Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete Co.

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Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete Company
Seal of the United States Supreme Court.svg
Argued January 15, 1991
Decided June 3, 1991
Full case name Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete Company
Citations 500 U.S. 614 (more)
Holding
Race-based use of peremptory challenges violates due process.
Court membership
Case opinions
Majority Kennedy, joined by White, Marshall, Blackmun, Stevens, Souter
Dissent O'Connor, joined by Rehnquist, Scalia
Dissent Scalia
Laws applied
U.S. Const. amend. XIV

Edmonson v. Leesville Concrete Company, 500 U.S. 614 (1991), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that peremptory challenges may not be used to exclude jurors on the basis of race in civil trials. Edmonson extended the court's similar decision in Batson v. Kentucky, a criminal case. The court applied the equal protection part of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment in finding that such race-based challenges violated the Constitution.

Background

A black construction worker, Thaddeus Donald Edmonson, was injured during work on federal property. He sued Leesville Concrete Company for negligence leading to his injuries. During jury selection, Leesville used two of their three peremptory challenges on black jurors, leaving a panel of twelve with one African-American. Edmonson, citing Batson requested that the trial court require Leesville give a race-neutral reason for the peremptory challenges of black jurors, but the court refused. The jury found that Leesville was responsible for 20% of Edmonson's injury and awarded him $18,000. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed the decision, holdingthat parties become state actors during jury selection, and so Batson requires race-neutral selection in civil cases. When the Fifth Circuit reheard the case en banc, they affirmed the original District Court decision. Recognizing a circuit split, the Supreme Court granted certiorari.

Decision

Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the opinion for the majority. Kennedy began with a long line of cases where the court held that racial discrimination was impermissible in jury selection before a criminal trial. He then pointed out that although the court had never indicated such discrimination was permitted in a civil trial, either, it also holds that federal law restrains the actions of government, not private actors. To decide whether to apply federal law, Kennedy applied a two-part test from Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co 457 U.S. 922 (1982). The first part of the test is whether the constitutional deprivation, in this case the right to a fair and impartial jury, resulted from a right rooted in state authority. Kennedy found, almost summarily, that peremptory challenges' intimate role in shaping a jury meant the case met the first part of the test. The second part of the test is whether the private party, Leesville and its counsel, was acting as a "state actor".

In determining whether the Leesville was acting as a state actor, Kennedy considered three issues and relevant precedent. The first issue was whether the actor relies on governmental assistance, and Kennedy found that the system of jury selection clearly existed within the sphere of judicial proceedings and would not be possible without the assistance of the judge and all other constituent elements of the institution. The second consideration was whether the actor is performing a traditional function of government. Kennedy first found that the jury was clearly performing a traditional function of government by serving as the finder-of-fact in a civil trial. Second, he drew a parallel between jury selection and elections, indicating that Constitutional constraints apply to all the machinery involved in choosing representatives and juries (such as when parties control primary elections). This is unlike any other aspect of civil litigation, none of which involve a government function like jury selection. The third consideration was whether the injury caused was aggravated in a unique way by the incidents of governmental authority. Kennedy said racial discrimination inside the courtroom diminishes the integrity of the courts and "compounds the racial insult" of discrimination.[1]

The next part of Kennedy's opinion dealt with the question of whether litigants could raise violations of jurors' rights on their behalf. The relevant precedent in that consideration was Powers v. Ohio 499 U.S. 400 (1991), a similar case that dealt with race-based exclusion of jurors during jury selection in a criminal trial. In Powers, the court held that litigants generally cannot make a claim due to violations of others' rights, except where the litigant has suffered an injury the courts can resolve, has a close relation with the third party, and the third party is hindered in protecting his or her own interests.[2] Kennedy held that all three conditions were met in Edmonson's case, including the resolvable injury. The concrete resolvable injury arose, in Kennedy's view, whenever racial discrimination took place within criminal or civil trials.

The court didn't make a holding regarding whether prima facie evidence of racial discrimination in Edmonson's case actually existed, but remanded the case for the trial court to decide that issue.

Dissent

Three justices dissented, arguing that there was no state action (which is required for any Fifth or Fourteenth Amendment violation) because the litigants are private parties. Justice O'Connor wrote the dissent, joined by Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice Scalia. O'Connor wrote that "the Court's final argument is that the exercise of a peremptory challenge by a private litigant is state action because it takes place in a courtroom. [But] the actions of a lawyer in a courtroom do not become those of the government by virtue of their location. This is true even if those actions are based on race." "Constitutional 'liability attaches only to those wrongdoers who carry a badge of authority of [the government] and represent it in some capacity.' Tarkanian, 488 U.S., at 191 [double-internal quotation marks omitted]." Therefore, although "[r]acism is a terrible thing ... [t]he Government is not responsible for a peremptory challenge by a private litigant."

References

  1. 500 U.S. 614, 628
  2. 499 U.S. 400, 410

External links