As enacted, Ohio's Amended Substitute House Bill 319 (H.B. 319)
makes it a crime for a physician or other person to perform an
abortion on an unmarried, unemancipated, minor woman, unless,
inter alia, the physician provides timely notice to one of
the minor's parents or a juvenile court issues an order authorizing
the minor to consent. To obtain a judicial bypass of the notice
requirement, the minor must present clear and convincing proof that
she has sufficient maturity and information to make the abortion
decision herself, that one of her parents has engaged in a pattern
of physical, emotional, or sexual abuse against her, or that notice
is not in her best interests. Among other things, H.B. 319 also
allows the physician to give constructive notice if actual notice
to the parent proves impossible "after a reasonable effort";
requires the minor to file a bypass complaint in the juvenile court
on prescribed forms; requires that court to appoint a guardian
ad litem and an attorney for the minor if she has not
retained counsel; mandates expedited bypass hearings and decisions
in that court and expedited review by a court of appeals; provides
constructive authorization for the minor to consent to the abortion
if either court fails to act in a timely fashion; and specifies
that both courts must maintain the minor's anonymity and the
confidentiality of all papers. Shortly before H.B. 319's effective
date, appellees -- an abortion facility, one of its doctors, and an
unmarried, unemancipated, minor woman seeking an abortion there --
and others filed a facial challenge to the statute's
constitutionality in the Federal District Court, which ultimately
issued an injunction preventing H.B. 319's enforcement. The Court
of Appeals affirmed, concluding that various of the statute's
provisions were constitutionally defective.
Held: The judgment is reversed.
854 F.2d 852 (CA6 1988), reversed.
Justice KENNEDY delivered the opinion of the Court with respect
to Parts I, II, III, and IV, concluding that, on its face, H.B. 319
does not impose an undue, or otherwise unconstitutional, burden on
a minor seeking an abortion. Pp.
497 U. S.
510-519.
1. House Bill 319 accords with this Court's cases addressing the
constitutionality of parental notice or consent statutes in the
abortion context.
Page 497 U. S. 503
Planned Parenthood of Central Missouri v. Danforth,
428 U. S. 52;
Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U. S. 622;
H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U. S. 398;
Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas City, Mo., Inc. v.
Ashcroft, 462 U. S. 476;
Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, Inc.,
462 U. S. 416. Pp.
497 U. S.
510-517.
(a) Whether or not the Fourteenth Amendment requires parental
notice statutes, as opposed to parental consent statutes, to
contain judicial bypass procedures, H.B. 319's bypass procedure is
sufficient because it meets the requirements identified in
Danforth, Bellotti, Ashcroft, and
Akron for the
more intrusive consent statutes, particularly the four criteria set
forth by the plurality in
Bellotti, supra, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S.
643-644. First, the statute satisfies the requirement
that the minor be allowed to show the maturity to make her abortion
decision without regard to her parents' wishes. Second, by
requiring the juvenile court to authorize her consent upon
determining that the abortion is in her best interests and in cases
where she has shown a pattern of abuse, H.B. 319 satisfies the
requirement that she be allowed to show that, even if she cannot
make the decision by herself, the abortion would be in her best
interests. Third, the requirement that a bypass procedure ensure
the minor's anonymity is satisfied, since H.B. 319 prohibits the
juvenile court from notifying the parents that the complainant is
pregnant and wants an abortion and requires both state courts to
preserve her anonymity and the confidentiality of court papers, and
since state law makes it a crime for any state employee to disclose
documents not designated as public records. Neither the mere
possibility of unauthorized, illegal disclosure by state employees
nor the fact that the H.B. 319 complaint forms require the minor to
provide identifying information for administrative purposes is
dispositive. Complete anonymity is not critical under this Court's
decisions, and H.B. 319 takes reasonable steps to prevent the
public from learning of the minor's identity. Fourth, H.B. 319's
time limits on judicial action satisfy the requirement that a
bypass procedure be conducted with expedition. Even if, as
appellees contend, the bypass procedure could take up to 22
calendar days, including weekends and legal holidays, that
possibility does not suffice to invalidate the statute on its face.
See, e.g., Ashcroft, supra, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 477,
n. 4,
462 U. S. 491,
n. 16. Pp.
497 U. S.
510-514.
(b) The
Bellotti criteria need not be extended by
imposing appellees' suggested additional requirements on bypass
procedures. First, H.B. 319 is not rendered unconstitutional by the
fact that its constructive authorization provisions do not require
an affirmative order authorizing the physician to act in the event
that either state court fails to act within the prescribed time
limits. Absent a showing that those limits will be ignored, the
State may expect that its judges will follow
Page 497 U. S. 504
mandated procedural requirements. Moreover,
Ashcroft,
supra, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S.
479-480, n. 4, does not require constructive
authorization provisions, which were added by Ohio out of an
abundance of caution and concern for the minor's interests. Second,
a bypass procedure such as Ohio's does not violate due process by
placing the burden of proof on the issues of maturity or best
interests on the minor or by requiring a heightened, clear and
convincing evidence standard of proof. The plurality in
Bellotti, supra, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 634,
indicated that a State may require the minor to bear the burden of
proof on these issues. Moreover, a State may require a heightened
standard of proof when, as here, the bypass procedure contemplates
an
ex parte proceeding at which no one opposes the minor's
testimony and she is assisted by an attorney and a guardian
ad
litem. Third, H.B. 319's statutory scheme and the bypass
complaint forms do not deny an unwary and unrepresented minor the
opportunity to prove her case by requiring her to choose among
three forms, the first of which relates only to maturity, the
second to best interests, and the third to both. Even assuming some
initial confusion, it is unlikely that the Ohio courts will treat a
minor's choice of forms without due care and understanding for her
unrepresented status. Moreover, she does not make a binding
election by her initial form choice, since H.B. 319 provides her
with appointed counsel after filing the complaint and allows her to
move to amend the pleadings. Pp.
497 U. S.
514-517.
2. Even assuming that H.B. 319 gives a minor a substantive,
state-law liberty or property right "to avoid unnecessary or
hostile parental involvement" upon proof of maturity or best
interests, the statute does not deprive her of this right without
due process, since its confidentiality provisions, expedited
procedures, pleading form requirements, clear and convincing
evidence standard, and constructive authorization provisions are
valid on their face. Pp.
497 U. S.
517-518.
3. House Bill 319 is not facially invalid simply because it
requires parental notice to be given by the physician, rather than
by some other qualified person. Since the physician has a superior
ability to garner and use important medical and psychological data
supplied by a parent upon receiving notice, a State may require the
physician himself to take reasonable steps to notify the parent.
See Matheson, supra, 450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 400,
450 U. S. 411.
In addition, the conversation with an experienced and detached
physician may assist the parent in approaching the problem in a
mature and balanced way and thereby enable him to provide better
advice to the minor than would a conversation with a less
experienced person. Any imposition on the physician's schedule is
diminished by provisions allowing him to give notice by mail if he
cannot reach the parent "after a reasonable effort" and to forgo
notice in the event of certain emergencies,
Page 497 U. S. 505
which provisions constitute an adequate recognition of his
professional status.
Akron, supra, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S.
446-449. Pp.
497 U. S.
518-519.
Justice KENNEDY, joined by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, Justice WHITE, and
Justice SCALIA, concluded in Part V that H.B. 319 constitutes a
rational way to further legitimate ends. A free and enlightened
society may decide that each of its members should attain a
clearer, more tolerant understanding of the profound philosophic
choices confronting a woman considering an abortion, which decision
will affect her own destiny and dignity and the origins of the
other human life within the embryo. It is both rational and fair
for the State to conclude that, in most instances, the beginnings
of that understanding will be within the family, which will strive
to give a lonely or even terrified minor advice that is both
compassionate and mature. Pp.
497 U. S.
519-520.
Justice STEVENS, agreeing that H.B. 319 is not unconstitutional
on its face, concluded that, in some of its applications, the
one-parent notice requirement will not reasonably further the
State's legitimate interest in protecting the welfare of its minor
citizens. The question whether the judicial bypass is so obviously
inadequate for such exceptional situations that the entire statute
should be invalidated must await the statute's implementation and
the evaluation of the significance of its restrictions in light of
its administration. The State must provide an adequate mechanism
for avoiding parental notification for cases in which the minor is
mature or notice would not be in her best interests.
See Akron
v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, 462 U.
S. 416,
462 U. S. 441,
n. 31. Pp.
497 U. S.
521-523.
KENNEDY, J., announced the judgment of the Court, and delivered
the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I, II, III, and IV,
in which REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE, STEVENS, O'CONNOR, and SCALIA,
JJ., joined, and an opinion with respect to Part V, in which
REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE and SCALIA, JJ., joined. SCALIA, J.,
filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
497 U. S. 520.
STEVENS, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in
the judgment,
post, p.
497 U. S. 521.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and
MARSHALL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
497 U. S.
524.
Page 497 U. S. 506
Justice KENNEDY announced the judgment of the Court and
delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I, II,
III, and IV, and an opinion with respect to Part V in which THE
CHIEF JUSTICE, and Justice WHITE, and Justice SCALIA join.
The Court of Appeals held invalid an Ohio statute that, with
certain exceptions, prohibits any person from performing an
abortion on an unmarried, unemancipated, minor woman absent notice
to one of the woman's parents or a court order of approval. We
reverse, for we determine that the statute accords with our
precedents on parental notice and
Page 497 U. S. 507
consent in the abortion context, and does not violate the
Fourteenth Amendment.
I
A
The Ohio Legislature, in November 1985, enacted Amended
Substitute House Bill 319 (H.B. 319), which amended Ohio Rev. Code
Ann. § 2919.12 (1987), and created §§ 2151.85 and
2505.073 (Supp.1988). Section 2919.12(B), the cornerstone of this
legislation, makes it a criminal offense, except in four specified
circumstances, for a physician or other person to perform an
abortion on an unmarried and unemancipated woman under eighteen
years of age.
See § 2919.12(D) (making the first
offense a misdemeanor and subsequent offenses felonies); §
2919.12(E) (imposing civil liability).
The first and second circumstances in which a physician may
perform an abortion relate to parental notice and consent. First, a
physician may perform an abortion if he provides "at least
twenty-four hours actual notice, in person or by telephone," to one
of the women's parents (or her guardian or custodian) of his
intention to perform the abortion. § 2919.12(B)(1)(a)(i). The
physician, as an alternative, may notify a minor's adult brother,
sister, stepparent, or grandparent, if the minor and the other
relative each file an affidavit in the juvenile court stating that
the minor fears physical, sexual, or severe emotional abuse from
one of her parents.
See §§ 2919.12(B)(1)(a)(i),
2919.12(B)(1)(b), 2919.12(B)(1)(c). If the physician cannot give
the notice "after a reasonable effort," he may perform the abortion
after "at least forty-eight hours constructive notice" by both
ordinary and certified mail. § 2919.12(B)(2). Second, a
physician may perform an abortion on the minor if one of her
parents (or her guardian or custodian) has consented to the
abortion in writing.
See § 2919.12(B)(1)(a)(ii).
The third and fourth circumstances depend on a judicial
procedure that allows a minor to bypass the notice and consent
Page 497 U. S. 508
provisions just described. The statute allows a physician to
perform an abortion without notifying one of the minor's parents or
receiving the parent's consent if a juvenile court issues an order
authorizing the minor to consent, § 2919.12(B)(1)(a)(iii), or
if a juvenile court or court of appeals, by its inaction, provides
constructive authorization for the minor to consent, §
2919.12(B)(1)(a)(iv).
The bypass procedure requires the minor to file a complaint in
the juvenile court, stating (1) that she is pregnant; (2) that she
is unmarried, under 18 years of age, and unemancipated; (3) that
she desires to have an abortion without notifying one of her
parents; (4) that she has sufficient maturity and information to
make an intelligent decision whether to have an abortion without
such notice, or that one of her parents has engaged in a pattern of
physical, sexual, or emotional abuse against her, or that notice is
not in her best interests; and (5) that she has or has not retained
an attorney. §§ 2151.85(A)(1) (5). The Ohio Supreme
Court, as discussed below, has prescribed pleading forms for the
minor to use.
See App. 6-14.
The juvenile court must hold a hearing at the earliest possible
time, but not later than the fifth business day after the minor
files the complaint. § 2151.85(B)(1). The court must render
its decision immediately after the conclusion of the hearing.
Ibid. Failure to hold the hearing within this time results
in constructive authorization for the minor to consent to the
abortion.
Ibid. At the hearing, the court must appoint a
guardian
ad litem and an attorney to represent the minor
if she has not retained her own counsel. § 2151.85(B)(2). The
minor must prove her allegation of maturity, pattern of abuse, or
best interests by clear and convincing evidence, § 2151.85(C),
and the juvenile court must conduct the hearing to preserve the
anonymity of the complainant, keeping all papers confidential.
§§ 2151.85(D), (F).
The minor has the right to expedited review. The statute
provides that, within four days after the minor files a
Page 497 U. S. 509
notice of appeal, the clerk of the juvenile court shall deliver
the notice of appeal and record to the state court of appeals.
§ 2505.073(A). The clerk of the court of appeals dockets the
appeal upon receipt of these items.
Ibid. The minor must
file her brief within four days after the docketing.
Ibid.
If she desires an oral argument, the court of appeals must hold one
within five days after the docketing and must issue a decision
immediately after oral argument.
Ibid. If she waives the
right to an oral argument, the court of appeals must issue a
decision within five days after the docketing.
Ibid. If
the court of appeals does not comply with these time limits, a
constructive order results authorizing the minor to consent to the
abortion.
Ibid.
B
Appellees in this action include the Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, a facility that provides abortions; Max Pierre
Gaujean, M.D., a physician who performs abortions at the Akron
Center; and Rachael Roe, an unmarried, unemancipated minor woman
who sought an abortion at the facility. In March, 1986, days before
the effective date of H.B. 319, appellees and others brought a
facial challenge to the constitutionality of the statute in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. The
District Court, after various proceedings, issued a preliminary
injunction and later a permanent injunction preventing the State of
Ohio from enforcing the statute.
The Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed, concluding
that H.B. 319 had six constitutional defects. These points,
discussed below, related to the sufficiency of the expedited
procedures, the guarantee of anonymity, the constructive
authorization provisions, the clear and convincing evidence
standard, the pleading requirements, and the physician's personal
obligation to give notice to one of the minor's
Page 497 U. S. 510
parents. The State of Ohio, on appeal under 28 U.S.C. §
1254(2) (1982 ed.), challenges the Court of Appeals' decision in
its entirety. Appellees seek affirmance on the grounds adopted by
the Court of Appeals and on other grounds as well.
II
We have decided five cases addressing the constitutionality of
parental notice or parental consent statutes in the abortion
context.
See Planned Parenthood of Central Missouri v.
Danforth, 428 U. S. 52
(1976);
Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.
S. 622 (1979);
H. L. v. Matheson, 450 U.
S. 398 (1981);
Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas
City, Mo., Inc. v. Ashcroft, 462 U. S. 476
(1983);
Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health,
Inc., 462 U. S. 416
(1983). We do not need to determine whether a statute that does not
accord with these cases would violate the Constitution, for we
conclude that H.B. 319 is consistent with them.
A
This dispute turns, to a large extent, on the adequacy of H.B.
319's judicial bypass procedure. In analyzing this aspect of the
dispute, we note that, although our cases have required bypass
procedures for parental consent statutes, we have not decided
whether parental notice statutes must contain such procedures.
See Matheson, supra, 450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 413,
and n. 25 (upholding a notice statute without a bypass procedure as
applied to immature, dependent minors). We leave the question open,
because, whether or not the Fourteenth Amendment requires notice
statutes to contain bypass procedures, H.B. 319's bypass procedure
meets the requirements identified for parental consent statutes in
Danforth, Bellotti, Ashcroft, and
Akron. Danforth
established that, in order to prevent another person from having an
absolute veto power over a minor's decision to have an abortion, a
State must provide some sort of bypass procedure if it elects to
require parental
Page 497 U. S. 511
consent.
See 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 74. As
we hold today in
Hodgson v. Minnesota, ante, p.
497 U. S. 417, it
is a corollary to the greater intrusiveness of consent statutes
that a bypass procedure that will suffice for a consent statute
will suffice also for a notice statute.
See also Matheson,
supra, 450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 411,
n. 17 (notice statutes are not equivalent to consent statutes
because they do not give anyone a veto power over a minor's
abortion decision).
The plurality opinion in
Bellotti stated four criteria
that a bypass procedure in a consent statute must satisfy.
Appellees contend that the bypass procedure does not satisfy these
criteria. We disagree. First, the
Bellotti plurality
indicated that the procedure must allow the minor to show that she
possesses the maturity and information to make her abortion
decision, in consultation with her physician, without regard to her
parents' wishes.
See 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 643.
The Court reaffirmed this requirement in
Akron by holding
that a State cannot presume the immaturity of girls under the age
of 15. 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 440.
In the case now before us, we have no difficulty concluding that
H.B. 319 allows a minor to show maturity in conformity with the
plurality opinion in
Bellotti. The statute permits the
minor to show that she "is sufficiently mature and well enough
informed to decide intelligently whether to have an abortion." Ohio
Rev.Code Ann. § 2151.85(C)(1) (Supp.1988).
Second, the
Bellotti plurality indicated that the
procedure must allow the minor to show that, even if she cannot
make the abortion decision by herself, "the desired abortion would
be in her best interests." 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 644.
We believe that H.B. 319 satisfies the
Bellotti language
as quoted. The statute requires the juvenile court to authorize the
minor's consent where the court determines that the abortion is in
the minor's best interest and in cases where the minor has shown a
pattern of physical, sexual, or emotional abuse.
See Ohio
Rev.Code Ann. § 2151.85(C)(2).
Page 497 U. S. 512
Third, the
Bellotti plurality indicated that the
procedure must insure the minor's anonymity.
See 443 U.S.
at
443 U. S. 644.
H.B. 319 satisfies this standard. Section 2151.85(D) provides
that
"[t]he [juvenile] court shall not notify the parents, guardian,
or custodian of the complainant that she is pregnant or that she
wants to have an abortion."
Section 2151.85(F) further states:
"Each hearing under this section shall be conducted in a manner
that will preserve the anonymity of the complainant. The complaint
and all other papers and records that pertain to an action
commenced under this section shall be kept confidential and are not
public records."
Section 2505.073(B), in a similar fashion, requires the court of
appeals to preserve the minor's anonymity and confidentiality of
all papers on appeal. The State, in addition, makes it a criminal
offense for an employee to disclose documents not designated as
public records.
See Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §§
102.03(B), 102.99(B) (Supp. 1988).
Appellees argue that the complaint forms prescribed by the Ohio
Supreme Court will require the minor to disclose her identity.
Unless the minor has counsel, she must sign a complaint form to
initiate the bypass procedure and, even if she has counsel, she
must supply the name of one of her parents at four different
places.
See App. 6-14 (pleading forms). Appellees would
prefer protections similar to those included in the statutes that
we reviewed in
Bellotti and
Ashcroft. The statute
in
Bellotti protected anonymity by permitting use of a
pseudonym,
see Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts v.
Bellotti, 641 F.2d 1006, 1025 (CA1 1981), and the statute in
Ashcroft allowed the minor to sign the petition with her
initials,
see 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 491,
n. 16. Appellees also maintain that the Ohio laws requiring court
employees not to disclose public documents are irrelevant, because
the right to anonymity is broader than the right not to have
officials reveal one's identity to the public at large.
Page 497 U. S. 513
Confidentiality differs from anonymity, but we do not believe
that the distinction has constitutional significance in the present
context. The distinction has not played a part in our previous
decisions, and, even if the
Bellotti plurality is taken as
setting the standard, we do not find complete anonymity critical.
H.B. 319, like the statutes in
Bellotti and
Ashcroft, takes reasonable steps to prevent the public
from learning of the minor's identity. We refuse to base a decision
on the facial validity of a statute on the mere possibility of
unauthorized, illegal disclosure by state employees. H.B. 319, like
many sophisticated judicial procedures, requires participants to
provide identifying information for administrative purposes, not
for public disclosure.
Fourth, the
Bellotti plurality indicated that courts
must conduct a bypass procedure with expedition to allow the minor
an effective opportunity to obtain the abortion.
See 443
U.S. at
443 U. S. 644,
as noted above, requires the trial court to make its decision
within five "business day[s]" after the minor files her complaint,
§ 2151.85(B)(1); requires the court of appeals to docket an
appeal within four "days" after the minor files a notice of appeal,
§ 2505.073(A); and requires the court of appeals to render a
decision within five "days" after docketing the appeal,
ibid.
The District Court and the Court of Appeals assumed that all of
the references to days in § 2151.85(B)(1) and §
2505.073(A) meant business days, as opposed to calendar days.
Cf. Ohio Rule App.Proc. 14(A) (excluding nonbusiness days
from computations of less than seven days). They calculated, as a
result, that the procedure could take up to 22 calendar days,
because the minor could file at a time during the year in which the
14 business days needed for the bypass procedure would encompass
three Saturdays, three Sundays, and two legal holidays. Appellees
maintain, on the basis of an affidavit included in the record, that
a 3-week delay could increase by a substantial measure both the
costs and the medical risks of an abortion.
See App. 18.
They conclude, as did those
Page 497 U. S. 514
courts, that H.B. 319 does not satisfy the
Bellotti
plurality's expedition requirement.
As a preliminary matter, the 22-day calculation conflicts with
two well-known rules of construction discussed in our abortion
cases and elsewhere. "Where fairly possible, courts should construe
a statute to avoid a danger of unconstitutionality."
Ashcroft, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 493
(opinion of Powell, J.). Although we recognize that the other
federal courts "
are better schooled in and more able to
interpret the laws of their respective States'" than are we,
Frisby v. Schultz, 487 U. S. 474,
487 U. S. 482
(1988), the Court of Appeals' decision strikes us as dubious.
Interpreting the term "days" in § 2505.073(A) to mean business
days instead of calendar days seems inappropriate and unnecessary
because of the express and contrasting use of "business day[s]" in
§ 2151.85(B)(1). In addition, because appellees are making a
facial challenge to a statute, they must show that "no set of
circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid."
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, 492 U.
S. 490, 492 U. S. 524
(O'CONNOR, J., concurring). The Court of Appeals should not have
invalidated the Ohio statute on a facial challenge based upon a
worst-case analysis that may never occur. Cf. Ohio
Rev.Code § 2505.073(A) (allowing the court of appeals, upon
the minor's motion, to shorten or extend the time periods).
Moreover, under our precedents, the mere possibility that the
procedure may require up to twenty-two days in a rare case is
plainly insufficient to invalidate the statute on its face.
Ashcroft, for example, upheld a Missouri statute that
contained a bypass procedure that could require 17 calendar days
plus a sufficient time for deliberation and decisionmaking at both
the trial and appellate levels. See 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 477,
n. 4, 462 U. S. 491,
n. 16.
B
Appellees ask us, in effect, to extend the criteria used by some
members of the Court in
Bellotti and the cases following
it by imposing three additional requirements on bypass
Page 497 U. S. 515
procedures. First, they challenge the constructive authorization
provisions in H.B. 319, which enable a minor to obtain an abortion
without notifying one of her parents if either the juvenile court
or the court of appeals fails to act within the prescribed time
limits.
See Ohio Rev.Code Ann. §§ 2151.85(B)(1),
2505.073(A), and § 2919.12(B)(1)(a)(iv) (1987 and Supp.1988).
They speculate that the absence of an affirmative order when a
court fails to process the minor's complaint will deter the
physician from acting.
We discern no constitutional defect in the statute. Absent a
demonstrated pattern of abuse or defiance, a State may expect that
its judges will follow mandated procedural requirements. There is
no showing that the time limitations imposed by H.B. 319 will be
ignored. With an abundance of caution, and concern for the minor's
interests, Ohio added the constructive authorization provision in
H.B. 319 to ensure expedition of the bypass procedures even if
these time limits are not met. The State Attorney General
represents that a physician can obtain certified documentation from
the juvenile or appellate court that constructive authorization has
occurred. Brief for Appellant 36. We did not require a similar
safety net in the bypass procedures in
Ashcroft, supra, at
462 U. S.
479-480, n. 4, and find no defect in the procedures that
Ohio has provided.
Second, appellees ask us to rule that a bypass procedure cannot
require a minor to prove maturity or best interests by a standard
of clear and convincing evidence. They maintain that, when a State
seeks to deprive an individual of liberty interests, it must take
upon itself the risk of error.
See Santosky v. Kramer,
455 U. S. 745,
455 U. S. 755
(1982). House Bill 319 violates this standard, in their opinion,
not only by placing the burden of proof upon the minor, but also by
imposing a heightened standard of proof.
This contention lacks merit. A State does not have to bear the
burden of proof on the issues of maturity or best interests. The
plurality opinion in
Bellotti indicates that a State may
require the minor to prove these facts in a bypass
Page 497 U. S. 516
procedure.
See 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 643.
A State, moreover, may require a heightened standard of proof when,
as here, the bypass procedure contemplates an
ex parte
proceeding at which no one opposes the minor's testimony. We find
the clear and convincing standard used in H.B. 319 acceptable. The
Ohio Supreme Court has stated:
"Clear and convincing evidence is that measure or degree of
proof which will produce in the mind of the trier of facts a firm
belief or conviction as to the allegations sought to be
established. It is intermediate, being more than a mere
preponderance, but not to the extent of such certainty as is
required beyond a reasonable doubt as in criminal cases. It does
not mean clear and unequivocal."
Cross v. Ledford, 161 Ohio St. 469, 477, 120 N.E.2d
118, 123 (1954) (emphasis deleted). Our precedents do not require
the State to set a lower standard. Given that the minor is assisted
in the courtroom by an attorney as well as a guardian
ad
litem, this aspect of H.B. 319 is not infirm under the
Constitution.
Third, appellees contend that the pleading requirements in H.B.
319 create a trap for the unwary. The minor, under the statutory
scheme and the requirements prescribed by the Ohio Supreme Court,
must choose among three pleading forms.
See Ohio Rev.Code
§ 2151.85(C) (Supp. 1988); App. 6-14. The first alleges only
maturity and the second alleges only best interests. She may not
attempt to prove both maturity and best interests unless she
chooses the third form, which alleges both of these facts.
Appellees contend that the complications imposed by this scheme
deny a minor the opportunity, required by the plurality in
Bellotti, to prove either maturity or best interests or
both.
See 443 U.S. at
443 U. S.
643-644.
Even on the assumption that the pleading scheme could produce
some initial confusion because few minors would have counsel when
pleading, the simple and straightforward procedure does not deprive
the minor of an opportunity to
Page 497 U. S. 517
prove her case. It seems unlikely that the Ohio courts will
treat a minor's choice of complaint form without due care and
understanding for her unrepresented status. In addition, we note
that the minor does not make a binding election by the initial
choice of pleading form. The minor, under H.B. 319, receives
appointed counsel after filing the complaint and may move for leave
to amend the pleadings.
See 2151.85(B)(2); Ohio Rule
Juvenile Proc. 22(B);
see also Hambleton v. K. G. Barry
Corp., 12 Ohio St.3d 179, 183-184, 465 N.E.2d 1298, 1302
(1984) (finding a liberal amendment policy in the state civil
rules). Regardless of whether Ohio could have written a simpler
statute, H.B. 319 survives a facial challenge.
III
Appellees contend our inquiry does not end even if we decide
that H.B. 319 conforms to
Danforth, Bellotti, Matheson,
Ashcroft, and
Akron. They maintain that H.B. 319
gives a minor a state law substantive right "to avoid unnecessary
or hostile parental involvement" if she can demonstrate that her
maturity or best interests favor abortion without notifying one of
her parents. They argue that H.B. 319 deprives the minor of this
right without due process because the pleading requirements, the
alleged lack of expedition and anonymity, and the clear and
convincing evidence standard make the bypass procedure unfair.
See Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U. S. 319,
424 U. S. 335
(1976). We find no merit in this argument.
The confidentiality provisions, the expedited procedures, and
the pleading form requirements, on their face, satisfy the dictates
of minimal due process. We see little risk of erroneous deprivation
under these provisions, and no need to require additional
procedural safeguards. The clear and convincing evidence standard,
for reasons we have described, does not place an unconstitutional
burden on the types of proof to be presented. The minor is assisted
by an attorney and a guardian
ad litem, and the proceeding
is
ex parte. The
Page 497 U. S. 518
standard ensures that the judge will take special care in
deciding whether the minor's consent to an abortion should proceed
without parental notification. As a final matter, given that the
statute provides definite and reasonable deadlines, Ohio Rev.Code
Ann. § 2505.073(A), the constructive authorization provision,
§ 2151.85(B)(1), also comports with due process on its
face.
IV
Appellees, as a final matter, contend that we should invalidate
H.B. 319 in its entirety because the statute requires the parental
notice to be given by the physician who is to perform the abortion.
In
Akron, the Court found unconstitutional a requirement
that the attending physician provide the information and counseling
relevant to informed consent.
See 462 U.S. at
462 U. S.
446-449. Although the Court did not disapprove of
informing a woman of the health risks of an abortion, it explained
that
"[t]he State's interest is in ensuring that the woman's consent
is informed and unpressured; the critical factor is whether she
obtains the necessary information and counseling from a qualified
person, not the identity of the person from whom she obtains
it."
Id. at
462 U. S. 448.
Appellees maintain, in a similar fashion, that Ohio has no reason
for requiring the minor's physician, rather than some other
qualified person, to notify one of the minor's parents.
Appellees, however, have failed to consider our precedent on
this matter. We upheld, in
Matheson, a statute that
required a physician to notify the minor's parents.
See
450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 400.
The distinction between notifying a minor's parents and informing a
woman of the routine risks of an abortion has ample justification;
although counselors may provide information about general risks as
in
Akron, appellees do not contest the superior ability of
a physician to garner and use information supplied by a minor's
parents upon receiving notice. We continue to believe that a State
may require the physician himself or herself to take reasonable
Page 497 U. S. 519
steps to notify a minor's parent, because the parent often will
provide important medical data to the physician. As we explained in
Matheson,
"The medical, emotional, and psychological consequences of an
abortion are serious, and can be lasting; this is particularly so
when the patient is immature. An adequate medical and psychological
case history is important to the physician. Parents can provide
medical and psychological data, refer the physician to other
sources of medical history, such as family physicians, and
authorize family physicians to give relevant data."
450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 411
(footnote omitted). The conversation with the physician, in
addition, may enable a parent to provide better advice to the
minor. The parent who must respond to an event with complex
philosophical and emotional dimensions is given some access to an
experienced and, in an ideal case, detached physician who can
assist the parent in approaching the problem in a mature and
balanced way. This access may benefit both the parent and child in
a manner not possible through notice by less qualified persons.
Any imposition on a physician's schedule, by requiring him to
give notice when the minor does not have consent from one of her
parents or court authorization, must be evaluated in light of the
complete statutory scheme. The statute allows the physician to send
notice by mail if he cannot reach the minor's parent "after a
reasonable effort," Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 2919.12(B)(2) (1987),
and also allows him to forgo notice in the event of certain
emergencies,
see § 2919.12(C)(2). These provisions
are an adequate recognition of the physician's professional status.
On this facial challenge, we find the physician notification
requirement unobjectionable.
V
The Ohio statute, in sum, does not impose an undue, or otherwise
unconstitutional, burden on a minor seeking an
Page 497 U. S. 520
abortion. We believe, in addition, that the legislature acted in
a rational manner in enacting H.B. 319. A free and enlightened
society may decide that each of its members should attain a
clearer, more tolerant understanding of the profound philosophic
choices confronted by a woman who is considering whether to seek an
abortion. Her decision will embrace her own destiny and personal
dignity, and the origins of the other human life that lie within
the embryo. The State is entitled to assume that, for most of its
people, the beginnings of that understanding will be within the
family, society's most intimate association. It is both rational
and fair for the State to conclude that, in most instances, the
family will strive to give a lonely or even terrified minor advice
that is both compassionate and mature. The statute in issue here is
a rational way to further those ends. It would deny all dignity to
the family to say that the State cannot take this reasonable step
in regulating its health professions to ensure that, in most cases,
a young woman will receive guidance and understanding from a
parent. We uphold H.B. 319 on its face, and reverse the Court of
Appeals.
It is so ordered.
Justice SCALIA, concurring.
I join the opinion of the Court, because I agree that the Ohio
statute neither deprives minors of procedural due process nor
contradicts our holdings regarding the constitutional right to
abortion. I continue to believe, however, as I said in my separate
concurrence last Term in
Webster v. Reproductive Health
Services, 492 U. S. 490
(1989), that the Constitution contains no right to abortion. It is
not to be found in the longstanding traditions of our society, nor
can it be logically deduced from the text of the Constitution --
not, that is, without volunteering a judicial answer to the
nonjusticiable question of when human life begins. Leaving this
matter to the political process is not only legally correct, it is
pragmatically so. That alone -- and not lawyerly dissection of
federal judicial
Page 497 U. S. 521
precedents -- can produce compromises satisfying a sufficient
mass of the electorate that this deeply felt issue will cease
distorting the remainder of our democratic process. The Court
should end its disruptive intrusion into this field as soon as
possible.
Justice STEVENS, concurring in part and concurring in the
judgment.
As the Court emphasizes, appellees have challenged the Ohio
statute only on its face. The State may presume that, in most of
its applications, the statute will reasonably further its
legitimate interest in protecting the welfare of its minor
citizens.
See H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U.
S. 398,
450 U. S.
422-423 (1981) (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment). In
some of its applications, however, the one-parent notice
requirement will not reasonably further that interest. There will
be exceptional situations in which notice will cause a realistic
risk of physical harm to the pregnant woman, will cause trauma to
an ill parent, or will enable the parent to prevent the abortion
for reasons that are unrelated to the best interests of the minor.
The Ohio statute recognizes that possibility by providing a
judicial bypass. The question in this case is whether that
statutory protection for the exceptional case is so obviously
inadequate that the entire statute should be invalidated. I am not
willing to reach that conclusion before the statute has been
implemented and the significance of its restrictions evaluated in
the light of its administration. I therefore agree that the Court
of Appeals' judgment must be reversed, and I join Parts I-IV of the
Court's opinion. [
Footnote 2/1]
Page 497 U. S. 522
The Court correctly states that we have not decided the specific
question whether a judicial bypass procedure is necessary in order
to save the constitutionality of a single parent notice statute.
See ante at
497 U. S. 510.
We have, however, squarely held that a requirement of preabortion
parental notice in all cases involving pregnant minors is
unconstitutional. Although it need not take the form of a judicial
bypass, the State must provide an adequate mechanism for cases in
which the minor is mature or notice would not be in her best
interests.
In
Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, Inc.,
462 U. S. 416
(1983), the city argued that the constitutionality of its ordinance
requiring parental consent was saved by the minor's opportunity to
invoke the State's juvenile court procedures. We held the same day
in
Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas City, Mo. v.
Ashcroft, 462 U. S. 476,
462 U. S. 493
(1983) (opinion of Powell, J.), that a similar provision which did
not require parental notification avoided any constitutional
infirmities in such a statute. We rejected the argument in
Akron, however, because the procedures in that case
required that the parent be given notice when the minor's petition
was filed. Writing for six Justices, including the author of the
Court's opinion in
H.L. v. Matheson, supra, Justice Powell
explained:
"Even assuming that the Ohio courts would construe these
provisions as permitting a minor to obtain judicial approval for
the 'proper or necessary . . . medical or surgical care' of an
abortion, where her parents had refused to provide that care, the
statute makes no provision for a mature or emancipated minor
completely to avoid hostile parental involvement by demonstrating
to the satisfaction of the court that she is capable of exercising
her constitutional right to choose an abortion. On the contrary,
the statute requires that the minor's parents be notified once a
petition has been filed, [Ohio Rev. Code Ann.] § 2151.28
[Supp. 1982], a requirement that in the case
Page 497 U. S. 523
of a mature minor seeking an abortion would be unconstitutional.
See H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U.S. at
450 U. S.
420 (POWELL, J., concurring);
id. at
450 U. S. 428, n. 3
(MARSHALL, J., dissenting)."
462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 441,
n. 31. Thus, while a judicial bypass may not be necessary to take
care of the cases in which the minor is mature or parental notice
would not be in her best interests -- and, indeed, may not be the
preferable mechanism -- the Court has held that some provision must
be made for such cases.
The Ohio statute, on its face, provides a sufficient procedure
for those cases. The pleading requirements and the constructive
authorization and confidentiality provisions of the Act satisfy the
standards established in
Ashcroft, supra, for a judicial
bypass. As the Court states, the minor is not bound by her initial
choice of pleading form,
ante at
497 U. S. 517,
the constructive authorization provision functions as an additional
"safety net" when the statutory deadlines are not met,
ante at
497 U. S. 515,
and the State has taken reasonable steps to ensure confidentiality,
ante at
497 U. S.
512-513. The requirement that the minor prove maturity
or best interests by clear and convincing evidence is supported by
the presumption that notification to a parent will in most
circumstances be in the minor's best interests: it is not
unreasonable to require the minor,
when assisted by counsel and
a guardian ad litem, ante at
497 U. S.
517-518, to overcome that presumption by clear and
convincing evidence.
Cf. Parham v. J.R., 442 U.
S. 584,
442 U. S. 610
(1979) ("[P]resumption that parents act in the best interests of
their child" is relevant in determining what process is due in
commitment proceeding). [
Footnote
2/2] I have more concern
Page 497 U. S. 524
about the possible delay in the bypass procedure, but the
statute permits the Ohio courts to expedite the procedure upon a
showing of good cause,
see ante at
497 U. S. 515
(citing Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 2505.073(A) (Supp.1988)), and
sensitive administration of the deadlines may demonstrate that my
concern is unwarranted.
There is some tension between the statutory requirement that the
treating physician notify the minor's parent and our decision in
Akron, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S.
446-449, that a State may not require the attending
physician to personally counsel an abortion patient. One cannot
overlook the possibility that this provision was motivated more by
a legislative interest in placing obstacles in the woman's path to
an abortion,
see Maher v. Roe, 432 U.
S. 464,
432 U. S. 474
(1977), than by a genuine interest in fostering informed
decisionmaking. I agree with the Court, however, that the Ohio
statute requires only that the physician take "reasonable steps" to
notify a minor's parent, and that such notification may contribute
to the decisionmaking process.
Ante at
497 U. S.
518-519. Accordingly, I am unable to conclude that this
provision is unconstitutional on its face.
[
Footnote 2/1]
It is perhaps trite for a judge to reiterate the familiar
proposition that an opinion about the facial constitutionality of a
statute says nothing about the judge's views concerning the wisdom
or unwisdom of the measure. I have made this observation before,
see National League of Cities v. Usery, 426 U.
S. 833,
426 U. S. 881
(1976) (dissenting opinion), and am moved by Justice BLACKMUN's
eloquent dissent to do so again. It would indeed be difficult to
contend that each of the challenged provisions of the Ohio statute
-- or the entire mosaic -- represents wise legislation.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The standard of proof for the minor's abortion decision is no
more onerous than that for any medical procedure of which the
parents may disapprove. Under Ohio law, a determination that a
child is neglected or dependent, which is necessary before a court
or guardian
ad litem may authorize proper or necessary
medical or surgical care, must be made by clear and convincing
evidence.
See Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 2151.35
(Supp.1988);
see also In re Willmann, 24 Ohio App.3d 191,
198-199, 493 N.E.2d 1380, 1389 (1986);
In re Bibb, 70 Ohio
App.2d 117, 120, 435 N.E.2d 96, 99 (1980).
Justice BLACKMUN, with whom Justice BRENNAN and Justice MARSHALL
join, dissenting.
I
The constitutional right to "control the quintessentially
intimate, personal, and life-directing decision whether to carry a
fetus to term,"
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services,
492 U. S. 490,
492 U. S. 538
(1989) (opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part),
does
"not mature and come into being magically only when one attains
the state-defined age of majority. Minors, as well as adults, are
protected by the Constitution and possess constitutional
rights."
Planned Parenthood
of
Page 497 U. S. 525
Central Mo. v. Danforth,
428 U. S. 52,
428 U. S. 74
(1976);
Hodgson v. Minnesota, ante, at
497 U. S. 435
("[T]he constitutional protection against unjustified state
intrusion into the process of deciding whether or not to bear a
child extends to pregnant minors as well as adult women"). Although
the Court "has recognized that the State has somewhat broader
authority to regulate the activities of children than of adults,"
in doing so, the State nevertheless must demonstrate that there is
a "
significant state interest in conditioning an abortion
. . . that is not present in the case of an adult."
Danforth, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 74-75
(emphasis added).
"Any independent interest the parent may have in the termination
of the minor daughter's pregnancy is no more weighty than the right
of privacy of the competent minor mature enough to have become
pregnant."
Id. at
428 U. S.
75.
"The abortion decision differs in important ways from other
decisions that may be made during minority. The need to protect the
constitutional right and the unique nature of the abortion
decision, especially when made by a minor, require a State to act
with
particular sensitivity when it legislates to foster
parental involvement in this matter."
Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U. S. 622,
443 U. S. 642
(1979) (plurality opinion) (emphasis added) (
Bellotti II).
"Particular sensitivity" is mandated because "there are few
situations in which denying a minor the right to make an important
decision will have consequences so grave and indelible."
Ibid. It should be obvious that
"considering her probable education, employment skills,
financial resources, and emotional maturity, unwanted motherhood
may be exceptionally burdensome for a minor."
Ibid.
The State of Ohio has acted with particular insensitivity in
enacting the statute the Court today upholds. Rather than create a
judicial bypass system that reflects the sensitivity necessary when
dealing with a minor making this deeply intimate decision, Ohio has
created a tortuous maze. Moreover, the State has failed utterly to
show that it has any significant
Page 497 U. S. 526
state interest in deliberately placing its pattern of obstacles
in the path of the pregnant minor seeking to exercise her
constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy. The challenged
provisions of the Ohio statute are merely "poorly disguised
elements of discouragement for the abortion decision."
Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians &
Gynecologists, 476 U. S. 747,
476 U. S. 763
(1986).
II
The majority does not decide whether the Ohio parental notice
statute must contain a judicial bypass procedure because the
majority concludes that the bypass procedure in the statute "meets
the requirements identified for parental consent statutes in
Danforth,
Bellotti, Ashcroft, and
Akron."
Ante at
497 U. S. 510.
I conclude, however, that, because of the minor's emotional
vulnerability and financial dependency on her parents, and because
of the "unique nature of the abortion decision,"
Bellotti
II, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 642,
and its consequences, a parental notice statute is tantamount to a
parental consent statute. As a practical matter, a notification
requirement will have the same deterrent effect on a pregnant minor
seeking to exercise her constitutional right as does a consent
statute.
See Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health,
Inc., 462 U. S. 416,
462 U. S. 441,
n. 31 (1983);
H. L. v. Matheson, 450 U.
S. 398,
450 U. S. 420,
n. 9 (1981) (concurring opinion). Thus, a notice statute, like a
consent statute, must contain a bypass procedure that comports with
the standards set forth in
Bellotti II. Because I disagree
with the Court's conclusion that the Ohio bypass procedure complies
with the dictates of
Bellotti II and its progeny, I would
strike down Ohio Amended Substitute House Bill 319.
The
Bellotti II plurality stated:
"A pregnant minor is entitled in such a [judicial bypass]
proceeding to show either: (1) that she is mature enough and well
enough informed to make her abortion decision, in consultation with
her physician, independently of her parents' wishes; or (2)
Page 497 U. S. 527
that, even if she is not able to make this decision
independently, the desired abortion would be in her best
interests."
443 U.S. at
443 U. S.
643-644 (footnote omitted). The language of the Ohio
statute purports to follow the standards for a bypass procedure
that are set forth in
Bellotti II, but at each stage along
the way, the statute deliberately places "substantial state-created
obstacles in the pregnant [minor's] path to an abortion,"
Maher
v. Roe, 432 U. S. 464,
432 U. S. 477,
n. 10 (1977), in the legislative hope that she will stumble,
perhaps fall, and at least ensuring that she "conquer a
multi-faceted obstacle course" before she is able to exercise her
constitutional right to an abortion. Dellinger and Sperling,
Abortion and the Supreme Court: Retreat from
Roe v. Wade,
138 U.Pa.L. Rev. 83, 100 (1989). The majority considers each
provision in a piecemeal fashion, never acknowledging or assessing
the "degree of burden that the entire regime of abortion
regulations places" on the minor.
Ibid.
A
The obstacle course begins when the minor first enters the
courthouse to fill out the complaint forms. The "pleading trap," as
it appropriately was described by the Court of Appeals,
Akron
Center for Reproductive Health v. Slaby, 854 F.2d 852, 863
(CA6 1988), requires the minor to choose among three forms. The
first alleges only maturity; the second alleges only that the
abortion is in her best interest. App. 6-11. Only if the minor
chooses the third form, which alleges both,
id. at 1213,
may the minor attempt to prove both maturity and best interest as
is her right under
Bellotti II. See Ohio Rev.Code Ann.
§ 2151.85(C)(3) (Supp.1988). The majority makes light of what
it acknowledges might be "some initial confusion" of the
unsophisticated minor who is trying to deal with an unfamiliar and
mystifying court system on an intensely intimate matter.
Ante at
497 U. S.
516-517. The Court points out that the minor, with
counsel appointed after she filed the complaint, "may move for
leave to amend the
Page 497 U. S. 528
pleadings" and avers that it "seems unlikely that the Ohio
courts will treat a minor's choice of complaint form without due
care."
Ibid. I would take the Ohio Legislature's word,
however, that its pleading requirement was intended to be
meaningful. The constitutionality of a procedural provision cannot
be analyzed on the basis that it may have no effect. If the
pleading requirement prevents some minors from showing either that
they are mature or that an abortion would be in their best
interests, it plainly is unconstitutional.
The majority fails to elucidate any state interest in setting up
this barricade for the young pregnant woman -- a barricade that
will "serve only to confuse . . . her and to heighten her anxiety."
Thornburgh, 476 U.S. at
476 U. S. 762.
The justification the State put forward before the Court of Appeals
was the
"absurd contention that '[a]ny minor claiming to be mature and
well enough informed to independently make such an important
decision as an abortion should also be mature enough to file her
complaint under [the appropriate subsection].'"
See 854 F.2d, at 863, quoting Brief for State of Ohio
43. This proffered "justification" is even more harsh than the
Court of Appeals noted. It excludes the mature minor who may not
have the intellectual capacity to understand these tangled forms,
and it spurns the immature minor who is abused or who contends for
some other reason that an abortion without parental involvement
would be in her best interest. Surely the goal of the court
proceeding is to assist, not to entrap, the young pregnant
woman.
The State's interest in "streamlining" the claims, belatedly
asserted for the first time before this Court, is no less absurd.
It is ludicrous to confound the pregnant minor, forced to go to
court at this time of crisis in her life, with alternative
complaint forms that must later be rescinded by appointed counsel
and replaced by the only form that is constitutionally valid.
Moreover, this ridiculous pleading scheme leaves to the judge's
discretion whether the minor may amend her
Page 497 U. S. 529
pleading and attempt to prove both her maturity and best
interest. To allow the resolution of this vital issue to turn on a
judge's discretion does not comport with
Bellotti II's
declaration that the minor who
"fails to satisfy the court that she is competent to make this
decision independently . . .
must be permitted to show
that an abortion nevertheless would be in her best interests."
Bellotti II, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S.
647-648 (emphasis added).
B
As the pregnant minor attempts to find her way through the
labyrinth set up by the State of Ohio, she encounters yet another
obstruction even before she has completed the complaint form. In
Bellotti II, the plurality insisted that the judicial
bypass procedure "must assure that a resolution of the issue, and
any appeals that may follow, will be completed with
anonymity. . . . "
Id. at
443 U. S. 644.
That statement was not some idle procedural requirement, but stems
from the proposition that the Due Process Clause protects the
woman's right to make her decision "independently and privately."
Hodgson, ante, at
497 U. S. 434. The zone of privacy long has been held to
encompass an "individual interest in avoiding disclosure of
personal matters."
Whalen v. Roe, 429 U.
S. 589,
429 U. S. 599
(1977). The Ohio statute does not safeguard that right. Far from
keeping the identity of the minor anonymous, the statute requires
the minor to sign her full name and the name of one of her parents
on the complaint form.
See App. 6-14 (pleading forms).
See ante at
497 U. S. 512.
("Unless the minor has counsel, she must sign a complaint form to
initiate the bypass procedure and, even if she has counsel, she
must supply the name of one of her parents at four different
places.") Acknowledging that "[c]onfidentiality differs from
anonymity," the majority simply asserts that "complete anonymity"
is not "critical."
Ibid. That easy conclusion is
irreconcilable with
Bellotti's anonymity requirement. The
definition of "anonymous" is "not named or identified."
Page 497 U. S. 530
Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary 88 (1983). Complete
anonymity, then, appears to be the only kind of anonymity that a
person could possibly have. The majority admits that case law
regarding the anonymity requirement has permitted no less.
See
ante at
497 U. S. 512,
citing
Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts v.
Bellotti, 641 F.2d 1006, 1025 (CA1 1981) (pseudonym);
Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas City, Missouri, Inc. v.
Ashcroft, 462 U. S. 476,
462 U. S. 491,
n. 16 (initials).
See also Thornburgh, 476 U.S. at
476 U. S. 766
("[T]he decision to terminate a pregnancy is an intensely private
one that must be protected in a way that assures anonymity").
The majority points to Ohio laws requiring court employees not
to disclose public documents, blithely assuming that the "mere
possibility of unauthorized, illegal disclosure by state employees"
is insufficient to establish that the confidentiality of the
proceeding is not protected.
Ante at
497 U. S. 513.
In fact, the provisions regarding the duty of court employees not
to disclose public documents amount to no more than "generally
stated principles of . . . confidentiality."
American College
of Obstetricians v. Thornburgh, 737 F.2d 283, 297 (CA3 1984),
aff'd on other grounds, 476 U. S. 747
(1986). As the District Court pointed out, there are no indications
of how a clerk's office, large or small, is to ensure that the
records of abortion cases will be distinguished from the records of
all other cases that are available to the public.
Akron Center
for Reproductive Health v. Rosen, 633
F. Supp. 1123, 1143-1144 (ND Ohio 1986).
Cf. Planned
Parenthood League of Massachusetts v. Bellotti, 641 F.2d 1006,
1025 (CA1 1981) (minor proceeds under pseudonym and affidavit
containing her identity is kept in separate, sealed file). Nor are
there measures for sealing the record after the case is closed to
prevent its public availability;
Planned Parenthood Assn. of
the Atlanta Area, Inc. v. Harris, 670 F.
Supp. 971, 991 (ND Ga.1987) (noting with disapproval that
Georgia statute made no provision for court documents to be
sealed).
Page 497 U. S. 531
This Court is well aware that, unless special care is taken,
court documents of an intimate nature will find their way to the
press and public.
See The Florida Star v. B.J.F.,
491 U. S. 524
(1989) (reporter in police room copied police report and published
article with rape victim's full name). The State has offered no
justification for its failure to provide specific guidelines to be
followed by the Juvenile Court to ensure anonymity for the pregnant
minor -- even though it has in place a procedure to assure the
anonymity of juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent or
unruly.
See Ohio Rev.Code Ann. § 2151.358 (1976)
(detailed provision for sealing record and for expungement of
record).
"A woman and her physician will necessarily be more reluctant to
choose an abortion if there exists a possibility that her decision
and her identity will become known publicly."
Thornburgh, 476 U.S. at
476 U. S. 766.
A minor whose very purpose in going through a judicial bypass
proceeding is to avoid notifying a hostile or abusive parent would
be most alarmed at signing her name and the name of her parent on
the complaint form. Generalized statements concerning the
confidentiality of records would be of small comfort, even if she
were aware of them. True anonymity is essential to an effective,
meaningful bypass. In the face of the forms that the minor must
actually deal with, the State's assurances that the minor's privacy
will be protected ring very hollow. I would not permit the State of
Ohio to force a minor to forgo her anonymity in order to obtain a
waiver of the parental notification requirement.
C
Because a
"pregnant adolescent . . . cannot preserve for long the
possibility of aborting, which effectively expires in a matter of
weeks from the onset of pregnancy,"
this Court has required that the State "must assure" that
the
"resolution of the issue, and any appeals that may follow, will
be completed with . . . sufficient expedition to provide an
effective opportunity for an abortion to be obtained."
Bellotti II, 443
Page 497 U. S. 532
U.S. at
443 U. S. 642,
443 U. S. 644
(opinion of Powell, J.);
see also H.L. v. Matheson, 450
U.S. at
450 U. S. 412
(time is of the essence in an abortion decision). Ohio's judicial
bypass procedure can consume up to three weeks of a young woman's
pregnancy. I would join the Sixth Circuit, the District Court, and
the other federal courts that have held that a timespan of this
length fails to guarantee a sufficiently expedited procedure.
See 854 F.2d at 868; 633 F. Supp. at 1143.
See also,
e.g., American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists v.
Thornburgh, 656 F.
Supp. 879, 887-888 (ED Pa. 1987) (statutory scheme allowing 23
days for judicial proceeding is unconstitutional);
Glick v.
McKay, 616 F.
Supp. 322, 326-327 (Nev.1985).
The majority is unconcerned that "the procedure may require up
to 22 days in a rare case."
Ante at
497 U. S. 514.
I doubt the "rarity" of such cases. In any event, the Court of
Appeals appropriately pointed out that, because a minor often does
not learn of her pregnancy until a late stage in the first
trimester, time lost during that trimester is especially critical.
854 F.2d at 867-868. The Court ignores the facts that the medical
risks surrounding abortion increase as pregnancy advances, and that
such delay may push a woman into her second trimester, where the
medical risks, economic costs, and state regulation increase
dramatically.
See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.
S. 113,
410 U. S. 150,
410 U. S. 163
(1973);
H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 439
and n. 25 (dissenting opinion). Minors, who are more likely to seek
later abortions than adult women, [
Footnote 1] and who usually are not financially
independent, will suffer acutely from any delay.
See
Ashcroft, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 497-498 (opinion concurring in part and
dissenting in part) (an increased cost factor "may seem
insignificant from the Court's comfortable perspective," but is not
"equally insignificant" to "the unemployed teenager" for whom this
additional cost may well put an abortion beyond reach). Because a
delay of up to 22
Page 497 U. S. 533
days may limit significantly a woman's ability to obtain an
abortion, I agree with the conclusions of the District Court and
the Court of Appeals that the statute violates this Court's command
that a judicial bypass proceeding be conducted with sufficient
speed to maintain "an effective opportunity for an abortion to be
obtained."
Bellotti II, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 644.
[
Footnote 2]
D
The Ohio statute provides that, if the juvenile or appellate
courts fail to act within the statutory timeframe, an abortion
without parental notification is "constructively" authorized.
Although Ohio's Legislature may have intended this provision to
expedite the bypass procedure, the confusion that will result from
the constructive authorization provision will add further delay to
the judicial bypass proceeding, and is yet one more obstruction in
the path of the pregnant minor. The physician risks civil damages,
criminal penalties, including imprisonment, as well as revocation
of his license for disobeying the statute's commands, but the
statute provides for no formal court order or other relief to
safeguard the physician from these penalties.
See
§§ 2151.85(B)(1); 2919.12(D); 2919.12(E); 4731.22(B)(23).
The State argues that a combination of a date-stamped copy of the
minor's complaint and
Page 497 U. S. 534
a "docket sheet showing no entry" would inform the physician
that the abortion could proceed. Brief for Appellant 36. Yet the
mere absence of an entry on a court's docket sheet hardly would be
reassuring to a physician facing such dire consequences, and the
State offers no reason why a formal order or some kind of actual
notification from the clerk of court would not be possible. There
is no doubt that the nebulous authorization envisioned by this
statute
"in conjunction with a statute imposing strict civil and
criminal liability . . . could have a profound chilling effect on
the willingness of physicians to perform abortions . . . . "
Colautti v. Franklin, 439 U. S. 379,
439 U. S. 396
(1979). I agree with the Court of Appeals that the "practical
effect" of the "pocket approval" provision is to frustrate the
minor's right to an expedient disposition of her petition. 854 F.2d
at 868.
E
If the minor is able to wend her way through the intricate
course of preliminaries Ohio has set up for her and at last reaches
the court proceeding, the State shackles her even more tightly with
still another "extra layer and burden of regulation on the abortion
decision."
Danforth, 428 U.S. at
428 U. S. 66.
The minor must demonstrate by "clear and convincing evidence"
either (1) her maturity; (2) or that one of her parents has engaged
in a pattern of physical, sexual, or emotional abuse against her;
or (3) that notice to a parent "is not in her best interest."
§ 2151.85(C). The imposition of this heightened standard of
proof unduly burdens the minor's right to seek an abortion and
demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of the real nature of a
court bypass proceeding.
The function of a standard of proof is to
"'instruct the factfinder concerning the degree of confidence
our society thinks he should have in the correctness of factual
conclusions,'"
Addington v. Texas, 441 U. S. 418,
441 U. S. 423
(1979), quoting
In re Winship, 397 U.
S. 358,
397 U. S. 370
(1970) (concurring opinion), and is "a societal judgment about how
the risk of error
Page 497 U. S. 535
should be distributed between the litigants."
Santosky v.
Kramer, 455 U. S. 745,
455 U. S. 755
(1982). By imposing such a stringent standard of proof, this Ohio
statute improperly places the risk of an erroneous decision on the
minor, the very person whose fundamental right is at stake.
Cf.
id. at
455 U. S. 756
(clear and convincing standard of proof usually has been employed
to preserve fundamental fairness in a variety of
government-initiated proceedings that threaten to deprive the
individual involved with a significant deprivation of liberty).
Even if the judge is satisfied that the minor is mature or that an
abortion is in her best interest, the court may not authorize the
procedure unless it additionally finds that the evidence meets a
"clear and convincing" standard of proof.
The majority asserts that a State may require a heightened
standard of proof because the procedure is
ex parte. Ante
at
497 U. S. 516.
According to the majority, the only alternative to the "clear and
convincing" standard is a preponderance of the evidence standard,
which would require proof by the greater weight of the evidence.
The majority reasons that the preponderance standard is unsuited to
a
Bellotti II bypass because, if the minor presents any
evidence at all and no evidence is put forth in opposition, the
minor always will present the greater weight of the evidence. Yet,
as the State explained at argument, the bypass procedure is
inquisitorial in nature, where the judge questions the minor to
discover if she meets the requirements set down in
Bellotti II.
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 9. The judge will be making this
determination after a hearing that resembles an interview, not an
evidentiary proceeding. [
Footnote
3] The District Court observed,
"the
Page 497 U. S. 536
judge's decision will necessarily be based largely on subjective
standards without the benefit of any evidence other than a woman's
testimony."
633 F. Supp. at 1137. Thus, unlike the procedure the majority
seems to envision, it is not the quantity of the evidence presented
that is crucial in the bypass proceeding; rather, the crucial
factors are the nature of the minor's statements to the judge and
her demeanor. Contrary to the majority's theory, if the minor
presents evidence that she is mature, she still must satisfy the
judge that this is so, even without this heightened standard of
proof. The use of a heightened standard in the very special context
of
Bellotti's court bypass procedure does little to
facilitate a fair and reliable result and imports an element from
the adversarial process into this unique inquiry where it has no
rightful place.
Although I think the provision is constitutionally infirm for
all minors, I am particularly concerned about the effect it will
have on sexually or physically abused minors. I agree that parental
interest in the welfare of their children is "particularly strong
where a
normal family relationship exists."
Bellotti
II, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 648
(emphasis added). A minor needs no statute to seek the support of
loving parents. Where trust and confidence exist within the family
structure, it is likely that communication already exists.
[
Footnote 4] If that
compassionate support is lacking, an unwanted pregnancy is a poor
way to generate it.
Sadly, not all children in our country are fortunate enough to
be members of loving families. For too many young pregnant women,
parental involvement in this most intimate decision
Page 497 U. S. 537
threatens harm, rather than promises comfort. [
Footnote 5] The Court's selective blindness
to this stark social reality is bewildering and distressing.
Lacking the protection that young people typically find in their
intimate family associations, these minors are desperately in need
of constitutional protection. The sexually or physically abused
minor may indeed be "lonely or even terrified,"
ante at
497 U. S. 520,
not of the abortion procedure, but of an abusive family member.
[
Footnote 6] The Court's placid
reference,
ibid., to the "compassionate and mature" advice
the minor will receive from within the family must seem an
unbelievable and cruel irony to those children trapped in violent
families. [
Footnote 7]
Under the system Ohio has set up, a sexually abused minor must
go to court and demonstrate to a complete stranger by clear and
convincing evidence that she has been the victim of a pattern of
sexual abuse. When asked at argument what kind of evidence a minor
would be required to adduce at her bypass hearing, the State
answered that the minor would tell her side to the judge and the
judge would consider how well
Page 497 U. S. 538
"the minor is able to articulate what her particular concerns
are." Tr. of Oral Arg. 9. The court procedure alone, in many cases,
is extremely traumatic.
See Hodgson, ante, at
497 U. S. 441,
and n. 29. The State and the Court are impervious to the additional
burden imposed on the abused minor who, as any experienced social
worker or counselor knows, is often afraid and ashamed to reveal
what has happened to her to anyone outside the home. The Ohio
statute forces that minor, despite her very real fears, to
experience yet one more hardship. She must attempt, in public, and
before strangers, to "articulate what her particular concerns are"
with sufficient clarity to meet the State's "clear and convincing
evidence" standard. The upshot is that, for the abused minor, the
risk of error entails a risk of violence.
I would affirm the judgments below on the grounds of the several
constitutional defects identified by the District Court and the
Court of Appeals. The pleading requirements, the so-called and
fragile guarantee of anonymity, the insufficiency of the expedited
procedures, the constructive authorization provision, and the
"clear and convincing evidence" requirement, singly and
collectively, cross the limit of constitutional acceptance.
III
Even if the Ohio statute complied with the
Bellotti II
requirements for a constitutional court bypass, I would conclude
that the Ohio procedure is unconstitutional because it requires the
physician's personal and nondelegable obligation to give the
required statutory notice. Particularly when viewed in context with
the other impediments this statute places in the minor's path,
there is more than a "possibility" that the physician notification
provision
"was motivated more by a legislative interest in placing
obstacles in the woman's path to an abortion,
see Maher v.
Roe, 432 U. S. 464, 474 (1977), than
by a genuine interest in fostering informed decisionmaking."
Ante at
497 U. S. 524
(STEVENS, J., concurring in the judgment). Most telling in this
regard is the fact that, according
Page 497 U. S. 539
to the Court of Appeals and the District Court, the State has
never claimed that personal notice by the physician was required to
effectuate an interest in the minor's health until the matter
reached this Court. In fact, the State has taken three different
positions as to its justification for this provision.
See
854 F.2d at 862 ("[T]he state's interest is in insuring that
immature, unemancipated minors or minors whose best interests
require notification have an adequate opportunity for parental
intervention. The state has made no showing that this interest is
advanced by requiring the attending physician, as opposed to
another qualified, responsible person, to effectuate
notification"); 633 F. Supp. at 1135 ("[T]he state's attempt to
characterize this duty as
merely ministerial' does not advance
its case at all, but rather suggests that its interest in having
the physician perform this function is even less weighty than
having him or her perform counseling to obtain informed consent"
[that was struck down in Akron v. Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, Inc., 462 U.
S. 416]). If these chimerical health concerns now
asserted in fact were the true motivation behind this provision, I
seriously doubt that the State would have taken so long to say so
.
Even if the State's interest in the health of the minor were the
motivation behind the provision, the State never explains why it is
that a physician interested in obtaining information, or a parent
interested in providing information to a physician, cannot do so
following the actual notification by some other competent
professional, such as a nurse or counselor. And the State and the
majority never explain why, if the physician's ability to garner
information from the parents is of such paramount importance that
only the physician may notify the parent, the statute allows the
physician to send notice by mail if he or she cannot reach the
minor's parent "after a reasonable effort." §
2919.12(B)(2).
The State's asserted interest in the minor's health care is
especially ironic in light of the statute's interference with
her
Page 497 U. S. 540
physician's experienced professional judgment. [
Footnote 8] "If a physician is licensed by
the State, he is recognized by the State as capable of exercising
acceptable clinical judgment,"
Doe v. Bolton, 410 U.
S. 179,
410 U. S. 199
(1973), and he should be permitted to exercise that judgment as to
whether he or another professional should be the person who will
notify a minor's parents of her decision to terminate her
pregnancy. I have no doubt that the attending physician, better
than the Ohio Legislature, will know when a consultation with the
parent is necessary. "If he fails in this, professional censure and
deprivation of his license are available remedies" already in
place.
Ibid. The strictures of this Ohio law not only
unduly burden the minor's right to an abortion but impinge on the
physician's professional discretion in the practice of medicine.
[
Footnote 9]
IV
The Ohio Legislature, in its wisdom, in 1985 enacted its
anti-abortion statute. That statute, when subjected to facial
challenge, has been held unconstitutional by the United States
District Court for the Northern District of Ohio and by the Court
of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. It is now, however, upheld on
that challenge by a majority of this Court. The majority opinion
takes up each challenged provision
Page 497 U. S. 541
in turn; concludes, with brief comment, that it is within the
bounds of the plurality opinion in
Bellotti II; and moves
on routinely and in the same fashion to the succeeding provisions,
one by one. A plurality then concludes, in
497 U.
S. with hyperbole that can have but one result: to
further incite an American press, public, and pulpit already
inflamed by the pronouncement made by a plurality of this Court
last Term in
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services,
492 U. S. 490
(1989). The plurality indulges in paternalistic comments about
"profound philosophic choices"; the "woman's own destiny and
personal dignity"; the "origins of the other human life that lie
within the embryo"; the family as "society's most intimate
association"; the striving of the family to give to the minor
"advice that is both compassionate and mature"; and the desired
assumption that "in most cases" the woman will receive "guidance
and understanding from a parent."
Ante at
497 U. S.
520.
Some of this may be so "in most cases" and, it is to be hoped,
in judges' own and other warm and protected, nurturing family
environments. But those "most cases" need not rely on
constitutional protections that are so vital for others. I have
cautioned before that there is "another world
out there'" that
the Court "either chooses to ignore or refuses to recognize."
Beal v. Doe, 432 U. S. 438,
432 U.S. 463 (1977). It is
the unfortunate denizens of that world, often frightened and
forlorn, lacking the comfort of loving parental guidance and mature
advice, who most need the constitutional protection that the Ohio
Legislature set out to make as difficult as possible to
obtain.
That that Legislature set forth with just such a goal is evident
from the statute it spawned. The underlying nature of the Ohio
statute is proclaimed by its strident and offensively restrictive
provisions. It is as though the Legislature said:
"If the courts of the United States insist on upholding a
limited right to an abortion, let us make that abortion as
difficult as possible to obtain"
because, basically, whether on professed
Page 497 U. S. 542
moral or religious grounds or whatever, "we believe that is the
way it must be." This often may be the way legislation is enacted,
but few are the instances where the injustice is so evident and the
impediments so gross as those inflicted by the Ohio Legislature on
these vulnerable and powerless young women.
[
Footnote 1]
Indeed, the threat of parental notice itself may cause a minor
to delay requesting assistance with her pregnancy.
See H.L. v
Matheson, 450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 439, and n. 25 (dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 2]
The majority finds comfort in
Ashcroft and insists that
this Court upheld a Missouri statute that contained a bypass
procedure "that could require 17 calendar days plus a sufficient
time for deliberation and decisionmaking at both the trial and
appellate levels."
Ante at
497 U. S. 514.
The majority disregards the limited nature of the
Ashcroft
holding. The Court there looked only at the Missouri appellate
procedure, and determined that the 24-hour deadline for docketing
the appeal and the 5-day deadline for completing the record and
perfecting the appeal, together with the requirement that the
Missouri Supreme Court provide for expedited appeal by court rule,
provided a constitutionally sufficient "framework" for complying
with
Bellotti's mandate for expedited appeals.
See 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 491,
n. 16. The Court made no ruling as to whether the Missouri law
provided constitutionally sufficient expedition at the initial
stages of the bypass.
[
Footnote 3]
Bellotti II itself recognized the unique nature of the
bypass procedure when it required the minor merely to show or
satisfy the court that she is mature or that an abortion would be
in her best interests, without imposing any standard of proof.
See also 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 643,
n. 22 ("much can be said for employing procedures and a forum less
formal than those associated with a court of general
jurisdiction").
[
Footnote 4]
It has been said that the majority of all minors voluntarily
tell their parents about their pregnancy. The overwhelming majority
of those under 16 years of age do so.
See Torres et al.,
Telling Parents: Clinic Practices and Adolescents' Use of Family
Planning and Abortion Services, 12 Family Planning Perspectives
284, 287-288, 291 (1980).
[
Footnote 5]
In 1986, more than 1,000,000 children and adolescents suffered
harm from parental abuse or neglect, including sexual abuse.
See Brief for American Psychological Association
et
al. as
Amici Curiae 9-10, and sources cited therein.
This figure is considered to be a minimum estimate, because the
incidence of abuse is substantially underreported. Pregnancy does
not deter, and may even precipitate, physical attacks on women.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 6]
"[P]regnant minors may attempt to self-abort or to obtain an
illegal abortion rather than risk parental notification."
H.L.
v. Matheson, 450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 439,
and n. 26 (dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 7]
The majority and the State of Ohio piously fail to mention what
happens to these unwanted babies, born to mothers who are little
more than children themselves, who have little opportunity,
education, or life skills. Too often, the unwanted child becomes
trapped in a cycle of poverty, despair, and violence. This Court,
by experience, knows all too well that the States are unable
adequately to supervise and protect these vulnerable citizens.
See Baltimore City Dept. of Social Services v. Bouknight,
493 U. S. 549
(1990);
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dept. of Social
Services, 489 U. S. 189
(1989).
[
Footnote 8]
In light of its asserted interest, I find it odd that Ohio
allows minors to consent to treatment for sexually transmitted
diseases, Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 3709.241 (1988), and drug and
alcohol abuse, § 3719.012(A). In each of these sensitive areas
of health care, the State apparently trusts the physician to use
his informed medical judgment as to whether he should question or
inform the parent about the minor's medical and psychological
condition.
[
Footnote 9]
The majority's reliance on
H.L. v. Matheson is
misplaced. In that case, unlike this one, the Utah Supreme Court
had limited the steps that a physician would have to take to notify
the minor's parents.
See 450 U.S. at
450 U. S. 405.
In contrast, in
Akron, the Court pointed out that the
"critical factor is whether she obtains the necessary
information and counseling from a
qualified person, not
the identity of the person from whom she obtains it."
462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 448
(emphasis added).