This is a companion case to
Cooper v. OSAA,
Plaintiff, Colby Whipple, attended Catlin Gabel, a private school, during the 1977-1978 school year and participated in interscholastic high school athletics at that school. In 1978, plaintiff attended Lakeridge High School and participated in interscholastic high school athletics there. In 1979, plaintiff re-enrolled in the Catlin Gabel School. She was not allowed to participate in interscholastic high school athletics because such activities would be in violation of the OSAA Eligibility Rule for transfer students. On plaintiffs behalf, the Catlin Gabel School requested a hardship exception to the eligibility rules. 2 After a hearing, but without separate notice to plaintiff, OSAA denied the request for a hardship exception. There was no suggestion of proselytizing or recruitment, and plaintiff transferred solely for academic reasons.
Plaintiff brought suit praying for a declaratory judgment holding that she was entitled to participate in interscholastic athletics at the Catlin Gabel School and for an injunction enjoining OSAA from declaring plaintiff ineligible to so participate. The trial court held the transfer rules unconstitutional and granted plaintiff the relief requested. We reverse. 3
The basis of the trial court’s ruling was that the transfer eligibility rules denied plaintiff equal protection
*422
because the rules are drafted too broadly to be reasonably related to the purpose of OSAA Article 20, which is to prevent actual proselytizing or the appearance of proselytizing, in order to promote harmony among member schools and districts. As we said in
Cooper v. OSAA, supra,
we agree that the rule in question sweeps very broadly. However, much as we find application of the rule unfortunate here, an overbreadth argument is inapposite under the Art I § 20 "balancing test” and under traditional federal equal protection analysis. The rule does not have to apply to all parties with "computer-like precision” and its application may produce inequitable results in certain circumstances.
Cooper v. OSAA, supra,
Plaintiff here raises two additional arguments not presented in Cooper: she contends that the transfer rule violates both her procedural and substantive due process rights guaranteed under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. We turn first to the substantive due process claim. The United States Supreme Court has consistently repudiated the use of substantive due process to invalidate state regulation except in the narrow arena of privacy rights and family relations. We find no authority to support the application of substantive due process to condemn OSAA’s action here.
See Roe v. Wade,
We turn now to the procedural argument. The procedural protections afforded by the Fourteenth Amendment are substantial. However, the Due Process Clause does not insulate an individual from every injury suffered at the hands of the state, but only protects from governmental action which deprives the person of an important liberty or property interest without notice and an opportunity to be heard.
See, e.g., Perry v. Sinderman,
Reversed.
Notes
See
text of OSAA Transfer Rule, Article 20-6 cited in
Cooper v. OSAA, supra,
See
OSAA Transfer Rule, Article 20-8-1, 20-8-2, cited in
Cooper v. OSAA, supra,
In view of the fact that plaintiff has graduated from high school, a question was raised at oral argument as to whether this case is moot. We think it is not moot because the questions presented here are "capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
See Sosna v. Iowa,
