to
ascertain an individual's true intentions without exacting a
protracted waiting period which may have dire economic and health
consequences for certain citizens.
See Shelton v. Tucker,
364 U. S. 479,
364 U. S. 488
(1960). The Arizona State welfare agency applies criteria other
than the duration of residency to determine whether an applicant is
a
bona fide resident. [
Footnote 28] The Arizona Medical Assistance to the Aged
law provides public medical care for certain senior citizens,
conditioned only on residence. [
Footnote 29] Pinal County, Arizona, has operated its
public hospital without benefit of the
Page 415 U. S. 268
durational residence requirement since the application of the
challenged statute in that County was enjoined by a federal court
in
Valenciano v. Bateman, 323 F.
Supp. 600 (Ariz.1971). [
Footnote 30]
The appellees allege that the waiting period is a useful tool
for preventing fraud. Certainly, a State has a valid interest in
preventing fraud by any applicant for medical care, whether a
newcomer or old-time resident,
Shapiro, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 637,
but the challenged provision is ill-suited to that purpose. An
indigent applicant, intent on committing fraud, could as easily
swear to having been a resident of the county for the preceding
year as to being one currently. And there is no need for the State
to rely on the durational requirement as a safeguard against fraud
when other mechanisms to serve that purpose are available which
would have a less drastic impact on constitutionally protected
interests.
NAACP v. Button, 371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 438.
For example, state law makes it a crime to file an "untrue
statement . . . for the purpose of obtaining hospitalization,
medical care or outpatient relief" at county expense.
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 11-297C (Supp. 1973-1974).
See
Dunn, 405 U.S. at
405 U. S.
353-354;
U.S. Dept. of Agriculture v.
Moreno, 413 U. S. 528,
413 U. S. 534
(1973)
Finally, appellees assert that the waiting period is necessary
for budget predictability, but what was said in
Shapiro is
equally applicable to the case before us:
"The records . . . are utterly devoid of evidence that
Page 415 U. S. 269
[the County] uses the one-year requirement as a means to predict
the number of people who will require assistance in the budget
year. [The appellees do not take] a census of new residents. . . .
Nor are new residents required to give advance notice of their need
for . . . assistance. Thus, the . . . authorities cannot know how
many new residents come into the jurisdiction in any year, much
less how many of them will require public assistance."
394 U.S. at
394 U. S.
634-635 (footnote omitted). Whatever the difficulties in
projecting how many newcomers to a jurisdiction will require
welfare assistance, it could only be an even more difficult and
speculative task to estimate how many of those indigent newcomers
will require medical care during their first year in the
jurisdiction. The irrelevance of the one-year residence requirement
to budgetary planning is further underscored by the fact that
emergency medical care for all newcomers and more complete medical
care for the aged are currently being provided at public expense
regardless of whether the patient has been a resident of the County
for the preceding year.
See Shapiro, supra, at
394 U. S.
635.
VII
The Arizona durational residence requirement for eligibility for
nonemergency free medical care creates an "invidious
classification" that impinges on the right of interstate travel by
denying newcomers "basic necessities of life." Such a
classification can only be sustained on a showing of a compelling
state interest. Appellees have not met their heavy burden of
justification, or demonstrated that the State, in pursuing
legitimate objectives, has chosen means which do not unnecessarily
impinge on constitutionally protected interests. Accordingly, the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Arizona is reversed, and
Page 415 U. S. 270
the case remanded for further action not inconsistent with this
opinion.
So ordered.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN concur in the
result.
[
Footnote 1]
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 11-291 (Supp. 1973-1974).
[
Footnote 2]
Section 11-297A (Supp. 1973-1974) provides in relevant part
that:
"Except in emergency cases when immediate hospitalization or
medical care is necessary for the preservation of life or limb no
person shall be provided hospitalization, medical care or
outpatient relief under the provisions of this article without
first filing with a member of the board of supervisors of the
county in which he resides a statement in writing, subscribed and
sworn to under oath, that he is an indigent as shall be defined by
rules and regulations of the state department of economic security,
an unemployable totally dependent upon the state or county
government for financial support, or an employable of sworn low
income without sufficient funds to provide himself necessary
hospitalization and medical care,
and that he has been a
resident of the county for the preceding twelve months."
(Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 3]
Thus, the question of the rights of transients to medical care
is not presented by this case.
[
Footnote 4]
Arizona's intermediate appellate court had also declared the
durational residence requirement unconstitutional in
Board of
Supervisors, Pima County v. Robinson, 10 Ariz.App. 238, 457
P.2d 951 (1969), but its decision was vacated as moot by the
Arizona Supreme Court. 105 Ariz. 280,
463 P.2d 536
(1970).
An Arizona one-year durational residence requirement for care at
state mental health facilities was declared unconstitutional in
Vaughan v. Bower, 313 F. Supp.
37 (Ariz.),
aff'd, 400 U.S. 884 (1970).
See
n 11,
infra.
A Florida one-year durational residence requirement for medical
care at public expense was found unconstitutional in
Arnold v.
Halifax Hospital Dist., 314 F.
Supp. 277 (MD Fla.1970), and
Crapps v. Duval County
Hospital Auth., 314 F.
Supp. 181 (MD Fla.1970).
[
Footnote 5]
E.g., Weber v. Aetna Cas. & Surety Co.,
406 U. S. 164,
406 U. S. 173
(1972);
Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.
S. 330,
405 U. S. 335
(1972).
[
Footnote 6]
394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 634.
See also id. at
394 U. S.
642-444 (STEWART, J., concurring).
[
Footnote 7]
Dunn v. Blumstein, supra; Shapiro v. Thompson,
394 U. S. 618
(1969);
see Wyman v. Lopez, 404 U.S. 1055 (1972);
Oregon v. Mitchell, 400 U. S. 112,
400 U. S. 237
(1970) (separate opinion of BRENNAN, WHITE, and MARSHALL, JJ.),
400 U. S.
285-286 (STEWART, J., concurring and dissenting, with
whom BURGER, C.J., and BLACKMUN, J., joined);
Wyman v.
Bowens, 397 U. S. 49
(1970);
United States v. Guest, 383 U.
S. 745,
383 U. S.
757-759 (1966);
cf. Griffin v. Breckenridge,
403 U. S. 88,
403 U. S.
105-106 (1971);
Demiragh v. DeVos, 476 F.2d 403
(CA2 19 73).
See generally Z. Chafee, Three Human Rights
in the Constitution of 1787, pp. 171-181, 187
et seq.
(1956).
[
Footnote 8]
See King v. New Rochelle Municipal Housing Auth., 442
F.2d 646, 648 n. 5 (CA2 1971);
Cole v. Housing Authority of the
City of Newport, 435 F.2d 807, 811 (CA1 1970);
Wellford v.
Battaglia, 343 F.
Supp. 143, 147 (Del.1972);
cf. Truax v. Raich,
239 U. S. 33,
239 U. S. 39
(1915); Note,
Shapiro v. Thompson: Travel, Welfare and the
Constitution, 44 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 989, 1012 (1969).
[
Footnote 9]
Appellees argue that the County should be able to apply a
durational residence requirement to preserve the quality of
services provided its longtime residents because of their ties to
the community and the previous contributions they have made,
particularly through past payment of taxes. It would seem
inconsistent to argue that the residence requirement should be
construed to bar longtime Arizona residents, even if
unconstitutional as applied to persons migrating into Maricopa
County from outside the State. Surely, longtime residents of
neighboring counties have more ties with Maricopa County and equity
in its public programs, as through past payment of state taxes,
than do migrants from distant States. This "contributory" rationale
is discussed
infra at
415 U. S.
266.
[
Footnote 10]
For a discussion of the problems posed by this ambiguity,
see Judge Coffin's perceptive opinion in
Cole v.
Housing Authority of the City of Newport, 435 F.2d 807 (CA1
1970).
[
Footnote 11]
In
Vaughan v. Bower, 313 F. Supp.
37 (Ariz.),
aff'd, 400 U.S. 884 (1970), a federal
court struck down an Arizona law permitting the director of a state
mental hospital to return to the State of his prior residence any
indigent patient who had not been a resident of Arizona for the
year preceding his civil commitment. It is doubtful that the
challenged law could have had any deterrent effect on migration,
since few people consider being committed to a mental hospital when
they decide to take up residence in a new State.
See also
Afleldt v. Whitcomb, 319 F. Supp.
69 (ND Ind.1970),
aff'd, 405 U.S. 1034 (1972).
[
Footnote 12]
See Vlandis v. Kline, 412 U. S. 441,
412 U. S.
452-453, n. 9 (1973).
[
Footnote 13]
For example, the
Shapiro Court cautioned that it meant
to
"imply no view of the validity of waiting period or residence
requirements determining eligibility [
inter alia] to
obtain a license to practice a profession, to hunt or fish, and so
forth."
394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 638
n. 21.
[
Footnote 14]
Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) Report on Medical
Resources Available to Meet the Needs of Public Assistance
Recipients, House Committee on Ways and Means, 86th Cong., 2d
Sess., 74 (Comm.Print 1961). Similarly, President Nixon has
observed: "
I
t is health which is real wealth,' said Ghandi,
and not pieces
of gold and silver.'" Health, Message from the President, 92d
Cong., 1st Sess., H.R.Doc. No. 92-49, p. 18 (1971). See
also materials cited at n
4, supra.
[
Footnote 15]
Reference to the tuition cases is instructive. The lower courts
have.contrasted in-state tuition with "necessities of life" in a
way that would clearly include medical care in the latter category.
The District Court in
Starns v. Malkerson, 326 F.
Supp. 234, 238 (Minn.1970),
aff'd, 401 U.S. 985
(1971), quoted with approval from
Kirk v. Board of
Regents, 273 Cal. App.
2d 430, 440, 78 Cal. Rptr. 260, 266-267 (1969),
appeal
dismissed, 396 U. S. 554
(1970) (emphasis added):
"'While we fully recognize the value of higher education, we
cannot equate its attainment with food, clothing and shelter.
Shapiro involved the immediate and pressing need for
preservation of life and health of persons unable to live
without public assistance, and their dependent children. Thus, the
residence requirement in
Shapiro could cause great
suffering, and even loss of life. The durational residence
requirement for attendance at publicly financed institutions of
higher learning [does] not involve similar risks. Nor was
petitioner . . . precluded from the benefit of obtaining higher
education. Charging higher tuition fees to nonresident students
cannot be equated with granting of basic subsistence to one class
of needy residents while denying it to an equally needy class of
residents.''"
See also Note, The Constitutionality of Nonresident
Tuition, 55 Minn.L.Rev. 1139, 1149-1158 (1971). Moreover, in
Vlandis, supra, the Court observed that
"special problems [are] involved in determining the
bona
fide residence of college students who come from out of State
to attend [a] public university . . . ,"
since those students are characteristically transient, 412 U.S.
at
412 U. S. 452.
There is no such ambiguity about whether appellant Evaro is a
bona fide resident of Maricopa County.
[
Footnote 16]
108 Ariz. 373, 374,
498 P.2d 461,
462 (emphasis added).
[
Footnote 17]
See Valenciano v. Bateman, 323 F.
Supp. 600, 603 (Ariz.1971).
See generally HEW Report
on Medical Resources,
supra, n 14, at 73-74; Dept. of HEW, Human Investment Programs:
Delivery of Health Services for the Poor (1967).
[
Footnote 18]
See HEW, Hill-Burton Project Register, July 1,
1947-June 30, 1967. HEW Publication No. (HSM) 72011, p. 37.
Maricopa County has received over $2 million in Hill-Burton (42
U.S.C. § 291
et seq.) funds since 1947.
[
Footnote 19]
Medicaid, the primary federal program for providing medical care
to indigents at public expense, does not permit participating
States to apply a durational residence requirement as a condition
to eligibility, 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(b)(3), and "this conclusion
of coequal branch of Government is not without significance."
Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U. S. 677,
411 U. S.
687-688 (1973). The State of Arizona does not
participate in the Medicaid program.
[
Footnote 20]
Cf. Ely, Legislative and Administrative Motivation in
Constitutional Law, 79 Yale L.J. 1205, 1223-1224 (1970); Note,
Developments in the Law -- Equal Protection, 82 Harv.L.Rev. 1065,
1076-1077 (1969).
[
Footnote 21]
The Arizona Supreme Court observed that, because this case
involves a governmental benefit akin to welfare, the "reasonable
basis" test of
Dandridge v. Williams, 397 U.
S. 471 (1970), should apply. In upholding a state
regulation placing an absolute limit on the amount of welfare
assistance to be paid a dependent family regardless of size or
actual need, the Court in
Dandridge found it "enough that
the State's action be rationally based and free from invidious
discrimination."
Id. at
397 U. S. 487.
The Court later distinguished
Dandridge in
Graham v.
Richardson, 403 U. S. 365,
403 U. S. 376
(1971), where MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, writing for the Court, observed
that
"[a]ppellants' attempted reliance on
Dandridge . . . is
also misplaced, since the classification involved in that case [did
not impinge] upon a fundamental constitutional right. . . ."
Strict scrutiny is required here because the challenged
classification impinges on the right of interstate travel.
Compare Dandridge, supra, at
397 U. S. 484
n. 16,
with Shapiro v. Thompson, supra.
[
Footnote 22]
Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S.
629.
[
Footnote 23]
See Cantor, The Law and Poor People's Access to Health
Care, 35 Law & Contemp.Prob. 901, 909-914 (1970);
cf.
Catholic Medical Center v. Rockefeller, 305 F.
Supp. 1256 and 1268 (EDNY 1969),
vacated and remanded,
397 U. S. 820,
aff'd on remand, 430 F.2d 1297,
appeal dismissed,
400 U.S. 931 (1970).
[
Footnote 24]
HEW Report on Medical Resources,
supra, n 14, at 74.
See generally Health,
Message from the President,
supra, n 14; E. Kennedy, In Critical Condition: The
Crises in America's Health Care (1973); Hearings on The Health Care
Crisis in America before the Subcommittee on Health of the Senate
Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, 92d Cong., 1st Sess.
(1971).
[
Footnote 25]
Cantor,
supra, n
23;
see E. Kennedy,
supra, n 24, at 78-94; Note, Working Rules for Assuring
Nondiscrimination in Hospital Administration, 74 Yale L.J. 151, 156
n. 32 (1964);
cf., e.g., Stanturf v. Sipes, 447 S.W.2d
558 (Mo.1969) (hospital refused treatment to frostbite victim
who was unable to pay $25 deposit).
See generally HEW
Report on Medical Resources,
supra, n 14, at 74; Hearings on The Health Care Crisis
in America,
supra, n 24.
[
Footnote 26]
"[L]ack of timely hospitalization and medical care for those
unable to pay has been considered an economic liability to the
patient, the hospital, and to the community in which these citizens
might otherwise be self-supporting. . . ."
HEW Report on Medical Resources,
supra, n 14, at 73; Comment, Indigents, Hospital
Admissions and Equal Protection, 5 U.Mich.J.L.Reform 502, 515-516
(1972);
cf. Battistella & Southby, Crisis in American
Medicine, The Lancet 581, 582 (Mar. 16, 1968).
[
Footnote 27]
See Green v. Dept. of Public Welfare of
Delaware, 270 F.
Supp. 173, 177-178 (Del.1967).
[
Footnote 28]
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 46-292(1) (Supp. 1973-1974).
[
Footnote 29]
§ 46-261.02(3) (Supp. 1973-1974).
[
Footnote 30]
In addition, Pima County, Arizona, did not apply the durational
residence requirement between August, 1969, when the requirement
was found unconstitutional by the Arizona Court of Appeals, Board
of Supervisors,
Pima County v. Robinson, 10 Ariz.App. 238,
457 P.2d 951, and September, 1970, when that judgment was vacated
as moot by the Arizona Supreme Court, 105 Ariz. 280,
463 P.2d
536.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS.
The legal and economic aspects of medical care [
Footnote 2/1] are enormous, and I doubt if
decisions under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment are equal to the task of dealing with these matters. So
far as interstate travel
per se is considered, I share the
doubts of my Brother REHNQUIST. The present case, however, turns
for me on a different axis. The problem has many aspects. The
therapy of Arizona's atmosphere brings many there who suffer from
asthma, bronchitis, arthritis, and tuberculosis. Many coming are
indigent, or become indigent after arrival. Arizona does not deny
medical help to "emergency" cases "when immediate hospitalization
or medical care is necessary for the preservation of life or limb,"
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 11-297A (Supp. 1973-1974). For others, it
requires a 12-month durational residence.
The Act is not aimed at interstate travelers; it applies even to
a long-term resident who moves from one county to another. As
stated by the Supreme Court of Arizona in the present case:
"The requirement applies to all citizens within the state
including long-term residents of one county who move to another
county. Thus, the classification does not single out nonresidents
nor attempt to penalize interstate travel. The requirement is
uniformly applied."
108 Ariz. 373, 375,
498 P.2d 461,
463.
Page 415 U. S. 271
What Arizona has done, therefore, is to fence the poor out of
the metropolitan counties, such as Maricopa County (Phoenix) and
Pima County (Tucson) by use of a durational residence requirement.
We are told that eight Arizona counties have no county hospitals,
and that most indigent care in those areas exists only on a
contract basis. In
San Antonio Independent School Dist. v.
Rodriguez, 411 U. S. 1, we had
a case where Texas created a scheme by which school districts with
a low property tax base, from which they could raise only meager
funds, offered a lower quality of education to their students than
the wealthier districts. That system was upheld against the charge
that the state system violated the Equal Protection Clause. It was
a closely divided Court, and I was in dissent. I suppose that, if a
State can fence in the poor in educational programs, it can do so
in medical programs. But to allow Arizona freedom to carry forward
its medical program, we must go one step beyond the
San
Antonio case. In the latter, there was no legal barrier to
movement into a better district. Here a one-year barrier to medical
care, save for "emergency" care, is erected around the areas that
have medical facilities for the poor.
Congress has struggled with the problem. In the Kerr-Mills Act
of 1960, 74 Stat. 987, 42 U.S.C. § 302(b)(2), it added
provisions to the Social Security Act requiring the Secretary of
Health, Education, and Welfare to disapprove any state plan for
medical assistance to the aged (Medicaid) that excludes "any
individual who resides in the state," thus eliminating durational
residence requirements.
Maricopa County has received over $2 million in federal funds
for hospital construction under the Hill-Burton Act, 42 U.S.C.
§ 291
et seq. Section 291c(e) authorizes the issuance
of regulations governing the operation
Page 415 U. S. 272
of Hill-Burton facilities. The regulations contain conditions
that the facility to be constructed or modernized with the funds
"will be made available to all persons residing in the territorial
area of the applicant," and that the applicant will render "a
reasonable volume of services to persons unable to pay therefor."
[
Footnote 2/2] The conditions of
free services for indigents, however, may be waived if "not
feasible from a financial viewpoint."
Prior to the application, the state agency must obtain from the
applicant an assurance
"that there will be made available in the facility or portion
thereof to be constructed or modernized a reasonable volume of
services to persons unable to pay therefor. The requirement of an
assurance from an applicant shall be waived if the applicant
demonstrates to the satisfaction of the State agency, subject to
subsequent approval by the Secretary, that such a requirement is
not feasible from a financial viewpoint."
42 CFR § 53.111(c)(1). [
Footnote 2/3]
So far as I can ascertain, the durational residence requirement
imposed by Maricopa County has not been federally approved as a
condition to the receipt of Hill-Burton funds.
Maricopa County does argue that it is not financially feasible
to provide free nonemergency medical care to new residents. Even
so, the federal regulatory framework does not leave the County
uncontrolled in determining which indigents will receive the
benefit of the resources which are available. It is clear, for
example, that the County could not limit such service to whites out
of
Page 415 U. S. 273
a professed inability to service indigents of all races because
42 CFR § 53.112(c) prohibits such discrimination in the
operation of Hill-Burton facilities. It does not allow racial
discrimination even against transients.
Moreover, Hill-Burton Act donees are guided by 42 CFR §
53.111(g), which sets out in some detail the criteria which must be
used in identifying persons unable to pay for such services. The
criteria include the patient's health and medical insurance
coverage, personal and family income, financial obligations and
resources, and "similar factors." Maricopa County, pursuant to the
state law here challenged, employs length of county residence as an
additional criterion in identifying indigent recipients of
uncompensated nonemergency medical care. The federal regulations,
however, do not seem to recognize that as an acceptable
criterion.
And, as we held in
Thorpe v. Housing Authority,
393 U. S. 268;
Mourning v. Family Publications Service, 411 U.
S. 356, these federal conditions attached to federal
grants are valid when "reasonably related to the purposes of the
enabling legislation." 393 U.S. at
393 U. S.
280-281.
It is difficult to impute to Congress approval of the durational
residence requirement, for the implications of such a decision
would involve weighty equal protection considerations by which the
Federal Government,
Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 U.
S. 497, as well as the States, are bound.
The political processes, [
Footnote
2/4] rather than equal protection litigation, are the ultimate
solution of the present problem. But in the setting of this case,
the invidious discrimination against the poor,
Harper v.
Virginia Board
Page 415 U. S. 274
of Elections, 383 U. S. 663, not
the right to travel interstate, is, in my view, the critical
issue.
|
415
U.S. 250app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF DOUGLAS, J.
GOURMAND AND FOOD -- A FABLE [Footnote 2/5]
The people of Gourmand loved good food. They ate in good
restaurants, donated money for cooking research, and instructed
their government to safeguard all matters having to do with food.
Long ago, the food industry had been in total chaos. There were
many restaurants, some very small. Anyone could call himself a chef
or open a restaurant. In choosing a restaurant, one could never be
sure that the meal would be good. A commission of distinguished
chefs studied the situation and recommended that no one be allowed
to touch food except for qualified chefs. "Food is too important to
be left to amateurs," they said. Qualified chefs were licensed by
the state, with severe penalties for anyone else who engaged in
cooking. Certain exceptions were made for food preparation in the
home, but a person could serve only his own family. Furthermore, to
become a qualified chef, a man had to complete at least twenty-one
years of training (including four years of college, four years of
cooking school, and one year of apprenticeship). All cooking
schools had to be first class.
These reforms did succeed in raising the quality of cooking. But
a restaurant meal became substantially more expensive. A second
commission observed that not everyone could afford to eat out. "No
one," they said, "should be denied a good meal because of his
Page 415 U. S. 275
income." Furthermore, they argued that chefs should work toward
the goal of giving everyone "complete physical and psychological
satisfaction." For those people who could not afford to eat out,
the government declared that they should be allowed to do so as
often as they liked and the government would pay. For others, it
was recommended that they organize themselves in groups and pay
part of their income into a pool that would undertake to pay the
costs incurred by members in dining out. To insure the greatest
satisfaction, the groups were set up so that a member could eat out
anywhere and as often as he liked, could have as elaborate a meal
as he desired, and would have to pay nothing or only a small
percentage of the cost. The cost of joining such prepaid dining
clubs rose sharply.
Long ago, most restaurants would have one chef to prepare the
food. A few restaurants were more elaborate, with chefs
specializing in roasting, fish, salads, sauces, and many other
things. People rarely went to these elaborate restaurants, since
they were so expensive. With the establishment of prepaid dining
clubs, everyone wanted to eat at these fancy restaurants. At the
same time, young chefs in school disdained going to cook in a small
restaurant where they would have to cook everything. The pay was
higher, and it was much more prestigious to specialize and cook at
a really fancy restaurant. Soon there were not enough chefs to keep
the small restaurants open.
With prepaid clubs and free meals for the poor, many people
started eating their three-course meals at the elaborate
restaurants. Then they began to increase the number of courses,
directing the chef to "serve the best, with no thought for the
bill." (Recently a 317-course meal was served.)
The costs of eating out rose faster and faster. A new
Page 415 U. S. 276
government commission reported as follows: (1) Noting that
licensed chefs were being used to peel potatoes and wash lettuce,
the commission recommended that these tasks be handed over to
licensed dishwashers (whose three years of dishwashing training
included cooking courses) or to some new category of personnel. (2)
Concluding that many licensed chefs were overworked, the commission
recommended that cooking schools be expanded, that the length of
training be shortened, and that applicants with lesser
qualifications be admitted. (3) The commission also observed that
chefs were unhappy because people seemed to be more concerned about
the decor and service than about the food. (In a recent taste test,
not only could one patron not tell the difference between a 1930
and a 1970 vintage, but he also could not distinguish between white
and red wines. He explained that he always ordered the 1930 vintage
because he knew that only a really good restaurant would stock such
an expensive wine.)
The commission agreed that weighty problems faced the nation.
They recommended that a national prepayment group be established
which everyone must join. They recommended that chefs continue to
be paid on the basis of the number of dishes they prepared. They
recommended that every Gourmandese be given the right to eat
anywhere he chose, and as elaborately as he chose, and pay
nothing.
These recommendations were adopted. Large numbers of people
spent all of their time ordering incredibly elaborate meals.
Kitchens became marvels of new, expensive equipment. All those who
were not consuming restaurant food were in the kitchen preparing
it. Since no one in Gourmand did anything except prepare or eat
meals, the country collapsed.
Page 415 U. S. 277
[
Footnote 2/1]
See 415
U.S. 250app|>appendix to this opinion,
post, p.
415 U. S.
274.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Title 42 CFR § 53.111(b)(8) define that term to mean
"a level of uncompensated services which meets a need for such
services in the area served by an applicant and which is within the
financial ability of such applicant to provide."
[
Footnote 2/3]
The waiver of such a requirement requires notice and opportunity
for public hearing. 42 CFR § 53.111(c)(2).
[
Footnote 2/4]
For the impact of "free" indigent care on private hospitals and
their paying patients
see Dept. of Health, Education, and
Welfare (HEW) Report on Medical Resources Available to Meet the
Needs of Public Assistance Recipients, House Committee on Ways and
Means, 86th Cong., 2d Sess. (Comm.Print 1961).
[
Footnote 2/5]
Foreword to an article on Medical Care and its Delivery: An
Economic Appraisal by Judith R. Lave and Lester B. Lave in 35 Law
& Contemp.Prob. 252 (1970).
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, dissenting.
I
The State of Arizona provides free medical care for indigents.
Confronted, in common with its 49 sister States, with the assault
of spiraling health and welfare costs upon limited state resources,
it has felt bound to require that recipients meet three standards
of eligibility. [
Footnote 3/1]
First, they must be indigent, unemployable, or unable to provide
their own care. Second, they must be residents of the county in
which they seek aid. Third, they must have maintained their
residence for a period of one year. These standards, however, apply
only to persons seeking nonemergency aid. An exception is
specifically provided for "emergency cases when immediate
hospitalization or medical care is necessary for the preservation
of life or limb. . . ."
Appellant Evaro moved from New Mexico to Arizona in June, 1971,
suffering from a "chronic asthmatic and bronchial illness." In
July, 1971, he experienced a respiratory attack, and obtained
treatment at the facilities of appellant Memorial Hospital, a
privately operated
Page 415 U. S. 278
institution. The hospital sought to recover its expenses from
appellee Maricopa County under the provisions of Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann.
§ 297A (Supp 1973-1974), asserting that Evaro was entitled to
receive county care. Since he did not satisfy the eligibility
requirements discussed above, [
Footnote
3/2] appellee declined to assume responsibility for his care,
and this suit was then instituted in the State Superior Court.
Appellants did not, and could not, claim that there is a
constitutional right to nonemergency medical care at state or
county expense or a constitutional right to reimbursement for care
extended by a private hospital. [
Footnote 3/3] They asserted, however, that the state
legislature, having decided to give free care to certain classes of
persons, must give that care to Evaro as well. The Court upholds
that claim, holding that the Arizona eligibility requirements
burdened Evaro's "right to travel."
Unlike many traditional government services, such as police or
fire protection, the provision of health care has commonly been
undertaken by private facilities and personnel. But as strains on
private services become greater, and the costs of obtaining care
increase, federal, state, and local governments have been pressed
to assume a larger role. Reasonably enough, it seems to me, those
governments which now find themselves in the hospital business seek
to operate that business primarily for those
Page 415 U. S. 279
persons dependent on the financing locality both by association
and by need.
Appellants in this case nevertheless argue that the State's
efforts, admirable though they may be, are simply not impressive
enough. But others excluded by eligibility requirements certainly
could make similar protests. Maricopa County residents of many
years, paying taxes to both construct and support public hospital
facilities, may be ineligible for care because their incomes are
slightly above the marginal level for inclusion. These people have
been excluded by the State not because their claim on limited
public resources is without merit, but because it has been deemed
less meritorious than the claims of those in even greater need.
Given a finite amount of resources, Arizona after today's decision
may well conclude that its indigency threshold should be elevated,
since its counties must provide for out-of-state migrants as well
as for residents of longer standing. These more stringent need
requirements would then deny care to additional persons who, until
now, would have qualified for aid.
Those presently excluded because marginally above the State's
indigency standards, those who may be excluded in the future
because of more stringent indigency requirements necessitated by
today's decision, and appellant Evaro, all have a plausible claim
to government supported medical care. The choice between them
necessitated by a finite amount of resources is a classic example
of the determination of priorities to be accorded conflicting
claims, and would in the recent past have been thought to be a
matter particularly within the competence of the state legislature
to decide. As this Court stated in
Dandridge v. Williams,
397 U. S. 471,
397 U. S. 487
(1970),
"the Constitution does not empower this Court to second-guess
state officials charged with the difficult
Page 415 U. S. 280
responsibility of allocating limited public welfare funds among
the myriad of potential recipients."
The Court holds, however, that the State was barred from making
the choice it made because of the burden its choice placed upon
Evaro's "right to travel." Although the Court's definition of this
"right" is hardly precise, the Court does state:
"[T]he right of interstate travel must be seen as insuring new
residents the same right to vital government benefits and
privileges in the States to which they migrate as are enjoyed by
other residents."
This rationale merits further attention.
II
The right to travel throughout the Nation hag been recognized
for over a century in the decisions of this Court. [
Footnote 3/4]
See Crandall v.
Nevada, 6 Wall. 35 (1868). But the concept of that
right has not been static. To see how distant a cousin the right to
travel enunciated in this case is to the right declared by the
Court in
Crandall, reference need only be made to the
language of Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for the Court:
"But if the government has these rights on her own account, the
citizen also has correlative rights. He has the right to come to
the seat of government to assert any claim he may have upon that
government, or to transact any business he may have with it. To
seek its protection, to share its offices, to engage in
administering its functions. He has a right to free access to its
seaports, through which all the operations of foreign trade and
commerce are
Page 415 U. S. 281
conducted, to the sub-treasuries, the land offices, the revenue
offices, and the courts of justice in the several States, and this
right is, in its nature, independent of the will of any State over
whose soil he must pass in the exercise of it."
Id. at
73 U. S. 44.
The Court in
Crandall established no right to free
benefits from every State through which the traveler might pass,
but more modestly held that the State could not use its taxing
power to impede travel across its borders. [
Footnote 3/5]
Later cases also defined this right to travel quite
conservatively. For example, in
Williams v. Fears,
179 U. S. 270
(1900), the Court upheld a Georgia statute taxing "emigrant agents"
-- persons hiring labor for work outside the State -- although
agents hiring for local work went untaxed. The Court recognized
that a right to travel existed, stating:
"Undoubtedly the right of locomotion, the right to remove from
one place to another according to inclination, is an attribute of
personal liberty, and the right, ordinarily, of free transit from
or through the territory of any State is a right secured by the
Fourteenth Amendment and by other provisions of the
Constitution."
Id. at
179 U. S. 274.
The Court went on, however, to decide that the statute, despite the
added cost it assessed against exported labor, affected freedom of
egress "only incidentally and remotely."
Ibid. [
Footnote 3/6]
Page 415 U. S. 282
The leading earlier case,
Edwards v. California,
314 U. S. 160
(1941), provides equally little support for the Court's expansive
holding here. In
Edwards, the Court invalidated a
California statute which subjected to criminal penalties any person
"that brings or assists in bringing into the State any indigent
person who is not a resident of the State, knowing him to be an
indigent person."
Id. at
314 U. S. 171.
Five members of the Court found the statute unconstitutional under
the Commerce Clause, finding in the Clause a
"prohibition against attempts on the part of any single State to
isolate itself from difficulties common to all of them by
restraining the transportation of persons and property across its
borders."
Id. at
314 U. S. 173.
Four concurring Justices found a better justification for the
result in the Fourteenth Amendment's protection of the "privileges
of national citizenship." [
Footnote
3/7] Regardless of the right's precise source and definition,
it is clear that the statute invalidated in
Edwards was
specifically designed to, and would, deter indigent persons from
entering the State of California. The imposition of criminal
penalties on all persons assisting the entry of an indigent served
to block ingress as surely as if the State had posted guards at the
border to turn indigents away. It made no difference to the
operation of the statute that the indigent, once inside the State,
would be supported by federal payments. [
Footnote 3/8] Furthermore,
Page 415 U. S. 283
the statute did not require that the indigent intend to take up
continuous residence within the State. The statute was not
therefore an incidental or remote barrier to migration, but was, in
fact, an effective and purposeful attempt to insulate the State
from indigents.
The statute in the present case raises no comparable barrier.
Admittedly, some indigent persons desiring to reside in Arizona may
choose to weigh the possible detriment of providing their own
nonemergency health care during the first year of their residence
against the total benefits to be gained from continuing location
within the State, but their mere entry into the State does not
invoke criminal penalties. To the contrary, indigents are free to
live within the State, to receive welfare benefits necessary for
food and shelter, [
Footnote 3/9]
and to receive free emergency medical care if needed. Furthermore,
once the indigent has settled within a county for a year, he
becomes eligible for full medical care at county expense. To say,
therefore, that Arizona's treatment of indigents compares with
California's treatment during the 1930's would border on the
frivolous.
Since those older cases discussing the right to travel are
unhelpful to Evaro's cause here, reliance must be placed elsewhere.
A careful reading of the Court's opinion discloses that the
decision rests almost entirely on two cases of recent vintage:
Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U. S. 618
(1969), and
Dunn v. Blumstein, 405 U.
S. 330 (1972). In
Shapiro, the Court struck
down statutes requiring one year's residence prior to receiving
welfare benefits. In
Dunn, the Court struck down a statute
requiring a year's residence before receiving the right to vote. In
placing reliance on these two cases, the Court
Page 415 U. S. 284
must necessarily distinguish or discredit recent cases of this
Court upholding statutes requiring a year's residence for lower
in-state tuition. [
Footnote 3/10]
The important question for this purpose, according to the Court's
analysis, is whether a classification "
operates to
penalize those persons . . . who have exercised their
constitutional right of interstate migration.'" (Emphasis in
Court's opinion.)
Since the Court concedes that "some
waiting period[s] . . .
may not be penalties,'" ante at 415 U. S.
258-259, one would expect to learn from the opinion how
to distinguish a waiting period which is a penalty from one which
is not. Any expense imposed on citizens crossing state lines, but
not imposed on those staying put, could theoretically be deemed a
penalty on travel; the toll exacted from persons crossing from
Delaware to New Jersey by the Delaware Memorial Bridge is a
"penalty" on interstate travel in the most literal sense of all.
But such charges, [Footnote 3/11]
as well as other fees for use of transportation facilities such as
taxes on airport users, [Footnote
3/12] have been upheld by this Court against attacks based upon
the right to travel. It seems to me that the line to be derived
from our prior cases is that some financial impositions on
interstate travelers have such indirect or inconsequential impact
on travel that they simply do not constitute the type of direct
purposeful barriers struck down in Edwards and
Shapiro. Where the impact is that remote, a State can
reasonably require that the citizen bear some proportion of the
State's cost in its facilities. I would think that this standard is
not only supported by this Court's decisions, but would be
Page 415 U. S. 285
eminently sensible and workable. But the Court not only rejects
this approach, it leaves us entirely without guidance as to the
proper standard to be applied.
The Court instead resorts to
ipse dixit, declaring,
rather than demonstrating that the right to nonemergency medical
care is within the class of rights protected by
Shapiro
and
Dunn:
"Whatever the ultimate parameters of the
Shapiro
penalty analysis,
it is at least clear that medical care is as
much'a basic necessity of life' to an indigent as welfare
assistance. And governmental privileges or benefits necessary
to basic sustenance have often been viewed as being of greater
constitutional significance than less essential forms of
governmental entitlements.
See, e.g., Shapiro, supra; Goldberg
v. Kelly, 397 U. S. 254,
397 U. S.
264 (1970);
Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp.,
395 U. S.
337,
395 U. S. 340-342
(1969)."
Ante at
415 U. S. 259.
(Emphasis added; footnotes omitted.)
However clear this conclusion may be to the majority, it is
certainly not clear to me. The solicitude which the Court has shown
in cases involving the right to vote, [
Footnote 3/13] and the virtual denial of entry inherent
in denial of welfare benefits -- "the very means by which to live,"
Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U. S. 254,
397 U. S. 264
(1970) -- ought not be so casually extended to the alleged
deprivation here. Rather, the Court should examine, as it has done
in the past, whether the challenged requirement erects a real and
purposeful barrier to movement, or the threat of such a barrier, or
whether the effects on travel, viewed realistically, are merely
incidental and remote. As the above discussion has shown, the
barrier here is hardly
Page 415 U. S. 286
a counterpart to the barriers condemned in earlier cases. That
being so, the Court should observe its traditional respect for the
State's allocation of its limited financial resources, rather than
unjustifiably imposing its own preferences.
III
The Court, in its examination of the proffered state interests,
categorically rejects the contention that those who have resided in
the county for a fixed period of time may have a greater stake in
community facilities than the newly arrived. But this rejection is
accomplished more by fiat than by reason. One of the principal
factual distinctions between
Starns v.
Malkerson, 326 F.
Supp. 234 (Minn.1970),
aff'd, 401 U.S. 985 (1971), and
Vlandis v. Kline, 412 U. S. 441
(1973), both of which upheld durational residence requirements for
in-state university tuition, [
Footnote 3/14] and
Shapiro, which struck them
down for welfare recipients, is the nature of the aid which the
State or county provides. Welfare benefits, whether in cash or in
kind, are commonly funded from current tax revenues, which may well
be supported by the very newest arrival as well as by the longtime
resident. But universities and hospitals, although demanding
operating support from current revenues, require extensive capital
facilities which cannot possibly be funded out of current tax
revenues. Thus, entirely apart from the majority's conception of
whether nonemergency health care is more or less important than
continued education,
Page 415 U. S. 287
the interest of longer established residents in capital
facilities and their greater financial contribution to the
construction of such facilities seems indisputable. [
Footnote 3/15]
Other interests advanced by the State to support its statutory
eligibility criteria are also rejected virtually out of hand by the
Court. The protection of the county economies is dismissed with the
statement that "[t]he conservation of the taxpayers' purse is
simply not a sufficient state interest. . . ." [
Footnote 3/16] The Court points out that the cost
of care, if not borne by the Government, may be borne by private
hospitals such as appellant Memorial Hospital. While this
observation is doubtless true in large part, and is bound to
present a problem to any private hospital, it does not seem to me
that it thus becomes a constitutional determinant. The Court also
observes that the State may, in fact,
save money by
providing nonemergency medical care, rather than waiting for
deterioration of an illness. However valuable a qualified cost
analysis might be to legislators drafting eligibility requirements,
and however little this speculation may bear on Evaro's condition
(which the record does not indicate to have been a deteriorating
illness), this sort of judgment has traditionally been confided to
legislatures, rather than to courts charged with determining
constitutional questions.
The Court likewise rejects all arguments based on
Page 415 U. S. 288
administrative objectives. Refusing to accept the assertion that
a one-year waiting period is a "convenient rule of thumb to
determine
bona fide residence," the majority simply
suggests its own alternatives. Similar analysis is applied in
rejecting the appellees' argument based on the potential for fraud.
The Court's declaration that an indigent applicant "intent on
committing fraud, could as easily swear to having been a resident
of the county for the preceding year as to being one currently"
ignores the obvious fact that fabricating presence in the State for
a year is surely more difficult than fabricating only a present
intention to remain.
The legal question in this case is simply whether the State of
Arizona has acted arbitrarily in determining that access to local
hospital facilities for nonemergency medical care should be denied
to persons until they have established residence for one year. The
impediment which this quite rational determination has placed on
appellant Evaro's "right to travel" is so remote as to be
negligible: so far as the record indicates, Evaro moved from New
Mexico to Arizona three years ago, and has remained ever since. The
eligibility requirement has not the slightest resemblance to the
actual barriers to the right of free ingress and egress protected
by the Constitution, and struck down in cases such as
Crandall and
Edwards. And, unlike
Shapiro, it does not involve an urgent need for the
necessities of life or a benefit funded from current revenues to
which the claimant may well have contributed. It is a substantial
broadening of, and departure from, all of these holdings, all the
more remarkable for the lack of explanation which accompanies the
result. Since I can subscribe neither to the method nor the result,
I dissent.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 11-297A (Supp. 1973-1974) reads as
follows:
"Except in emergency cases when immediate hospitalization or
medical care is necessary for the preservation of life or limb no
person shall be provided hospitalization, medical care or
outpatient relief under the provisions of this article without
first filing with a member of the board of supervisors of the
county in which he resides a statement in writing, subscribed and
sworn to under oath, that he is an indigent as shall be defined by
rules and regulations of the state department of economic security,
an unemployable totally dependent upon the state or county
government for financial support, or an employable of sworn low
income without sufficient funds to provide himself necessary
hospitalization and medical care, and that he has been a resident
of the county for the preceding twelve months."
[
Footnote 3/2]
The parties stipulated that Mr. Evaro was "an indigent who
recently changed his residence from New Mexico to Arizona and who
has resided in the state of Arizona for less than twelve months."
App. 10. Therefore, Mr. Evaro failed to meet only the third
requirement discussed in the text.
[
Footnote 3/3]
This Court has noted that citizens have no constitutional right
to welfare benefits.
See, e.g., Dandridge v. Williams,
397 U. S. 471
(1970);
San Antonio Independent School Dist. v. Rodriguez,
411 U. S. 1,
411 U. S. 33
(1973).
[
Footnote 3/4]
Although the right to travel has been recognized by this Court
for over a century, the origin of the right still remains somewhat
obscure. The majority opinion in this case makes no effort to
identify the source, simply relying on recent cases which state
such a right exists.
[
Footnote 3/5]
The tax levied by the State of Nevada was upon every person
leaving the State. As this Court has since noted, the tax was a
direct tax on travel, and was not intended to be a charge for the
use of state facilities.
See Evansville Airport v. Delta
Airlines, 405 U. S. 707
(1972).
[
Footnote 3/6]
The Court also rejected an equal protection argument,
concluding:
"We are unable to say that such a discrimination, if it existed,
did not rest on reasonable grounds, and was not within the
discretion of the state legislature."
179 U.S. at
179 U. S.
276.
[
Footnote 3/7]
See the concurring opinions of MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS
(with whom Mr. Justice Black and Mr. Justice Murphy joined), 314
U.S. at
314 U. S. 177,
and Mr. Justice Jackson,
id. at
314 U. S.
181.
[
Footnote 3/8]
The Court in
Edwards observed:
"After arriving in California, [the indigent] was aided by the
Farm Security Administration, which . . . is wholly financed by the
Federal government."
314 U.S. at
314 U. S. 175.
The Court did not express a view at that time as to whether a
different result would have been reached if the State bore the
financial burden.
But cf. Shapiro v. Thompson,
394 U. S. 618
(1969).
[
Footnote 3/9]
See Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 4233 (Supp. 1973-1974),
which provides that an eligible recipient of general assistance
must have "established residence at the time of application."
[
Footnote 3/10]
See Starns v. Malkerson, 326 F.
Supp. 234 (Minn.1970),
aff'd, 401 U.S. 985 (1971);
Vlandis v. Kline, 412 U. S. 441
(1973).
[
Footnote 3/11]
See, e.g., Interstate Busses Corp. v. Blodgett,
276 U. S. 245
(1928);
Hendrick v. Maryland, 235 U.
S. 610 (1915).
[
Footnote 3/12]
See Evansville Airport v. Delta Airlines, 405 U.
S. 707 (1972).
[
Footnote 3/13]
See, e.g., Evans v. Cornman, 398 U.
S. 419 (1970);
Cipriano v. City of Houma,
395 U. S. 701
(1969).
[
Footnote 3/14]
In
Vlandis, while striking down a Connecticut statute
that, in effect prevented a new state resident from obtaining lower
tuition rates for the full period of enrollment, we stated that the
decision should not
"be construed to deny a State the right to impose on a student,
as one element in demonstrating
bona fide residence, a
reasonable durational residency requirement, which can be met while
in student status."
412 U.S. at
412 U. S. 452.
Starns was cited as support for this position.
[
Footnote 3/15]
This distinction may be particularly important in a State such
as Arizona, where the Constitution provides for limitations on
state and county debt.
See Ariz.Const., Art. 9, § 5
(State); Art. 9, § (County).
See generally Comment,
Dulling the Edge of Husbandry: The Special Fund Doctrine in
Arizona, 1971 L. & Soc. O. (Ariz. St.L.J.) 555.
[
Footnote 3/16]
The appellees in this case filed an affidavit indicating that
acceptance of appellants' position would impose an added burden on
property taxpayers in Maricopa County of over $2.5 million in the
first year alone. App. 117.