Rebecca S. HOLLENBAUGH and Fred K. Philburn, petitioners,
v.
CARNEGIE FREE LIBRARY et al
No. 78-5519
Supreme Court of the United States
December 11, 1978
On petition for Writ of Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
The petition for writ of certiorari is denied.
Mr. Justice MARSHALL, dissenting.
The Court today lets stand a decision that upholds, after the most minimal scrutiny, an unwarranted governmental intrusion into the privacy of public employees. The ruling below permits a public employer to dictate the sexual conduct and family living arrangements of its employees, without a meaningful showing thаt these private choices have any relation to job performance. Because I believe this decision departs from our precedents and conflicts with the rulings of other courts I would grant certiorari and set the case for argument.
Mr. Justice BRENNAN would grant certiorari.
* Petitioner Rebecca Hollenbaugh served as a librarian and petitioner Fred Philburn as a custodian at the state-maintаined Carnegie Free Library in Connellsville, Pa. The two began seeing each other socially, although Mr. Philburn was married at the time. In 1972, Ms. Hollenbaugh learned that she was pregnant with Mr. Philburn's child, and within a month, Mr. Philburn left his wife and moved in with Ms. Hollenbaugh. Due to her pregnancy, Ms. Hollenbaugh sought and was granted a leave of absence by the respondent Board of Trustees from March to September 1973. While petitioners did not conceal their arrangement, neither did they advertise it.
Responding to some complaints from members of the community, the Board of Trustees attempted to dissuade pеtitioners from continuing to live together. When petitioners refused to alter their arrangement, they were discharged. They subsequently brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 seeking declaratory and injunctive reliеf and monetary damages.
After a nonjury trial, the District Court found that under the minimum rationality test, petitioners' discharge did not violate the Equal Protection Clause. The court further concluded that рetitioners' behavior was not encompassed within the constitutional right to privacy.
II
I have frequently rеiterated my objections to the perpetuation of "the rigid two-tier model [that] still holds sway as the Court's articulated description of the equal protection test." Massachusetts Board of Retirement v. Murgia,
Respondents do not claim to have relied on a legislative proscription of particular sexual conduct. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania reрealed its law prohibiting adultery and fornication in 1972. 1972 Pa.Laws, Act No. 334, § 5. Rather, in the exercise of ad hoc and, it seems, unreviewable discretion, respondents determined to deprive petitioners of their jobs unless "they 'normalized' their relationship through marriage or [unless] Philburn moved out."
Such administrative intermeddling with important personal rights merits more than minimal scrutiny. One such right, cleаrly implicated by petitioners' discharge, is that "of the individual . . . to engage in any of the common occupations of life," Board of Regents v. Roth,
Petitioners' rights to pursue an open rather than а clandestine personal relationship and to rear their child together in this environment closely resemble the other aspects of personal privacy to which we have еxtended constitutional protection. That petitioners' arrangement was unconventional or socially disapproved does not negate the resemblance, cf. Carey v. Population Services International, supra,
Petitioners' choice of living arrangements for themselves and their child is thus sufficiently close to the interests we have previously recognized as fundamental and sufficiently related to the constitutional guarantee of freedom of assoсiation that it should not be relegated to the minimum rationality tier of equal protection analysis, a disposition that seems invariably fatal to the assertion of a constitutional right. See Massachusetts Board of Retirement v. Murgia,
Moreover, respondents' actions here may not withstand even the minimal scrutiny of the rational-basis test. In the District Court's view, the test was satisfied because respondents could have legitimately conсluded that petitioners' relationship impaired their effectiveness on the job and that failure to discharge them would constitute tacit approval of an illicit relationship.
The сourt acknowledged, however, that petitioners were "competent employees who had had no significant problems with their employers until the circumstances that gave rise to their discharges."
Nor does the District Court's opinion make clear how respondents' interest in avoiding the appearance of "tacit approval" of petitioners' relationship provided a rational basis for petitioners' discharge. The court adverted to no evidence suggesting that petitioners' status impaired the library's performance of its public function. Moreover, the State has given some indication of the prevailing moral sensibilities of the community by the repeal in 1972 of the criminal sanctiоns against fornication and adultery.
III
On a record so devoid of evidence in support of petitioners' discharge, the Court of Appeals' holding appears to conflict with deсisions of other courts striking down similar attempts by governmental bodies to regulate the private lives of their employees. In Andrews v. Drew Municipal Separate School Dist.,
I believe that individuals' choices concerning their private lives deserve more than token protection from this Court, regardless of whether we approve of those choices. Accordingly, I dissent from the denial of certiorari.
