DocketNumber: S-18-005.
Judges: Stacy
Filed Date: 3/1/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
I agree with the majority's analysis and holding, including its careful application of rational basis scrutiny to analyze the equal protection challenge presented here. I write separately to emphasize something the majority opinion does not do: apply a threshold "similarly situated" test.
That is significant, because many of our prior opinions describe a threshold showing that a litigant must satisfy before a court will engage in constitutional scrutiny of an equal protection claim.
The initial inquiry in an equal protection analysis is whether the challenger is similarly situated to another group for the purpose of the challenged government action. Absent this threshold showing, there is not a **354viable equal protection claim. In other words, dissimilar treatment of dissimilarly situated persons does not violate equal protection rights.2
This court first applied the threshold "similarly situated" test in the 1996 case of State v. Atkins .
[T]he initial inquiry in an equal protection analysis focuses on whether one has demonstrated that one was treated differently than others similarly situated. Absent this threshold showing, one lacks a viable equal protection claim....
If one can make this threshold showing, the inquiry then shifts to whether the legislation at issue can survive judicial scrutiny.9
**355In Atkins , we concluded it was unnecessary to reach the merits of the equal protection claim because we determined, as a threshold matter, that inmates in state prisons were not similarly situated to inmates in county jails.
Although the adoption in Klinger of a threshold similarly situated test has been criticized by judges
The legal conclusion that two groups are not "similarly situated" is not one courts should be making as a threshold matter, as doing so serves only to insulate the challenged classification from any meaningful equal protection review. If two groups are not similarly situated, the proper constitutional analysis will bear that out. The majority opinion illustrates this point.
After reciting the overarching principle that "[t]he Equal Protection Clause requires the government to treat similarly situated people alike" the majority proceeds to analyze the equal protection claim by applying rational basis scrutiny to the age-based classification being challenged here. Only after completing this analysis does the majority conclude that Hibler's equal protection claim lacks merit.
A threshold "similarly situated" inquiry is a poor substitute for careful judicial scrutiny of the fit between the State's interest and the challenged classification. I would like to see this court expressly disapprove of our prior cases that have recognized a threshold "similarly situated" inquiry in equal protection cases. But I am encouraged by the fact that the majority opinion neither cites to nor endorses a threshold "similarly situated" test, and I therefore concur in all respects.
See, State v. Loyuk,
Loyuk , supra note 1, 289 Neb. at 918,
Atkins , supra note 1.
See
See
Atkins , supra note 1,
Klinger v. Department of Corrections,
Atkins , supra note 1,
See, e.g., Women Prisoners of D.C. Correct. v. D.C.,
See, Angie Baker, Note, Leapfrogging over Equal Protection Analysis: The Eighth Circuit Sanctions Separate and Unequal Facilities for Males and Females in Klinger v. Department of Corrections,
See cases cited supra note 1.
See, e.g., In re Interest of Phoenix L. , supra note 1 (parents of Indian children not similarly situated to parents of non-Indian children); Benitez , supra note 1 (those with unsubstantiated reports of child abuse not similarly situated to those with court-substantiated reports of child abuse); Gramercy Hill Enters. , supra note 1 (two nursing homes not similarly situated); Atkins , supra note 1 (county jail inmates and state prison inmates not similarly situated).
Cleburne , supra note 6.