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USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 1 of 169 [PUBLISH] In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit ____________________ No. 23-10385 ____________________ JANUARY LITTLEJOHN, JEFFREY LITTLEJOHN, PlaintiďŹs-Appellants, versus SCHOOL BOARD OF LEON COUNTY, FLORIDA, ROCKY HANNA, Individually and in his oďŹcial capacity as Superintendent of Leon County Schools, DR. KATHLEEN RODGERS Individually and in her oďŹcial capacity as Former Assistant Superintendent Equity OďŹcer and Title IX Compliance Coordinator for Leon County Schools, RACHEL THOMAS, Individually and in oďŹcial capacity as Counselor at Deerlake Middle School, USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 2 of 169 2 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 ROBIN OLIVERI, Individually and in her oďŹcial capacity as Assistant Principal of Deerlake Middle School, Defendants- Appellees. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida D.C. Docket No. 4:21-cv-00415-MW-MJF ____________________ Before ROSENBAUM, NEWSOM, and TJOFLAT, Circuit Judges. ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge: Our system of government divides the governmentâs pow- ers among three branches: the legislature, the executive, and the judiciary. Each branch generally performs different types of ac- tions. This case requires us to determine whether Defendants-Ap- pellees Leon County School Board and its employeesâ actions, which Plaintiffs-Appellants January and Jeffrey Littlejohn chal- lenge, were legislative or executive. That distinction governs which analytical framework we apply in a substantive-due-process case like this one. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 3 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 3 The Littlejohns allege that the Board and its officials violated their parental due-process rights when the officials met with and permitted the Littlejohnsâ thirteen-year-old child to express the childâs gender identity at school. In compliance with the Boardâs guidelines at the time, school officials developed a gender-identity- related âStudent Support Planâ for and with the child without the Littlejohnsâ involvement and contrary to the Littlejohnsâ wishes. As we explain, these actions are executive, not legislative, in nature. So we apply the substantive-due-process framework that governs analysis of executive actions. That framework asks whether the officialsâ conduct âshocked the conscience.â Because the school officialsâ actions here do not satisfy that standard as a matter of law, after careful consideration and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm the district courtâs order dismissing the Littlejohnsâ claims. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background1 At the time relevant to this litigation, the Littlejohnsâ child was thirteen years old and attended Deerlake Middle School in Tal- lahassee, Florida. The Littlejohnsâ child was assigned female at birth, but before the 2020â21 school year, asked to go by they/them pronouns and a âmaleâ name, J. The Littlejohns did not allow their 1 We recount the facts in the light most favorable to the Littlejohns. See Burban v. City of Neptune Beach, 920 F.3d 1274, 1278 (11th Cir. 2019). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 4 of 169 4 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 child to use a diďŹerent name or pronouns, though they permitted the child to use âJ.â as a ânicknameâ at school. Mrs. Littlejohn in- formed the childâs teacher that a private therapist that the Lit- tlejohns hired was seeing the child, and she asked the teacher not to use a diďŹerent name or pronouns for the child. But the child told school counselor Rachel Thomas that the child wanted to use the name J. and they/them pronouns. The School Board maintains a Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Gender Nonconforming and Questioning Support Guide (âGuideâ). The School Boardâs LGBTQ+ Equity Committee developed the Guide, under the supervision of Superintendent Rocky Hanna and Assistant Superintendent Dr. Kathleen Rodgers. The Guide is âa tool for schools, students and their parents and le- gal guardians to eďŹectively navigate existing laws, regulations and policies that support LGBTQ+ [Leon County School] students.â At the time of the events underlying this litigation, the 2018 version of the Guide was in eďŹect. The School Board released an updated Guide in June 2022. But because the 2018 Guide governed Defendantsâ actions here, we consult the 2018 Guide in this appeal. Among other resources, the 2018 Guide contained a Ques- tion-and-Answer portion, which discussed parental-notiďŹcation procedures. It instructed staďŹ not to notify parents if a studentâs behavior led staďŹ to believe the student was LGBTQ+: Q: A student has exhibited behavior in school leading admin- istrators or teachers to believe the student is LGBTQ+. Should the parents or legal guardians be notiďŹed? USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 5 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 5 A: No. Outing a student, especially to parents, can be very dangerous to the student[â]s health and well-being. Some students are not able to be out at home because their parents are unaccepting of LGBTQ+ people out. As many as 40% of homeless youth are LGBTQ+, many of whom have been rejected by their families for being LGBTQ+. Outing stu- dents to their parents can literally make them homeless. The Guide also included a template for a Transgender/Gen- der Nonconforming Student Support Plan. That template con- tained an intake checklist asking whether the childâs parents were âawareâ of their gender identity, whether the parents were âsup- portive,â and whether the parents were to be notiďŹed. After the Littlejohnsâ child expressed a desire to socially tran- sition at school, Thomas and other school staďŹ met with the child to develop a Student Support Plan. Because the child did not af- ďŹrmatively request parental presence at that meeting, in accord with the Guide, school oďŹcials did not notify the Littlejohns. And the Student Support Plan stated that the Littlejohns were âaware, but not supportiveâ of their childâs desire to use a preferred name and pronouns. When the Littlejohns learned about their childâs Student Support Plan meeting and social transition at school, they con- tacted school and district administrators. Thomas and Assistant Principal Robin Oliveri called Mrs. Littlejohn, and Thomas told her that the Littlejohns were not invited to their childâs Student Sup- port Plan meeting because, âby law,â the child had to request USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 6 of 169 6 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 parental attendance. And, Thomas stated, the child was âpro- tectedâ under a non-discrimination law that did not require paren- tal notiďŹcation. Oliveri added that the school designed its protocol of not including parents without the childâs approval to protect the childâs safety. The Littlejohns then repeatedly called and emailed Dr. Rodgers. Eventually, Dr. Rodgers stated in an email to the Lit- tlejohns, âWe currently do not have any Florida speciďŹc law that obligates us to inform the parents or says we cannot listen to the student without their parent present.â 2 B. Procedural History The Littlejohns sued the School Board, Hanna, Rodgers, Thomas, and Oliveri, alleging that they violated the Littlejohnsâ substantive-due-process and privacy rights under both federal and state law. In their operative First Amended Complaint, the 2 After the Littlejohns filed suit, Florida enacted its âParentsâ Bill of Rightsâ law. See Fla. Stat. § 1014.01 et seq (2021). That law provides that the State or its entities cannot âinfringe on the fundamental rights of a parent to direct the upbringing, education, health care, and mental health of his or her minor child without demonstrating that such action is reasonable and necessary to achieve a compelling state interest and that such action is narrowly tailored and is not otherwise served by a less restrictive means.â Id. § 1014.03. In June 2022, the School Board approved a revised Guide âconsistent with the pronouncements in Floridaâs Parentsâ Bill of Rightsâ and related legislation. The 2022 Guide provides, among other things, that âSchool personnel must not intentionally withhold information from parents unless a reasonably prudent person would believe that disclosure would result in abuse, abandonment, or neglect . . . .â USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 7 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 7 Littlejohns asserted ďŹve causes of action: three under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the United States Constitution and two under the Florida Constitution.3 As relevant here, the Littlejohns alleged that Hanna and Dr. Rodgers violated their parental-due-process and familial-privacy rights by preparing and authorizing the Guide. They also asserted that Thomas violated their parental-due-process and familial-pri- vacy rights by meeting with and developing a Student Support Plan for their child without notifying them. As for Oliveri, the Lit- tlejohns alleged that she violated their parental-due-process and fa- milial-privacy rights by âconcealing informationâ about the childâs social transition at school. Finally, the Littlejohns contended that the School Board violated their parental-due-process and familial- privacy rights by authorizing and implementing the 2018 Guide, as well as by authorizing their exclusion from their childâs Student Support Plan meeting. The Littlejohns sought both damages and prospective relief. They sought a âdeclaration that Defendants violated [their] funda- mental rightsâ by (1) permitting their child to âselect[] a new âaf- ďŹrmed name and pronouns,â without parental notiďŹcation and con- sentâ; (2) prohibiting school staďŹ from communicating with them about their childâs âdiscordant gender identityâ; and (3) instructing school staďŹ to âdeceiveâ them by âusing diďŹerent names and 3 In their original complaint, the Littlejohns also asserted two causes of action under Florida statutes, but they did not reallege them in their First Amended Complaint. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 8 of 169 8 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 pronouns around parents than are used in school.â They also sought nominal and compensatory damages against the Board and against the individual Defendants in their individual capacities. Defendants moved to dismiss. The district court granted the motion without prejudice. First, the district court held that the re- lease of the 2022 Guide mooted all claims for injunctive relief, as those claims were based on the superseded 2018 Guide. Next, the district court found that the individual Defendants were entitled to qualiďŹed immunity on the damages claims. As for the damages claims against the School Board, the district court determined that the challenged actionsâthe failure to include the Littlejohns in the Student Support Plan meeting and allowing the Littlejohnsâ child to socially transition at schoolâdid not violate the Littlejohnsâ rights under the âshock the conscienceâ test. And because the dis- trict court concluded that the School Boardâs actions did not âshock the conscience,â it dismissed the claims. Finally, the district court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the Florida con- stitutional claims after it dismissed the federal claims. The Littlejohns timely appealed. 4 On appeal, they do not challenge the district courtâs mootness determination on the 2018 Guide or its decision not to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the Florida-law claims. So we do not discuss those claims further. 4 On appeal, eleven organizations, along with a coalition of 21 states, filed briefs as amici curiae in support of the Littlejohns and reversal. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 9 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 9 II. STANDARD OF REVIEW We review a grant of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim de novo, accepting the complaintâs allegations as true and construing them in the light most favorable to the plaintiďŹ. Burban v. City of Neptune Beach, 920 F.3d 1274, 1278 (11th Cir. 2019). III. DISCUSSION To survive a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a complaint must contain âenough facts to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.â Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2). In other words, a plaintiďŹ must âplead[] factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.â Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009). As weâve noted, the Littlejohns assert that Defendants vio- lated their substantive-due-process rights to âmake decisions con- cerning the care, custody, and control of their childrenâ and to âdi- rect the medical and mental health decision-making for their chil- dren,â as well as their right to familial privacy. Our substantive- due-process precedent recognizes certain rights as âfundamental,â meaning they are âobjectively, deeply rooted in this Nationâs his- tory and tradition, and implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were sacri- ďŹced.â Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 720â21 (1997) (cleaned up). Because it makes no diďŹerence to the outcome here, USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 10 of 169 10 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 we assume without deciding that the Littlejohns invoke âfunda- mentalâ rights. 5 On appeal, the Littlejohns challenge only the district courtâs dismissal of their claims seeking damages. Again, the Littlejohns sought damages for Defendantsâ alleged violations of their funda- mental parental-due-process and familial-privacy rights. And they based these claims on Defendantsâ actions permitting their child to socially transition at school without their involvement or authori- zation, including Defendantsâ creation of a Student Support Plan for the child. We conclude that the district court correctly dismissed those claims. To explain why, we divide our discussion into three parts. Section A explains the diďŹerent analytical frameworks we apply in substantive-due-process cases about executive and legislative ac- tion, respectively. Section B shows that the Littlejohns challenge executive, not legislative, action. As a result, the âshocks the con- scienceâ standardânot strict scrutinyâapplies. And Section C concludes that the Littlejohns have not alleged conduct that 5 Substantive-due-process jurisprudence requires a âa âcareful descriptionâ of the asserted fundamental liberty interest.â Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 721 (quoting Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 302 (1993)). The Supreme Court has recognized parentsâ âfundamental right . . . to make decisions concerning the care, cus- tody, and control of their children.â Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 66 (2000) (plurality opinion). Under the umbrella of that right, it has also recognized parentsâ âplenary authority to seek [medical] care for their children, subject to a physicianâs independent examination and medical judgment.â Parham v. J.R., 442 U.S. 584, 604 (1979). We express no opinion about whether Defendantsâ actions implicated the Littlejohnsâ childâs medical or mental-health care. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 11 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 11 âshocks the conscience,â so the district court correctly dismissed their claims. A. We apply different analytical frameworks to assess ex- ecutive and legislative actions that allegedly violated substantive-due-process rights. The Fourteenth Amendmentâs Due Process Clause prohibits a state or its oďŹcials from âdepriv[ing] any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.â U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1. Due process has both a procedural and substantive compo- nent. See Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 719â20. This case concerns the latter: substantive due process. To state a substantive-due-process claim under § 1983, a plaintiďŹ must allege â(1) a deprivation of a constitutionally pro- tected interest, and (2) that the deprivation was the result of an abuse of governmental power suďŹcient to raise an ordinary tort to the stature of a constitutional violation.â HoeďŹing v. City of Miami, 811 F.3d 1271, 1282 (11th Cir. 2016) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). To determine whether Defendantsâ actions violated the Lit- tlejohnsâ rights, we must ďŹrst identify whether Defendantsâ chal- lenged actions were âlegislativeâ or âexecutiveâ in nature. Thatâs so because our due-process precedent applies diďŹerent evaluative frameworks to âlegislativeâ and âexecutiveâ actions. See McKinney v. Pate, 20 F.3d 1550, 1557 n.9 (11th Cir. 1994) (en banc). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 12 of 169 12 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 âExecutiveâ action violates a plaintiďŹâs substantive due-pro- cess rightsâeven if the right involved is a fundamental oneâif the action âshocks the conscience.â See County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833, 846 (1998). In contrast, we use diďŹerent levels of scrutiny to determine whether legislative action violates a plaintiďŹâs substantive due-pro- cess rights. To identify the correct level of scrutiny, we âcraft[] a careful description of the asserted rightâ and ascertain whether it is so âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and traditionâ as to be fundamental. Waldman v. Conway, 871 F.3d 1283, 1292 (11th Cir. 2017) (quoting Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 721). If legislative action im- plicates a fundamental right, that action must survive strict scru- tiny. See id. If it involves a right that is not fundamental, we subject that action to rational-basis review. See FCC v. Beach Commcâns, Inc., 508 U.S. 307, 313 (1993). The Littlejohns challenge this description of the governing frameworks. They point to our language in McKinney and argue that the âshocks the conscienceâ test does not apply to their funda- mental-rights claim, no matter whether Defendantsâ action was âexecutiveâ or âlegislative.â 6 And to be sure, we have characterized the âshocks the conscienceâ standard as â[a]n alternate substantive 6 Defendants assert that the Littlejohns forfeited this claim by failing to raise it in the district court. We need not assess that contention because, as we ex- plain, the Littlejohnsâ claim fails on the merits, in any case. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 13 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 13 due process testâ used where the challenged action does not impli- cate a fundamental right. McKinney, 20 F.3d at 1556 n.7. But after we issued McKinney, the Supreme Court clariďŹed in Sacramento that the executive-action framework weâve described above governs all substantive-due-process claims involving execu- tive actionâeven those involving fundamental rights. In Sacra- mento, a high-speed police chase tragically resulted in the death of a sixteen-year-old. See 523 U.S. at 836â37. The teenâs survivors sued, claiming that the police oďŹcer violated their sonâs âsubstan- tive due process right to lifeâ through their deliberate or reckless indiďŹerence. Id. at 837. But the Court disagreed. In reaching that conclusion, the Court noted that âthe touchstone of due process is protection of the individual against arbitrary action of government,â even if âthe fault lies . . . in the exercise of power without any reasonable justi- ďŹcation in the service of a legitimate governmental objective,â as it does when a substantive-due-process violation occurs. Id. at 845â 46 (cleaned up). Then, the Court distinguished between substan- tive-due-process violations that the government commits in its leg- islative versus its executive capacities. Id. at 846. The Court ex- plained that âcriteria to identify what is fatally arbitrary diďŹer de- pending on whether it is legislation or a speciďŹc act of a govern- mental oďŹcer that is at issue.â Id. Thatâs because challenges to âexecutive action . . . raise a particular need to preserve the consti- tutional proportions of constitutional claims, lest the Constitution USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 14 of 169 14 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 be demoted to . . . a font of tort law.â Id. at 847 n.8; see also Paul v. Davis, 424 U.S. 693, 701 (1976). When âexecutive actionâ is involved, âonly the most egre- gious oďŹcial conduct can be said to be âarbitrary in the constitu- tional sense.ââ Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 846 (quoting Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 129 (1992)). And to satisfy that stand- ard, the Court continued, âthe cognizable level of executive abuse of powerâ is âthat which shocks the conscience.â Id. So in Sacramento, the Court considered whether the oďŹcerâs deprivation of the teenâs life was âan abuse of executive power so clearly unjustiďŹed by any legitimate objective of law enforcement as to be barred by the Fourteenth Amendment.â Id. at 840. The Court determined it wasnât. Because the death occurred during a high-speed chase, and oďŹcers engaged in that kind of activity must make split-second decisions, the Court found that the oďŹcerâs con- duct there did not âshock the conscience.â See id. at 855. Importantly for our purposes, the Court clariďŹed that the âconscience shockingâ inquiry is a âthreshold questionâ that neces- sarily precedes any fundamental-rights analysis. See id. at 847 n.8. In other words, even if a plaintiďŹ alleges that executive action vio- lated a fundamental right, the plaintiďŹ must ďŹrst show that the ac- tion âshock[ed] the contemporary conscience.â See id. (character- izing âegregious behaviorâ as a ânecessary conditionâ for a USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 15 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 15 substantive-due-process violation).7 To the extent that any conďŹict exists between Sacramento and our later cases (e.g., Waldman), Sac- ramento necessarily controls. Cf. United States v. Dubois, 94 F.4th 1284, 1301 (11th Cir. 2024) (âwhen prior . . . precedents conďŹict, the earlier case controlsâ (quoting MacPhee v. MiMedx Grp., 73 F.4th 1220, 1250 (11th Cir. 2023))). Our precedent illustrates the Sacramento framework in prac- tice. Take Maddox v. Stephens, 727 F.3d 1109 (11th Cir. 2013). Mad- dox concerned the same fundamental parental right that the Lit- tlejohns assert. In Maddox, the plaintiďŹ alleged that a state social 7 The Dissent asserts that Sacramento does not require us to apply the âshocks the conscienceâ standard to state actions that burden a right âimplicit in the concept of ordered liberty,â even if those state actions are executive in charac- ter. Diss. at 26. In support, it highlights United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 746 (1987), as an example of the Court explaining that a plaintiff can state a substantive-due-process claim by alleging conduct that âshocks the con- scienceâ or interferes with a right âimplicit in the concept of ordered liberty.â Diss. at 26. We respectfully disagree with that reading of Salerno and Sacra- mento. We do not parse âthe language of an opinion . . . as though we are dealing with language of a statute.â Reiter v. Sonotone Corp., 442 U.S. 330, 341 (1979). So we cannot take from Salernoâs use of âorâ that the âshocks the con- scienceâ standard does not apply to the Littlejohnsâ claim. Rather, we must assess the body of binding precedent as a whole, including the guidance Sacra- mento offers. And to the extent that body of binding precedent is conflicting, we think our best path forward is, as Judge Newsom points out in his concur- ring opinion, to follow the clearest rule statement, see Newsom Op. at 13â15â the one that Sacramento provides and that our binding precedent follows. So precedent directs us to apply the âshocks the conscienceâ standard to all exec- utive action, even if the executive action burdens a right âimplicit in the con- cept of ordered libertyâ in the process. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 16 of 169 16 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 worker violated her parental substantive-due-process rights by re- moving her child from her custody and placing the child with the childâs grandmother. Id. at 1113. We found that the plaintiďŹ had âundisputed[ly]â pled a violation of her substantive-due-process rights. Id. at 1119. But we said that such a violation was not enoughârather, only conduct that is âarbitrary or conscience shocking in a constitutional senseâ could trigger a substantive-due- process violation. Id. (quoting Waddell v. Hendry Cnty. SheriďŹâs OďŹ., 329 F.3d 1300, 1305 (11th Cir. 2003)). So we reversed the district courtâs denial of summary judgment for the social-worker defend- ant. Id. at 1127. As Maddox shows, the Littlejohns are mistaken in their con- tention that the âshocks the conscienceâ standard does not apply when we assess claims that the governmentâs executive actions vi- olated (even fundamental) substantive-due-process rights. Nor, as the Dissent contends, are Sacramentoâs and Maddoxâs directions about how to apply the âshocks the conscienceâ standard dicta. Diss. at 3. Justice Souter offered footnote 8 as a direct re- sponse to Justice Scaliaâs concurrence that refused to apply the âshocks the conscienceâ standard. Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 843 n.8. So the Courtâs reasoning as to why the standard applied was neces- sary to the opinionâs central rationale and its holding that Officer Smithâs behavior did ânot shock the conscience.â Id. at 855. Whether the Court could have resolved the case on narrower grounds does not detract from the fact that the shocks-the-con- science standard was crucial to the grounds on which the Court did USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 17 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 17 resolve the case. And that makes it binding. See, e.g., Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137, 177 (1803). But even if it were dicta, we have long distinguished be- tween âdictaâ and âSupreme Court dicta.â Schwab v. Crosby, 451 F.3d 1308, 1325 (11th Cir. 2006). And even assuming Sacramentoâs footnote 8 is dicta, itâs not the âsubordinate clause, negative preg- nant, devoid-of-analysis, throw-away kind of dicta.â Id. Rather, itâs âwell thought out, thoroughly reasoned, and carefully articulated analysis by the Supreme Court describing the scope of one of its own decisions.â Id. So we give that reasoning and its clear impli- cations substantial weight. In any event, Maddoxâs application of the âshocks the con- scienceâ standard is binding. As the Dissent recognizes, Maddox held âthat it was not clearly established that Stephensâs con- duct . . . was conscience shocking.â Diss. at 37. If Maddox didnât need to prevail under the âshocks the conscienceâ standard, then we couldnât have awarded Stephens qualified immunity on the ground that we did. In other words, if Maddox could have pre- vailed by proving only that the defendants violated a fundamental right under clearly established law, then our conclusion that the law did not clearly establish that Stephensâs conduct was con- science shocking would have been irrelevantâthe âshocks the con- scienceâ standard wouldnât have been an element of Maddoxâs claim. But we held that the âshocks the conscienceâ standard ap- plied to Maddoxâs parental-rights claim. Maddox, 727 F.3d at 1119. So we applied the standard and concluded he couldnât prove that USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 18 of 169 18 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 element under clearly established law. Our application of the âshocks the conscienceâ standard was therefore necessary to our holding in Maddox, and it binds us here as prior precedent. See Chambers v. Thompson, 150 F.3d 1324, 1326 (11th Cir. 1998). B. The Littlejohns challenge executive, not legislative, ac- tion, so the âshocks the conscienceâ standard applies. We must decide, then, whether the Littlejohns challenge âlegislativeâ or âexecutiveâ action. We begin by deďŹning those terms. âExecutive acts characteristically apply to a limited number of personsâ and âtypically arise from the ministerial or administra- tive activities of members of the executive branch.â McKinney, 20 F.3d at 1557 n.9. âLegislative acts, on the other hand, generally ap- ply to a larger segment ofâif not all ofâsociety; laws and broad- ranging executive regulations are the most common examples.â Id. For example, a school board rule of general applicability is âlegis- lativeâ action. See Harrah Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Martin, 440 U.S. 194, 198 (1979) (per curiam). But an âadministrative decisionâ that âaf- fects only a limited class of personsâ is a âtextbook âexecutive act.ââ Lewis v. Brown, 409 F.3d 1271, 1273 (11th Cir. 2005). Defendantsâ actions with respect to the Littlejohnsâ child were âexecutive.â The Littlejohns challenge Defendantsâ âdeci- sionâ to create a Student Support Plan for their child and permit the child to socially transition at school, an action that âaďŹect[ed] only a limited class of persons.â See id. Put diďŹerently, the Lit- tlejohns challenge Defendantsâ application of the Guide to their child. That is, they challenge Defendantsâ individualized action USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 19 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 19 consistent with the Guideâs general directives. That is âexecutiveâ action. See Crymes v. DeKalb County, 923 F.2d 1482, 1485 (11th Cir. 1991) (âA legislative act involves policy-making rather than mere administrative application of existing policies.â). To be sure, the Guide itself is arguably âlegislative,â as it was a âbroad-rangingâ policy that âgenerally appl[ied] to a larger seg- ment of . . . society,â the Leon County School District. See McKin- ney, 20 F.3d at 1557 n.9. But the Littlejohns waived any general challenge to the Guide (or its adoption and broad implementation). In their opposition to Defendantsâ motion to dismiss, the Lit- tlejohns asserted that âDefendantsâ course of conduct, not the con- tents of the 2018 Guide,â was the âfocus of [their] action.â We can- not revive this waived issue. See, e.g., United States v. Campbell, 26 F.4th 860, 872 (11th Cir. 2022) (en banc). In any event, the district court found that the adoption of the 2022 Guide mooted any chal- lenge to the 2018 Guide, a determination that the Littlejohns do not challenge on appeal. So all that remains is the Littlejohnsâ chal- lenge to âtextbook âexecutive act[s].ââ 8 See Brown, 409 F.3d at 1273; 8 We reach a different conclusion than the First Circuit recently did when it determined a similar school-gender-identity policy was legislative action. Foote v. Ludlow Sch. Comm., 128 F.4th 336, 346â47 (1st Cir. 2025). We do so for two reasons. First, the Littlejohns litigated the case differently than did the plaintiffs in Foote. As we discuss above, the Littlejohns waived their general challenges to the Guide, its adoption, and its broad implementation. By con- trast, in Foote, the Protocol was itself the âchief target of the Parentsâ com- plaint.â Id. at 347. The focus of the parentsâ challenge in Foote was a more characteristically legislative actâa general policy and its routine USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 20 of 169 20 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 C.B. ex rel. Breeding v. Driscoll, 82 F.3d 383, 385, 387 (11th Cir. 1996) (holding the suspension of students under an existing school policy was executive action). And Maddox made clear that even when a plaintiďŹ alleges vi- olations of her fundamental parental rights, executive action must âshock the conscienceâ to violate due process. See Maddox, 727 F.3d at 1119. In Maddox, the parental-rights interest was at its apexâa state oďŹcial removed a child from her motherâs custody. See id. at 1113. Yet we applied the âshock the conscienceâ standard all the same. See id. at 1119. And several of our sister circuits have done so as well. See, e.g., Doe v. Woodard, 912 F.3d 1278, 1300 (10th Cir. 2019) (applying the âshocks the conscienceâ standard even when the plaintiďŹ alleged interference with fundamental parental rights); Brittain v. Hansen, 451 F.3d 982, 991 (9th Cir. 2006) (same); Schmidt v. Des Moines Pub. Sch., 655 F.3d 811, 816 (8th Cir. 2011) (same); Sief- ert v. Hamilton County, 951 F.3d 753, 766 (6th Cir. 2020) (same); Miller applicationsânot, as we see it here, a more characteristically executive actâ the specific application of a general policy to one person. Second, our prece- dent does not appear to take as narrow a view of executive action as does the First Circuit. The First Circuit indicated that executive conduct is typically associated with âinstant judgment.â Id. By contrast, weâve considered execu- tive action the application of a broad rule to âonly a limited class of persons,â like the enforcement of zoning regulations. Brown, 409 F.3d at 1273â74. To be sure, weâve explained that similar regulations or policies may be legislative acts themselves, see Crymes, 923 F.2d at 1485â86, and plaintiffs could surely style their complaints to challenge them as legislative action. But the Lit- tlejohns didnât do that here; they challenged the âapplication of existing poli- ciesâ to their child. Id. at 1485. And that, weâve held, is the hallmark of exec- utive action. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 21 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 21 v. City of Philadelphia, 174 F.3d 368, 375 (3d Cir. 1999) (same); Goe v. Zucker, 43 F.4th 19, 30 (2d Cir. 2022) (same), cert. denied sub nom., Goe v. McDonald, 143 S. Ct. 1020 (2023). We must follow our precedent here. See, e.g., United States v. Archer, 531 F.3d 1347, 1352 (11th Cir. 2008) (âUnder [the prior panel precedent rule], a prior panelâs holding is binding on all subsequent panels unless and until it is overruled or undermined to the point of abrogation by the Supreme Court or by this court sitting en banc.â). C. Defendantsâ actions did not âshock the conscience.â So we must now determine whether Defendantsâ actions âshocked the conscience.â They did not. As the Supreme Court has clariďŹed, âconduct intended to in- jure in some way unjustiďŹable by any government interest is the sort of oďŹcial action most likely to rise to the conscience-shocking level.â Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 849. And â[o]nly the most egregious conductâ meets this standard. Waldman, 871 F.3d at 1292. We begin once again with Maddox. We decided Maddox on qualiďŹed-immunity grounds, ďŹnding that the plaintiďŹ had not âcited any case that would make it clear to a reasonable social worker at the time that her actions were arbitrary or conscience shocking.â 727 F.3d at 1126. So we did not decide whether the social workerâs conduct âshocked the conscienceâ and thus violated the plaintiďŹâs substantive-due-process rights. See id. at 1127 n.19. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 22 of 169 22 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 Because Maddox did not perform the âshocks the conscienceâ anal- ysis, it does not resolve the Littlejohnsâ claims. So we look to other precedent applying the âshocks the con- scienceâ test in the educational context for guidance. True, these cases did not involve interference with parental due-process rights, like the Littlejohns allege. But their analysis of the âshocks the con- scienceâ test remains instructive. For example, we found that corporal punishment with a metal weight lock, which ultimately blinded a student in one eye, was âarbitraryâ and âconscience-shocking.â Neal ex rel. Neal v. Ful- ton Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 229 F.3d 1069, 1075â77 (11th Cir. 2000). We reasoned that a school oďŹcial violated a studentâs substantive-due- process rights if â(1) [he] intentionally used an amount of force that was obviously excessive under the circumstances, and (2) the force used presented a reasonably foreseeable risk of serious bodily in- jury.â Id. at 1075. That test, we reasoned, contemplates âegregious oďŹcial abuse of force.â Id. at 1076. And we extended Nealâs frame- work to a case where a school principal âstruck [a student] with a metal cane in the head, ribs and back,â ďŹnding that the principal was not entitled to qualiďŹed immunity. Kirkland ex rel. Jones v. Greene Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 347 F.3d 903, 904 (11th Cir. 2003). But, since Neal, we have repeatedly rejected claims of âcon- science-shockingâ conduct in educational settings. In Dacosta v. Nwachukwa, 304 F.3d 1045, 1047 (11th Cir. 2002) (per curiam), the defendant âslammedâ a door in the plaintiďŹâs face, âviolently swung the door,â and âshoved [the plaintiďŹâs] face.â Even though USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 23 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 23 the defendant was arrested for criminal battery, we concluded that the defendantâs conduct did not âshock[] the conscienceâ beyond the commission of a state-law tort. Id. at 1047â48. Nor did we ďŹnd a substantive-due-process violation when a student died from electric shock after touching a live wire during a class demonstration. Nix v. Franklin Cnty. Sch. Dist., 311 F.3d 1373, 1374â75 (11th Cir. 2002). The plaintiďŹs, the deceased studentâs par- ents, argued that school oďŹcials âwere particularly arbitrary, reck- less, and deliberately indiďŹerentâ in allowing the demonstration to occur. Id. at 1376. But we concluded that, under our case law, the plaintiďŹsâ âallegations of âdeliberate indiďŹerenceââ did not ââshock the conscienceâ in a way that gives rise to a due-process violation.â Id. at 1378. We extended Nixâs reasoning in another case concerning a studentâs death, this time following an âintenseâ football practice. See Davis v. Carter, 555 F.3d 979, 980 (11th Cir. 2009). The plaintiďŹs, the deceased studentâs parents, alleged that the football coaches failed to provide enough water, ignored the studentâs complaints that he was dehydrated, subjected the student to ârigorous condi- tioning drills,â and failed to attend to the student even after he col- lapsed. Id. at 980â81. We found that the football coaches were en- titled to qualiďŹed immunity because their conduct did not ârise to the conscience-shocking level.â Id. at 984. Though the coaches may have been âdeliberately indiďŹerent to the safety risks posed by their conduct,â we said, they did not âact[] willfully or maliciously with an intent to injure,â so they did not violate the studentâs USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 24 of 169 24 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 constitutional rights. Id. Rather, the plaintiďŹsâ claims were âproperly conďŹned to the realm of torts.â Id. Taken together, Nix and Davis impose a high bar: even where a student dies, school oďŹcialsâ behavior does not âshock the con- scienceâ if it is no more than reckless or deliberately indiďŹerent. See id.; cf. also L.S. ex rel. Hernandez v. Peterson, 982 F.3d 1323, 1331 (11th Cir. 2020) (expressing âdoubt that deliberate indiďŹerence can ever be âarbitraryâ or âconscience shockingâ in a non-custodial set- tingâ). Rather, something more is required, like âmalicious[]â con- duct, see Davis, 555 F.3d at 984, or âobviously excessiveâ force, see Neal, 229 F.3d at 1076. We do not have to ďŹx the precise height of that bar to conclude that the Littlejohnsâ allegations do not clear it. Comparing the facts here to those in our cases above, we cannot conclude that Defendantsâ actions with respect to the Lit- tlejohnsâ child âshocked the conscience.â The child was not physi- cally harmed, much less permanently so. Contra Neal, 229 F.3d at 1071; Kirkland, 347 F.3d at 904; Dacosta, 304 F.3d at 1047; Nix, 311 F.3d at 1375; Davis, 555 F.3d at 980â81. 9 Defendants did not remove the Littlejohnsâ child from their custody. Contra Maddox, 727 F.3d at 1113. And Defendants did not force the child to attend a Student Support Plan meeting, to not invite the Littlejohns to that meeting, or to socially transition at school. In fact, Defendants did not force the Littlejohnsâ child to do anything at all. Cf. Sacramento, 523 U.S. 9 We do not suggest that only physical harm can support a substantive-due- process violation. We offer this list only as illustrative (not exhaustive) exam- ples drawn from our precedent. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 25 of 169 23-10385 Opinion of the Court 25 at 855. And perhaps most importantly, Defendants did not act with intent to injure. To the contrary, they sought to help the child. Un- der these circumstances, even if the Littlejohns felt that Defend- antsâ eďŹorts to help their child were misguided or wrong, the mere fact that the school oďŹcials acted contrary to the Littlejohnsâ wishes does not mean that their conduct âshocks the conscienceâ in a constitutional sense. Finally, we are not persuaded by the Littlejohnsâ attempts to distinguish Sacramento and its framework because this case does not involve âexigent circumstancesâ or âsplit-second life or death decisions.â We agree, of course, that whether government action âshocks the conscienceâ depends on context. But the context does not change the applicable legal framework. After all, Sacramento is clear that its framework applies to all substantive-due-process cases that involve executive action. See Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 847 (â[T]he substantive component of the Due Process Clause is vio- lated by executive action only when it âcan properly be character- ized as arbitrary, or conscience shocking, in a constitutional sense.ââ (emphasis added) (citation omitted)); see also id. at 847 n.8 (explaining that âexecutive action challenges raise a particular need to preserve the constitutional proportions of constitutional claimsâ). Not only that, but we have applied Sacramentoâs framework in cases that did not concern âsplit-secondâ or law-enforcement de- cisionsâmost relevantly, Maddox. We reject the Littlejohnsâ eďŹorts to cabin Sacramento and reiterate that the âshocks the conscienceâ USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 26 of 169 26 Opinion of the Court 23-10385 test is appropriate for all substantive-due-process challenges to ex- ecutive action. Because the Littlejohns failed to state a claim that Defend- antsâ (executive) actions âshocked the conscience,â the district court properly granted Defendantsâ motion to dismiss. 10 IV. CONCLUSION For the reasons weâve discussed, we aďŹrm the district courtâs grant of Defendantsâ motion to dismiss. AFFIRMED. 10 Because we find that the Littlejohnsâ complaint fails to state a claim on the merits, we do not reach the individual Defendantsâ alternative argument that they are entitled to qualified immunity. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 27 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 1 ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge, concurring: Judge Newsomâs concurrence today marks at least the fourth time heâs lamented substantive due process in one of his opinions. And although his opinion today complains specifically about substantive-due-process doctrine as it applies to âexecutiveâ state action, 1 the first paragraph of Judge Newsomâs concurrence takes issue with substantive due process even as we apply it to âleg- islativeâ state action. I havenât previously had a chance to respond to Judge Newsomâs concerns about substantive due process, 2 but given that heâs raised the issue repeatedly, I did not think I could forego answering here. Judge Newsom has long said heâs âfor ditching substantive due process altogether and exploringâ what he thinks is a more âpromisingâ and âprincipledâ vehicle âfor protecting individual 1 To be clear, I donât write to address Judge Newsomâs critiques of how weâve distinguished between substantive-due-process challenges to âlegislativeâ and âexecutiveâ state action or of the âshocks the conscienceâ test that we apply to challenges to executive action. Newsom Op. at 3â18. Rather, I address only what we generally think of when we speak of substantive due process: sub- stantive-due-process challenges to âlegislativeâ state actionâwhich do not employ the âshocks the conscienceâ test. That I donât address âexecutiveâ substantive-due-process claims and the âshocks the conscienceâ test is neither an endorsement of nor objection to these frameworks. Itâs just that, in light of the critical mass of Judge Newsomâs attacks on substantive-due-process challenges to âlegislativeâ state action, I feel my focus here needs to be on that (and in any case, this concurring opinion is already quite long doing just that). 2 I was on the en banc Court in Sosa v. Martin County, one of Judge Newsomâs previous outings with substantive due process. But there, I needed to use my dissent to explain why the Majority Opinion was incorrect. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 28 of 169 2 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 rights against state interferenceââthe Fourteenth Amendmentâs Privileges or Immunities Clause. See Sosa v. Martin County, 57 F.4th 1297, 1307 (11th Cir.) (en banc) (Newsom J., concurring) (citing Kevin Newsom, Setting Incorporationism Straight: A Reinterpretation of the Slaughter-House Cases, 109 YALE L.J. 643, 658â87 (2000)), cert. denied, 144 S. Ct. 88 (2023). In Judge Newsomâs view, substantive due process âloos[es] judges to foist their policy preferences on so- ciety.â Newsom Op. at 3. No doubt a serious charge. But respectfully, I disagree with Judge Newsomâs conclusion. So before Judge Newsom leaves sub- stantive due process for constitutional roadkill, I have a few thoughts. Letâs start where we agree. We agree that the Constitution protects certain unenumerated rights. See, e.g., U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1. It is beyond dispute that our Founders intended even broad provisions, like the Due Process Clause or the Privi- leges or Immunities Clause, to constrain government. See Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 174 (1803). But we disagree about the precise meaning of those words and the doctrine we can pull from them. To put it another way, we disagree about the methodology by which we should identify and enforce fundamental rights. Under current doctrine, which we home in the Due Process Clause, fundamental rights are those that are deeply rooted in our Nationâs history and tradition and implicit in our concept of or- dered liberty. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 29 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 3 Think marriage, which has always been âthe foundation of the fam- ily and of society.â Maynard v. Hill, 125 U.S. 190, 211 (1888). For his part, Judge Newsom would prefer to make our fun- damental-rights jurisprudence anew under the Privileges or Im- munities Clause. But to my knowledge, Judge Newsom hasnât yet shared how his view of the privileges-or-immunities doctrine will work. Still, he has left open the possibility that the Privileges or Immunities Clause could accommodate some of the individual lib- erties our current doctrine secures. See, e.g., Sosa, 57 F.4th at 1307 (Newsom J., concurring); Newsom, Incorporationism, supra, at 736 n.450 (reserving âfor another day whether the Courtâs privacy de- cisions . . . might find support in a resurrected Privileges or Immun- ities Clauseâ (cleaned up)). So whatâs the difference, a reader might wonder. Given his charge that substantive-due-process doctrine âloos[es] judges to foist their policy preferences on societyâ because âitâs so untethered from traditional interpretive sources,â Newsom Op. at 3, a reader might think that the guardrails on substantive due process are sub- stantially weaker than those on any framework under the Privi- leges or Immunities Clause. Not so. See infra Section III.A. No matter whether we travel under substantive-due-process doctrine, the Privileges or Immuni- ties Clause, or even certain enumerated-rights amendments, the first leg of our journey generally requires us to determine whether the claimed right is a fundamental one. And in each case, we must USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 30 of 169 4 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 employ all the usual tools, like the Constitutionâs structure, its his- tory, and our traditions to assess that. We also consider precedent. Take the Privileges or Immunities Clause. The text doesnât tell us what our predecessors understood a âprivilegeâ or âimmun- ityâ to be. Or consider the First Amendment. True, we know the Constitution protects âthe freedom of speech.â U.S. CONST. amend. I. But we canât tell from the text alone, for instance, whether the provision protects those who burn American flags. See Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397, 404 (1989). So we resort to our usual means of interpreting the Constitutionâhistory, tradition, struc- ture, and precedentâto fill in the gaps. And we do the same thing when we conduct a substantive-due-process analysis. That brings us to the second step of a fundamental-rights analysis. To my knowledge, Judge Newsom hasnât yet shared how that would work under his view of the Privileges or Immunities Clause. So Iâll assume the second step would work in one of two ways. One the one hand, the second step may adopt a tiers-of-scru- tiny approach, as the Supreme Court did when it applied the Privi- leges or Immunities Clause in Saenz v. Roe, 526 U.S. 489 (1999). There, the Supreme Court said that we evaluate the constitution- ality of a law that burdens a fundamental right by subjecting it to at least strict scrutiny. Id. at 504. That means we ask whether the law is narrowly drawn to further a compelling government inter- est, and if it isnât, the law doesnât survive. If, on the other hand, the first step of our analysis reveals the claimed right isnât fundamental, USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 31 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 5 then Saenz seems to suggest we apply rational-basis scrutiny, mean- ing the law stands if we can conceive of a rational basis for it. But guess what: At the second step of the substantive-due- process framework, we also apply these same tiers of scrutiny based on whether a right is fundamental or not. So again, no dif- ference! On the other hand, the second step of analysis could follow the historical approach the Court has employed in some recent constitutional casesâthink the Second Amendment, for instance. If so, weâd look for ârelevantly similarâ historical analogues for the challenged law. But when we do that, the level of generality at which we define the relevant regulatory tradition that has gov- erned the asserted right can determine whether we will find a ârel- evantly similarâ historical analogue and thus whether the law stands or falls. That determinationâthe level of generality at which we define the relevant regulatory traditionâis not a binary one. So by its nature, it allows judges substantial discretion. In- deed, some might say more than do the tiers of scrutiny. Yes, it would be great if the Constitution gave us indisputa- bly clear direction for every question, but it doesnât. No document could. But that doesnât mean that the Constitutionâs intent to pro- tect unenumerated fundamental rights is not clear. It is. Indeed, itâs beyond dispute that the Constitution protects unenumerated fundamental rights: the Ninth Amendmentâs text says so; the his- torical record unambiguously reveals the Foundersâ intent to pro- tect unenumerated fundamental rights; the Framers of the USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 32 of 169 6 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 Fourteenth Amendment saw the Fourteenth Amendment as pro- tecting unenumerated fundamental rights; and the source of that protection is clearly in Section One of the Fourteenth Amend- mentâwhether under the Due Process Clause or the Privileges or Immunities Clause, or even some combination of the two. Plus, as Iâve just summarized, the tests we apply to protect those rights under either substantive-due-process doctrine or the Privileges or Immunities Clause require us to engage in essentially the same analysis. And for literally years now, the Supreme Court (and the lower courts following suit) has applied substantive-due- process doctrine to consider challenges to claimed unenumerated fundamental rights. In short, applied properly and faithfully, substantive due process does not allow judges to âfoist their policy preferences on societyâ any more than we may when we construe constitutional rights under other parts of the Constitutionâwhether under enu- merated-rights provisions or the Privileges or Immunities Clause. This opinion proceeds in three parts. But as a heads up, that doesnât mean itâs brief. Before I can address the charge that sub- stantive due process is the modus operandi of judicial activism, I must first lay some foundation. Towards that end, Section I starts with Judge Newsomâs ar- gument that substantive due process is âunmoored from history.â Newsom Op. at 2. It shows that our Founders always intended and the people always understood that our constitutions, both federal and state, preserved to the people fundamental yet unenumerated USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 33 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 7 rights. This history lays the groundwork for our understanding of what makes an unenumerated right fundamental. Section II then compares modern substantive-due-process doctrine to those historical principles. It explains that todayâs juris- prudence largely adheres to the understanding that the Founders and the drafters of the Fourteenth Amendment held about the pro- cess by which courts identify unenumerated rights and about the substance of those rights. Far from dismissing âtraditional inter- pretive sources,â id. at 3, substantive-due-process precedent re- quires that we employ them. And in Section III, Iâll address head on the assertion that, â[i]f ever there were a doctrine that gave a veneer of truth to the vicious lie that judges just decide cases in accordance with their priors, itâs substantive due process.â Id. Section III responds to Judge New- somâs suggestion, as well as his pulling of substantive due processâs fire alarmsâDred Scott and Lochnerâas reasons to abandon the doctrine. And it shows that neither Dred Scott nor Lochner (as erro- neous and, in Dred Scottâs case, abhorrent as they were) validate the charge that substantive due process is rotten at its core any more than Plessy v. Fergusonâs separate-but-equal abomination proves the Equal Protection Clause is fatally defective. I. The Constitution protects and Founding Era and Recon- stitution Era Americans intended for courts to enforce unenumerated fundamental rights. Our Constitution rests on a bargain (the âsocial contractâ). Each of this countryâs citizens sacrifices some of their freedom to USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 34 of 169 8 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 form a government that provides for the common defense, pro- motes the general welfare, and secures the blessings of liberty. U.S. CONST. pmbl. But we donât relinquish all our rights. Some, after all, are âunalienable.â 3 THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE para. 2 (U.S. 1776). The Framers listed some of those preexisting privi- leges in the Constitutionâs first eight Amendments. Still, at no point did they intend, or did our countryâs citizens understand, the enumeration of some rights to deny or disparage other limitations on governmental authority. Indeed, the Ninth Amendment could not say so any more clearly. Americans always understood that courts would enforce individualsâ retained rights and would check acts not within the state and federal governmentsâ powers. This understanding of how state and federal constitutions secure our fundamental rights animated the drafters of the Four- teenth Amendmentâs Section One, which, among other things, precludes states from âmak[ing] or enforc[ing] any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of the citizens of the United Statesâ or âdepriv[ing] any person of life, liberty, or property, with- out due process of law.â U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1. The lead- 3 Nowadays, we more commonly use the term âinalienable.â But âunaliena- bleâ and âinalienableâ mean the same thing. See Unalienable, BLACKâS LAW DICTIONARY (12th ed. 2024) (stating as the only definition for the term, âSee inalienableâ); Unalienable, OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY, https://www.oed.com/dictionary/unalienable_adj (last visited October 24, 2024) [https://perma.cc/KMF8-STLN]. To conform to modern preference, this opinion uses the term âinalienableâ except when quoting sources that use the term âunalienable.â USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 35 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 9 up to and aftermath of the Civil War made clear that the states had not adequately secured fundamental rights for some within their bordersânamely, Black Americans. So the Fourteenth Amend- ment enabled the federal government, including its courts, to en- force those rights. This Section details that history. It first recounts Americansâ view of unenumerated, fundamental rights at the Founding. Then, it discusses fundamental-rights jurisprudence during the Antebel- lum period. And last, it shows how Americans during Reconstruc- tion adopted the Fourteenth Amendment to ensure the federal government could secure Americansâ unenumerated, fundamental rights. This history lays the groundwork for understanding how modern substantive due process accords with our predecessorâs un- derstanding of what makes an unenumerated right fundamental. A. When Americans ratiďŹed the Constitution, they understood that courts would secure Americansâ unenumerated, funda- mental rights. We the people are sovereign in these United States. Through the state and federal constitutions, we cede some of our natural freedoms in exchange for an elected government that acts for the common good. See generally JOHN LOCKE, TWO TREATISES OF GOVERNMENT (1689); see THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE para. 2 (U.S. 1776). To the states, we grant broad police powers to regulate the public health, safety, and welfare. See, e.g., Munn v. Illi- nois, 94 US. 113, 124 (1876); Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 US. 11, 27 (1905). And to the federal government, we grant a set of USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 36 of 169 10 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 âenumerated powers.â McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 405 (1819). But those grants of authority are not absolute. From both, we retain a set of fundamental rights the government cannot infringe. The Framers found this proposition unremarkable. âIn large part, the notion that Americans enjoyed a common set of basic rights was an engrained assumption that needed no explanation.â Jud Campbell, General Citizenship Rights, 132 YALE L.J. 611, 634 (2023). 4 The âfundamental principles of civil and religious libertyâ formed âthe basis whereon these republics, their laws and 4 These limitations on government generally fall into two buckets: inalienable natural rights and common-law rights. See Baude, Campbell & Sachs, infra, at 1196â98. The first are âunceded portions of right,â such as the âfreedom of religion,â Letter from Thomas Jefferson to Noah Webster, Jr. (Dec. 4, 1790), in 18 THE PAPERS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON 131, 132 (Julian P. Boyd ed., 1971) [hereinafter Jefferson to Webster], the sanctity of the family, Moore v. City of East Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494, 503 (1977) (plurality opinion), or the right to marry, Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644, 669 (2015), that Americans did not grant to the government through the social contract. The second, Jefferson explained, are âcertain fences which experience has proved peculiarly effica- cious against wrong,â such as âtrial by jury, Habeas corpus laws, free presses.â Jefferson to Webster, supra, at 132. In other words, the second bucket includes rights that developed through the common law or that the coloniesâ experi- ences with Britain proved necessary. See United States v. Williams, 113 F.4th 637, 649 n.5 (6th Cir. 2024) (citing 2 DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 321 (Washington: Depart- ment of State, 1894)) (referring to the Third Amendment as a ârestrictiveâ pro- vision). Americans generally cede their remaining liberties, such as the right to contract or acquire and possess property, âto be regulated, modified, and, sometimes, absolutely restrainedâ by the government for the public good. Og- den v. Saunders, 25 U.S. 213, 320 (1827) (opinion of Trimble, J.). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 37 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 11 constitutions are erected.â The Northwest Ordinance, Act of Aug. 7, 1789, ch. 8, 1 Stat. 50, 51 n.a. So âthe power to violate and disre- gardâ these rights did not âlurk[] under any general grant of legis- lative authorityâ or âgeneral expressions of the will of the people.â Wilkinson v. Leland, 27 U.S. (2 Pet.) 627, 657 (1829). The Framers expressly articulated some (though not all) of these fundamental rights in the Bill of Rights. Indeed, âthere was broader agreement that Americans enjoyed certain fundamental le- gal rights with determinate legal content.â William Baude, Jud Campbell & Stephen E. Sachs, General Law and the Fourteenth Amendment, 76 STAN. L. REV. 1185, 1199 (2024). After all, the Bill of Rights was ânot intended to lay down any novel principles of gov- ernment, but simply to embody certain guaranties and immunities which we had inherited from our English ancestors.â Robertson v. Baldwin, 165 U.S. 275, 281 (1897). The âright of the people peaceably to assemble,â for in- stance, âexisted long before the adoption of the Constitution of the United Statesâ; it âis, and always has been, one of the attributes of citizenship under a free governmentâ that ââderives its sourceâ . . . from those laws whose authority is acknowledged by civilized man throughout the world.â United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U.S. 542, 551 (1875) (quoting Gibbons v. Ogden, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat) 1, 211 (1824)); see also District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (â[I]t has always been widely understood that the Second Amendment . . . codiďŹed a pre-existing right.â); Crawford v. Washing- ton, 541 U.S. 36, 54 (2004) (concluding the Sixth Amendmentâs USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 38 of 169 12 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 Confrontation Clause referenced âthe right of confrontation at common lawâ).5 The debate between the Federalists and Anti-Federalists over the ďŹrst ten amendments illustrates this point that the Framers un- derstood the Constitution to protect these rights that pre-existed itâwhether the Constitution expressly named them or not. Anti- Federalists pushed for a Bill of Rights because they believed the Necessary and Proper Clause risked granting Congress too much power. See Brutus No. 2 (1787), reprinted in 2 THE COMPLETE ANTI- FEDERALIST 372, 374 (Hebert J. Storing, ed., Univ. Chi. Press 1981) (suggesting the federal governmentâs power is âcomplete, with re- spect to every object to which they extendâ). The Federalists of- fered two responses. First, echoing the inherent limitations on government that Americans inherited from the English common law, the Federalists argued that âa bill of rights is not necessary.â 1 ANNALS OF CONG. 456 (1789) ( Joseph Gales ed., 1834) (remarks of Rep. James Madi- son). That was so, they reasoned, because a bill of rights would be a mere âdeclaration of rightsâ in which the people were already âsecure,â âwhetherâ a bill of rights âdeclare[d] them or not.â Id. at 5 The Framers also saw Article 1, Section 10, as articulating preexisting limita- tions on legislative authority. See THE FEDERALIST No. 44 (James Madison) (âBills of attainder, ex-post-facto laws, and laws impairing the obligation of contracts, are contrary to the first principles of the social compact, and to every principle of sound legislation.â). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 39 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 13 742 (remarks of Rep. Roger Sherman).6 In fact, Federalists like Noah Webster âspoofed Anti-Federalistsâ who attempted to list the several rights they misperceived the new federal government to now be able to abrogate. AKHIL REED AMAR, AMERICAâS UNWRITTEN CONSTITUTION: THE PRECEDENTS AND PRINCIPLES WE LIVE BY 124 (2012). For instance, Webster proposed a mocking amendment that âCongress shall never restrain any inhabitant of America from eating and drinking, at seasonable times . . . .â Id. And second, the Federalists argued that enumerating certain rights âwould disparage those rights which were not placed in that enumeration.â 1 ANNALS OF CONG. 456 (1789) ( Joseph Gales ed., 1834) (remarks of Rep. James Madison); AMAR, AMERICAâS UNWRITTEN CONSTITUTION, supra, at 125. To some, the risks 6 Remarks like these were common. See, e.g., 2 DEBATES ON THE ADOPTION OF THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION 161â62 (Jonathan Elliot ed., 2d ed., Philadel- phia, J.B. Lippincott 1891) (remarks of Theophilus Parsons) (â[N]o power was given to Congress to infringe on any one of the natural rights of the people by this Constitution; and should they attempt it without constitutional authority, the act would be a nullity, and could not be enforced.â); Letter from Pierce Butler to James Iredell (Aug. 11, 1789) (âA few milk-and-water amendments have been proposed by Mr. M[adison], such as liberty of conscience, a free press, and one or two general things already well secured.â), reprinted in DAVID K. WATSON, THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES: ITS HISTORY, APPLICATION AND CONSTRUCTION 1368 n.21 (1910); Virginia Ratification Con- vention Debates (June 16, 1788) (remarks of George Nicholas) (âA Bill of Rights is only an acknowledgement of the pre-existing claim to rights in the people. They belong to us as much as if they had been inserted in the Consti- tution.â), reprinted in 10 THE DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE RATIFICATION OF THE CONSTITUTION 1334 (John P. Kaminski et al. eds., 1993). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 40 of 169 14 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 enumeration posed were particularly stark because enumeration could foreclose âthe progress of things,â in which we may âdiscover some great and Importantâ right that âwe donât now think of.â Let- ter from Edmund Pendleton to Richard Henry Lee ( June 14, 1788), in 8 THE LETTERS AND PAPERS OF EDMUND PENDLETON 532, 532â33 (David John Mays ed., 1967). Both responses reďŹected the Framersâ intuitions that enu- meration wasnât necessary to preserve Americansâ fundamental rights. And the Federalistsâ second concern emphasized that enu- meration might even endanger, rather than secure, fundamental rights. Still, ultimately, the Federalists agreed to append a Bill of Rights to the Constitution, in part, to appease the Anti-Federalists. See, e.g., Letter from George Washington to James Madison (May 31, 1789), reprinted in 2 THE PAPERS OF GEORGE WASHINGTON, PRESIDENTIAL SERIES 419, 419 (Dorothy Twohig ed., 1987). Madi- son recognized some of the Anti-Federalistsâ concerns. Although he acknowledged the âforceâ of the Federalistsâ ďŹrst âobservationâ that a Bill of Rights is not necessary, Madison underscored the prac- tical, âsalutary eďŹect against the abuse of powerâ that enumeration might provide. 7 1 ANNALS OF CONG. 456â57 (1789) ( Joseph Gales ed., 1834) (remarks of Rep. James Madison). 7 Madison argued that enumeration would guard against overzealous govern- ing in all its forms. Enumeration, he said, would âestablish the public opinion in . . . favorâ of Americansâ rights and ârouse the attention of the whole USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 41 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 15 Even so, as to the Federalistsâ second concern that a declara- tion of some rights might undermine rights that base principles of the social contract and English common law secured, Madison con- sidered it âone of the most plausible argumentsâ in opposition to the Bill. Id. at 456. So the people ratiďŹed another amendment to ensure that â[t]he enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.â U.S. CONST. amend. IX. The Ninth Amendment conďŹrmed what Americans already understood: â[t]he people were entitled to various preexisting and customary rights already in place at the Foundingâ as well as rights the people inherently âwithheld from the government . . . when government was established.â See AMAR, AMERICAâS UNWRITTEN CONSTITUTION, supra, at 108â09 (conďŹrming the Ninth Amend- ment protects rights that people inherently âwithheld from the government . . . when government was established,â which may community,â helping to âcontrol the majority from those acts to which they might be otherwise inclined.â 1 ANNALS OF CONG. 455 (1789) (Joseph Gales ed., 1834) (remarks of Rep. James Madison). And, he continued, enumeration would âimpress some degree of respect for [individual liberties],â especially among legislators who occupied âthe most powerfulâ branch of government. Id. at 454â55. Plus, Madison remarked, a declaration of rights could spur the judiciary âto consider themselves in a peculiar manner the guardians of those rights.â Id. at 457. In this way, the judiciary could overcome its ânatural fee- blenessâ and âcontinual jeopardy of being overpowered, awed, or influenced by [the] co-ordinate branches.â THE FEDERALIST NO. 78 (Alexander Hamil- ton). In sum, Madison found persuasive the realist and political, rather than the legal, justifications for enumeration. Jud Campbell, Judicial Review and the Enumeration of Rights, 15 GEO. J.L. & PUB. POLâY 569, 571 (2017). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 42 of 169 16 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 still âemerge[] long after the Foundingâ through âpractice[] by each generation of Americansâ); see also Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 490 (1965) (Goldberg, J., concurring) (â[T]he Framers did not intend that the ďŹrst eight amendments be construed to exhaust the basic and fundamental rights which the Constitution guaranteed to the people.â). And that was so whether the Constitution expressly enumerated those fundamental rights or not. B. Throughout the Antebellum period, courts secured Americansâ unenumerated, fundamental rights. As the Founders intended, Antebellum courts routinely en- forced Americansâ fundamental rights. And both state and federal courts did so even when the pertinent constitution didnât have a textual hook explicitly guaranteeing the right at issue. 1. State courts routinely enforced unenumerated rights against state abridgment. State courts commonly enforced fundamental rights. And they did so even though, as the Supreme Court held in Barron v. Baltimore, 32 U.S. 243, 250â51 (1833), before the ratiďŹcation of the Fourteenth Amendment, the Bill of Rights did not bind them. State courts also enforced fundamental rights even though state constitutions did not include all the rights that the federal Consti- tutionâs ďŹrst eight amendments listed. These so-called âBarron con- trarianâ state courts regularly enforced the Bill of Rightsâs limita- tions in their state. But they did so not because they disagreed with Barron and thought the amendments bound âthe states of [their] own USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 43 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 17 legislative forceâ (though some did so believe). Rather, they en- forced the Bill of Rightsâs limitations because they saw the amend- ments as âdeclaratory of certain fundamental common-law rightsâ owed to any citizen of a free society. AKHIL REED AMAR, THE BILL OF RIGHTS: CREATION AND RECONSTRUCTION 147, 153 (1998); Baude, Campbell & Sachs, supra, at 1200 & n.85. Consider Nunn v. Georgia, 1 Ga. 243 (1846). There, the Geor- gia Supreme Court enforced a citizenâs right to bear arms for self- defense even though the adjudication was not âmade on clauses in the State Constitution[].â Id. at 249. The court dismissed the rightâs unenumerated status as immaterial because the Second Amendment codiďŹed âan unalienable right, which lies at the bot- tom of every free government,â and the people could not have âin- tended to conferâ the power to abridge it âon the local legislatures.â Id. at 250. Nunn then conďŹrmed that other fundamental rights, like the right of the people âto be secure in their persons, houses, pa- pers, and eďŹects, against unreasonable searches and seizures; in all criminal prosecutions, to be confronted with the witness against them; to be publicly tried by an impartial jury; and to have the as- sistance of counsel for their defence,â were âas perfect under the State as the national legislatureâ; they âcannot be violated by either.â Id. at 251 (emphasis in original). Many courts treated the Takings Clause similarly. New Jer- seyâs constitution, for instance, did not provide for a right to com- pensation when the government conďŹscated private property. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 44 of 169 18 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 Yet New Jerseyâs supreme court rejected the argument that non-enumeration precluded a plaintiďŹâs takings claim. The court explained that the limitation was âoperative as a principle of uni- versal law; and the legislature of this State, can no more take pri- vate property for public use, without just compensation, than if this restraining principle were incorporated into, and made part of its State Constitution.â Sinnickson v. Johnson, 17 N.J.L. 129, 146 (1839); see Young v. McKenzie, 3 Ga. 31, 44 (1847) (enforcing the rights declared in the Takings Clause because it embodies a âgreat com- mon law principle . . . applicable to all republican governments, and which derived no additional force, as a principle, from being incor- porated into the Constitution of the United Statesâ); Bradshaw v. Rodgers, 20 Johns. 103, 105â06 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1822) (same); L.C. & C.R.R. Co. v. Chappell, 24 S.C.L. (Rice) 383, 387, 389 (1838) (same); Hall v. Washington County, 2 Greene 473, 478 (Iowa 1850) (same); State v. Glen, 52 N.C. (7 Jones) 321, 330â31 (1859) (same). These examples are not outliers. The force of preexisting, fundamental rights was âwidespreadâ in state courts and âreďŹective of a serious theory of constitutional governmentââeven though the Bill of Rights did not, at that time, bind the states. Jason Maz- zone, The Bill of Rights in the Early State Courts, 92 MINN. L. REV. 1, 26 n.98, 29â31 (2007). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 45 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 19 2. Despite their limited subject-matter jurisdiction, fed- eral courts also enforced unenumerated rights against government abridgment. And federal courts applied that same thinking to many rights that the Bill of Rights does not expressly declare. Indeed, federal courts acknowledged and enforced unenumerated rights in the Antebellum period, although in limited contexts. At that time, federal courts often lacked jurisdiction over claims that a state de- nied a citizenâs fundamental rights. Exercised against the states, those rights, although fundamental, were not federal rights suďŹ- cient to trigger federal courtsâ arising-under jurisdiction, let alone one of the Judiciary Actâs limited grants of the Supreme Courtâs appellate jurisdiction. Cf. Calder v. Bull, 3 U.S. (3 Dall.) 386, 392 (1798) (opinion of Chase, J.) (â[T]his court has no jurisdiction to determine that any law of any state Legislature, contrary to the Constitution of such state, is void.â). 8 As a result, petitioners could not pursue state violations of their fundamental rights on appeal from state courts to the Supreme Court. Compare Trs. of Dartmouth Coll. v. Woodward, 1 N.H. 111, 114 (1817) (âThe legislative power of this state . . . is limited only by our constitutions and by the funda- mental principles of all government and the unalienable rights of mankind.â), with Trs. of Dartmouth Coll. v. Woodward, 17 U.S. (4 8 Plus, if a state court upheld a fundamental right as a federal right superior to a stateâs action, the losing party could not appeal its loss to the Supreme Court. See Judiciary Act of 1789, ch. 20, § 25, 1 Stat. 73, 86 (codified as amended at 28 U.S.C. § 2104); RICHARD H. FALLON, JR. ET AL., HART AND WECHSLERâS THE FEDERAL COURTS AND THE FEDERAL SYSTEM 25 (7th ed. 2015). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 46 of 169 20 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 Wheat.) 518, 625, 644â54 (1819) (opinion of Marshall, C.J.) (ruling only on the Contracts Clause); see also Baude, Campbell & Sachs, supra, at 1203 (highlighting the same dynamic in Barron). That said, federal courts did adjudicate fundamental-rights claims in two circumstances. First, plaintiďŹs could seek redress for violations of their fundamental rights under the Constitutionâs Privileges and Immunities Clause, U.S. CONST. art. IV, § 2, cl. 1. (not to be confused with the Privileges or Immunities Clause, U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1, which was not ratiďŹed until 1868). And second, courts adjudicated fundamental-rights claims when parties invoked diversity jurisdiction. I discuss each circumstance in turn. As to the ďŹrst circumstance where federal courts adjudicated fundamental-rights claims, plaintiďŹs could seek redress for viola- tions of their fundamental rights under the Constitutionâs Privi- leges and Immunities Clause. At the Founding, the Framers pre- sumed that a citizenâs home state would guarantee to its citizens the base freedoms inherent in our social contract. But the Framers worried that states and their courts might discriminate against out- of-state Americans. See Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 74 (1938). So they included the Privileges and Immunities Clause to protect citizensâ fundamental rights, and they guaranteed a federal forum to secure the enforcement of those rights. See THE FEDERALIST No. 80 (Alexander Hamilton) (â[I]n order to the inviolable maintenance of that equality of privileges and immunities to which the citizens of the Union will be entitled, the national judiciary ought to USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 47 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 21 preside in all cases in which one State or its citizens are opposed to another State or its citizens.â). CorďŹeld v. Coryell is the authoritative case on the matter. 6 F. Cas. 546 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1825) (No. 3,230) (Washington, Circuit Jus- tice). And for our purposes, it both conďŹrms the Foundersâ under- standing of fundamental rights and provides an early template for how courts applied those initial understandings to distinguish fun- damental rights from non-fundamental ones. In CorďŹeld, a Pennsylvania citizen claimed that a New Jersey law prohibiting him, as a nonresident, from harvesting oysters in the State violated the Privileges and Immunities Clause because it deprived him of a right New Jersey guaranteed to its own citizens. Id. at 551â52. The Court rejected the argument. The Privileges and Immunities Clause, Justice Washington clariďŹed, protected only âthose privileges and immunities which are, in their nature, fundamental; which belong, of right, to the cit- izens of all free governments; and which have, at all times, been enjoyed by the citizens of the several states which compose this Union, from the time of their becoming free, independent, and sovereign.â Id. at 551. Among those rights were â[p]rotection by the government; the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the right to USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 48 of 169 22 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 acquire and possess property of every kind, and to pursue and ob- tain happiness and safety.â Id. at 551â52. 9 And under these âgeneral headsâ fell many other rights: the right to âpass through, or to reside in any other state, for purposes of . . . professional pursuitsâ; âto claim the beneďŹt of the writ of habeas corpus; to institute and maintain actions of any kind in the courtsâ; âto take, hold and dispose of propertyâ; to be âexempt[] from higher taxes or impositions than are paid by the other citizens of the stateâ; and to participate in âthe elective franchise, as regu- lated and established by the laws or constitution of the state in which it is to be exercised.â Id. at 552. But that wasnât all. Justice Washington recognized that pro- tected privileges and immunities included â[t]hese, and many oth- ers which might be mentioned.â Id. Still, those privileges and immunities did not include oyster harvesting. The oyster beds at issue were peculiar to New Jersey. Id. So a right to access them was neither common to all Americans 9 Justice Washingtonâs qualification that these rights are âsubject nevertheless to such restraints as the government may justly prescribe for the general good of the whole,â Corfield, 6 F. Cas. at 552, does not undermine the notion that unenumerated, fundamental rights operate as a limitation on government au- thority. Rather, Justice Washingtonâs statement comports with the under- standing that legislatures could regulate but not abridge peopleâs rights, a dis- tinction that turned, in part, on the subject matter of the purported regulation. See supra note 4; infra Section II; Baude, Campbell & Sachs, supra, at 1196â99, 1237â38. After all, â[n]o fundamental rightânot even the First Amendmentâ is absolute.â McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 802 (2010) (Scalia, J., concurring). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 49 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23 nor inherent in our system of governance. See id. (explaining citi- zens of the several states are not entitled to participate in rights âwhich belong exclusively to the citizens of any other particular stateâ). In fact, history and common-law authorities conďŹrmed that states generally held exclusive rights to certain public re- sources, like oysters. Id. (quoting 2 HUGO GROTIUS, THE RIGHTS OF WAR AND PEACE, ch. 2, § 5). Simply, the right to farm them was one of the âadvantagesâ that states by positive law âsecured to their own citizens.â Id.; see also Baldwin v. Fish & Game Commân, 436 U.S. 371, 387 (1978) (â[W]hen [Justice Washington] considered the reach of the Privileges and Immunities Clause, [he] included in his list of situations, in which he believed the States would be obligated to treat each otherâs residents equally, only those where a nonresident sought to engage in an essential activity or exercise a basic right.â). I pause to emphasize the distinction Justice Washington made. He interpreted the Privileges and Immunities Clause to pro- tect the âvarious preexisting and customary rights already in place at the Foundingâ as well as rights the people âwithheld from the government . . . when government was established.â AMAR, AMERICAâS UNWRITTEN CONSTITUTION, supra, at 108â09 (discussing plausible interpretations of the Ninth Amendment). That is, Jus- tice Washington understood the Privileges and Immunities Clause to protect rights of âgeneral citizenship,â Butler v. Farnsworth, 4 F. Cas. 902, 903 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1821) (No. 2,240) (Washington, Circuit Justice), inherent in all âfree Republican governments,â Calder, 3 U.S. (3 Dall.) at 388 (opinion of Chase, J.). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 50 of 169 24 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 Indeed, many of the CorďŹeld rights are not enumerated in the Constitution, but we continue to subject laws that burden them to heightened scrutiny precisely because they concern âfundamen- tal matter[s] in a free and democratic society,â Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533, 561â62 (1964) (right of suďŹrage), 10 or issues that are âsuf- ďŹciently basic to the livelihood of the Nation,â United Bldg. & Con- str. Trades Council v. Mayor and Council of Camden, 465 U.S. 208, 219, 221 (1984) (quoting Baldwin, 436 U.S. at 383) (pursuit of a common calling in the various states). In contrast, when governments guarantee a claimed right under only some circumstancesâsuch that we can say the right is not truly common to all free governmentsâwe generally defer to regulations of that purported right that require âeach citizen to so 10 Justice Washingtonâs mention of voting rights underscores another similar- ity between Antebellum jurisprudence and our current doctrine. Justice Washington recognized that states may prescribe regulations on rights to suf- frage, Corfield, 6 F. Cas. at 552; see U.S. CONST. art. I, § 2, cl. 1, but posited that the Privileges and Immunities Clause could bar deprivations of the franchise to those otherwise-eligible individuals who moved from another state, see Ab- bot v. Bayley, 23 Mass. 89, 92 (1827). This understanding correlates with mod- ern doctrineâs recognition that, although Americans donât have the right to vote for every government office, âonce the franchise is granted to the elec- torate, lines may not be drawn which are inconsistent with the Equal Protec- tion Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.â Harper v. Virginia Bd. of Elections, 383 U.S. 663, 665 (1966). So for instance, a state would abridge a citizenâs fun- damental right to vote by imposing unduly restrictive residency requirements on suffrage. See, e.g., Carrington v. Rash, 380 U.S. 89, 96 (1965); Dunn v. Blum- stein, 405 U.S. 330, 360 (1972). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 51 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 25 conduct himself . . . as not unnecessarily to injure another.â Munn, 94 U.S. at 124. And modern jurisprudence adopts this way of distinguishing between fundamental and non-fundamental rights. See, e.g., Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 403 (1923) (overturning a conviction for teaching German because â[n]o emergency has arisen which ren- ders knowledge by a child of some language other than English so clearly harmful as to justify its inhibition with the consequent in- fringement of rights long freely enjoyedâ). As Section I.C. of this Concurrence explains, the Fourteenth Amendmentâs drafters relied heavily on CorďŹeldâs conception of fundamental rights in crafting Section One of that amendment. The drafters considered funda- mental those rights that people throughout the several states âhave, at all times, . . . enjoyed.â CorďŹeld, 6 F. Cas. at 551. And now, to identify whether a claimed right is fundamental, our current sub- stantive-due-process jurisprudence calls for such an analysis of trends across jurisdictions. So CorďŹeld shows that modern funda- mental-rights doctrine generally secures those rights our Founders intended for the courts to protect. Returning to the two circumstances in which courts adjudi- cated fundamental-rights claims in Antebellum times, the second circumstance occurred when parties invoked diversity jurisdiction. Diversity jurisdiction enabled federal courts to resolve claims on non-federal grounds. So plaintiďŹs could petition federal courts to review state legislative actions that they thought improperly abridged their fundamental rights. See Laurence H. Tribe, USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 52 of 169 26 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 Substantive Due Process, in 5 ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION 2570 (Leonard W. Levy & Kenneth L. Karst eds., 2000). Terrett v. Taylor oďŹers a good example of this. 13 U.S. (9 Cranch) 43 (1815). There, Justice Story denied Virginiaâs attempt to seize land that Virginiaâs colonial government had granted to the Episcopal Church. Id. at 43, 50â52. Although no state constitu- tional provision barred Virginiaâs legislation, the Court struck it down as âutterly inconsistent with a great and fundamental princi- ple of a republican government.â Id. at 50â51. Terrettâs resolution and its reasoning mirrored those of the âvested-rightsâ cases in which the Supreme Court enforced unwrit- ten limitations on statesâ legislative authority over property. In Fletcher v. Peck, for instance, âthe unanimous opinion of the courtâ conďŹrmed that Georgia could not revoke its prior land grants âei- ther by general principles which are common to our free institu- tions, or by the particular provisions of the constitution of the United States.â 10 U.S. (6 Cranch) 87, 139 (1810) (opinion of Mar- shall, C.J.); see also id. at 132 (opinion of Johnson, J.) (âI do not hes- itate to declare that a state does not possess the power of revoking its own grants. But I do it on a general principle, on the reason and nature of things . . . .â). And in Wilkinson v. Leland, Justice Story aďŹrmed the princi- ples set forth in Taylor. He explained the âfundamental maxims of a free government seem to require, that the rights of personal lib- erty and private property should be held sacred,â so no legislative USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 53 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 27 act could âtransfer the property of A. to B. without his consent.â Wilkinson, 27 U.S. (2 Pet.) at 657. Indeed, âno [such] case . . . has ever been held a constitutional exercise of legislative power in any state in the union.â Id. And that principle has been ďŹrmly estab- lished by the Court since Calder v. Bull. See 3 U.S. (3 Dall.) at 388 (opinion of Chase, J.) (â[A] law that takes property from A. and gives it to B . . . is against all reason and justice, for a people to entrust a Legislature with [such] powersâ). To be sure, some contested the reasoning of these decisions. See id. at 399 (opinion of Iredell, J.) (â[T]he Court cannot pro- nounce [a legislative act] to be void, merely because it is, in their judgment, contrary to the principles of natural justice.â). But those views were outliers at the time. Frederick Mark Gedicks, An Originalist Defense of Substantive Due Process: Magna Carta, Higher- Law Constitutionalism, and the Fifth Amendment, 58 EMORY L.J. 585, 651 (2009). And even those jurists acknowledged that unenumer- ated rights ought to at least inform their reading of statutes. See, e.g., Minge v. Gilmour, 17 F. Cas. 440, 444 (C.C.D.N.C. 1798) (No. 9,631) (Iredell, Circuit Justice). Plus, others who disfavored applying unenumerated funda- mental rights as a matter of federal law acknowledged their force when a plaintiďŹ invoked the federal courtsâ diversity jurisdiction. See, e.g., Citizensâ Sav. & Loan Assân v. City of Topeka, 87 U.S. (20 Wall.) 655, 662â63 (1875) (Miller, J.) (â[T]here are such rights in every free government beyond the control of the State. . . . There are limitations on such power which grow out of the essential USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 54 of 169 28 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 nature of all free governments. Implied reservations of individual rights, without which the social compact could not exist, and which are respected by all governments entitled to the name.â). So these disagreements stemmed from a perceived lack of federal authority to enforce unenumerated fundamental rights, at least in some cases. But as I discuss later, the Fourteenth Amendment dispelled that misguided perception. Ultimately, itâs unsurprising that each of these vested-rights cases sounds in the unenumerated-rights language state courts em- ployed in enforcing the rights that the Takings Clause embodies.11 And we can say the same thing about Justice Washingtonâs ap- proach to fundamental rights in CorďŹeld; his opinion applies the same principles that drove state courts to apply substantive Bill-of- 11 The fundamental-rights rationale pervaded vested-rights cases in state courts as well. See, e.g., Regents of the Univ. of Md. v. Williams, 9 G. & J. 365, 408 (Md. 1838) (âAnd independently of the constitution of the United States, and of this state, that act is void as opposed to the fundamental principles of right and justice, inherent in the nature and spirit of the social compact.â); White v. White, 4 How. Pr. 102, 111 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1849) (â[T]he security of the citizen against such arbitrary legislation rests upon the broader and more solid ground of natural rights, and is not wholly dependent upon these negatives upon the legislative power contained in the constitution. . . . The exercise of such a power is incompatible with the nature and objects of all governments, and is destructive to the great end and aim for which government is instituted, and is subversive of the fundamental principles upon which all free governments are organized.â); Currieâs Admârs v. Mut. Assur. Socây, 14 Va. (4 Hen. & M.) 315, 438â39 (1809) (â[The] legislature is bounded . . . by the principles and provi- sions of the constitution and bill of rights, and by those great rights and prin- ciples, for the preservation of which all just governments are founded.â). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 55 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 29 Rights protections. These cases reďŹect the dominant jurisprudence of the Antebellum period: Both state and federal courts, when con- fronted with alleged abridgments of fundamental rights, consid- ered whether the claimed state action burdened a liberty interest that our system of government inherently protects. Both sets of courts asked whether the people implicitly withheld the claimed right at the formation of government, whether the right was com- mon to Americans across the several states, and whether it had been historically subject to government regulation or abridgment. If these considerations sound familiar, itâs because they are. As I discuss further in Section II, they are essentially the same in- quiries we conduct under modern substantive-due-process doc- trine. The key distinction between our modern jurisprudence and that of the Antebellum period is that, during the Antebellum pe- riod, the federal government did not enjoy the same authority it later gained to guarantee Americansâ fundamental rights. But as the next section shows, the drafters of the Fourteenth Amendment expanded that authority. C. Americans ratiďŹed the Fourteenth Amendment to ensure the fed- eral government, including its courts, would secure unenumerated fundamental rights against state abridgment. The drafters of the Fourteenth Amendment intended to make more readily available federal enforcement of Americansâ fundamental rights. As Iâve mentioned, until that time, the Consti- tution and Bill of Rights generally did not open federal courts to USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 56 of 169 30 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 fundamental-rights claims. âUnder Article IVâs Privileges and Im- munities Clause, CorďŹeld rights were enforceable only by out-of- state citizens,â and âunder Barron, the rights set out in the ďŹrst eight amendments were enforceable only against the federal govern- ment. Congress thus lacked broader power to secure general fun- damental rights against state abridgment.â Baude, Campbell & Sachs, supra, at 1218; see CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2765 (1866) (statement of Sen. Jacob Howard). Of course, that was a feature of the Framersâ constitutional design; the Framers assumed states would secure their citizensâ fundamental rights. But by the Civil War, practice had proven that wasnât neces- sarily the case. So although the Constitution and Bill of Rights de- clared some of the fundamental rights guaranteed to the people, individuals could not depend on an ability to enforce those rights. As Representative John Bingham, the main drafter of the Four- teenth Amendment, summarized, No State ever had the right, under the forms of law or otherwise, to deny to any freeman the equal protection of the laws or to abridge the privileges or immunities of any citizen of the Republic, alt- hough many of them have assumed and exercised the power, and that without remedy. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2542 (1866) (statement of Rep. John Bingham) (emphasis added). The Georgia Supreme Court oďŹers a good example of the trend John Bingham observed. In the mid-1840s, that tribunal USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 57 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 31 secured many individual rights that Georgiaâs constitution had not enumerated. See, e.g., Nunn, 1 Ga. at 249, 251 (right to bear arms, as well as other Bill-of-Rights guarantees); McKenzie, 3 Ga. at 41â42 (takings). But by 1848, the Court clariďŹed that â[f ]ree persons of colorâ did not possess many of those rights, as they were not âciti- zens.â Cooper v. City of Savannah, 4 Ga. 68, 72 (1848). So, the court held, they were ânot entitled to bear arms, vote for members of the legislature, or to hold any civil oďŹce.â Id. And Cooper was part of a larger trend; other statesâ supreme courts routinely ratiďŹed their stateâs denials of Black Americansâ fundamental rights. See, e.g., Amy v. Smith, 11 Ky. (1 Litt.) 326, 334 (1822) (upholding law restricting free Black Americansâ right to ďŹle lawsuits); Indiana v. Cooper, 5 Blackf. 258, 259 (Ind. 1839) (upholding law requiring bond for free Black Americans traveling in the state); Nelson v. Illinois, 33 Ill. 390, 395 (1864) (upholding law excluding free Black Americans from âemigrationâ to and âsettlement inâ Illi- nois). Indeed, this trend perhaps reached its awful apex in the no- torious U.S. Supreme Court case Dred Scott v. Sandford. 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393 (1857) (holding that the Constitution did not extend American citizenship, with its attendant rights and privileges, to Black Americans and that slaves are âpropertyâ within the meaning of the Due Process Clause). Most prominently, the states involved in this trend and this line of cases denied the fundamental rights that the Civil Rights Act of 1866 aimed to secure: namely, Black Americansâ rights âto make and enforce contracts, to sue, be parties, and give evidence, to USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 58 of 169 32 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and personal property, and to full and equal beneďŹt of all laws and proceedings for the security of person and property . . . .â Ch. 31, § 1, 14 Stat. 27 (codiďŹed as amended at 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981(a), 1982). But the Fourteenth Amendmentâs drafters expressed out- rage at these deprivations. They were concerned because Black Americans had been denied equal rights. And they also clariďŹed that the federal government should play a role in enforcing all Americansâ fundamental rights. After all, fundamental rights are âcertain absolute rights which pertain to every citizen, which are inherent, and of which a State cannot constitutionally deprive him.â CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 1833 (1866) (statement of Rep. William Lawrence) (emphasis added); see id. at 1757 (state- ment of Sen. Lyman Trumbull) (explaining the Civil Rights Act se- cures âinherent, fundamental rights which belong to free citizens or free men in all countries, . . . and they belong to them in all the States of the Unionâ). Crucially, the Fourteenth Amendmentâs drafters understood fundamental rights to encompass more than those that the Consti- tutionâs ďŹrst eight amendments identify. They invoked the social- contract precepts that animated the Framersâ view of Americansâ fundamental rights. See, e.g., id. at 1118 (statement of Rep. James Wilson) (explaining the rights of âgeneral citizenshipâ are those that âa citizen does not surrender because he may happen to be a citizen of the State which would deprive him of them . . . .â). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 59 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 33 In fact, they often referenced CorďŹeldâs broad understanding of fundamental rights. See, e.g., id. at 1117â18 (statement of Rep. James Wilson) (quoting 6 F. Cas. at 551â52); id. at 2765 (statement of Sen. Jacob Howard) (same); see also JOHN HART ELY, DEMOCRACY AND DISTRUST 29 (1980) (conďŹrming the Fourteenth Amendmentâs âframers repeatedly adverted to the CorďŹeld discussion as the key to what they were writingâ). So perhaps itâs unsurprising that Sec- tion 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment, which, among other things, prohibits states from âdepriv[ing] any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law,â echoes CorďŹeldâs recognition of the right to â[p]rotection by the government; the enjoyment of life and liberty, with the right to acquire and possess property of every kind, and to pursue and obtain happiness and safety,â 6 F. Cas. at 551â52. And the Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment near-uni- versally employed the broad language characteristic of fundamen- tal-rights jurisprudenceânot just of the jurisprudence of their time but also of ours. Compare CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 3031 (1866) (statement of Sen. John Henderson) (âthe rights that attach to citizenship in all free Governmentsâ), id. at 1833, 1836 (statement of Rep. William Lawrence) (rights that are âinherent in every citizen of the United Statesâ and âexist anterior to and inde- pendently of all laws and all constitutionsâ), and id. at 1089 (state- ment of Rep. John Bingham) (rights âuniversal and independent of all local State legislationâ), with Holden v. Hardy, 169 U.S. 366, 389 (1898) (rights âwhich inhere in the very idea of free governmentâ), Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U.S. 97, 105 (1934) (rights which are âso USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 60 of 169 34 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamentalâ), overruled by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964), and Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U.S. 319, 325 (1937) (rights which strike at the âvery essence of a scheme of ordered libertyâ), overruled by Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969). In other words, the Fourteenth Amendmentâs drafters, in ex- plaining their intent, conveyed that Americans are entitled to a set of fundamental rights, which âcannot be fully deďŹned in their en- tire extent and precise natureâ but to which âshould be added the personal rights guaranteed and secured by the ďŹrst eight amend- ments of the Constitution.â CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2765 (1866) (statement of Sen. Jacob Howard) (emphasis added); see id. (â[H]ere is a mass of privileges, immunities, and rights, some of them secured by the second section of the fourth article of the Constitution, which I have recited, some by the ďŹrst eight amend- ments of the Constitution.â (emphasis added)). To that end, Representative Bingham proposed a constitu- tional amendment to secure federal enforcement of those rights. Echoing Antebellum jurisprudence, he noted that, although the Framers assumed Americans enjoyed a set of fundamental rights that no state could deny, â[a] grant of power . . . is a very diďŹerent thing from a bill of rights.â Id. at 1093 (statement of Rep. John Bingham). Before the Fourteenth Amendment, fundamental rights largely were not federally enforceable rights. And the federal government could ensure they became so only if an amendment âvested [the federal government] with power to hold [the states] to USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 61 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 35 answer before the bar of national courts.â Id. at 1090 (statement of Rep. John Bingham). As the Supreme Court later conďŹrmed, âone of the primary purposes . . . of the Fourteenth Amendment was . . . to eliminate doubt as to the constitutional validity of the Civil Rights Act as ap- plied to the States.â Hurd v. Hodge, 334 U.S. 24, 32â33 (1948). In other words, the Fourteenth Amendment sought to end any ques- tion of the constitutionality of federal civil-rights legislation. The drafters were concerned at the time about the Civil Rights Actâs private right of action, which secured a federal forum for plaintiďŹs to enforce their rights, ch. 31, § 3, 14 Stat. 27 (1866) (codiďŹed as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 1988). But the Fourteenth Amendment also ensured the constitutionality of the legislation that followed it, in- cluding 42 U.S.C. § 1983, see Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871, ch. 22, 17 Stat. 13 (codiďŹed as amended at 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985â1986). 12 12 Although the Fourteenth Amendment sought to enable Congress to enact private rights of action, Congress may âenforceâ the Fourteenth Amendment through other means, too. U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 5. The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendmentsâ drafters understood each amendmentâs enforce- ment section to implement the expansive language of McCulloch v. Maryland. See CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong. 1st Sess. 1118 (1866) (remarks of Rep. James Wilson) (quoting 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 421 (1819)). So the Reconstruction Amendments support âbroad congressional power to administer strong and even selective medicine to individual statesâ that have often abridged Ameri- cansâ fundamental rights. Akhil Reed Amar, The Lawfulness of Section 5 â and Thus of Section 5, 126 HARV. L. REV. F. 109, 114 (2013) (emphasis omitted). For instance, Congress may âenact reasonably prophylactic remedial legislation,â Tennessee v. Lane, 541 U.S. 509, 523 (2004), and, when necessary, even require USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 62 of 169 36 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 After rounds of revision, Representative Bingham intro- duced a version of the Fourteenth Amendment that resembled its ďŹnal form. That revisionâs Section One includes precisely the same second sentence as the one in the version of the Fourteenth Amendment that Congress ultimately ratiďŹed: No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due pro- cess of law; nor deny to any person within its juris- diction the equal protection of the laws. CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2542 (1866) (statement of Rep. John Bingham). As Bingham introduced it, he emphasized that â[t]he necessity for the ďŹrst section of this amendment . . . is one of the lessons that have been . . . taught to all the people of this country by the history of the past four years of terriďŹc conďŹict.â Id. â[T]hat is, to protect by national law the privileges and immunities of all the citizens of the republic and the inborn rights of every per- son within its jurisdiction whenever the same shall be abridged or denied by the unconstitutional acts of any State.â Id. (emphases added). Simply, the drafters intended, and Americans understood,13 that states preclear certain laws with the federal government, see South Caro- lina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301, 330 (1966). 13 Recent scholarship has shown that the Congressional Globe is highly probative not just of legislative intent but also the public meaning of the Fourteenth USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 63 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 37 the Fourteenth Amendment to enable federal courts to protect all fundamental rights, not just those enumerated in the Constitu- tionâs amendments. Indeed, the text of the amendment reďŹects that on its face. After all, Section One purposely employs expansive lan- guage. Had the drafters envisioned a narrow conception of Amer- icansâ liberties, they would have listed or referred to those the Bill of Rights protects. Instead, they recognized that Americansâ rights âcannot be fully defined in their entire extent and precise nature.â Id. at 2765 (statement of Sen. Jacob Howard). The drafters âdid not presume to know the extent of freedom in all of its dimensions,â so they used broad but clear terms to âentrust[] to future genera- tions a charter protecting the right of all persons to enjoy liberty as we learn its meaning.â Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644, 664 (2015). Our duty to secure Americansâ fundamental rights inheres in the Constitutionâs text and history. Amendment. See Rachel A. Shelden, Finding Meaning in the Congressional Globe: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Problem of Constitutional Archives, 2 J. AM. CON. HIST. 715, 730â33 (2024). The Globe seldom contained speeches made to an invested congressional audience; instead, it reprinted curated addresses that representatives wished to make to their constituents. Id. at 727â30. So it offers a unique snapshot of âa congressmanâs sense of what mattered to people in their home districts,â id. at 731, and therefore reflects part of an âexpressive of a feedback loop in which constituents and their representatives conveyed their views to one another,â id. at 732. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 64 of 169 38 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 * * * Ultimately, our modern doctrine successfully discharges that duty. To be sure, the Supreme Court has concluded it does so un- der the Due Process Clause instead of the Privileges or Immunities Clause. See McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 758â59 (2010) (plurality opinion); cf. Slaughter-House Cases, 83 U.S. 36, 79 (1872) (Miller, J.) (interpreting the Privileges or Immunities clause to cover only rights peculiar to federal citizenship). But the only conclusion that the Founding, Antebellum, and Reconstruction history sup- ports is that our modern rights jurisprudence (which enforces fun- damental but unenumerated rights) accurately reďŹects our Found- ersâ intentions, regardless of the textual hook. Cf. Dobbs v. Jackson Womenâs Health Org., 597 U.S. 215, 240 n.22 (2022) (quoting CorďŹeld, 6 F. Cas. at 551â52). So most respectfully, the common refrain that âsubstantive due processâ is oxymoronic, see, e.g., Sosa, 57 F.4th at 1306; Eknes- Tucker v. Governor of Alabama, 114 F.4th 1241, 1244 (11th Cir. 2024) (Pryor, C.J., respecting the denial of rehearing en banc), misses the point. Perhaps homing the protection of fundamental rights in the Due Process Clause instead of the Privileges or Immunities Clause leaves room for debate. 14 But homing them somewhere in the Con- stitution does not. 14 My point is a pretty narrow one: if the Court is interpreting the Due Process Clause in accordance with Americansâ intentions when they ratified the Four- teenth Amendment, stare decisis requires consistency in our fundamental- USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 65 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 39 Our doctrine sometimes imperfectly yet accurately captures the Constitutionâs text and its animating principles. See Gundy v. United States, 588 U.S. 128, 166â67 (2019) (Gorsuch, J., dissenting) (âWhen one legal doctrine becomes unavailable to do its intended work, the hydraulic pressures of our constitutional system some- times shift the responsibility to diďŹerent doctrines.â (citing McDon- ald, 561 U.S. at 758) (plurality opinion)). But that is not a reason to abandon settled principles of constitutional jurisprudence. The history is unambiguous. It shows beyond dispute that the Constitution secures unenumerated rights and that the Consti- tution includes textual provisions to advance that purpose. That we interpret the Constitution to do so and to be faithful to the prin- ciples that animated the Founders and Fourteenth Amendment rat- iďŹers is more important than which textual provision we read as doing so. rights jurisprudence. We can conclude that our current doctrineâthough in Judge Newsomâs considered view, homed in the incorrect constitutional textâstill accords with the original understanding of the Fourteenth Amend- mentâs Section One. And we can also recognize that a doctrinal shift to the Privileges or Immunities Clause may introduce to our fundamental-rights ju- risprudence methodological or substantive error by destabilizing a century and a half of law. Cf. Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 827 (1991) (explaining stare decisis âpromotes the evenhanded, predictable, and consistent develop- ment of legal principles . . . and contributes to the actual and perceived integ- rity of the judicial processâ). So without more, I am unconvinced that sub- stantive due processâan accurate (yet purportedly imperfect) reflection of our predecessorsâ aimsâis an approach to constitutional interpretation that we should leave behind. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 66 of 169 40 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 The important question, then, is not whether the Due Pro- cess Clause is the proper textual hook for the doctrine. Rather, the important question is whether our current doctrine protects, in es- sence, the rights that Americans at the Founding and at the ratiďŹ- cation of the Fourteenth Amendment intended courts to secure from government interference. And as Section II explains, I think our current doctrine does. II. Substantive due process suďŹciently reďŹects the Found- ersâ intentions of how courts would secure Americansâ fundamental rights. The Fourteenth Amendment guarantees everyone due pro- cess of law, opens the federal courts to claims of state deprivations of fundamental rights, and enables the federal government to en- force those protections. And that brings me to the next point. As substantive due process developed in the decades after the Fourteenth Amend- mentâs ratiďŹcation, fundamental-rights jurisprudence has more or less matched the understandings Americans had at the Founding and at the time the states ratiďŹed the Fourteenth Amendment. The rest of this section proceeds in two parts. First, I review todayâs substantive-due-process doctrine. Then, I highlight the key similarities between our doctrine and the principles our history il- lustrates. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 67 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 41 A. Modern jurisprudence secures fundamental rights that are deeply rooted in this nationâs history and tradition. Today, when a plaintiďŹ alleges a violation of their unenumer- ated fundamental rights, we generally employ a two-step inquiry under substantive due process to resolve the claim. At the ďŹrst step, we determine whether a right is âfundamental.â See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 710 (1997). And at the second, we scruti- nize the government action either strictly or loosely depending on whether the right asserted is fundamental. If the right is fundamental, then we presume the govern- ment action is wrongful, and the government must show its action is ânarrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.â Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 302 (1993). 15 But if the right is not fundamen- tal, then we presume the government action lawful, and we uphold the law as long as it is ârationally related to legitimate government interests.â Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 728. This rational-relation test is particularly light-handedâmuch like a âsieve,â Eknes-Tucker, 114 F.4th at 1296 (Rosenbaum, J., dissenting from the denial of 15 Alternatively, Supreme Court precedent has suggested that a regulatory tra- dition may establish the constitutionality of a law. See United States v. Rahimi, 602 U.S. 680, 691 (2024) (explaining âif a challenged regulation fits within [our regulatory] tradition, it is lawfulâ); Jackman v. Rosenbaum Co., 260 U.S. 22, 31 (1922) (âIf a thing has been practiced for two hundred years by common con- sent, it will need a strong case for the Fourteenth Amendment to affect it.â). So even if a plaintiff establishes at step one of our fundamental-rights analysis that the constitution protects âa liberty interest . . . generally speaking, that must give way when there is a tradition denying the specific application of that general interest.â Kerry v. Din, 576 U.S. 86, 95 (2015) (plurality opinion). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 68 of 169 42 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 rehearing en banc)âbecause we sustain the governmentâs action if âthere is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could pro- vide a rational basisâ for it. FCC v. Beach Commcnâs, Inc., 508 U.S. 307, 313 (1993); see Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma Inc., 348 U.S. 483, 488 (1955). That is not to say rational-basis review is completely tooth- less. Courts have stricken action a government has taken under a mere âpretext of executing its powers.â McCulloch, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) at 423. Typically, we have done so when the facts reveal that a governmentâs claim to regulate for the public welfare is just a pretext for its true, âbare . . . desire to harm a politically unpopular group.â USDA v. Moreno, 413 U.S. 528, 534 (1973); accord Zobel v. Williams, 457 U.S. 55, 61â63 (1982); City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 473 U.S. 432, 446â47 (1985); Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620, 635 (1996). But these cases are few and far between. The upshot of the diďŹerence between strict and rational-ba- sis scrutiny, then, is that the most important substantive-due-pro- cess question is whether the claimed right is âfundamental.â After all, the answer to that question often predicts whether the chal- lenged law will stand or fall. To determine whether a right qualiďŹes as âfundamental,â we assess whether the right is âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and tradition, and implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were sacriďŹced.â Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 721 (cleaned up). One way to ascertain that a right is âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and traditionâ or USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 69 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 43 âimplicit in the concept of ordered libertyâ is its enumeration in the ďŹrst eight amendments. See Dobbs, 597 U.S. at 237. But the Due Process Clause does not protect those rights merely âbecause [they] are enumerated in the ďŹrst eight Amend- mentsâ; it does so at least largely because those rights are âof such a nature that they are included in the conception of due process of law.â Twining v. New Jersey, 211 U.S. 78, 99 (1908), overruled by Mal- loy, 378 U.S. at 6; see Hurtado v. California, 110 U.S. 516, 538 (1884) (declining to incorporate the Fifth Amendment right to a grand- jury indictment). So the bottom-line inquiry for any right the Four- teenth Amendment secures, enumerated or unenumerated, is whether âour Nationâs history, legal traditions, and practicesâ con- ďŹrm that it is deeply rooted and implicit in our concept of ordered liberty. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 710; cf. Poe v. Ullman, 367 U.S. 497, 554 (1961) (Harland, J., dissenting) (â[C]onclusive, in my view, is the ut- ter novelty of this enactment.â). When we conduct this inquiry, we often begin with the Eng- lish common law or, in some cases, even further back with the rightâs âancient origins.â Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 659 (discussing mar- riage). Core legal documents (such as the Magna Carta), parlia- mentary acts, and landmark British cases often supply the relevant principle or applicable rule of decision at common law. See, e.g., Hurtado, 110 U.S. at 522 (citing the Magna Carta); Slaughter-House Cases, 83 U.S. at 65â66 (explaining âthe Parliament of Great Britain . . . continued to grant to persons and corporations exclusive privi- leges,â just like Louisiana did to the slaughter-house at issue). And USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 70 of 169 44 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 often, old legal treatises make an appearanceâmostly from the re- curring cast of Bracton, Coke, Hale, and Blackstoneâto solidify our understanding of the prevailing legal norms. See, e.g., Hurtado, 110 U.S. at 522; Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 710â12; Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 659â60; Dobbs, 597 U.S. at 272. We rely on these sources because the Framers assumed that Americans enjoyed many of the same âguaranties and immunities which we had inherited from our English ancestors.â Robertson, 165 U.S. at 281. But we have noted their limits as well: âThe com- mon law, of course, developed over time,â and the Framers did not import English common law wholesale. New York State RiďŹe & Pis- tol Assân v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1, 35 (2022). So a âlong, unbroken line of common-law precedent stretching from Bracton to Blackstone is far more likely to be part of our law than a short-lived, 14th-century English practice.â Id. Next in our inquiry, we usually survey state and federal law relating to the claimed right at the Founding or the ratiďŹcation of the Fourteenth Amendment. For instance, in declaring that the Due Process Clause incorporated the Eighth Amendmentâs protec- tion against excessive ďŹnes, the Supreme Court found that (a) at the time of the Founding, âthe constitutions of eight Statesâaccount- ing for 70% of the U.S. populationâforbade excessive ďŹnes,â and (b) in 1868, âupon ratiďŹcation of the Fourteenth Amendment,â the âconstitutions of 35 of the 37 Statesâaccounting for over 90% of the U.S. populationâexpressly prohibited excessive ďŹnes.â Timbs v. Indiana, 586 U.S. 146, 152 (2019); see also Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 713â USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 71 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 45 16 (surveying the development of American legislation about sui- cide in rejecting a claim that a right to end oneâs life is fundamen- tal). But constitutional provisions and statutes are not the only sources of law we reviewâany source probative of our actual âle- gal traditions and practicesâ can be helpful. See AMAR, AMERICAâS UNWRITTEN CONSTITUTION, supra, at 103 (âSimply put, many of the . . . rights of the people . . . may be found in everyday American lifeâin the practices of ordinary Americans as they go about their aďŹairs and in patterns of laws and customs across the land.â). So for instance, we note how often executive oďŹcials or the courts protected a claimed right, as well as how often they enforced any purported prohibitions on that right. See, e.g., Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558, 569 (2003) (recognizing sodomy laws were rarely âen- forced against consenting adults acting in privateâ). We also con- sider newspapers, periodicals, or other materials that show that Americans âwidely heldâ a particular view about the claimed right. See, e.g., Heller, 554 U.S. at 615 (relying on âan editorialâ to deter- mine the Second Amendmentâs scope). These authorities are important because they reveal the un- derstandings of âthose who ratiďŹed and adopted the relevant con- stitutional provision.â Natâl RiďŹe Assân v. Bondi, 61 F.4th 1317, 1322 (11th Cir.), rehâg en banc granted, opinion vacated, 72 F.4th 1346 (11th Cir. 2023). So they oďŹer insight into the rights the people under- stood the Fourteenth Amendment to protect when they voted for USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 72 of 169 46 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 it. And that provides a substantial âclaim to democratic legitimacyâ when we declare government action invalid. Id. Besides evidence from the Founding and Reconstruction, in determining whether a right is fundamental, we also look to mod- ern statutory and constitutional trends among states, as well as other sources probative of the current, prevailing legal practices. Often, our review conďŹrms the conclusion we gleaned from the historical materials. See, e.g., Timbs, 586 U.S. at 153 (âToday, ac- knowledgment of the rightâs fundamental nature remains wide- spread.â); Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 719 (â[T]he States are currently en- gaged in serious, thoughtful examinations of physician-assisted su- icide and other similar issues.â). But other times, it highlights a radical departure from antiquated ideals. See Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 664. And that departure may deserve recognition. Legal norms at common law, at the time of the Founding, and at the ratiďŹcation of the Fourteenth Amendment are imperfect proxies of the rights the âpeopleâ retained. After all, not all the âpeopleâ could vote to ratify the Constitution or adopt the Fourteenth Amendment. Women couldnât vote until two decades into the 20th century. See Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. 162, 171 (1874); U.S. CONST. amend. XIX; see also Dobbs, 597 U.S. at 372â73 (Breyer, J., dissenting). And it wasnât until a century after the ratiďŹcation of the Fourteenth Amendment that we legislatively ensured non-whitesâ access to the franchise. See Voting Rights Act of 1965, Pub. L. No. 89-110, 79 Stat. 437 (codiďŹed as amended at 52 U.S.C. §§ 10101, 10301â14, USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 73 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 47 10501â08, 10701â02). So more recent laws, practices, and under- standings can provide a much-needed view of what rights all the people âretained.â But more to the point, such an inquiry recognizes that â[t]he nature of injustice is that we may not always see it in our own times.â Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 664. Those who âwrote and ratiďŹed the Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment did not presume to know the extent of freedom in all of its dimensions.â Id. They used broad language and âentrusted to future generations a charter protecting the right of all persons to enjoy liberty as we learn its meaning.â Id.; see Ullman, 367 U.S. at 542 (Harlan, J., dissenting) (âThat tradition is a living thing.â). And rights that âonly became analytically clear or won recognition after the adoption of the Ninthâ and Fourteenth Amendments are still âcovered byâ their âletter and spirit.â AMAR, AMERICAâS UNWRITTEN CONSTITUTION, supra, at 108. At bottom, each of these pieces of evidence informs our as- sessment of whether a plaintiďŹâs claimed right is âfundamental.â Our focus on these objective indicators of our history and tradition helps guard against âroaming at large into the constitutional ďŹeldâ while also ensuring that we do not wholesale forfeit the fundamen- tal rights our Founders charged the judiciary with securing. Gris- wold, 381 U.S. at 502 (Harlan, J., concurring). B. Four similarities among modern fundamental-rights doctrine, our founding principles, and historical practice show that mod- ern substantive-due-process doctrine imposes limitations on USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 74 of 169 48 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 government that Americans voted for when they ratiďŹed the Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment. In four ways, our fundamental-rights doctrine channels the Foundersâ intentions, and the peopleâs understandings, when they declared âthat the enumeration of certain rights in the Constitu- tion does not deny or disparage those rights retained by the peo- ple.â U.S. CONST. amend IX. First, our general understanding of what makes a right fun- damental is essentially the same as it was at the Founding. In other words, our requirement that a fundamental right is âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and traditionâ and âimplicit in the concept of ordered libertyâ does not materially diďŹer from the frameworks we see in early caselaw. Whether those rights are described as âvital principles in our free Republican governments,â Calder, 3 U.S. at 388 (opinion of Chase, J.), âprivileges and immunities which . . . belong, of right, to the citizens of all free governments,â CorďŹeld, 6 F. Cas. at 551, or â[i]mplied reservations . . . , without which the so- cial compact could not exist,â Loan Assân, 87 U.S. at 663, the opin- ions all invoke the same concept: The people retained a class of rights when we established our government, so âthe power to vio- late and disregard themâ does not âlurk[] under any general grant of legislative authorityâ or âgeneral expressions of the will of the people,â Wilkinson, 27 U.S. (2 Pet.) at 657. Second, and relatedly, the justiďŹcation for judicial enforce- ment of those rights has endured from the Founding to today. That is, the judiciary protects rights, at least under the Fourteenth USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 75 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 49 Amendment, because they are âin their nature, fundamental,â Cor- ďŹeld, 6 F. Cas. at 551, not just because we enumerated some of them in the Constitution. To be sure, enumeration is one source of authority. But the Founders, especially the Federalists, understood that base limits on government action inhered in the social contract, so enumeration was merely declaratory of rights that already limited government. And the drafters of the Fourteenth Amendment understood the same thing when they noted that Sections One and Five of that amendment âestablish[ed] no new rightâ but merely provided a means for the federal government âto protect and enforce those which already belong to every citizen.â CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong. 1st Sess. 1117 (1866) (statement of Rep. James Wilson); id. at 1836 (statement of Rep. William Lawrence) (â[T]his bill creates no new right, confers no new privilege, but is declaratory of what is already the constitutional rights of every citizen in every State . . . .â). Itâs that principle that underwrites our modern caselawâwe protect rights under the Fourteenth Amendment, at least in part, because they are âof such a nature that they are included in the conception of due process of law.â McDonald, 561 U.S. at 759 (plurality opin- ion) (quoting Twining, 211 U.S. at 99). In other words, the promise of âdue process of lawâ is not a promise of process for the sake of process; itâs a promise of process for the sake of ensuring our fun- damental rights have practical meaning. Third, the legal methodologyâthat is, the relevant historical evidence and precedentâwe use to determine whether a right is USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 76 of 169 50 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 fundamental has remained consistent. As early cases said, funda- mental rights were those that âhave, at all times, been enjoyed by the citizens of the several states which compose this Union.â Cor- ďŹeld, 6 F. Cas. at 551; see also Loan Assân, 87 U.S. at 663 (âImplied reservations of individual rights . . . are respected by all govern- ments entitled to the name.â). So our current inquiry into prevail- ing legal practices at the common law, across state governments, and even other countries, matches our earliest instincts about what made a right âfundamental.â And that similarity is more than a coincidence. At both the time of the Founding and ratiďŹcation of the Fourteenth Amend- ment, general law played a key role in the American legal system. Its content âform[ed] the substratum of our laws.â United States v. Burr, 25 F. Cas. 55, 77 (C.C.D. Va. 1807) (No. 14,693) (Marshall, Cir- cuit Justice). And in many routine cases, it provided the âprinci- pleââor the rule of decisionâthat âwould obtainâ in the âab- senceâ of any applicable positive state or federal law. United States v. Chambers, 291 U.S. 217, 226 (1934). So a reference to rights âre- spected by all governments entitled to the name,â for instance, was a reference to rights as the general law deďŹnes them. See Baude, Campbell & Sachs, supra, at 1199 (âLawyers and judges evinced the general-law character of these fundamental rights not only by us- ing terms like these but also by explicitly describing the rights as shared among multiple jurisdictions.â). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 77 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 51 And when judges in our pre-Erie 16 days had to rely on the general law to supply a rule of decision, they âfoundâ the general law in much the same way we now determine whether a right is fundamental. They reviewed colonial, Founding, and Antebellum- Era treatises and scholarly works; a study of the English common law; and a catalog of relevant state-court decisions, among many other probative sources. See, e.g., Swift v. Tyson, 41 U.S. (16 Pet.) 1, 19â22 (1842); Nichols v. Fearson, 32 U.S. (7 Pet.) 103, 109â12 (1833); see also St. George Tucker, Appendix to 1 WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES 430 (S. Tucker ed. & comm. 1803). And that review included an assessment of how law has developed over time. See Baude, Campbell & Sachs, supra, at 1248 (explaining the general law âis shaped by legally recognized custom and practice; its con- tours can change as those practices changeâ); Danielle DâOnfro & 16 In Erie Railroad Company v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 71 (1938), the Supreme Court overturned Swift v. Tyson. Swift held that federal courts sitting in diver- sity may, in the absence of a pertinent state statute, apply the general law to commercial disputes. In other words, federal courts in diversity could use âgeneral reasoning and legal analogiesâ to determine âthe just rule furnished by the principles of commercial law to govern the case,â 41 U.S. (16 Pet.) at 19, even if state courts applied a different rule of decision. Erie, by contrast, required federal courts sitting in diversity to interpret all state substantive law as the âhighest courtâ of a state would. 304 U.S. at 78. And in doing so, Erie âoverruled a particular way of looking at law which dominated the judicial processâ from the Founding to the beginning of the twentieth century. Guar. Tr. Co. of N.Y. v. York, 326 U.S. 99, 101 (1945). State-court decisions were no longer âmerely evidenceâ of the proper rule of decision that a federal court should apply but were now âthe controlling formulationsâ of the applicable law itself. Id. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 78 of 169 52 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 Daniel Epps, The Fourth Amendment and General Law, 132 YALE L.J. 910, 940 (2023) (âJurists and lawyers in 1791 would not have under- stood the common law as perfectly static.â); accord Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 644 (âWhen new insight reveals discord between the Con- stitutionâs central protections and a received legal stricture, a claim to liberty must be addressed.â). So the diďŹerence between substantive due process and the vision of fundamental rights that the Founders and drafters of the Fourteenth Amendment held is not one of substance but one of vehicleâthe same ďŹrst principles continue to guide us even though we may now think about and describe the law diďŹerently. See gen- erally Lawrence Lessig, Fidelity in Translation, 71 TEX. L. REV. 1165 (1993). Fourth, and ďŹnally, the current tiers of scrutiny adequately approximate the Foundersâ expectations about the bounds of the statesâ police powers. The core premise of the social contract is that â[w]hen one becomes a member of society, he necessarily parts with some rights or privileges which, as an individual not af- fected by his relations to others, he might retain.â Munn, 94 U.S. at 124 (emphasis added). And social-contract theory recognizes that individuals cede those rights âfor the public good.â Id. at 125. These two precepts inform the boundaries of government author- ity. But they also raise two questions: (1) Which rights did the peo- ple retain when they âenteredâ the social contract, in that the state generally may not abridge them, and (2) how much may we sec- ond-guess whether the government acted âfor the public good?â USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 79 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 53 I think our modern framework satisfactorily responds to these questions. As to the ďŹrst questionâthe rights the people re- tainedâweâve just answered it: rights that are âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and traditionâ and âimplicit in the concept of or- dered liberty.â Our review of past and present legal norms will ul- timately reveal whether the claimed right is regularly abridged, or whether the claimed right is so routinely exercised and protected that we can conclude the people âretainedâ it when they entered the social contract. In that case, presumptively, the government could not infringe on that legally determinate right. Strict scrutinyâs allowance of some regulation of fundamen- tal rights operates as a limited exception to the peopleâs retention of those rights. But it is one that still ďŹnds its roots in the social contractâs logic. Requiring the government to show that its action is ânarrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest,â Reno, 507 U.S. at 302, is a way of forcing the government to show that its ac- tion in fact serves the âpublic good.â Some might view questioning whether a certain law is in the âpublic goodâ as policymaking. But the judiciaryâs acceptance of a governmentâs asserted public interest often derives from objective sources, such as the historical evidence that we use to deďŹne the right in the ďŹrst place. See United States v. Rahimi, 602 U.S. 680, 732 & n.7 (2024) (Kavanaugh, J., concurring) (âThe Court has em- ployed balancing only in discrete areas of constitutional lawâand even in those cases, history still tends to play a far larger role than overt judicial policymaking.â). So strict scrutiny is really just a USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 80 of 169 54 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 mechanism that helps courts and litigants deďŹne the scope a claimed right and delimit its outer boundaries. In contrast, when a claimed right is not deeply rooted or im- plicit in the concept of ordered liberty, the judiciary historically has deferred to the legislatureâs determination that a particular act ad- vances the public good. Id. at 253. â[T]he questionâ whether we sustain government action in the face a claim that such action abridges fundamental rights âis one of power, not of expediency.â Munn, 94 U.S. at 132. When the state has the power to actâbecause the people retained no right forbidding government intrusionââthe legisla- ture is the exclusive judgeâ of whether the action beneďŹts the pub- lic good. Id. at 133; see, e.g., Crowley v. Christensen, 137 U.S. 86, 91 (1890) (deferring to the legislature because there âis no inherent right in a citizen to thus sell intoxicating liquors by retailâ; it âis not a privilege of a citizen of the state or of a citizen of the United Statesâ). We make no judgment on whether an act is expedient. Rather, we step in only â[i]f no state of circumstances could exist to justify such a statute,â Munn, 94 U.S. at 132âthat is, only if the government lacks the power to enact such a law. In that limited case, we can enforce constitutional limitations on purely âarbitrary exertions of power under the forms of legislation.â Hurtado, 110 U.S. at 536. So no functional distinction exists between todayâs rational- basis formulation and our countryâs historical deference to legisla- turesâ determinations of what advances the public good. Indeed, USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 81 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 55 our current caselaw practically rips the words out of Reconstruc- tion-era opinions. Compare Munn, 94 U.S. at 132 (âno state of cir- cumstances could exist to justify such a statuteâ), with Beach Commcnâs, 508 U.S. at 313 (âreasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide a rational basisâ). Even todayâs focus on impermissible animus ďŹnds its roots in long-held restrictions on legislation enacted under pretexts or for partial or special purposes. Compare McCulloch, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) at 423 (pretexts), Austin v. Murray, 33 Mass. 121, 126 (1834) (ânot a police regulation, made in good faithâ), Hurtado, 110 U.S. at 536 (âspecial, partial, and arbitrary exertions of powerâ), with Moreno, 413 U.S. at 534 (âbare . . . desire to harm a politically unpopular groupâ); City of Cleburne, 473 U.S. at 446â47 (same); Romer, 517 U.S. at 635 (purpose of amendment âto make them unequal to every- one elseâ). In sum, modern fundamental-rights doctrineâs ties to our historical roots refute calls to abandon modern doctrine because it is allegedly âunmoored from history,â âahistorical,â and âmanipu- lable,â Newsom Op. at 2, 18, 3. If anything, the peopleâs under- standing of unenumerated rights at both the Founding and the rat- iďŹcation of the Fourteenth Amendment warrants modern funda- mental-rights doctrineâs continued use. III. Substantive due process oďŹers a workable method for se- curing Americansâ fundamental rights. With the matters of history and text resolved, we can ad- dress the so-called âpracticalâ and âpedigreeâ problems that USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 82 of 169 56 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 substantive due process purportedly presents. Hillcrest Prop., LLP v. Pasco County, 915 F.3d 1292, 1305â06 (11th Cir. 2019) (Newsom, J., concurring). Of course, given the historical directives to enforce unenumerated rights, these criticisms are ultimately unavailing. But it is worth highlighting that these criticisms still do not provide a good reason to abandon substantive-due-process doctrine. A. Substantive due process employs routine tools of constitutional decisionmaking to declare what the law is, not what judges think the law should be. The practical problems Judge Newsom identiďŹes seem to ďŹow from what he sees as âmalleableâ standards inherent in our substantive-due-process doctrine. Newsom Op. at 3. He views our guideposts of history and tradition and our concept of ordered lib- erty as âvague shibboleths . . . untethered from the governing textâ that âinvite manipulable, policy-driven cherry-picking.â Sierra v. City of Hallandale Beach, 996 F.3d 1110, 1129 (11th Cir. 2021) (New- som, J., concurring). And if we applied only those vague standards, perhaps we would, as Alexander Hamilton put it, âbe disposed to exercise will instead of judgment.â THE FEDERALIST NO. 78 (Alex- ander Hamilton). But as weâve thoroughly discussed, our broad guideposts are not the end of the legal legwork our substantive- due-process doctrine requires. Applied faithfully and accurately, substantive due process looks like any other routine form of con- stitutional interpretation. We, of course, start any constitutional analysis with the rel- evant text. Usually, the text readily indicates whether the plaintiďŹâs USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 83 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 57 claim is plausible. For instance, both the Due Process Clause and the Privileges or Immunities Clause invite claims that a state has impermissibly infringed a personâs individual rights. See U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1 (âNo State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge . . . ; nor shall any State deprive . . . .â). But that textual invitation rarely resolves the question presented. Many provisions include âgeneral term[s], applicable to many objects.â Gibbons, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat) at 189. Knowing that, at the time of Reconstruction, âthe terms âprivilegesâ and âimmuni- tiesâ . . . were used interchangeably with the words ârights,â âliber- ties,â and âfreedomsââ ultimately âreveal[s] little aboutâ the âsub- stanceâ of the rights Americans intended the Fourteenth Amend- ment to protect. McDonald, 561 U.S. at 813â14 (Thomas, J., con- curring in part and concurring in the judgment). So we must use additional interpretive tools to discern their character and scope. See, e.g., McCulloch, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) at 407 (determining the scope of Congressâs powers through the Constitutionâs structure); Hur- tado, 110 U.S. at 530â31, 535â38 (relying on history and other com- mon-law principles to inform the meaning of the Due Process Clause). For instance, to return to CorďŹeld, when Justice Washington interpreted the scope of the Privileges and Immunities Clause, he appealed to the Constitutionâs structure and its history. He ex- plained that it secured those âprivileges and immunities which are, in their nature, fundamental; which belong, of right, to the citizens of all free governments; and which have, at all times, been enjoyed USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 84 of 169 58 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 by the citizens of the several statesââas opposed to any privileges the states create by local lawâbecause deprivations of those our fundamental rights would undermine our Founderâs intent to se- cure a single Union. 6 F. Cas. at 551â52. And in turn, he could conclude that a claimed right to oyster harvesting, a resource pecu- liar to New Jersey, did not fall within the scope of the Privileges and Immunities Clause. Id. Similarly, in the Slaughter-House Cases, Justice Miller, made clear that he could not interpret the Privileges or Immunities Clause âwithout a reference to [its] history,â 83 U.S. at 67â68, 71 (discussing the eradication of slavery), or its structure, id. at 75â78 (discussing the federal governmentâs limited role in âordinary and usualâ governance). And through those tools, he discerned (per- haps incorrectly) that the provision ought to secure only rights which owe âtheir existence to the Federal government, its National character, its Constitution, or its laws,â id. at 79. As a result, it be- came apparent that the Fourteenth Amendment did not secure the Louisiana butchersâ right to practice their trade free from the in- terference of a state-granted monopoly. Id. at 80â81. In both cases, our usual interpretive tools allowed us to re- ďŹne an applicable principle from the general constitutional provi- sion at issue, and that principle resolved the dispute. In comparison, more speciďŹc provisions, such as those in the ďŹrst eight amendments, may take us one step closer to resolving the constitutional question. We know the claimed right exists at least in some form. But, again, that small step rarely resolves the USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 85 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 59 legal question the facts present, and we must again bring out our jurisprudential toolkit. Take the Sixth Amendmentâs Confrontation Clause. See U.S. CONST. amend. VI (âIn all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the witnesses against him.â). When the Court had to decide whether certain out-of- court statements (hearsay) could be admitted into evidence against a criminal defendant, the Court ďŹrst announced that the âConsti- tutionâs text does not alone resolve this case.â Crawford v. Washing- ton, 541 U.S. 36, 43 (2004). That was so, the Court explained, be- cause we âcould plausibly read âwitnesses againstâ a defendant to mean those who actually testify at trial, those whose statements are oďŹered at trial, or something else in between.â Id. (internal cita- tions omitted). So the Court reviewed many of the sources we highlighted in our discussion of substantive-due-process doctrine. Precedents from the English common law (the case of Sir Walter Raleigh, in particular), the coloniesâ experiences with British rule, and Ante- bellum state-court practice supported the Courtâs conclusion that the Confrontation Clause prohibits the introduction of out-of- court testimonial statements. See id. at 43â50. The Second Amendment provides another example. See U.S. CONST. amend. II (âA well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.â). Though textually based, the full scope of the âright of the people to keep and bear Armsâ was not USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 86 of 169 60 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 immediately clear; two sides of a dispute easily âset out very diďŹer- ent interpretations of the Amendment.â Heller, 554 U.S. at 577. But after a lengthy review of the English common law, our colonial his- tory, the nationâs ratiďŹcation debates, and post-ratiďŹcation practice from the Antebellum period to modern times, the Court con- ďŹrmed âthat the Second Amendment conferred an individual right to keep and bear arms.â See id. at 577â95. Again, text alone did not clearly delineate the content of the asserted right, and the Court exercised judgment, in light of the historical record, to ascertain the textâs âidiomatic meaning.â Id. at 577. Still, analysis rarely ends after we articulate the content of the Constitutionâs text. Rather, our reliance on the full breadth of our legal resources only deepens when weâre called to examine a claimed rightâs scope in the face of state action that likely intrudes on that claimed right. Concrete questions of whether the state may âprohibit[] an individual subject to a domestic violence re- straining order from possessing a ďŹrearm,â Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 684, or prevent a natural father from establishing paternity over his pu- tative child born to a married couple, Michael H. v. Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, 113 (1989) (plurality opinion), are not neatly answered by precedent conďŹrming that the Second Amendment protects an âin- dividual right to keep and bear arms,â Heller, 554 U.S. at 595, or that Due Process Clause secures âthe interest of parents in the care, cus- tody, and control of their children,â respectively, Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 65 (2000) (plurality opinion). In both instances, we must determine whether our Nationâs history and tradition per- mits such regulation. See Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692; Kerry v. Din, 576 USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 87 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 61 U.S. 86, 95 (2015) (plurality opinion) (explaining fundamental rights âmust give way when there is a tradition denying the speciďŹc appli- cation of that generalâ right). Sometimes, the historical analogues âare relatively simple to draw.â Bruen, 5967 U.S. at 27. In Michael H., California just adopted âthe presumption of legitimacyâ that âwas a fundamental principle of the common lawâ and traditionally âprotected the marital fam- ily . . . against the sort of claims Michaelâ asserted. 491 U.S. at 124. But other cases âmay require a more nuanced approach,â Bruen, 5967 U.S. at 27, often calling on us to determine whether a relevant tradition is suďŹciently âenduring,â ârepresentative,â and âcompa- rableâ to establish an exception to an enumerated right, id. at 69, 30, 27, or to support the existence of an unenumerated one, see Glucksburg, 521 U.S. at 721. Those are diďŹcult questions. How do we know, for in- stance, whether enough states adopted a particular policy to sug- gest that policy is a ârepresentativeâ tradition? Or, how do we en- sure that we are pulling the controlling principle from the ade- quately comparable analogous historical regulation at âjust the right level of generality?â Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 740 (Barrett, J., con- curring). These inquires do oďŹer clear guideposts, and âreasonable minds sometimes disagree about howâ to resolve them. Id. But that does not make our exercise of discretion in answer- ing those questions any less of âa commonplace task for any lawyer or judge.â Bruen, 597 U.S. at 28. For instance, courts often deter- mine whether a historical tradition is suďŹciently representative USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 88 of 169 62 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 through historical facts, comparisons to those historical facts, and, in some cases, reasoning inward from clear outliers that provide ready ďŹrst-cut answers. Compare Bruen, 597 U.S. at 67 (rejecting as relevant analogues regulations governing only âabout two-thirds of 1% of the populationâ), and Timbs, 586 U.S. at 152 (concluding a representative tradition existed where 70% of the U.S. population forbade excessive ďŹnes), with Antonyuk v. James, 120 F.4th 941, 1022 (2d Cir. 2024) (concluding a representative tradition existed where â15.3 percent of the Nationâs population,â comprising â37.7% of the urban population livingâ in the United States, prohibited ďŹre- arms in public parks); see also Dobbs, 597 U.S. at 239. A rule to cut through each interpretive nuance may not exist in this area of law. But âmany constitutional standards involve un- doubted gray areas, and it normally might be fair to venture the assumption that case-by-case development will lead to a workable standard.â Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 746 ( Jackson, J., concurring) (quot- ing Garcia v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth., 469 U.S. 528, 540 (1985)) (cleaned up). The point is that the legal reasoning in most constitutional cases, even when we apply an enumerated right, requires not just âexercise of judicial discretion,â THE FEDERALIST NO. 78 (Alexander Hamilton), but an exercise of the same kind of judicial discretion that our unenumerated-rights jurisprudence calls for. As this dis- cussion shows, fundamental-rights casesâwhether based on broad provisions like the Due Process Clause, or on enumerated rights like those in the Second and Sixth Amendmentsârequire careful USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 89 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 63 examinations of the Constitutionâs structure, its history, and our precedents to fashion a rule of decision. And the particularly tough questions that fundamental-rights cases pose exist in disputes in- volving rights of both species, enumerated and unenumerated. So what, if anything, gives spark to Judge Newsomâs assess- ment that â[i]f ever there were a doctrine that gave a veneer of truth to the vicious lie that judges just decide cases in accordance with their priors, itâs substantive due process?â Newsom Op. at 3. Perhaps that many use the doctrine as a mechanism to bring polit- ically salient issues before the courts. See, e.g., Sosa, 57 F.4th at 1305 (Newsom, J., concurring) (explaining substantive due process has âoften been invoked as a failsafe doctrine of sorts . . . to plug some perceived gap in the written Constitutionâ). And when we resolve any politically salient issueâwhether involving enumerated rights or the scope of Congressâs powersâcharges of policymaking will ensue. See David E. Pozen & Adam M. Samaha, Anti-Modalities, 119 MICH. L. REV. 729, 746 (2021) (âParticipants in constitutional de- bates routinely distinguish legitimate constitutional concerns from illegitimate considerations of policy when attacking their oppo- nents or defending their own, ostensibly policy-free positions.â). But that characterization cannot and should not give us reason to abandon the doctrine. Itâs axiomatic our jurisdiction extends to some so-called âpo- litical casesâ and that the âcourts cannot reject . . . a bona ďŹde con- troversy as to whether some action denominated âpoliticalâ exceeds constitutional authority.â Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 217 (1962). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 90 of 169 64 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 That is especially in the case for rights many will claim the Four- teenth Amendment protects. Our forbearers adopted that amend- ment with the express intent to enable Americans âto hold [the states] to answer before the bar of national courts.â CONG. GLOBE, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 1090 (1866) (statement of Rep. John Bingham). Our duty is âto be an intermediate body between the people and the legislatureâ by enforcing the will of the people as âdeclared in the Constitution.â THE FEDERALIST NO. 78 (Alexander Hamil- ton). And we cannot abdicate it solely because some may misun- derstand our âexercise of judicial discretion.â Id. As Hamilton put it, such an argument is âof no weight,â for if it were correct, it âwould proveâ only that âthere ought to be no judges distinct fromâ the legislature. Id. Weâd be left with no âbulwark . . . against legislative encroachmentsâ on the rights of individuals. Id. Yet Hamiltonâs reďŹections show that these are not new con- cerns. And as our examples illustrate, the âexercise of judicial dis- cretionâ is inevitable in any constitutional case, if not every one that comes before us. But our reasoned opinions are a response to that. They make us show our work and explain why the Constitu- tion and our interpretive tools require the answer we give. And through that methodology, we have long been able to show the public that weâre exercising our âjudgmentâ in âdeclar[ing] the sense of the law,â as opposed to exerting our âwillâ upon them. Id. We employ well-reďŹned jurisprudential tools, including tex- tual and structural analyses, reviews of pertinent precedents, and surveys of our nationâs history and tradition, to avoid policymaking USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 91 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 65 and to rebut any charges of it. See Pozen & Samaha, supra, at 736â 38, 746â50, 793â94; id. at 793 (â[W]henever the modalities are seen to establish a relatively determinate proposition of law, that propo- sition is eligible to stay in the constitutional box.â). So Judge New- somâs âpracticalâ criticisms are no stronger just because we secure unenumerated rights through a general constitutional provision, like the Due Process Clause (or for that matter, the Privileges or Immunities Clause). Theyâre an innate feature of judicial reviewâ and one the judiciary regularly handles. B. Dred Scott and Lochner do not require us to abandon our fundamental-rights jurisprudence. Judge Newsomâs invocation of substantive due processâs boogiemen, Dred Scott and Lochner, also ďŹounders under scrutiny. Dred Scott has little relation to our fundamental-rights jurispru- dence. In fact, historical evidence suggests it played little to no role in developing todayâs substantive-due-process doctrine. And Loch- ner is a stand-in for arguments we already addressedâthat, in some cases, judges may get it wrong because they wrongly rely on their own policy preferences instead of our legal and historical guide- posts. But that, of course, can happen no matter the legal frame- work, even under the alternative privileges-or-immunities doctrine Judge Newsom proposes. His own proposals are not immune from his own critiques. So although Dred Scott and Lochner provide im- portant reminders of past mistakes, they do not suggest that we ought to abandon Americanâs fundamental rights. Rather, they serve as warnings for us to faithfully apply the law and not allow USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 92 of 169 66 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 personal policy preferences to sneak into our analysesâwhether we are applying substantive-due-process doctrine or any other legal framework under the Constitution. 1. Dred Scott has little relevance for our fundamental-rights jurisprudence. First, thereâs the claim that âsubstantive-due-process doc- trine traces its rootsâ to Dred Scott. Hillcrest, 915 F.3d at 1305 (New- som, J., concurring). Not so. That repugnant decision is not the root of our fundamental- rights jurisprudenceâor even of substantive due process. And itâs simply incorrect to suggest that the Supreme Court conjured up substantive due process (or more generally, fundamental-rights ju- risprudence) to constitutionalize slavery. In fact, by the time the Supreme Court decided Dred Scott, substantive due process was al- ready well established. Ryan C. Williams, The One and Only Sub- stantive Due Process Clause, 120 YALE L.J. 408, 467, 469 (2010). 17 17 The Constitutionâs Due Process Clauses trace their origin to a 1354 statute, which improved upon the âlaw of the landâ clause in the Magna Carta. See, e.g., 28 Edw. 3 c. 3 (1354) (Eng.); 42 Edw. 3 c. 3 (1368) (Eng.); Magna Carta 1225, 9 Hen. 3 c. 29 (Eng.). The âlaw of the landâ clause prohibited England from punishing a person âexcept by the lawful judgment of his peers and by the law of the land.â Magna Carta 1225, 9 Hen. 3 c. 29 (Eng.). Sir Edward Coke, a prominent English jurist and Chief Justice of the Court of the Kingâs Bench, linked the 1354 clause and the âlaw of the landâ clause in his commen- taries. Randy E. Barnett & Evan D. Bernick, No Arbitrary Power: An Originalist Theory of the Due Process of Law, 60 WM. & MARY L. REV. 1599, 1607 (2019). Throughout English common law, the âlaw of the landâ provision and due- USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 93 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 67 Not only that, but the travesty of Dred Scott does not come from its reliance on substantive due process. True, Dred Scott found process statutes stood as barricades against abuses of the royal prerogative. Barnett & Bernick, supra, at 1610â12; Hurtado, 110 U.S. at 531. Some even viewed them as having operated as limitations against Parliament itself. See Gedicks, supra, at 601â11 (discussing Bonhamâs Case, decided by Lord Coke, as an example of fundamental law limiting Parliamentâs legislative authority); James W. Ely, Jr., The Oxymoron Reconsidered: Myth and Reality in the Origins of Substantive Due Process, 16 CONST. COMMENT. 315, 321 (1999) (âCoke implied that the âlaw of the landâ constituted a substantive limitation on the power of government.â). That view of Cokeâs jurisprudence never took hold in Eng- land; âthe omnipotence of parliament over the common law was absolute, even against common right and reason.â Hurtado, 110 U.S. at 531 (recognizing Bonhamâs Case as an exception to parliamentary supremacy). But Americans did not adopt Englandâs system of government. Rather, throughout America, written constitutions helped limit governmentsâ powers, and widespread ac- ceptance of the separation of powers disentangled legislative and judicial au- thorities. Id. at 531. So unlike in England, legislative acts in the United States were not equivalent to constitutional pronouncements. Instead, âlaw of the landâ and due-process provisions imported from England operated as âlimitations upon all the pow- ers of government, legislative as well as executive and judicial.â Id. at 532. And the Supreme Court observed in 1884 that what were once â[a]pplied in England only as guards against executive usurpation and tyrannyâ became in America âbulwarks also against arbitrary legislation.â Id. As a result, many thought the Due Process Clauses guaranteed not just âparticular forms of pro- cedure, but the very substance of individual rights to life, liberty, and property.â Id. (emphasis added). In fact, â[b]y the time of the Fourteenth Amendmentâs rat- ification in 1868,â substantive due process was well established: âcourts in at least twenty of the thirty-seven then-existing states had endorsed some version of substantive due process in connection with interpreting either due process, law-of-the-land, or similar provisions in their own constitutions or the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause.â Williams, supra, at 469. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 94 of 169 68 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 property ownership to be a fundamental right. But that isnât why Dred Scott is so abhorrent. Rather, Dred Scottâs obliteration of the law was its holding that people are property. And that was not a conclusion the Court reached through substantive due process. So to argue that Dred Scottâs existence un- dermines substantive due process as a doctrine (or more broadly, fundamental-rights jurisprudence) is to miss the reason Dred Scott was so repugnant and erroneousâthat contrary to the concept on which Dred Scott is based, people are not property but individuals entitled to equal dignity in both life and the law. See Williams, su- pra, at 467 (âAlthough Taneyâs Dred Scott opinion was unquestiona- bly controversial at the time it was issued, there is virtually no evi- dence to suggest that such controversy stemmed from Taneyâs use of the Due Process Clause . . . .â). 18 Indeed, the drafters of the Fourteenth Amendment speciďŹ- cally sought to address that central and wrong premise of the Dred Scott decision. After all, Section One of that amendment both con- stitutionalizes birthright citizenship and guarantees those citizensâ fundamental rights. U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1. So itâs especially odd to deploy Dred Scott as a reason for undermining the protec- tions that very Section of the Fourteenth Amendment provides. 18 Dred Scott was also erroneous on substantive due processâs own terms. The United States had an established history of banning slavery. Congress did so in the Northwest Ordinance, and states throughout the Union enacted and upheld laws similar to the Missouri Compromise. Dred Scott, 60 U.S. at 620, 626â28 (Curtis, J., dissenting). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 95 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 69 Rather than a justiďŹcation for jettisoning fundamental-rights jurisprudence, Dred Scott is better understood as a wretched symp- tom of the deep racial divisions and discrimination that plagued the United States in the lead-up to the Civil War and that continued to dominate Supreme Court jurisprudence for the next near century, regardless of the constitutional provision at issue. See, e.g., Civil Rights Cases, 109 U.S. 3 (1883) (Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amend- mentsâ enforcement provisions), abrogated in part by Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. v. United States, 379 U.S. 241 (1964); Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) (Equal Protection Clause), overruled by Brown v. Bd. of Educ., 347 U.S. 483 (1954). And if we lose sight of that fact, we miss the vestiges of those divisions that still marginalize some Americans today. See Al- len v. Milligan, 599 U.S. 1, 22 (2023) (upholding the district courtâs ďŹndings âthat political campaigns in Alabama had been âcharacter- ized by overt or subtle racial appealsââ and âthat âAlabamaâs exten- sive history of repugnant racial and voting-related discrimination is undeniable and well documentedââ). In short, Dred Scott and its er- rors tell us nothing about the propriety of todayâs substantive-due- process jurisprudence (or about fundamental-rights jurisprudence more broadly). 2. Lochner does not oďŹer a compelling reason to depart from our current fundamental-rights jurisprudence. Critics also point to Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905), as a reason for casting aside substantive due process. Lochner was USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 96 of 169 70 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 wrong. But it doesnât justify abandoning fundamental-rights juris- prudence. In Lochner, the Court invalidated wage-and-hour legislation because it concluded the legislation violated the âgeneral right to make a contract.â Id. at 53. But Lochner did not apply substantive due process as we con- ceptualize that doctrine today. Rather, it strained at length to char- acterize the wage-and-hour law as lacking any rational relationship to the stateâs police powers; it called the law a mere pretext for class legislation. See id. at 54â64. In other words, Lochnerâs analysis de- parted from the many opinions emphasizing deference to the leg- islature in the regulation of contract and property rights. Victoria Nourse, A Tale of Two Lochners: The Untold History of Substantive Due Process and the Idea of Fundamental Rights, 97 Cal. L. Rev. 751, 767, 798 (2009); see, e.g., Saunders, 25 U.S. at 320 (opinion of Trimble, J.) (explaining citizens cede many contract and property rights âto be regulated, modiďŹed, and, sometimes, absolutely restrainedâ by the government for the public good). So to reject Lochner is not to reject judicial enforcement of fundamental rights. As Justice Holmes pointed out in dissent, his disagreement with the majority did not preclude stringent review of statutes that âwould infringe fundamental principles as they have been understood by the traditions of our people and our law.â Lochner, 198 U.S. at 76 (Holmes, J., dissenting). Plus, Lochner emphasized property rights, rather than the âprivacyâ rights on which our modern doctrine focuses. See AMAR, USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 97 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 71 AMERICAâS UNWRITTEN CONSTITUTION, supra, at 126. And that dif- ference is signiďŹcant. Property, by its nature in our system, is not equally distributed among every citizen. So as a practical matter, citizens donât equally share the same rights when it comes to prop- erty. In contrast, every citizenâland-owning or notâenjoys the same privacy rights. And that equality in privacy rights echoes the Fourteenth Amendmentâs central principle of equality. For that reason, modern doctrine is much more in tune with the import of the Fourteenth Amendment than was Lochner. And relatedly, modern substantive-due-process doctrine has much more in common with the democracy-reinforcing theory of judicial review than its critics have given it credit for. See Douglas NeJaime & Reva Siegal, Answering the Lochner Objection: Substantive Due Process and the Role of Courts in a Democracy, 96 N.Y.U. L. REV. 1902, 1908â09 (2021) (explaining judicial intervention in substan- tive-due-process cases âcan be understood as democracy-promot- ingâ). As a matter of methodology, modern doctrine allows us to intervene only when evidence from the democratic process plainly shows the claimed right is fundamental. See Nourse, supra, at 798 (explaining substantive-due-process cases are an example of ââcon- vergence,â where majorities are ready to recognize the rights of mi- noritiesâ). And as a matter of substance, âunlike economic liber- ties, personal liberties,â such as the âfreedom to marryâ or to direct oneâs childrenâs upbringing, are often âvulnerable in the political process.â JAMES E. FLEMING, CONSTRUCTING BASIC LIBERTIES: A USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 98 of 169 72 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 DEFENSE OF SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS 141 (Univ. Chi. Press 2022); NeJaime & Siegal, supra, at 1959 (â[Modern cases] diďŹer from Loch- ner in the deeper sense that the claimants in the cases faced condi- tions of stigma, denigration, and inequality that impeded their democratic participation.â). So both formally and functionally, rev- erence for and concerns about the democratic process guide mod- ern substantive-due-process jurisprudence. Each of these distinctions from Lochner helps constrain judi- cial discretion in substantive-due-process analysis. But as weâve al- ready discussed, the remaining judicial discretion is not an issue unique to substantive due process. Nearly every case with political relevance results in a chargeâusually unfoundedâthat political or moral, rather than legal, reasoning motivates judgesâ decisions. See Pozen & Samaha, Anti-Modalities, supra, at 746. Still, we do not re- spond to such charges by abandoning provisions of the Constitu- tion. Also, the view that we should leave fundamental rights that the Constitutionâs text does not explicitly address to the mercy of the legislative process, see Newsom Op. at 1â3, abandons the Fram- ersâ intent to ensure protection of those rights. And it may itself reďŹect a judgeâs view of what constitutes good governance. That is, it may show that a particular judge ďŹnds legislative or executive abridgment of fundamental rights to be less oďŹensive than judicial protection of them. In other words, that view of fundamental-rights jurisprudence might itself betray a pol- icy judgment. So the argument that unenumerated rights ought to USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 99 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 73 always and only be secured in the legislative process suďŹers from the same defect as the one it charges substantive due process with; it may turn on a judgeâs personal view that deference to the legis- latureâeven despite blatant violation of fundamental rightsâis al- ways âbetterâ for our system of government. Finally, concerns about another Lochner donât end if we re- ject substantive due process. If Judge Newsomâs privileges-or-im- munities doctrine were to secure individual liberties, see, e.g., Sosa, 57 F.4th at 1307 (Newsom, J., concurring), it is diďŹcult to see how any of the Lochner-esque critiques about intruding on issues properly reserved for the political sphere would lose their force. Courts would still be in the business of reviewing legislative and executive action, and critics would still cry Lochner when a court ultimately does hold unconstitutional actions by democratically elected oďŹcials. Plus, even if we substantially limit the scope of our funda- mental-rights jurisprudence, the troubles of judicial review, and its counter-majoritarian diďŹculty, persist. âThe more deferential fed- eral courts are towardâ the legislative and executive branches, even when courts believe their coordinate branchesâ actions to be âwrong, misguided, or ill-motivated, the more deferential they might also be towardâ acts that the Founders and the drafters of the Fourteenth Amendment intended the courts âto hold invalid.â Baude, Campbell & Sachs, supra, at 1240. In other words, we just replace any Lochner-esque errors of wrongfully intervening in the democratic process with errors of wrongfully avoiding fulďŹlling USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 100 of 169 74 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 23-10385 our judicial duty of invalidating unconstitutional acts. As a result, we erroneously enable the tyranny of the majority. Examples of these cases are legion. For instance, in rejecting a substantive-due-process claim, the Supreme Court allowed a Vir- ginia institution to forcibly sterilize one of its citizens by âcutting the[ir] Fallopian tubes.â Buck v. Bell, 274 U.S. 200, 207 (1927), abro- gated by Skinner v. Oklahoma ex rel. Williamson, 316 U.S. 535, 541 (1942). And in violation of the plainly articulated Equal Protection Clause, the Court has wrongly deferred to many violative govern- ment acts. See, e.g., Plessy, 163 U.S. at 544 (separate but equal); Ko- rematsu v. United States, 323 U.S. 214, 223 (1944) (upholding intern- ment camps based on national origin), overturned by Trump v. Ha- waii, 585 U.S. 667 (2018). These errors, which weâve since cor- rected, were not reasons to give up on enforcing either clause. In short, we canât jettison substantive due process on the ar- gument that weâve erred in the past or that we may err again. At the end of the day, history unambiguously shows that Americans twice voted to ratify constitutional provisions that secure through the courts unenumerated rights implicit in our system of ordered liberty. Any practical problems with implementing the Ninth and Fourteenth Amendmentsâ directives were part of the âinterest bal- ancingâ âthe peopleâ conducted when they voted for them. Heller, 554 U.S. at 635. So it is our duty to continue to adjudicate funda- mental-rights claims when they come within our jurisdiction. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 101 of 169 23-10385 ROSENBAUM, J., Concurring 75 * * * To be sure, â[s]ubstantive due process [can be] hard.â New- som Op. at 1 (quoting Eknes-Tucker, 114 F.4th at 1277 (Jordan, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc)). But we donât throw out our precedents simply because their application can be âhard.â And we certainly donât do so when a constitutional right is at stake. The people ratified our Constitution on the understanding that courts would secure their fundamental rightsâboth express and unenumeratedâagainst government overreach. And when state courts did not live up to those initial expectations, the people rati- fied constitutional amendments to ensure federal courts would pick up the slack. So it is our duty to enforce the Ninth and Four- teenth Amendments and to secure fundamental rights, whether they are enumerated or not. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 102 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 1 NEWSOM, Circuit Judge, concurring: This case proves the truth of a colleagueâs recent observa- tion that â[s]ubstantive due process is hard.â Eknes-Tucker v. Gover- nor of Alabama, 114 F.4th 1241, 1277 (11th Cir. 2024) (Jordan, J., dis- senting from denial of rehearing en banc). Hard, indeed. To be clear, though, substantive due process is hard, in large part, because itâand, with it, the doctrine that courts have cobbled together to implement itâis incoherent. And itâs incoherent, in large part, be- cause itâs made up. Enough is enough. Substantive due process isnât worth the candle. Itâs doing more harm than good, and weâby which I suppose I really mean my bosses at the Supreme Courtâ should ditch it. Let me say two things at the outset, by way of preface. First, I think the defendantsâ conduct hereâin essence, hiding from the Littlejohns the fact that their 13-year-old daughter had expressed a desire to identify as a boy at schoolâwas shameful. If I were a legislator, Iâd vote to change the policy that enabled the defendantsâ efforts to keep the Littlejohns in the dark. Butâand itâs a big butâ judges arenât just politicians in robes, and they donât (or certainly shouldnât) just vote their personal preferences. The question for me, therefore, isnât whether the defendantsâ conduct was shame- ful, but rather whether it was unconstitutional. And if Iâve said it once, Iâve said it a thousand times: âNot everything that s[tinks] violates the Constitution.â Hillcrest Prop., LLP v. Pasco Cnty., 915 F.3d 1292, 1303 (11th Cir. 2019) (Newsom, J., concurring in the judgment). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 103 of 169 2 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 Second, the target of my criticism today is the doctrine that we have come (totally unironically) to call âsubstantive due pro- cess.â In response to my critique, Judge Rosenbaum has penned a thorough, thoughtful, 75-page defense of that doctrineâan ode, re- ally. Iâm tempted, of course, to dig in and try my hand at a point- by-point rebuttal. But this case has been pending long enough, and the parties are entitled to a resolution of their dispute. Accordingly, Iâve decided to leave it alone entirely. Iâll let readers draw their own conclusions about whether itâs worth clinging to either sub- stantive-due-process doctrine generally or the comically vacuous âshocks the conscienceâ test that courts have invented to imple- ment it. My views will be clear enough. With that brief preamble, letâs jump in. I Iâm a longtime (and vocal) substantive-due-process skeptic. In an effort to avoid making a pest of myselfâat least on this scoreâI wonât rehash for a fourth time my formal critique of the doctrine. Because Iâve heard no convincing rebuttal, Iâll just take as givens that substantive due process (1) makes a hash of constitu- tional text, (2) is unmoored from history, and (3) is tainted by igno- minious precedents like Dred Scott and Lochner. See, e.g., Sosa v. Martin Cnty., 57 F.4th 1297, 1305 (11th Cir. 2023) (Newsom, J., con- curring); Hillcrest, 915 F.3d at 1304â06; Kevin Christopher New- som, Setting Incorporationism Straight: A Reinterpretation of the Slaughter-House Cases, 109 Yale L.J. 643, 733â42 (2000). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 104 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 3 To be clear, though, itâs worse than that. Precisely because itâs so untethered from traditional interpretive sources, substantive due process is infinitely malleableâand thus manipulable. Thereâs a little something in it for pretty much everyone. More often than not, itâs been progressives who have championed substantive due processâand particularly the doctrineâs protection of unenumer- ated âprivacyâ-based rightsâin the face of conservative critiques. Think Griswold, Roe, Casey, Lawrence, and Obergefell. But sometimes, folks mysteriously switch sides. Some staunch conservative skeptics of substantive due processâs âpri- vacyâ strain, for instance, warmly (if a little sheepishly) embrace the âparental rightsâ strain exemplified by Meyer and Pierceâand, in turn, the progressive privacy hawks express apprehension. Now maybe there are some principled differences. Itâs not my intention today to adjudicate the extent to which, say, the common law pro- vided more or less protection for personal or parental prerogatives. But letâs be honest: If ever there were a doctrine that gave a veneer of truth to the vicious lie that judges just decide cases in accordance with their priors, itâs substantive due process. II But in fact, as this case lays bare, itâs even worse than that. In what follows, Iâll explore yet another perversity of substantive- due-process doctrine. Perhaps less salaciously than distorting con- stitutional text or loosing judges to foist their policy preferences on society, but no less importantly, substantive due process has USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 105 of 169 4 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 spawned all sorts of confusion concerning its day-to-day operation in real cases that affect real people. Todayâs object lesson, on full display in this case: the distinc- tion courts have drawn between substantive-due-process chal- lenges to âlegislativeâ and âexecutiveâ actions. With respect to challenges to legislative action, everyone seems to agree that the standard by which a court will conduct its review depends on whether a so-called âfundamental rightâ is at stake. If the legisla- tive action infringes a fundamental right, the court will apply âstrict scrutiny,â meaning that the action will fall unless itâs the âleast re- strictive meansâ of achieving some âcompellingâ governmental ob- jective. See, e.g., Williams v. Morgan, 478 F.3d 1316, 1320 (11th Cir. 2007); see also, e.g., Ams. for Prosperity Found. v. Bonta, 594 U.S. 595, 607 (2021) (explaining that under strict scrutiny âthe government must adopt the least restrictive means of achieving a compelling state interestâ (quotation marks omitted)). By contrast, if no fun- damental right is at stake, the court will review legislative action only for ârational basis,â meaning that the law will survive so long as it is rationally related to any âlegitimateâ government purpose. See, e.g., Williams, 478 F.3d at 1320; Doe v. Moore, 410 F.3d 1337, 1345 (11th Cir. 2005); Maj. Op. at 12. Pretty clean. Made up, to be sure, but clean. When it comes to challenges to executive action, substantive- due-process doctrine is anything but clean. And the messiness be- gins with the so-called âshocks the conscienceâ test, which the Su- preme Court seems (?) to have said is the standard against which USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 106 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 5 all executive actions should be measuredâand which, accordingly, our opinion today applies to decide the parentsâ challenge to the school boardâs decision to exclude them from a planning meeting involving their gender-dysphoric child. See Maj. Op. at 18â26. Weâll circle back to this soon enough, but for the time being just take on faith that the Supreme Court said in County of Sacramento v. Lewis that âin a [substantive] due process challenge to executive ac- tion, the threshold question is whether the behavior of the govern- mental officer is so egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience.â 523 U.S. 833, 848 n.8 (1998). Where to begin with the shocks-the-conscience test? The obvious place, I suppose, is with its hopeless obscurity, as to both the âwhatâ and the âwho.â With respect to the âwhat,â I canât im- prove on Justice Scaliaâs colorful quip, in which he referred to the âne plus ultra, the Napoleon Brandy, the Mahatma Gandhi, the Cel- lophane of subjectivity, thâ olâ âshocks-the-conscienceâ test.â Id. at 861 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment) (footnote omitted). The shocks-the-conscience standard simultaneously means nothing and everythingâitâs utterly and totally in the eye of the beholder. And with respect to the âwho,â who knows? Lewis refers to âthe con- temporary conscience,â id. at 848 n.8 (majority opinion), but whose? The reasonable personâs? An unelected judgeâs? The Borgâs? Frankly, I have no idea. But digging a little deeperâand now weâre really getting to the nub of the partiesâ dispute hereâhow exactly does the shocks- USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 107 of 169 6 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 the-conscience test fit into the substantive-due-process framework? Does it apply, as the school board here contends, to all challenges to executive actions, including those alleging infringements of fun- damental rights? Or, as the parents insist, does it apply only to those cases in what Iâll call the âresiduumââthat is, those that deal with more mine-run executive conduct? And if it does apply in fun- damental-rights cases, such that a shocked conscience is a necessary condition to invalidating the challenged executive action, is it also a sufficient condition? Or must a plaintiff show something more? To those foundational questionsâWhatâs the standard, and when does it apply?âthe precedent provides no ready answers. Letâs look first at our own cases, which are, to put it charita- bly, dissonant. Iâll take just a few of them, in chronological order, beginning with Dacosta v. Nwachukwa, 304 F.3d 1045 (11th Cir. 2002). There, we considered whether a college professorâs conduct in slamming a glass door on a student stated a substantive-due-pro- cess claim. Significantly for present purposes, we framed the in- quiry in disjunctive terms, as follows: Conduct by a government actor that would amount to an intentional tort under state law would only rise to the level of a substantive due process violation if it [1] âshocks the conscienceâ or [2] interferes with rights âimplicit in the concept of ordered libertyââin other words, only if it aďŹects individual rights guar- anteed, explicitly or implicitly, by the Constitution it- self. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 108 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 7 Id. at 1048 (enumeration added). So, per Dacosta, a plaintiff raising a substantive-due-process challenge to an executive officialâs action can prevail by showing that the conduct either shocked the con- science or implicated a fundamental right. About a decade later, though, we seemed to reverse course, adopting an approach that required a substantive-due-process plaintiff to establish that an executive officialâs conduct both in- fringed a fundamental right and shocked the conscience. In Maddox v. Stephens, we acknowledged, at the outset, that a social workerâs âsafety planâ that placed a child in a grandmotherâs care interfered with a motherâs âconstitutionally protected liberty interest in the care, custody and management of [her] children.â 727 F.3d 1109, 1118â19 (11th Cir. 2013) (citation and quotation marks omitted). But we went on to clarify that ânot every wrong committed by a state actor rises to the level of a constitutional tort sufficient to trig- ger . . . substantive due process protectionâ and emphasized that âplaintiffs face a high bar when attempting to establish a substan- tive due process violation as conduct by a government actor will rise to the level of a substantive due process violation only if the act can be characterized as arbitrary or conscience shocking in a con- stitutional sense.â Id. (citation and quotation marks omitted). The upshot seems clear enough: A substantive-due-process plaintiff challenging executive action canât win, as Dacosta had indicated, by showing either conscience-shocking behavior or infringement of a fundamental right; rather, she must establish both. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 109 of 169 8 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 And yet. Just a few years later, we reversed course again, seemingly re-embracing a disjunctive, either-or framing. In Wald- man v. Conway, which involved an inmateâs challenge to prison of- ficialsâ classification of him as a sex offender, we said, as an initial matter, that â[t]he Fourteenth Amendment forbids the govern- ment from infringing fundamental liberty interests at all, unless the infringement is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state inter- est.â 871 F.3d 1283, 1292 (11th Cir. 2017). We held that a sex of- fenderâs right to refuse registration and publication of his infor- mation wasnât âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and tradi- tionâ and, therefore, wasnât fundamental. Id. (quoting Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997)). We went on, thoughâcit- ing Lewisâto clarify that â[w]here a fundamental liberty interest does not exist, substantive due process nonetheless protects against the arbitrary and oppressive exercise of government powerâ and, more specifically, that â[e]xecutive action is arbitrary in a constitu- tional sense when it âshocks the conscience.ââ Id. And then, sum- marizing our holding, we said that the executive action at issue â[1] d[id] not infringe any fundamental rights . . . and [2] d[id] not shock the conscience.â Id. at 1293 (emphasis and enumeration added). Pretty clearly, we treated either showingâinfringement of a fun- damental right or conscience-shocking behaviorâas an inde- pendently sufficient basis for a substantive-due-process claim. So our own precedent is a mess. What about the Supreme Courtâs? Not much better. Letâs start with the modern fountain- head, Lewis. Briefly, in Lewis, parents of a motorcycle passenger killed in a high-speed police chase brought a substantive-due- USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 110 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 9 process claim against the officer involved in the pursuit. See 523 U.S. at 837. What does the Courtâs opinion tell us about the shocks- the-conscience testâs role in a substantive-due-process analysis or the breadth of its application? Does the test apply to all challenges to executive action, or only some? Does it apply to cases implicat- ing fundamental rights, or only those in what Iâve called the âresid- uumâ? Short answer: Tough to say. For starters, there are non-frivolous arguments that the Su- preme Court meant to limit the scope of its holding to police-pur- suit cases. After all, the Court described â[t]he issue in th[e] caseâ as âwhether a police officer violates the Fourteenth Amend- ment[] . . . in a high-speed automobile chase aimed at apprehend- ing a suspected offender,â reported that it had âgranted certiorari to resolve a conflict among the Circuits over the standard of culpa- bility on the part of a law enforcement officer for violating substan- tive due process in a pursuit case,â and announced as its âhold[ing]â that âhigh-speed chases with no intent to harm suspects physically or to worsen their legal plight do not give rise to liability under the Fourteenth Amendment, redressible by an action under § 1983.â Id. at 836, 839, 854 (citation omitted). Thereâs also language in the Lewis opinion to suggest that even if not strictly limited to pursuit cases, the Court intended to apply the shocks-the-conscience standard only to âresiduumâ cases that donât implicate fundamental rights. The Court repeatedly cau- tioned against âarbitraryâ government conduct, see id. at 836, 843, 845, 846, 847, and emphasized that â[t]he touchstone of due process USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 111 of 169 10 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 is protection of the individual against arbitrary action of govern- ment,â id. at 845 (quoting Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539, 558 (1974)) (alteration in original). Perhaps most pointedly in this re- spect, the Lewis Court said this: While due process protection in the substantive sense limits what the government may do in both its legis- lative, see, e.g., Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479 (1965), and its executive capacities, see, e.g., Rochin v. California, 342 U.S. 165 (1952), criteria to identify what is fatally arbitrary diďŹer depending on whether it is leg- islation or a speciďŹc act of a governmental oďŹcer that is at issue. * * * Our cases dealing with executive ac- tion have repeatedly emphasized that only the most egregious oďŹcial conduct can be said to be âarbitrary in the constitutional sense . . . .â * * * To this end, for half a century now we have spoken of the cognizable level of executive abuse of power as that which shocks the conscience. Id. at 846 (emphasis added). All of the âarbitrar[iness]â talk in Lewis is evocative of the standard that applies at the most deferential end of the scrutiny spectrum, and thus could be understood to imply that the Court wasnât addressing itself to cases implicating funda- mental rights.1 1 Which raises yet another complication: Might Lewis itself have been a funda- mental-rights case? The Supreme Court never said as much in so many words, but one could reasonably assume that the right to âlife,â which the plaintiffsâ son lost in the chase, is indeed fundamental. Cf. Browder v. City of Albuquerque, USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 112 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 11 But then thereâs Lewisâs footnote 8. There, the Court specif- ically responded to Justice Scaliaâs charge that the shocks-the-con- science test shouldnât apply, and that under Glucksberg the focus should instead be on whether âour Nation has traditionally pro- tected the right [the plaintiffs] assert[ed].â 523 U.S. at 862 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment). The majority rejoined as follows, and in so doing gave every indication that the shocks-the-con- science standard applies, at the threshold and across the board, to all challenges to executive action, of whatever stripe and in what- ever context: [A] case challenging executive action on substantive due process grounds, like this one, presents an issue antecedent to any question about the need for histor- ical examples of enforcing a liberty interest of the sort claimed. For executive action challenges raise a partic- ular need to preserve the constitutional proportions of constitutional claims, lest the Constitution be de- moted to what we have called a font of tort law. Thus, in a due process challenge to executive action, the threshold question is whether the behavior of the governmental oďŹcer is so egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience. That judgment may be informed by a his- tory of liberty protection, but it necessarily reďŹects an understanding of traditional executive behavior, of 787 F.3d 1076, 1080 (10th Cir. 2015) (Gorsuch, J.) (considering the âfundamen- tal right to lifeâ in a substantive-due-process case brought by the estate of a deceased occupant killed when his car was hit by a police cruiser). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 113 of 169 12 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 contemporary practice, and of the standards of blame generally applied to them. Only if the neces- sary condition of egregious behavior were satisďŹed would there be a possibility of recognizing a substan- tive due process right to be free of such executive ac- tion, and only then might there be a debate about the suďŹciency of historical examples of enforcement of the right claimed, or its recognition in other ways. In none of our prior cases have we considered the neces- sity for such examples, and no such question is raised in this case. In sum, the diďŹerence of opinion in Glucksberg was about the need for historical examples of recognition of the claimed liberty protection at some appropriate level of speciďŹcity. In an executive action case, no such issue can arise if the conduct does not reach the de- gree of the egregious. Id. at 847â48 n.8 (emphasis added). 2 2 In his dissenting opinion, Judge Tjoflat calls footnote 8 âpure dicta.â Dissent- ing Op. at 28. The shocks-the-conscience test, he says, applies only to what he calls âexecutive power plusâ casesâi.e., those that involve âa common law tort claim styled as a constitutional violation.â See id. at 19â20. Respectfully, I donât think Lewis supports that reading. The Lewis Court never drew a line between âexecutive-power-plusâ and fundamental-rights casesâa line that, it seems to me, would be fuzzy and unstable in any event. See supra at 10â11 n.1. Nor is footnote 8 dictaâeven under Judge Tjoflatâs proposal for smoking out superfluous language. See Dissenting Op. at 8â9. After all, the Lewis majority expressly declined Justice Scaliaâs invitation to bypass the shocks-the-con- science test in favor of Glucksbergâs historical inquiry. See Lewis, 523 U.S. at USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 114 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 13 So, to summarize how things stood in the Supreme Court after Lewis: Vague hints, perhaps, that the shocks-the-conscience test might have a narrower berth, but clearer indications that the Court meant for it to apply to all substantive-due-process chal- lenges to executive action. And what about since Lewis? You guessed itâmore uncer- tainty. In Chavez v. Martinez, 538 U.S. 760 (2003), the Court consid- ered a substantive-due-process claim against an officer who had al- legedly subjected a witness to a coercive interrogation. Writing for a three-justice plurality, Justice Thomas seemed to apply both the shocks-the-conscience and fundamental-rights analyses to conduct that was indisputably executive in nature. First, the plurality cited Lewis and stated that it could not âagree with [the plaintiffâs] char- acterization of [the officerâs] behavior as âegregiousâ or âconscience shocking.ââ Id. at 774â75 (plurality opinion). The plurality then said, thoughâciting Glucksbergâthat âthe Due Process Clause also protects certain âfundamental liberty interestsâ from deprivation by the government, regardless of the procedures provided, unless the infringement is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state inter- est.â Id. at 775. That certainly makes it seem like the plurality 847â48 n.8. Because the officerâs conduct didnât shock the conscience, the Lewis majority saw no need to consider âhistorical examples of protected lib- erty.â Id. at 847. So, far from dicta, the idea that âa due process challenge to executive actionâ must first satisfy a shocks-the-conscience âthresholdâ was integral to the Courtâs reasoning. See id. at 847â48 And the fact that Justice Scalia felt compelled to write separately in order to dispute that proposition confirms as much. See id. at 860â62 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 115 of 169 14 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 thought that a substantive-due-process violation could be shown either wayâby conscience-shocking conduct or by infringement of a fundamental right. So, what to make of Lewis and Chavez? Neither is crystal clear, but to the extent they give off notes, those notes are (also) discordant: Lewis loudly indicates that the shocks-the-conscience standard applies to all substantive-due-process challenges to execu- tive action, whereas Chavez suggests, albeit more quietly, that the test applies only outside the fundamental-rights context. For my- self, I tend to think a similarly perplexed then-Judge Gorsuch rec- onciled them about as well as can be done when he said that Lewis is relatively clear, Chavez is relatively not, and so Lewisâs rule (?) that the shocks-the-conscience standard applies across the board to all executive-action challenges governs. His words: In Chavez v. Martinez, a three-justice plurality seemed to employ both the âlegislativeâ and âexecutiveâ tests in a case challenging executive action. What exactly this means is unclear. * * * All we can say with cer- tainty is that Chavez did not expressly overrule Lewisâs holding that the âarbitrary or conscience shockingâ test is the appropriate one for executive action so we feel obliged to apply it. Browder v. City of Albuquerque, 787 F.3d 1076, 1079 n.1 (10th Cir. 2015) (citation omitted). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 116 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 15 * * * While no clear rule really emerges from this jurisprudential dumpster fire, so far as I can tell, the best understanding is that any plaintiff challenging executive action on the ground that it violates substantive due processâeven one who, like the plaintiffs here, in- sists that the executive actorâs conduct has infringed a fundamental rightâmust prove conscience-shocking behavior as a necessary el- ement of his claim. 3 Now, finally, to a consideration of the implications of that conclusion. Spoiler alert: Goofy. III So where does all this leave us? The way I see it, the legisla- tive-executive distinction, and the ensuing application of the shocks-the-conscience test to all challenges to executive actions, in- cluding those that affect fundamental rights, results in a liability re- gime that is totally bizarre: If the government infringes a funda- mental right via legislative act, it will almost certainly loseâbe- cause, as the old saw goes, strict scrutiny is âstrict in theory, but fatal in fact.â See Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 237 3 Perhaps not surprisingly, a number of our sister circuits have come to that conclusion, as well. See, e.g., DePoutot v. Raffaelly, 424 F.3d 112, 118 (1st Cir. 2005); Kane v. Barger, 902 F.3d 185, 192 (3d Cir. 2018); Hawkins v. Freeman, 195 F.3d 732, 738 (4th Cir. 1999) (en banc); Siefert v. Hamilton Cnty., 951 F.3d 753, 765â66 (6th Cir. 2020); Nelson v. City of Chicago, 992 F.3d 599, 604 (7th Cir. 2021); Moran v. Clarke, 296 F.3d 638, 644 (8th Cir. 2002) (en banc), abrogated on other grounds by Manuel v. City of Joliet, 580 U.S. 357, 364 (2017). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 117 of 169 16 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 (1995) (citation and quotation marks omitted). By contrast, if the government infringes that right through executive action, it will almost certainly winâbecause, as the case law bears out, pretty much nothing shocks the conscience. That makes no sense. Thereâs certainly no textual warrant for such a radical disjunction in the Fifth or Fourteenth Amend- mentsâ Due Process Clauses, both of which address the govern- ment generally, not a particular branch. See U.S. Const. amend V (âNo person shall be . . . deprived of life, liberty, or property, with- out due process of law . . . .â); id. amend. XIV, § 1 (âNo State shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law . . . .â). 4 But of course the lack of textual anchor shouldnât surprise us, because as Iâve saidâtoo many times nowâ the substantive-due-process doctrine has no root in the text at all. See supra at 2. Nor, to my mind, can the application of a more indulgent constitutional standard to executive than to legislative action that implicates fundamental rights be squared with common sense. 4 Nor does the shocks-the-conscience test find any footing in § 1983âs text. See 42 U.S.C. § 1983. So while Judge Tjoflat might be right that a shocks-the-con- science âthreshold requirement all but eliminates § 1983 as a remedy to com- pensate citizens whose fundamental rights have been violated by state and lo- cal executive action,â Dissenting Op. at 43â44, I think he missteps in blaming this Court for âamend[ing]â § 1983, see id. at 47. That charge, it seems to me, is more appropriately leveled at the Supreme Court than us, the middle-man- agers who must heed and seek to implement the high courtâs commands, however muddled or misguided. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 118 of 169 23-10385 Newsom, J., Concurring 17 Why should the executive branch of the government be given more leeway to violate constitutional rights than the legislative branch? Then-Judge Gorsuch, puzzling over the same divergence, suggested one possibility: Perhaps the answer lies in the fact that legislation touching on fundamental rights is clearly state action and clearly aďŹects the liberty of an entire class of per- sons while executive action infringing fundamental rights can often come by way of isolated and unau- thorized conduct by individual rogue executive agents against individual citizens. Browder, 787 F.3d at 1079 n.1. Maybe, but Iâm skeptical. Executive officers often have and exercise authority to promulgate policies that mimic legislation, both in terms of the deliberation that goes into them and the ground they cover. And courts arenât always punctilious about dis- tinguishing government conduct based on function rather than branch. To take just one example, the district court considering a substantive-due-process challenge to the Trump Administrationâs rescission of DACA applied the shocks-the-conscience standard de- spite the fact that, for all practical purposes, that executive action operated just like a statute. See Casa De Maryland v. U.S. Depât of Homeland Sec., 284 F. Supp. 3d 758, 777 (D. Md. 2018), affâd in part, vacated in part, and revâd in part, 924 F.3d 684 (4th Cir. 2019). It seems to me (1) that the standards applicable to legislative and executive infringements of fundamental rights should USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 119 of 169 18 Newsom, J., Concurring 23-10385 probably be the same and (2) if thereâs to be any divergence, then current law might have gotten matters exactly backwards. After all, itâs at the very least arguable that âexecutive actionâwhich, by its nature, is individual, targeted, and one-off, rather than broadly and generally applicableâholds the greater potential for abuse.â Hillcrest, 915 F.3d at 1311 (Newsom, J., concurring in the judg- ment). * * * Bottom line: Iâve long known (and preached) that substan- tive-due-process doctrine is atextual, ahistorical, and contaminated by rogue precedents. And Iâve long feared that it is susceptible to grave abuse on both sides of the jurisprudential divide. This case has taught me that the legal framework the theory has generated is too far gone. As the old saying goes, âIf you find yourself in a hole, best to stop digging.â For decades, courts invoking substantive due process have bored a crater-sized hole in responsible constitutional decisionmaking. We should be looking for ways to climb out of that hole, not deepen it. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 120 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 1 TJOFLAT, Circuit Judge, dissenting: The âright of parents to direct the upbringing of their chil- dren is among the âunalienable Rightsâ with which the Declaration of Independence proclaims âall men . . . are endowed by their Cre- ator.ââ Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 91, 120 S. Ct. 2054, 2074 (2000) (Scalia, J., dissenting). â[T]he interest of parents in the care, custody, and control of their childrenâis perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interestsâ the Due Process Clause protects. Id. at 65, 120 S. Ct. at 2060 (plurality opinion). âIn a long line of cases, [the Supreme Court] ha[s] held that, in addition to the specific free- doms protected by the Bill of Rights, the âlibertyâ specially pro- tected by the Due Process Clause includes the right[] . . . to direct the education and upbringing of oneâs children . . . .â Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 720, 117 S. Ct. 2258, 2267 (1997); see also, e.g., Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 399, 43 S. Ct. 625, 626 (1923) (referring to âthe right of the individual to . . . establish a home and bring up childrenâ); Pierce v. Socây of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus & Mary, 268 U.S. 510, 534â35, 45 S. Ct. 571, 573 (1925) (recog- nizing âthe liberty of parents and guardians to direct the upbringing and education of children under their controlâ). Today, this Court holds that Jeffrey and January Littlejohn, parents of a minor child, A.G., cannot recover damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against four executives of the Leon County School District for violating their fundamental liberty interest in A.G.âs up- bringing and education. The Court affirms the District Courtâs dis- missal of the Littlejohnsâ complaint because the Littlejohns failed USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 121 of 169 2 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 to allege facts that the executivesâ conduct was âso egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience.â Maj. Op. at 11; Cnty. of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833, 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. 1708, 1717 n.8 (1998). According to the Court, if there was any doubt the Littlejohns had to prove that the executivesâ conduct was conscience-shocking to be heard on their claim that the executives violated their fundamental interest in the upbringing and education of A.G., Sacramento eliminated it: Importantly for our purposes, the [Supreme] Court clar- ified that the âconscience shockingâ inquiry is a âthresh- old questionâ that necessarily precedes any fundamen- tal-rights analysis. In other words, even if a plaintiff al- leges that executive action violated a fundamental right, the plaintiff must first show that the action âshock[ed] the contemporary conscience.â Maj. Op. at 14â15 (citations omitted). The Court points to Maddox v. Stephens, 727 F.3d 1109 (11th Cir. 2013), as âillustrat[ing] the Sacramento framework in practice.â Maj. Op. at 16. Maddox is âprecedent,â the Court states, because it âconcerned the same fundamental parental rights that the Lit- tlejohns assert.â Id. According to the Court, in Maddox, â[w]e found that the plaintiff had âundisputed[ly]â pled a violation of her sub- stantive-due-process rights. But we said that such a violation was not enoughârather, only conduct that is âarbitrary or conscience shocking in a constitutional senseâ could trigger a substantive-due- process violation.â Id. (citations omitted). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 122 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 3 I do not read the Supreme Courtâs opinion in Sacramento as holding that âthe conscience shocking inquiry is a threshold ques- tion that necessarily precedes any fundamental-rights analysis.â Contra Maj. Op. at 14â15. Nor do I read this Courtâs opinion in Mad- dox as holding that âonly conduct that is âarbitrary or conscience shocking in a constitutional senseâ could trigger a substantive-due- process violation.â Contra id. at 16. If todayâs opinion states the law, then enforcement in the Eleventh Circuit of the fundamental liberty interests the Littlejohns seek to vindicate under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 has come to an end. I respectfully dissent. * * * I turn first to three points to keep in mind while reading this dissent. Then, in Part I, I turn to the legal backdrop surrounding fundamental rights and the âshocks-the-conscience standard.â In Part II, I turn to the factual issues litigated in Sacramento and the holding the Supreme Court reached based on the resolution of those issues. In Part III, I explain why Maddoxâs holding is not an application of Sacramentoâs holding in the fundamental rights con- text. Rather, the portion of Maddox that the Majority cites is pure dicta. By taking it as the law, the Court has trampled on the prov- ince of the Legislature, amended § 1983, and violated our Consti- tutionâs separation of powers. In part IV, I conclude. * * * USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 123 of 169 4 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 It will be helpful in reading this dissent to keep three points in mind: A. Executive Power The first point is that executive power falls under the âpolice power.â Under the Tenth Amendment, â[t]he powers not dele- gated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the peo- ple.â Police power is â[t]he inherent and plenary power of a sover- eign to make all laws necessary and proper to preserve the public security, order, health, morality, and justice. It is a fundamental power essential to government.â Police Power, Blackâs Law Diction- ary (12th ed. 2024). The executive branch of government at the state and local levels is charged with attaining the governmentâs police power objectives. The executives appointed to attain the ob- jectives are given the authorityâthe executive powerâneeded to do that work. In Florida, the provision of public education is an exercise in police power. Article IX of the Florida Constitution establishes a public education system, comprised of a State Board of Education, School Districts (by county), and School Boards that are charged with operating the schools within the districts. Fla. Const. art. IX, §§ 1(a), 2, 4. Drawing on its police power, the Leon County School Board authorized its LGBTQ+ Equity Committee to develop the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Gender Nonconforming and Questioning Support Guide. The School Board assigned Superin- tendent Hanna, Assistant Superintendent Rogers, Assistant USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 124 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 5 Principal Oliveri, and Counselor Thomas the task of implementing the Guide. Their interactions with A.G. and the Littlejohns in- volved the exercise of executive power. If âthe [police] power [is] so abused as to cause its exertion to exceed the limits of the police power,â the exertion is brought under âthe prohibitions of â the Due Process Clause of the Four- teenth Amendment. Pac. Gas & Elec. Co. v. Police Ct. of Sacramento, 251 U.S. 22, 25, 40 S. Ct. 79, 81 (1919). Because executive power derives from the police power, the same is true if executive power is abused. In his opinion for the Court in Sacramento, Justice Souter used the following phrases to describe executive behavior that ex- ceeds the limits of executive power, bringing the behavior under the prohibition of the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause and âmost probably support[ing] a substantive due process claim,â 523 U.S. at 849, 118 S. Ct. at 1718: ⢠â[C]onduct intended to injure in some way unjustiďŹable by any government interest is the sort of oďŹcial action most likely to rise to the conscience-shocking level.â Id. ⢠â[A]n abuse of executive power so clearly unjustiďŹed by any legitimate objective of law enforcement as to be barred by the Fourteenth Amendment.â Id. at 840, 118 S. Ct. at 1713 (emphasis added). ⢠â[B]ehavior . . . so egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience.â Id. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 125 of 169 6 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 B. Dicta The second point is that dicta are not precedentialâonly holdings are. âA judgeâs power to bind is limited to the issue that is before him; he cannot transmute dictum into decision by waving a wand and uttering the word âhold.ââ United States v. Rubin, 609 F.2d 51, 69 n.2 (2d Cir. 1979) (Friendly, J., concurring). This is because Article III of the U.S. Constitution conďŹnes federal courts to the resolution of actual âCasesâ or âControversies.â U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. 1 Dicta, however, are statements or observations in a courtâs opinion that are not directly related to the facts or legal questions necessary to resolve the action. Chief Justice Marshall explained why dicta are not binding: It is a maxim not to be disregarded, that general expres- sions, in every opinion, are to be taken in connection with the case in which those expressions are used. If they go beyond the case, they may be respected, but ought not to control the judgment in a subsequent suit when the very point is presented for decision. The reason of this maxim is obvious. The question actually before the Court is investigated with care, and considered in its full 1 Although the role of federal courts might be debated amongst the bar, bench, and lectern, I agree with Judge Newsom that âonce a court has fulfilled its obligationâthat is, has said enough to resolve the partiesâ disputeâit should just stop. It shouldnât forge ahead, reach out, and declare more law.â United States v. Files, 63 F.4th 920, 933 (11th Cir. 2023) (Newsom, J., concurring), cert. denied, 144 S. Ct. 419 (2023). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 126 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 7 extent. Other principles which may serve to illustrate it, are considered in their relation to the case decided, but their possible bearing on all other cases is seldom com- pletely investigated. Cohens v. Virginia, 19 U.S. (6 Wheat.) 264, 399â400 (1821). In other words, âDicta are less carefully considered than holdings, and, therefore, less likely to be accurate statements of law.â Michael C. Dorf, Dicta and Article III, 142 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1997, 2000 (1994). â[C]ourts are more likely to exercise ďŹawed, ill-considered judg- ment, more likely to overlook salutary cautions and contraindica- tions, more likely to pronounce ďŹawed rules, when uttering dicta than when deciding their cases.â Pierre N. Leval, Judging Under the Constitution: Dicta About Dicta, 81 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1249, 1255 (2006). In addition to accuracy problems, confusing dicta as binding presents a profound separation of powers issue. â[C]ourts have le- gitimate authority only to decide cases, not make law in the ab- stract.â Dorf, supra, at 2001. Because dicta are outside the case or controversy, relying on dicta ventures into the terrain of advisory opinions and steps on the line separating the Legislatureâs province 2 to make law from the Judiciaryâs role in deciding controversies. 2 Chief Justice Jay and the Associate Justices noted as early as 1793 that the constitutional separation of powers counsels against the âpropriety of [the fed- eral judiciary] extrajudicially decidingâ questions which arise outside of a case or controversy. Letter from Chief Justice John Jay and the Associate Justices to President George Washington (August 8, 1793), 3 Correspondence & Public Papers of John Jay 488â89 (Henry P. Johnston ed., 1891). Consequently, â[f]ederal judicial power is limited to those disputes which confine federal courts to a rule consistent with a system of separated powers.â Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 97, 88 S. Ct. 1942, 1951 (1968); see also Muskrat v. United States, 219 USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 127 of 169 8 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 How do we know what is dictum? Judge Pierre Leval oďŹers an illustrative test: To identify dictum, it is useful to turn the questioned proposition around to assert its opposite, or to assert whatever alternative proposition the court rejected in its favor. If the insertion of the rejected proposition into the courtâs reasoning, in place of the one adopted, would not require a change in either the courtâs judgment or U.S. 346, 356, 31 S. Ct. 250, 253 (1911) (â[U]nless [the judicial power] is asserted in a case or controversy within the meaning of the Constitution, the power to exercise it is nowhere conferred.â). The judicial power does not create âroving commission[s] to publicly opine on every legal question.â TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, 594 U.S. 413, 423, 141 S. Ct. 2190, 2203 (2021); see also Fed. Bureau of Investigation v. Fikre, 601 U.S. 234, 241, 144 S. Ct. 771, 777 (2024) (â[F]ederal judges are not counselors or academics; they are not free to take up hypothet- ical questions that pique a partyâs curiosity or their own.â). This limitation on the judicial power is a necessary guard of liberty, for âthere is no liberty if the power of judging be not separated from the legislative and executive powers.â The Federalist No. 78, at 465 (Alexander Hamilton) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961). As such, the Supreme Court emphasizes that ren- dering advisory opinions gives rise to dangers and must therefore be avoided. See Michigan v. Long, 463 U.S. 1032, 1041, 103 S. Ct. 3469, 3476 (1983). âHowever much provision may be made on paper for adequate arguments (and experience justifies little reliance) advisory opinions are bound to move in an unreal atmosphere.â Felix Frankfurter, A Note on Advisory Opinions, 37 Harv. L. Rev. 1002, 1006 (1924). Ignoring this restriction on the federal judici- ary poses grave danger, given the political function implicit in the power of the judiciary to abrogate unconstitutional behaviors. See id. at 1007. No matter the evil presented to the courts, the federal judiciary âcannot rightly attempt to protect the people, by undertaking a function not its own.â Id. at 1008. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 128 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 9 the reasoning that supports it, then the proposition is dictum. It is superďŹuous. It had no functional role in compelling the judgment. Leval, supra, at 1257. Our Circuit abides by these principles. Former Chief Judge Ed Carnes, joined by Chief Judge William Pryor, clariďŹes in his con- currence in Nelson v. Tompkins: âThis Court has often stressed that no decision can hold anything that goes beyond the facts of the 3 case.â 89 F.4th 1289, 1303 (11th Cir. 2024) (Carnes, J., concurring). 3 See also, e.g., Edwards v. Prime, Inc., 602 F.3d 1276, 1298 (11th Cir. 2010) (âWe have pointed out many times that regardless of what a court says in its opinion, the decision can hold nothing beyond the facts of that case. All statements that go beyond the facts of the case . . . are dicta. And dicta [are] not binding on anyone for any purpose.â (citations omitted)); Chavers v. Secây, Fla. Depât of Corr., 468 F.3d 1273, 1275 (11th Cir. 2006) (âThe holdings of a prior decision can reach only as far as the facts and circumstances frame the precise issue presented in that case.â); Watts v. BellSouth Telecomms., Inc., 316 F.3d 1203, 1207 (11th Cir. 2003) (âWhatever their opinions say, judicial decisions cannot make law beyond the facts of the cases in which those decisions are an- nounced.â); United States v. Aguillard, 217 F.3d 1319, 1321 (11th Cir. 2000) (âThe holdings of a prior decision can reach only as far as the facts and circumstances presented to the Court in the case which produced that decision.â (quot- ing United States v. Hunter, 172 F.3d 1307, 1309 (11th Cir. 1999) (Carnes, J., con- curring) (quotation marks omitted))); see also Moon v. Head, 285 F.3d 1301, 1318 (11th Cir. 2002) (Carnes, J., concurring) (âThose statements are dicta. They are dicta because they go beyond the facts of the [earlier] case itself . . . .â); Ingram v. Commâr of Soc. Sec. Admin., 496 F.3d 1253, 1265 (11th Cir. 2007) (âJudicial opinions do not make binding precedents; judicial decisions do.â (quoting USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 129 of 169 10 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 So what do Sacramento and Maddox hold? And how much of what was written are obiter dicta? The answers to these questions are pertinent to an accurate understanding of the law as it stands. C. Liberty Interests The third point is that, unless otherwise indicated, in using the terms âfundamental right(s),â âfundamental liberty interest(s)â and âparental right(s),â I am referring to liberty interests like the provisions of the Bill of Rights that have been incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment through its Due Process Clause be- cause they are ââfundamental to our scheme of ordered liberty,â or âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and tradition.ââ Timbs v. Indi- ana, 586 U.S. 146, 150, 139 S. Ct. 682, 687 (2019) (quoting McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 767, 130 S. Ct. 3020, 3036 (2010)). I. FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS PRE-SACRAMENTO Before I discuss why Sacramento does not hold what this Court purports it does, it is imperative to understand the backdrop against which Sacramento took place. In 1923, the Supreme Court clariďŹed that the liberty guaran- teed by the Fourteenth Amendment âdenotes not merely freedom from bodily restraintâ but also protects liberties including âthe right . . . to . . . bring up children.â Meyer, 262 U.S. at 399, 43 S. Ct. at 626. Dantzler v. IRS, 183 F.3d 1247, 1251 (11th Cir. 1999) (alteration adopted) (quo- tation marks omitted))). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 130 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 11 The Supreme Court has continued to affirm the proposition that parents have a fundamental liberty interest in raising their chil- dren. See Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 720, 117 S. Ct. at 2267; Pierce, 268 U.S. at 534â35, 45 S. Ct. at 573. In other words, the Littlejohns as- 4 sert a fundamental interest, meaning it ought to be protected from unnecessary government interference, regardless of whether that interference is âconscience shocking.â So where did âshocks the conscienceâ come into play? âShocks the conscienceâ made its debut in Rochin v. Califor- nia, 342 U.S. 165, 172, 72 S. Ct. 205, 209 (1952). There, the Court held that a conviction premised on drugs that were obtained by pumping the defendantâs stomach violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. At the time, Justice Frankfurter, who wrote the majority opinion, did not believe that the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. Instead, Justice Frankfurter stated that conduct that âshocks the conscienceâ violated Due Process because it âoďŹend[s] the communityâs sense of fair play and decency.â Id. at 173, 72 S. Ct. at 210. But Rochin never suggested that âshocks the conscienceâ was a threshold requirement or an element of a Due Process claim. For a while, âshocks the conscienceâ appeared only spar- ingly. In 1957, the Court applied the standard to deny a habeas pe- tition. Breithaupt v. Abram, 352 U.S. 432, 436â37, 77 S. Ct. 408, 411 4 The Majority âassume[s] without deciding that the Littlejohns invoke âfun- damentalâ rights.â Maj. Op. at 10. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 131 of 169 12 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 (1957). Then in United States v. Salerno, the Court stated that âsub- stantive due process prevents the government from engaging in conduct that shocks the conscience or interferes with rights implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.â 481 U.S. 739, 746, 107 S. Ct. 2095, 2101 (1987) (emphasis added) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). There, it was clear that âshocking the conscienceâ was not a threshold requirement to vindicate a fundamental right, hence the Courtâs disjunctive framing. That is seen later in Young- berg v. Romeo, where the Court held that the Due Process Clause protects against unsafe conďŹnement and unreasonable body re- straints. 457 U.S. 307, 324, 102 S. Ct. 2452, 2462 (1982). In Youngberg, the Court never mentioned âshocks the conscienceâ or even cited Rochin. See generally id. Indeed, â[a]n analysis of every Supreme Court citation to Ro- chin from 1952 to 1998 demonstrates that, outside the context of the evidentiary exclusionary rule, the shocks the conscience test was cited much more frequently in dissenting opinions, often re- jected, and strongly criticized. It was never considered to be the only standard for challenging executive misconduct, nor was it viewed as supplanting fundamental rights analysis.â Rosalie Berger Levinson, Time to Bury the Shocks the Conscience Test, 13 Chap. L. Rev. 307, 315â16 (2010). Our Circuit precedent supports this understanding of the law. For example, in Arnold v. Bd. of Educ. of Escambia Cnty., we found that a parentâs constitutional right to direct the upbring- ing of a minor is violated when the minor is coerced to refrain from discussing with the parent an intimate USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 132 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 13 decision such as whether to obtain an abortion; a deci- sion which touches fundamental values and religious be- liefs parents wish to instill in their children. 880 F.2d 305, 312 (1989), abrogated on other grounds by Leatherman v. Tarrant Cnty. Narcotics Intel. & Coordination Unit, 507 U.S. 163, 113 5 S. Ct. 1160 (1993). Arnold makes no mention of âshocking the con- scienceâ because hornbook constitutional law principles do not re- quire it to do so. We correctly acknowledged that fundamental rights were protected from government intrusion even when that intrusion did not âshock the conscience.â No more, according to the Majority. It reads Sacramento to muz- zle the vindication of fundamental rights. Whatâs moreâthe Ma- jority purports that Sacramento did all of this in a footnote. Instead of fundamental rights being protected from an executive actorâs intrusion, they are protected only if the act âshocks the con- science.â The Majority is wrong. II. COUNTY OF SACRAMENTO V. LEWIS Today, this Court holds that âeven if a plaintiff alleges that ex- ecutive action violated a fundamental right, the plaintiff must first show that the action âshock[ed] the contemporary conscience.ââ Maj. Op. at 15. In other words, a plaintiff must allege and prove that the executiveâs action exceeded the limits of his authorized 5 In Swann v. Southern Health Partners, Inc., 388 F.3d 834 (2004), we held that Leatherman overruled Arnold to the extent it held a heightened pleading stand- ard applied to § 1983 actions. Id. at 837. That makes no difference here. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 133 of 169 14 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 power and therefore constituted a substantive due process viola- tion. The Court reaches that holding because Sacramento âclarified that the âconscience shockingâ inquiry is a âthreshold questionâ that necessarily precedes any fundamental-rights analysis.â Maj. Op. at 14â15. But Sacramento did no such thing. Justice Souterâs opinion for the Court in Sacramento states the issue before the Court as âwhether a police officer violates the Fourteenth Amendmentâs guarantee of substantive due process by causing death through deliberate or reckless indifference to life in a high-speed automobile chase aimed at apprehending a suspected offender.â 523 U.S. at 836, 118 S. Ct. at 1711. The Court answered no and held that âin such circumstances only a purpose to cause harm 6 unrelated to the legitimate object of arrest will satisfy the element of arbitrary conduct shocking to the conscience, necessary for a due pro- cess violation.â 7 Id., 118 S. Ct. at 1711â12 (emphasis added). A. The Facts Leading to Suit The facts underpinning the Supreme Courtâs holding in Sac- ramentoâthat the police officer did not violate the Fourteenth Amendmentâs guarantee of substantive due processâwere these: 6 I read âunrelated to the legitimate object of arrestâ as beyond the limits of executive power. 7 The Court in Sacramento granted certiorari âto resolve a conďŹict among the Circuits over the standard of culpability on the part of a law enforcement of- ďŹcer for violating substantive due process in a pursuit case.â Id. at 839, 118 S. Ct. at 1713. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 134 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 15 On May 22, 1990, at approximately 8:30 p.m., petitioner James Everett Smith, a Sacramento County sheriďŹâs dep- uty, along with another oďŹcer, Murray Stapp, responded to a call . . . . Upon returning to his patrol car, Stapp saw a motorcycle approaching at high speed. It was operated by 18-year-old Brian Willard and carried Philip Lewis, re- spondentsâ 16-year-old decedent, as a passenger. . . . Stapp turned on his overhead rotating lights, yelled to the boys to stop, and pulled his patrol car closer to Smithâs, attempting to pen the motorcycle in. Instead of pulling over in response to Stappâs warning lights and commands, Willard slowly maneuvered the motorcycle between the two police cars and sped oďŹ. Smith imme- diately switched on his own emergency lights and siren, made a quick turn, and began pursuit at high speed. For 75 seconds over a course of 1.3 miles in a residential neighborhood, the motorcycle wove in and out of on- coming traďŹc, forcing two cars and a bicycle to swerve oďŹ the road. The motorcycle and patrol car reached speeds up to 100 miles an hour, with Smith following at a distance as short as 100 feet; at that speed, his car would have required 650 feet to stop. The chase ended after the motorcycle tipped over as Willard tried a sharp left turn. By the time Smith slammed on his brakes, Willard was out of the way, but Lewis was not. The patrol car skidded into him at 40 miles an hour, propelling him some 70 feet down the road and inďŹicting massive injuries. Lewis was pro- nounced dead at the scene. Id. at 836â37, 118 S. Ct. at 1712. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 135 of 169 16 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 B. The lawsuit Lewisâs parents and the representatives of Lewisâs estate, in- voking 42 U.S.C. § 1983, sued Sacramento County, the Sacramento County Sheriffâs Department, and Deputy Smith, âalleging a dep- rivation of Philip Lewisâs Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process right to life.â8 Id. at 837, 118 S. Ct. at 1712. The District Court granted summary judgment for the county and sheriffâs de- partment and dismissed the claim against Smith on the ground of qualified immunity. Id. The Ninth Circuit reversed as to Smith and remanded the case for further proceedings, finding a genuine issue of fact as to whether âSmithâs conduct amounted to deliberate in- difference.â Id. at 838, 118 S. Ct. at 1712â13. On certiorari, the Supreme Court restated the plaintiffsâ claim against Smith as: âSmithâs actions in causing Lewisâs death were an abuse of executive power so clearly unjustified by any legitimate objective of law enforcement as to be barred by the Fourteenth Amendment.â Id. at 840, 118 S. Ct. at 1713 (emphasis added). C. The Supreme Courtâs Decision The Court held that âhigh-speed chases with no intent to harm suspects physically or to worsen their legal plight do not give rise to liability under the Fourteenth Amendment, redressible by 8 Philip Lewisâs parents initially sued in state court bringing claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the deprivation of Lewisâs life and for compensation under state law for Lewisâs wrongful death. Lewis v. Sacramento County, 98 F.3d 434, 437 (9th Cir. 1996). The defendants removed the case to federal court based on federal question jurisdiction. Id. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 136 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 17 an action under § 1983.â Id. at 854, 118 S. Ct. at 1720. The sum and substance of Sacramentoâs holding is that Smithâs behavior in doing his job as a law enforcement oďŹcer did not deny Philip Lewis sub- 9 stantive due process. Smith was faced with a course of lawless behavior for which the police were not to blame. They had done nothing to cause Willardâs high-speed driving in the first place, nothing to excuse his flouting of the commonly understood law enforcement authority to control traffic, and nothing (beyond a refusal to call off the chase) to encourage him to race through traffic at breakneck speed forcing other drivers out of their travel lanes. Willardâs outrageous behavior was practically instanta- neous, and so was Smithâs instinctive response. While prudence would have repressed the reaction, the of- ficerâs instinct was to do his job as a law enforcement officer, not to induce Willardâs lawlessness, or to terror- ize, cause harm, or kill. Regardless whether Smithâs behavior offended the rea- sonableness held up by tort law or the balance struck in law enforcementâs own codes of sound practice, it does not shock the conscience . . . . Id. at 855, 118 S. Ct. at 1721. 9 The Court reversed the Ninth Circuitâs decision and, in effect, affirmed the District Courtâs summary judgment on the ground that the Sacramento plain- tiffs failed to create an issue of fact warranting a jury trial on their substantive due process claim. See id. at 855, 118 S. Ct. at 1721. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 137 of 169 18 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 D. Footnote 8 Todayâs majority rests its decision on a âclarificationâ hidden within Sacramentoâs footnotes. According to this Court, Justice Souter clarified Sacramentoâs âholdingâ in footnote 8: As we explain in the text, a case challenging executive action on substantive due process grounds, like this one, presents an issue antecedent to any question about the need for historical examples of enforcing a liberty inter- est of the sort claimed. For executive action challenges raise a particular need to preserve the constitutional proportions of constitutional claims, lest the Constitution be demoted to what we have called a font of tort law. Thus, in a due process challenge to executive action, the threshold question is whether the behavior of the governmental officer is so egre- gious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience. That judgment may be in- formed by a history of liberty protection, but it neces- sarily reflects an understanding of traditional executive behavior, of contemporary practice, and of the stand- ards of blame generally applied to them. Only if the nec- essary condition of egregious behavior were satisfied would there be a possibility of recognizing a substantive due process right to be free of such executive action, and only then might there be a debate about the sufficiency of historical examples of enforcement of the right claimed, or its recognition in other ways. In none of our prior cases have we considered the necessity for such ex- amples, and no such question is raised in this case. Id. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8 (emphasis added). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 138 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 19 1. A Font of Tort Law The portion of footnote 8 italicized above indicates that Jus- tice Souter, like the Supreme Court as a whole, was concerned about 42 U.S.C. § 1983 becoming a âfont of tort law.â Id. The com- plaint in Sacramento alleged that Deputy Smith caused Philip Lewisâs death âthrough deliberate or reckless indifference to life in a high-speed automobile chase.â Id. at 836, 118 S. Ct. at 1711. In essence, the complaint presented a common law tort claim styled 10 as a constitutional violation. That is, the only thing distinguishing the plaintiffsâ claim from a tort was that the defendant happened to be a state actor. As a result, the plaintiffs could argue that Smithâs actions deprived Lewis âof life . . . without due process of lawâ in violation of the U.S. Constitution. See U.S. Const. amend. XIV. In Sacramento, Justice Souter avoids the âfont of tort lawâ problem by restating the claim as an abuse of executive power: âSmithâs actions in causing Lewisâs death were an abuse of executive power so clearly unjustified by any legitimate objective of law en- forcement as to be barred by the Fourteenth Amendment.â Id. at 840, 118 S. Ct. at 1713 (emphasis added). Footnote 8 further ensures the avoidance with this statement: âin a due process challenge to executive action, the threshold question is whether the behavior of the governmental officer is so egregious, so outrageous, that it may 10 California law prevented the Lewis plaintiffs from bringing their claim as a state law tort action. See Cal. Veh. Code § 17004 (1990) (providing that a public employee is not liable for civil damages resulting from the operation of an emergency vehicle in immediate pursuit of a suspected criminal). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 139 of 169 20 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience.â Id. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8. This sentence and the âfont of tort lawâ sen- tence preceding it describe deliberate and tortious conduct. Thus, footnote 8 essentially creates an âexecutive power plusâ inquiry: to amount to a substantive due process claim, the officerâs behavior must exceed the limits of his executive power. The âplusâ is that the behavior is âso egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience.â Id. Using this test in Littlejohn is inapt. The executives who de- prived the Littlejohns of their constitutional right did not commit a common law tort or abuse their executive power. To the con- trary, the Littlejohns allege the deprivation of parental rights that are anchored in the Constitution because they are ââfundamental to our scheme of ordered liberty,â or âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and tradition.ââ See Timbs, 586 U.S. at 150, 139 S. Ct. at 687 (quoting McDonald, 561 U.S. at 767, 130 S. Ct. at 3036). And the deprivation took place while the executives were simply doing their jobs. The Littlejohnsâ lawyers could not have alleged that the executivesâ behavior was beyond the scope of the executivesâ job responsibilities and executive power. That is because the behavior naturally fell within their authority to implement the Guide and was not âso egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience.â Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8. The lawyers could not allege that the executives abused their power when acting under policy because Rule 11 prohibits such frivolity. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b)(2). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 140 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 21 The Majority is mistaken to apply the âshocks the con- scienceâ test here. A straightforward reading of footnote 8 and re- lated passages of Justice Souterâs opinion reveals that the threshold requirement does not apply in § 1983 cases brought against execu- tives for the infringement of a fundamental liberty interest thatâ- like many of the Bill of Rights provisionsâhas been incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment through its Due Process Clause. Foremost in the Sacramento Courtâs mind was the proposi- tion that the Fourteenth Amendment is not a âfont of tort law to be superimposed upon whatever systems may already be administered by the Statesâ . . . . â[O]ur Constitution . . . does not purport to supplant traditional tort law in laying down rules of conduct to regulate liability for in- juries that attend living together in society.â We have accordingly rejected the lowest common denominator of customary tort liability as any mark of sufficiently shocking conduct, and have held that the Constitution does not guarantee due care on the part of state officials; liability for negligently inflicted harm is categorically be- neath the threshold of constitutional due process. It is, on the contrary, behavior at the other end of the culpa- bility spectrum that would most probably support a sub- stantive due process claim; conduct intended to injure in some way unjustifiable by any government interest is the sort of official action most likely to rise to the con- science-shocking level. 523 U.S. at 848â49, 118 S. Ct. at 1718 (citations omitted). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 141 of 169 22 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 Footnote 8 to Justice Souterâs opinion deals with what a plaintiďŹ must show to place his tort claim at the other end of the end of the customary tort law culpability spectrum and therefore obtain a hearing on whether the executiveâs infringement of his liberty is compensable in damages. Below, I recite the relevant pas- sages of footnote 8 followed by commentary that clariďŹes what the footnote means. Excerpt 1 As we explain in the text, a case challenging executive action on substantive due process grounds, like this one, presents an issue antecedent to any question about the need for historical examples of enforcing a liberty inter- est of the sort claimed. For executive action challenges raise a particular need to preserve the constitutional pro- portions of constitutional claims, lest the Constitution be demoted to what we have called a font of tort law. Thus, in a due process challenge to executive action, the threshold question is whether the behavior of the gov- ernmental oďŹcer is so egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary con- science. Id. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8. The Court is taking steps to ensure that enforcing a liberty interest in life (or physical security) is not demoting the Constitu- tion to a font of tort law. The conduct the plaintiďŹ introduces in responding to the threshold question must be more than âdeliber- ate or reckless indiďŹerence to lifeâ (or physical security). Id. at 836, 118 S. Ct. at 1711. It must constitute an abuse of the executiveâs USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 142 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23 police power so egregious, so outrageous as to shock the contem- porary conscience. Stated another way, the executive action must involve âconduct intended to injure [the plaintiff] in some way un- justifiable by any government interest.â Id. at 849, 118 S. Ct. at 1718. That is, the conduct was an unjustified exercise of the police power. Only after ďŹnding that the executive engaged in such con- duct will the trial court consider whether historical examples of en- forcing the liberty interest involved are needed to allow the plaintiďŹ to go forward with his tort claim. Lastly, the reference to âthe constitutional proportions of constitutional claimsâ is a reference to claims like the Littlejohnsâ for the enforcement of liberty interests incorporated into the Four- teenth Amendment for protection. Excerpt 2 That judgment may be informed by a history of liberty protection, but it necessarily reďŹects an understanding of traditional executive behavior, of contemporary prac- tice, and of the standards of blame generally applied to them. Id. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8. In deciding whether the executiveâs conduct shocked the contemporary conscience, the trial court considers the standards of conduct governing âtraditional executive behaviorâ and âcon- temporary practice.â Id. Trial courts routinely draw on such stand- ards in personal injury cases to determine whether to ďŹnd the de- fendant liable for alleged tortious behavior. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 143 of 169 24 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 Excerpt 3 Only if the necessary condition of egregious behavior were satisďŹed would there be a possibility of recognizing a substantive due process right to be free of such execu- tive action, and only then might there be a debate about the suďŹciency of historical examples of enforcement of the right claimed, or its recognition in other ways. In none of our prior cases have we considered the necessity for such examples, and no such question is raised in this case. Id. Opinions in Washington v. Glucksberg diďŹered about the need for historical examples of the recognition of the claimed liberty protection at some level of speciďŹcity. Compare 521 U.S. at 720â22, 117 S. Ct. at 2268, with id. at 765, 117 S. Ct. a 2281â82 (Souter, J., concurring in the judgment) In footnote 8, Justice Souter stated that in an action challenging executive conduct, the historical-ex- amples issue cannot arise unless the conduct is so egregious and outrageous that it shocks the contemporary conscience. Sacra- mento, 523 U.S. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8. The issue before the Court in Sacramento was whether Dep- uty Smithâs conduct constituted âan abuse of executive power so clearly unjustiďŹed by any legitimate objective of law enforcement as to be barred by the Fourteenth Amendment.â Id. at 840, 118 S. Ct. at 1713. In other words, the question was whether Deputy Smith âintended to injure [Lewis] in some way unjustifiable by any USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 144 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 25 government interest.â Id. at 849, 118 S. Ct. at 1718. That is âthe sort of official action most likely to rise to the conscience-shocking level.â Id. A substantive due process claim was unavailable because Smith was doing his job and had no intention to injure Lewis. The language of footnote 8 makes it clear that the Court was not holding that a claim asserting an executiveâs violation of a lib- erty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment could only go forward if the plaintiff first alleged and proved that executiveâs conduct shocked contemporary conscience. 2. Conflicting Standards Justice Souter was aware of the foundational differences be- tween a substantive due process claim founded on an abuse of ex- ecutive power so egregious and outrageous that it shocks the con- temporary conscience and a claim founded on a right incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment as fundamental to the Nationâs scheme of ordered liberty. United States v. Salerno, which Justice Souter cites in Sacramento, highlights the differences: â[S]ubstantive due processâ prevents the government from engaging in conduct that âshocks the conscience,â . . . or interferes with rights âimplicit in the concept of ordered liberty.â Salerno, 481 U.S. at 746, 107 S. Ct. at 2101 (quoting Rochin, 342 U.S. at 172, 72 S. Ct. at 209; Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U.S. 319, 325â26, 58 S. Ct. 149, 152 (1937)). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 145 of 169 26 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 Under Rochinâs standard, an executive is answerable for en- gaging in conduct beyond the executive power, conduct that is not remotely related to the executiveâs job responsibilities and is so abusive and outrageous as to shock the contemporary con- scienceâexecutive power âplus.â Under the other standard, quoted from Palko v. Connecticut, an executive is answerable for violating a fundamental right even if that violation occurred in the scope of the executiveâs job. The executives whom the Littlejohns sued were engaging in conduct within their executive power and job responsibilities when they allegedly violated the Littlejohnsâ parental rights. Requiring the Littlejohns to allege and prove the contrary to obtain a day in court on their parental rights claims is to require them to allege and prove a falsehood, a farce. Their rights will go unenforced. The word âorâ that appears in Salernoâs statement of what âsubstantive due process preventsâ tells us that Sacramento did not intend to create such a farce. Substantive due process prevents ex- ecutive âconduct intended to injure in some way unjustifiable by any government interest,â Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 849, 118 S. Ct. at 1718, that is beyond the executiveâs job responsibilities, and is so abusive of the executiveâs power as to shock âthe contemporary conscience,â id. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8, or conduct that is within the executiveâs job responsibilities and the executive power but âinterferes with rights implicit in the concept of ordered lib- erty,â id. at 847, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 146 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 27 Salerno did not contemplate the absurdity of requiring a plain- tiff alleging interference of a fundamental right to simultaneously allege something quite different. The word âorâ avoids the absurd- ity. As we and the Supreme Court have explained, â[t]he ordinary use of âorâ is almost always disjunctive, and the words it connects are to be given separate meanings.â Santos v. Healthcare Rev. Recovery Grp., 90 F.4th 1144, 1153 (11th Cir. 2024) (per curiam) (quoting United States v. Woods, 571 U.S. 31, 45, 134 S. Ct. 557, 567 (2013) (internal quotation marks omitted)); see also Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Gar- ner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 116 (2012) (âUn- der the conjunctive/disjunctive canon, and combines items while or creates alternatives.â). In sum, requiring the Littlejohns to satisfy Rochinâs con- science-shocking standard to have a day in court under Palkoâs vio- lation-of-a-fundamental-right standard makes no sense. If, as the Court states, âthe [Supreme] Court clariďŹed that the âconscience shockingâ inquiry is a âthreshold questionâ that necessarily precedes any fundamental-rights analysis,â Maj. Op. at 14â15, why does Sac- ramento acknowledge that substantive due process functions in two totally unrelated causes of action, each with mutually exclusive and contradictory elements? 3. Obiter Dictum Even if footnote 8 set out what the Majority purports it does, nothing in footnote 8 would hold that a plaintiff cannot claim that executive action violated a fundamental right without first alleging USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 147 of 169 28 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 and proving that the action was beyond the limits of executive power and was âso egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience.â Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8. Rather than a holding, the footnote 8 language this Court relies on is pure dicta. The language is dicta because the Sacramento plaintiďŹsâ com- plaint did not allege that Deputy Smith violated a fundamental lib- erty interest. The complaint asserted the claim Justice Souter iden- tiďŹed in the opening paragraph of his opinion for the Court: Dep- uty Smith âviolate[d] the Fourteenth Amendmentâs guarantee of substantive due process by causing death through deliberate or reckless indiďŹerence to life in a high-speed automobile chase aimed at apprehending a suspected oďŹender.â Id. at 836, 118 S. Ct. at 1711. 11 Justice Souter described a tort claim in substantive due pro- cess clothing. Nothing in the complaint presented the issue of whether a plaintiďŹ suing an executive for violating a fundamental liberty interest incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment must allege and prove as a threshold matter that the executiveâs be- havior was beyond the executive power and, in the words of foot- note 8, âso egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary conscience.â Id. at 847 n.8, 118 S. Ct. at 1717 n.8. Since the issue was not presented, it could not have been 11 Restated by Justice Souter, the issue was whether âSmithâs actions in causing Lewisâs death were an abuse of executive power so clearly unjustified by any legit- imate objective of law enforcement as to be barred by the Fourteenth Amend- ment.â Id. at 840, 118 S. Ct. at 1713 (emphasis added). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 148 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 29 12 decided. The issue was not presented and decided because the facts would not support it. And as Justice Souter understood, the 12 Judge Newsom resists this conclusion by asserting that âunder Judge Tjoflatâs proposal for smoking out superfluous language,â footnote 8 is not dicta because âJustice Scalia felt compelled to write separatelyâ on the issue, âthe [Sacramento] majority expressly declined Justice Scaliaâs invitation to by- pass the shocks-the-conscience test in favor of Glucksbergâs historical inquiry,â and the ââthresholdâ was integral to the Courtâs reasoning.â Newsom Concur- rence at 12 n.2. But this reasoning misses the markâthrice over. First, the test I discuss is not simply my âproposal.â It is grounded in Article III of the Constitution. We are only empowered to resolve âCasesâ or âControversies.â U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. So, the inquiry is whether the state- ment was necessary to resolve the case, not whether it was merely significant or noteworthy. This principle has long been recognized, with courts distin- guishing between essential reasoning and dicta. See Loper Bright Enters. v. Rai- mondo, 144 S. Ct. 2244, 2277 (2024) (Gorsuch, J., concurring) (noting that courts must âbe careful not to treat every âhasty expression . . . as a serious and deliberate opinionâ (quoting Steel v. Houghton, 1 Bl. H. 51, 53, 126 Eng. Rep. 32, 33 (C. P. 1788)); Dictum, Blackâs Law Dictionary (1st ed. 1891) (defining dictum as âan observation or remark made by a judge in pronouncing an opin- ion upon a cause, concerning some rule, principle, or the case at bar, but not necessarily involved in the case or essential to its determinationâ). Second, dicta are not synonymous with frivolity. To be sure, the âshocks the conscienceâ standard is significant. But significance does not make a statement necessary to the decision. Here, the Court was not asked to ad- dress the standardânor did the facts demand it. The Court granted certiorari on a narrow question, and this broader constitutional analysis had no place in resolving the case. In doing so, the Court ventured beyond the facts and the issues, offering a constitutional pronouncement without the proper occasion. That is the very essence of dicta. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 149 of 169 30 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 Courtâs practice âis not to formulate a rule of constitutional law broader than is required by the precise facts to which it is to be applied.â Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520, 572, 113 S. Ct. 2217, 2247 (1993) (Souter, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (quoting Ashwander v. TVA, 297 U.S. 288, 347, 56 S. Ct. 466, 483 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring) (internal quotation marks omitted). Elevating the shocks-the-conscience standard from dicta to binding authority contravenes the critical safeguard of adversarial proceedings, and as discussed more below, ignores basic principles of separation of powers. The Majority creates a legal rule that has not been subjected to the scrutiny of adversary proceedings and judicial review. Law develops best when it arises from genuine cases and controversies, where parties present arguments, chal- lenge assumptions, and force courts to carefully consider the full implications of a rule. â[J]udges think differentlyâmore carefully, more focused, more likely to think things throughâwhen our words bring real consequences to the parties before us.â United Third, Justice Scaliaâs response does not elevate dicta to law. His dis- sent was focused on the case before the Courtâa âpolice-pursuit case[].â See Newsom Concurrence at 9. Scalia did not engage with the test in the context of fundamental rights, and neither did the majority. In the end, Judge Newsom exposes one of Sacramentoâs core problems. He points to a dissent to argue that a footnote is not dicta, muddying the wa- ters by using non-binding commentary to reify dicta into precedent. This only deepens the âcrater-sized hole in responsible constitutional decisionmaking.â See id. at 18. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 150 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 31 States v. Burris, 912 F.3d 386, 410 (6th Cir. 2019) (en banc) (Keth- ledge, J., concurring in the judgment). That process is absent here. What was once mere dictaâan aside not essential to the decisionâ now takes on the force of settled law that has not been fully tested. Ordinarily we think of separation of powers in terms of leg- islative or executive overreach. But the issue here is judicial over- reach. The Constitution limits our role to deciding actual disputes, not creating advisory rules, or pronouncing law outside the context of a case. See Flast, 392 U.S. at 96, 88 S. Ct. at 1950. So, by taking footnote 8 in Sacramento as binding law (supposing it supports what the majority purports it does), this Court has exceeded its authority under Article III. The Court taking a statement developed outside of the adversarial system and applying it as âlawâ transcends the judicial function from resolving disputes to creating law. Here, â[t]he Supreme Courtâs later admonition in District of Columbia v. Heller about latching onto unargued, unbriefed, uncon- sidered pronouncements has never rung more true: âIt is inconceiv- able that we would rest our interpretation . . . upon such a foot- noted dictum in a case where the point was not at issue and was not argued.ââ Wilson v. Midland Cnty., Tex., 116 F.4th 384, 407 (5th Cir. 2024) (en banc) (Willett, J., dissenting) (quoting District of Co- lumbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 625 n.25, 128 S. Ct. 2783, 2816 (2008)). III. MADDOX V. STEPHENS The Majority also claims that Maddox v. Stephens is precedent here. That is not so. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 151 of 169 32 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 Maddox was an interlocutory appeal. The issue was whether, on a motion for summary judgment, the District Court erred in denying Babette Stephens qualified immunity from suit on Nicole Maddoxâs claim that Stephens, a Gwinnett County, Georgia, social worker, violated her fundamental liberty interest in the care, cus- tody, and management of her minor child, J.O.. 727 F.3d at 1113. Maddox alleged that Stephens disregarded her liberty interest âin preparing and implementing a safety plan that allegedly prohibited [her] from removing the child from the paternal grandmotherâs care.â Id. A. Case Overview In determining whether Stephens was entitled to summary judgment on her qualified immunity defense, the District Court had two options. It could decide whether the facts underlying Mad- doxâs claim, taken in the light most favorable to Maddox, estab- lished that Stephensâs conduct violated Maddoxâs fundamental lib- erty interest, or it could avoid that decision and decide whether the law clearly established that Stephensâs conduct was unlawful in the circumstances of the case. The Court exercised the second option but found âthat it could not conclude at the summary judgment stage that Stephens was entitled to qualified immunity.â Id. at 1118. In deciding whether the District Court erred in denying Ste- phens qualified immunity, this Court had the same options the Dis- trict Court had. Id. First, it could decide whether the facts Maddox had presented on summary judgment showed that Stephens USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 152 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 33 13 violated her fundamental liberty interest as alleged. Or second, it could decide whether the law clearly established that Stephensâs conduct was unlawful. Like the District Court, this Court chose the second option. Id. at 1127 n.19 (citing Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 14 223, 236, 129 S. Ct. 808, 818 (2009)). The Court began its qualified immunity analysis by observ- ing that it âis undisputed . . . that Maddox has a liberty interest in the care, custody, and management of J.O. Maddox argues that Ste- phens violated this liberty interest, and therefore that she has sufficiently asserted a substantive due process violation.â Id. at 1119 (emphasis added). As the following discussion indicates, it is debatable whether the Court viewed Maddox as alleging that Stephens violated a lib- erty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, in the care and custody of her minor child, J.O. 15 13 If Stephens had argued that the summary judgment record revealed an ab- sence of any evidence to support Maddoxâs claim, this Court would have af- firmed the District Courtâs grant of qualified immunity (to Stephens) on the ground that Maddox failed to make out her claim. 14 Since the record established that Stephens was exercising her discretionary authority at the time of the alleged violation, it became Maddoxâs burden to show that Stephens was not entitled to qualified immunity. See Holloman ex rel. Holloman v. Harland, 370 F.3d 1252, 1264 (11th Cir. 2004). 15 Maddox did not assert a substantive due process claim under the Rochin standard. Rather, she asserted under the Palko standard a claim that Stephens violated her liberty interest in the care and custody of her child. See Plaintiffâs USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 153 of 169 34 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 The Court then went one step further and turned to what Maddox had to prove to establish the substantive due process vio- lation. Maddox had to prove what she did not allegeâthat Ste- phensâs conduct in preparing and implementing the safety plan was âarbitrary or conscience shocking in a constitutional sense.â Mad- dox, 727 F.3d at 1119 (quoting Waddell v. Hendry Cnty. Sheriffâs Off., 16 329 F.3d 1300, 1305 (11th Cir. 2003) (quotation marks omitted)). Indeed, Stephensâs actions âmust be characterized as arbitrary, or conscience shocking, in a constitutional sense.â Maddox, 727 F.3d at 1125â26 (quoting Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 128, 112 S. Ct. 1061, 1070 (1992) (emphasis added) (internal quota- tion marks omitted)). In eventually deciding that Stephens was entitled to quali- fied immunity because Maddox had not shown that the lawlessness of Stephensâs conduct was clearly established, the Court returned to what Maddox had to prove to prevail on her claim. It assumed that Maddox had satisfied the âhigh barâ and that Maddox had thus introduced evidence on summary judgment sufficient to establish that Stephensâs alleged actions were arbitrary, or conscience Response in Opposition to Department of Human Servicesâ Motion for Sum- mary Judgment 15, Maddox v. Georgia Depât Human Servâs, No. 1:10-cv-02742- AT (N.D. Ga. Nov. 17, 2011), ECF No. 98. 16 The Court emphasized that âonly the most egregious official conduct can be said to be arbitrary in the constitutional sense.â Maddox, 727 F.3d at 1119 (quoting Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 846, 118 S. Ct. at 1716) (internal quotation marks omitted)). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 154 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 35 shocking, in a constitutional sense. See Maddox, 727 F.3d at 1119. The Court indulged that assumption several times: [A]ssuming arguendo that Stephens violated Maddoxâs substantive due process rights, Stephens is entitled to qualified immunity because the law was not clearly es- tablished that Stephensâ actions were so conscience shocking as to violate Maddoxâs liberty interest in the care, custody, and management of J.O. Id. at 1121. [F]or purposes of addressing Maddoxâs substantive due process claim, we can assume arguendo that Stephens vi- olated Maddoxâs procedural due process rights. We nev- ertheless hold that Stephens is entitled to qualified im- munity because she did not violate any clearly estab- lished substantive due process rights of which a reason- able state official in Stephensâ shoes would have known during the pertinent time period. Id. at 1125. [E]ven if we assume arguendo, although we expressly do not decide, that Stephensâ actions violated Maddoxâs procedural due process rights, we cannot conclude that the law was clearly established at the time of the rele- vant conduct that Stephensâ actions were conscience shocking, and thus we cannot conclude that there has been a violation of clearly established substantive due process law. Id. at 1126â27. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 155 of 169 36 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 [W]e must conclude that it would not be clear to a rea- sonable social worker that her conduct violated Mad- doxâs substantive due process rights; stated another way, a reasonable social worker would not have been on no- tice that her behavior was âconscience shockingâ or âar- bitrary.â Id. at 1126. Although Maddox cite[d] Eleventh Circuit and Georgia Supreme Court cases for the proposition that procedural requirements should be followed when the State takes custody of the child, she ha[d] not cited any case that would make it clear to a reasonable social worker at the time that her actions were arbitrary or conscience shock- ing. Id. My take from the Courtâs quoted statements is this: the Court assumed that Maddox alleged that Stephensâs behavior was conscience-shocking. Then, based on that assumption, it held that Maddox failed to show that it was clearly established that the be- havior was unlawful. The Court assumed that Stephensâs behavior was con- science-shocking even though Maddox never labeled Stephensâs behaviorâin preparing and implementing a safety plan that pro- hibited Maddox from removing the child from the paternal grand- motherâs careâas conscience shocking. Instead, Maddox labeled the behavior as a violation of her fundamental liberty interest, an interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 156 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 37 In short, this Court did not hold that Stephensâs conduct âin preparing and implementing a safety plan that allegedly prohibited Maddox from removing the child from the paternal grandmotherâs careâ violated Maddoxâs liberty interest. Id. at 1113. It also did not hold that Sacramento required Maddox to allege that Stephensâs conduct was âan abuse of executive power so clearly unjustified by any legitimate objective of [that power] as to be barred by the Four- teenth Amendment.â Sacramento, 523 U.S. at 840, 118 S. Ct. at 1713. What it did holdâindeed, all that it heldâwas that it was not clearly established that Stephensâs conduct in preparing and imple- menting the safety plan was conscience shocking. Maddox, 727 F.3d at 1127. 17 17 Following the issuance of our mandate, Maddox moved the District Court to dismiss her 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claims and remand the case to the state court. The District Court described Maddoxâs motion in footnote 2 of its September 6, 2013, order granting the motion: Plaintiffs state that despite their disagreement with the Eleventh Circuitâs application of the law to the facts of this case, they are bound to accept the Eleventh Circuitâs opinion as the law of the case. Therefore, âPlaintiffs do not wish to proceed to trial on the [Section 1983] conspiracy claim with the belief that if the Plaintiffs obtain a favorable verdict, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals would once again reverse.â (Doc. 132 at 5). Maddox v. Georgia Depât of Hum. Services, No. 1:10-cv-02742-AT, 2013 WL 9348224, at *1 n.1 (N.D. Ga. Sept. 23, 2013). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 157 of 169 38 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 B. Assuming Maddox Is the Law In this section, I describe the litigation of a fundamental rights claim post-Maddox, which, according to the Court, âillus- trates the Sacramento framework in practiceâ and has become Elev- 18 enth Circuit precedent. Maj. Op. at 16. Posit a complaint like the one in Littlejohn with one excep- tion. Along with asserting claims against the four executives, the complaint properly presents a § 1983 claim against the Leon County School Board based on the Monell doctrine.19 That is, the 18 I, of course, disagree that Maddox is precedent here. Additionally, and as Judge Newsom acknowledges in his concurrence, one of our first substantive due process styled cases post-Sacramento maintained Salernoâs disjunctive fram- ing of âshocks the conscience or interfer[ing] with rights implicit in the con- cept of ordered liberty.â Newsom Concurrence at 6; see Dacosta v. Nwachukwa, 304 F.3d 1045, 1048 (11th Cir. 2002). Maddox and Dacosta are not precedential here because both cases involve common law torts dressed up in substantive due process clothing, and both revolve around qualified immunity rather than the standard for substantive due process. See discussion supra. That said, if the majority holds that Maddox is precedent, it has not wrestled with why that holding would not defy our prior panel precedent rule. 19 In Monell v. Depât Soc. Servâs, 436 U.S. 658, 98 S. Ct. 2018 (1978), the Supreme Court held that local governments, including school boards, are âpersonsâ subject to liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and thus can be held liable for con- stitutional violations that stem from their official policies or customs. Id. at 690â91, 98 S. Ct. at 2036. The School Board is not an âexecutive,â however, as that term is used in Sacramento and Maddox. In Sacramento, an executive is one who carries out the objectives of the stateâs police power as expressed by a local governmental entity. The police power was law enforcement. The exec- utive was Deputy Smith. The claim was that his conduct was not a legitimate USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 158 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 39 executives were performing their job-related functions while im- plementing the School Boardâs policy as reflected in the Guide.20 To prevail on their § 1983 claims against the executives, Maddox requires the Littlejohns to allege and prove as a threshold substantive due process claim that the executivesâ conduct in vio- lating their parental rights was âarbitrary or conscience shocking in a constitutional sense.â 727 F.3d at 1119 (quoting Waddell v. Hendry Cnty. Sheriffâs Off., 329 F.3d 1300, 1305 (11th Cir. 2003) (quotation marks omitted)). Unless the Littlejohns prove that threshold claim, they will be unable to recover damages against the executives for violating their parental rights. But they will be able to proceed against the School Board based on the executivesâ violation of their parental rights. pursuit of a law enforcement objective. In Maddox, the police power con- cerned the welfare of families and children and was exercised by the Georgia Department of Human Services Division of Family and Children Services (âDFCSâ). The executives were social workers like Stephens. The claim was that Stephens violated Maddoxâs fundamental parental rights. The claim was not that Stephens exceeded the legitimate objective of DFCS police power. 20 That the executives violated the Littlejohnsâ parental rights while perform- ing âa legitimate job-related function (that is, pursuing a job-related goal),â does not alter the fact that the executives were acting within their discretion- ary authority. Holloman, 370 F.3d at 1265â66. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 159 of 169 40 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 21 Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 11, the Littlejohnsâ lawyer cannot certify a complaint alleging that the executivesâ conduct in violat- ing the Littlejohnsâ parental rights was âarbitrary or conscience shocking in a constitutional senseâ without more. The lawyer can- not do so because the executives were simply performing their of- ficial duties. Rule 11(b)(2) allows an attorney to present a ânonfrivolous argument for . . . reversing existing law or for establishing new law.â The Littlejohnsâ lawyer concludes that to obtain the reversal of Maddox as precedent, Rule 11(b)(2) would permit him to file a complaint alleging that the executivesâ conduct in violating the Lit- tlejohnsâ parental rights was âarbitrary or conscience shocking in a constitutional sense.â So the lawyer drafts a complaint seeking damages against the executives for violating the Littlejohnsâ paren- tal rights by engaging in conduct that was conscience-shocking and 21 Rule 11(b)(3) states that [b]y presenting [a complaint] to the court, an attorney . . . certifies that to the best of the personâs knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an inquiry reasonable under the circum- stances: .... (3) the factual contentions have evidentiary support or, if specifically so identified, will likely have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery. Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b)(3). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 160 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 41 damages against the School Board based on the executivesâ con- duct in violating the Littlejohnsâ parental rights. The District Court dismisses the Littlejohnsâ § 1983 claim against the executives because the complaintâs factual allegations describing the executivesâ violation of the Littlejohnsâ parental rights show that the executivesâ actions were not arbitrary or con- science-shocking in a constitutional sense. Instead, the factual alle- gations show that the executives violated the Littlejohnsâ parental rights while doing their jobs. The Court then duly convenes a jury trial on the Littlejohnsâ claim against the School Board based on the executivesâ violation of their parental rights. The Littlejohns pre- vail. The jury finds that the executives violated their parental rights and did so in carrying out School Board policy. The jury assesses damages against the School Board, and the Court enters judgment accordingly. Assuming that Maddox is Eleventh Circuit precedent in § 1983 cases in which the plaintiff seeks the vindication of a right protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, these will be the conse- quences: ⢠If the executiveâs violation of the plaintiffâs right is pursu- ant to policy of the entity governing the executiveâs au- thority to act, the plaintiff might be compensated by the entity under Monell. The plaintiff will not be compen- sated by the executive, though, because the plaintiffâs lawyer will be unable to allege and prove that the execu- tiveâs conduct (in violating the plaintiffâs right) USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 161 of 169 42 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 constituted under Sacramento an abuse of executive power so clearly unjustified by any legitimate objective of the exercise of that power as to be barred by the Four- teenth Amendment. Whether the executive will be de- terred from violating a plaintiffâs protected right will de- pend on the ability of the entity responsible for the exec- utiveâs conduct to discipline the executive. In other words, Congressâs intent in enacting § 1983 becomes su- perfluous as the remedy against the person who did the constitutional violation is not imposed under the statute, but left to the discretion of some other person. ⢠If the executiveâs violation of the plaintiďŹâs protected right is not pursuant to the policy of the entity responsi- ble for the executiveâs conduct, the plaintiďŹâs right will not be vindicated at all. That is, the plaintiďŹ will be una- ble to pursue the entity under Monell and the plaintiďŹâs claim against the executive will fail because of the plain- tiďŹâs inability to prove that the executiveâs conduct was conscience shocking. IV. SEPARATION OF POWERS If Sacramento holds that plaintiďŹs cannot be heard on their fundamental rights claims for damages under § 1983 unless they allege and prove that the executive action underpinning their claims shocks the contemporary conscience, the Court ran rough- shod over the separation of powers doctrine. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 162 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 43 A. The Value of Incorporated Rights The Supreme Court acknowledges that certain liberty inter- ests are fundamental to the American scheme of justice by incor- porating them into the Fourteenth Amendment. They were incor- porated like the Bill of Rights (with exceptions) because they were deemed ââfundamental to our scheme of ordered liberty,â or âdeeply rooted in this Nationâs history and tradition.ââ Timbs, 556 U.S. at 150, 139 S. Ct. at 687 (quoting McDonald, 561 U.S. at 767, 130 S. Ct. at 3036). These interests include the parental rights the Lit- tlejohns seek to vindicate. Congress enacted § 1983 as part of the Civil Rights Act of 1871. Its âpurpose . . . was to interpose the federal courts between the States and the people, as guardians of the peopleâs federal rightsâto protect the people from unconstitutional action under color of state law, âwhether that action be executive, legislative, or judicial.ââ Mitchum v. Foster, 407 U.S. 225, 242, 92 S. Ct. 2151, 2162 (1972) (quoting Ex parte Virginia, 100 U.S. 339, 346 (1879)). The stat- ute was â[w]ritten in sweeping terms against a backdrop of horriďŹc violence, terror, and subjugation.â Wilson, 116 F.4th at 409 (Willett, J., dissenting). So, it âwas meant to open courthouse doors, not bolt them shut.â Id. The shocks-the-conscience threshold claim a plaintiďŹ must allege and prove to be heard on his claims that executive conduct violated rights incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment dis- serves Congressâs purpose in enacting § 1983. Indeed, the threshold requirement all but eliminates § 1983 as a remedy to compensate USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 163 of 169 44 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 citizens whose fundamental rights have been violated by state and local executive action. And in doing so, the requirement waters down the constitutional signiďŹcance of the citizenâs rights. But Sacramento harbored no such intention. When Sacra- mento was decided, the Supreme Court had rejected the idea that the incorporated rights had less value when made applicable to state and local government. In an increasing number of cases, â[t]he Court . . . has rejected the notion that the Fourteenth Amendment applies to the States only a watered-down, subjective version of the individual guarantees of the Bill of Rights.â Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1, 10â11, 84 S. Ct. 1489, 1495 (1964) (quoting Ohio ex rel. Eaton v. Price, 364 U.S. 263, 275, 80 S. Ct. 1463, 1470 (1960) (opinion of Brennan, J.) (internal quotation marks omitted)). Before Sacramento, the incorporated rights of citizens suing executives of the United States Government in federal court for damages were not watered down. 22 If a citizen claimed that a 22 Benton v. Maryland held that â[o]nce it is decided that a particular Bill of Rights guarantee is âfundamental to the American scheme of justice,â the same constitutional standards apply against both the State and Federal Gov- ernments.â 395 U.S. 784, 795, 89 S. Ct. 2056, 2063 (1969) (quoting Duncan v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 145, 149, 88 S. Ct. 1444, 1447 (1968)). At the time, the Court thought it could imply causes of actions to remedy constitution violations. In Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents, 403 U.S. 388, 91 S. Ct. 1999 (1971), the Supreme Court implied a cause of action for damages under the Fourth Amendment against federal oďŹcials for unreasonable searches and seizures. Id. at 389, 91 S. Ct. at 2001. And it had implied causes of action for damages under the Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause against a Congressman for USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 164 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 45 federal executive violated an incorporated right, the citizen would be heard on the merits of his claim. After aďŹording citizens the right to be heard in cases brought against federal executives, the Court would not, and did not, deprive citizens of the right to be heard in cases brought against state or local governmental execu- tives for the violation of fundamental rights. To say that the Court wouldâand didâstrains credulity. For this reason alone, the Littlejohns are entitled to a day in court on the merits of their claims that the defendant executives violated their parental rights. gender discrimination, Davis v. Passman, 442 U.S. 228, 248â49, 99 S. Ct. 2264, 2279 (1979), and under the Eighth Amendment Cruel and Unusual Punish- ments Clause for failure to provide adequate medical treatment, Carlson v. Green, 446 U.S. 14, 19, 100 S. Ct. 1468, 1472 (1980). Litigants sought the Courtâs creation of similar implied causes of action in 1983, 1987, 1988, and 1994. Eg- bert v. Boule, 596 U.S. 482, 486, 142 S. Ct. 1793, 1799â1800 (2022). To be sure, many of the claims cited in Egbert consistently failed as the Court became more reluctant to transcend the legislative function and imply causes of action (which supports that the Court would not impose a shocks-the-conscience standard today). Evaluating the vindication of fundamental rights at the time of Benton also supports the ridiculousness of a shocks-the-conscience standard. The Court thought it could imply causes of action to federal oďŹcials, so it makes no sense that it would later go on to limit that enforcement against state oďŹ- cials by imposing a shocks-the-conscience requirement. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 165 of 169 46 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 B. Amending § 1983 âThe Framers of the Federal Constitution . . . viewed the principle of separation of powers as the absolutely central guaran- tee of a just Government.â Morrison v. Olson, 487 U.S. 654, 697, 108 S. Ct. 2597, 2622 (1988) (Scalia, J., dissenting). The doctrine ensures that each branch of governmentâthe Legislative, Executive, and Judicialâoperates within its own distinct area. This prevents the concentration of power, which the Framers rightly feared to im- peril liberty. See Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 635, 72 S. Ct. 863, 870 (1952) ( Jackson, J., concurring) (explaining that âthe Constitution diďŹuses power the better to secure libertyâ). So, the Legislatureâs role is to make law. See Patchak v. Zinke, 583 U.S. 244, 250, 138 S. Ct. 897, 905 (2018) (â[T]he legislative power is the power to make law.â). And the Judiciaryâs role is to interpret and apply the law. See Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177 (1803). Let us recap with what the Legislature enacted in § 1983: Every person who, under color of any statute, ordi- nance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or im- munities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress. USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 166 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 47 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (emphasis added). Todayâs holding is barred by the separation of powers doc- trine. It either amends § 1983 or puts a gloss on the Littlejohnsâ parental rights that waters down their constitutional force. If the holding does the latter, it is obviously erroneous. It requires no sub- tle analysis to demonstrate that. Only Congress has the power to amend or otherwise alter § 1983. The Supreme Courtâs decision in Egbert makes that clear. The issue there was whether the Court should adhere to the hold- ing in Bivens and imply a cause of action for damages under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Egbert, 596 U.S. at 490, 142 S. Ct. at 1802. The Court held that the task of providing a federal rem- edy, such as § 1983, for a federal executiveâs violation of a constitu- tional right belonged to Congress: âwhether a given remedy is ad- equate is a legislative determination that must be left to Congress, not the federal courts.â Id. at 498, 142 S. Ct. at 1807. The Supreme Courtâs approach to separation of powers is- sues is hardly the same as it was when the Court decided Bivens and, years later, Sacramento. Since Bivens and its progeny, the Court has not implied additional causes of action for the violation of Consti- tutional rights. âNow long past the heady days in which th[e] Court assumed common-law powers to create causes of action,â it âha[s] come to appreciate more fully the tension between judicially cre- ated causes of action and the Constitutionâs separation of legisla- tive and judicial power.â Id. at 491, 142 S. Ct. at 1802 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). This reasoning is just as USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 167 of 169 48 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 applicable to limiting causes of actions as creating them. âJust as a court cannot apply its independent policy judgment to recognize a cause of action that Congress has denied, it cannot limit a cause of action that Congress has created merely because âprudenceâ dic- tates.â Lexmark Intâl, Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc., 572 U.S. 118, 128, 134 S. Ct. 1377, 1388 (2014) (citation omitted). Yet, the âshocks-the-conscienceâ test does just that. Posit how § 1983 would change if this test was in it: Every person who, under color of any statute, ordi- nance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State . . . sub- jects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States . . . to the deprivation of any right, privilege, or immunity secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at redress [if that personâs actions also shocked the contemporary con- science]. I would say that today the Supreme Court would not enter- tain an argument that § 1983 should be amended judicially to cut down on fundamental rights cases. The separation of powers doc- trine precludes this Court from applying the shock-the-conscience requirement to bar the Littlejohnsâ parental rights claim here. V. CONCLUSION Judge Newsom may be correctâthe âsubstantive due pro- cessâ cases that have snowballed since Sacramento are a âdumpster ďŹre.â Newsom Concurrence at 15. But that is no excuse for todayâs result. As Justices Alito and Thomas recently warned in a factually similar case, â[t]his case presents a question of great and growing USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 168 of 169 23-10385 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 49 importance.â Parents Protecting Our Children v. Eau Claire Area Sch. Dist., 145 S. Ct. 14, 14 (2024) (Alito, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari). That same question is before us now: Does the Consti- tution still protect parentsâ fundamental right to direct the upbring- ing of their children when government actors intrude without their knowledge or consent? The Majority says it does not. It reaches this conclusion by applying an illogical, unauthorized, and atextual âshocks-the-con- scienceâ standard that denies the Littlejohns the ability to vindicate their fundamental right to raise their child. Binding precedent in 23 Arnold requires a diďŹerent approach. The question is whether the Littlejohns alleged a violation of a fundamental right, not whether the conduct also âshocked the conscience.â And if Sacramento changed the law as the Majority purports it did, the vindication of fundamental rights under that âframeworkâ is an issue of ďŹrst im- pression in our Circuit. Todayâs decision ignores bedrock separation of powers prin- ciples, waters down fundamental rights, and ďŹies in the face of our 23 âWhile an intervening decision of the Supreme Court can overrule the deci- sion of a prior panel of our court, the Supreme Court decision must be clearly on point.â Garrett v. Univ. of Ala. at Birmingham Bd. of Trs., 344 F.3d 1288, 1292 (11th Cir. 2003). Because Sacramento is not âclearly on pointâ for all the reasons stated in this dissent, the Majority has violated our prior panel precedent rule. And even if Sacramento was on point, Dacosta would be our first case post-Sac- ramento. See Dacosta, 304 F.3d at 1048 (maintaining Salernoâs disjunctive of âshocks the conscience or interfer[ing] with rights implicit in the concept of ordered libertyâ (emphasis added)). USCA11 Case: 23-10385 Document: 112-1 Date Filed: 03/12/2025 Page: 169 of 169 50 TJOFLAT, J., Dissenting 23-10385 prior panel precedent rule. It is as wrong as it is ominous for the future of fundamental rights in the Eleventh Circuit. I respectfully dissent.
Case Information
- Court
- 11th Cir.
- Decision Date
- March 12, 2025
- Status
- Precedential