U.S. Supreme Court
HODGSON v. MINNESOTA, 497 U.S. 417 (1990)
497 U.S. 417
HODGSON ET AL. v. MINNESOTA ET AL.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
No. 88-1125.
Argued November 29, 1989
Decided June 25, 1990*
[Footnote *] Together with No. 88-1309,
Minnesota et al. v. Hodgson et al., also on certiorari to the same court.
Subdivision 2 of Minn. Stat. 144.343 provides that no abortion shall be
performed on a woman under 18 years of age until at least 48 hours after both of
her parents have been notified. The two-parent notice requirement is mandatory
unless, inter alia, the woman declares that she is a victim of parental abuse or
neglect, in which event notice of her declaration must be given to the proper
authorities. Subdivision 6 provides that, if a court enjoins the enforcement of
subdivision 2, the same two-parent notice requirement is effective unless a
court of competent jurisdiction orders the abortion to proceed without notice
upon proof by the minor that she is "mature and capable of giving informed
consent" or that an abortion without notice to both parents would be in her best
interest. Two days before the statute's effective date, a group consisting of
doctors, clinics, pregnant minors, and the mother of a pregnant minor filed suit
in the District Court, alleging that the statute violated the Due Process and
Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. The court declared the
statute unconstitutional in its entirety, and enjoined its enforcement. The
Court of Appeals, sitting in banc, reversed. Although it rejected the State's
submission that subdivision 2's two-parent notice requirement was constitutional
without any bypass procedure, the court held that subdivision 6 was valid and
that its bypass procedure saved the statute as a whole. The court also rejected
the argument that the 48-hour waiting period imposed a significant burden on the
minor's abortion right.
Held:
The judgment is affirmed.
853 F.2d 1452, affirmed.
JUSTICE STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I,
II, IV, and VII, concluding that subdivision 2 of 144.343 violates the
Constitution insofar as it requires two-parent notification. Pp. 436-444,
450-455.
(a) Since none of this Court's abortion decisions dealing with parental
consent or notification statutes focused on the possible significance of making
the consent or notice applicable to both parents instead of
[497 U.S. 417, 418]
just one, the District Court's extensive and unchallenged findings on the
question are significant. On the basis of extensive trial testimony, the
District Court found, inter alia, that the two-parent notification requirement
had particularly harmful effects on both the minor and the custodial parent when
the parents were divorced or separated, especially in the context of an abusive
or dysfunctional family; that the requirement also had adverse effects in
families in which the minor lives with both parents, particularly where family
violence is a serious problem; that the requirement actually impairs family
communication in many instances, since minors who otherwise would inform one
parent were unwilling to do so when such notification would involve going to
court for a bypass in any event; that few minors can take advantage of the abuse
exception because of the obligation to report the information to the authorities
and the attendant loss of privacy; and that the two-parent requirement did not
further the State's interests in protecting pregnant minors or assuring family
integrity. The court also found that, in many cases, the statutory 48-hour
waiting period was extended to a week or more by scheduling considerations,
thereby increasing the risk associated with the abortion to a statistically
significant degree. Pp. 436-444.
(b) The requirement that both parents be notified, whether or not both wish
to be notified or have assumed responsibility for the upbringing of the child,
does not reasonably further any legitimate state interest. Any such interest in
supporting the authority of a parent, who is presumed to act in the minor's best
interest, to assure that the abortion decision is knowing, intelligent, and
deliberate, would be fully served by a one-parent notification requirement as to
functioning families, where notice to either parent would normally constitute
notice to both. As to the many families in which the parent notified would not
notify the other parent, the State has no legitimate interest in questioning the
first parent's judgment or in presuming him or her incompetent to make decisions
regarding the child's health and welfare. Moreover, as the record demonstrates,
the two-parent requirement actually disserves the state interest in protecting
and assisting the minor with respect to the thousands of dysfunctional families
affected by the statute, where the requirement proved positively harmful. There
is no merit to the argument that the two-parent requirement is justified
because, in the ideal family, the minor should make her decision only after
consultation with both parents, who should naturally be concerned with her
welfare. The State has no legitimate interest in conforming family life to a
state-designed ideal by requiring family members to talk together. Nor can the
State's interest in protecting a parent's interest in shaping a child's values
and lifestyle overcome the liberty interests of a minor acting with the consent
of a single parent or court. The combined force of the [497 U.S. 417, 419] separate interest of one parent and
the minor's privacy interest outweighs the separate interest of the second
parent, and the justification for any rule requiring parental involvement in the
abortion decision rests entirely on the best interests of the child. The fact
that the two-parent requirement is virtually an oddity among state and federal
consent provisions governing childrens' health, welfare, and education further
demonstrates its unreasonableness and the ease with which the State can adopt
less burdensome means to protect the minor's welfare. Pp. 450-455.
JUSTICE STEVENS, joined by JUSTICE O'CONNOR, concluded in Parts V and VI
that:
1. Three separate but related interests are relevant to the constitutionality
of the 48-hour waiting period and the two-parent notification requirement.
First, the State has a strong and legitimate interest in the welfare of its
young citizens, whose immaturity, inexperience, and lack of judgment may
sometimes impair their ability to exercise their rights wisely. That interest
justifies a state-imposed requirement that the minor notify and consult with a
parent before terminating her pregnancy. See, e.g., Ohio v. Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, post, at 510-511. Second, parents have an interest in
controlling their childrens' education and upbringing, and a natural parent's
stake in the relationship with a child may rise to the level of a protected
liberty interest if the parent has demonstrated his commitment by assuming
personal, financial, or custodial responsibility for the child. Third, the
family has a privacy interest in its childrens' upbringing and education which
is constitutionally protected against undue state interference. When government
intrudes on the family's choices, the governmental interests advanced and the
extent to which they are served by the challenged regulation must be carefully
examined. Pp. 444-448.
2. To the extent that subdivision 2 of the state statute requires that a
minor wait 48 hours after notifying a single parent of her intention to obtain
an abortion, it reasonably furthers the legitimate state interest in ensuring
that the minor's decision is knowing and intelligent. The State may properly
enact laws designed to aid a parent who has assumed "primary responsibility" for
a minor's wellbeing in discharging that responsibility, and the 48-hour delay
provides the parent the opportunity to consult with his or her spouse and a
family physician, to inquire into the competency of the abortion doctor, and to
discuss the decision's religious and moral implications with the minor and
provide needed guidance and counsel as to how the decision will affect her
future. The delay imposes only a minimal burden on the minor's rights. The
statute does not impose any period of delay if the parents or a court, acting in
loco parentis, provide consent to the procedure. Moreover, the record reveals
that [497 U.S. 417, 420] the waiting
period may run concurrently with the time necessary to make an appointment for
the abortion. Pp. 448-449.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR concluded that subdivision 6 of the state statute -
two-parent notification plus judicial bypass - passes constitutional muster
because the interference with the family's internal operation required by
subdivision 2's two-parent notice requirement simply does not exist where the
minor can avoid notifying one or both parents by using the bypass procedure.
See, e.g., Planned Parenthood of Central Mo. v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52, 90-91. P.
461.
JUSTICE KENNEDY, joined by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE WHITE, and JUSTICE
SCALIA, concluded:
1. The state statute's 48-hour waiting period is necessary to enable notified
parents to consult with their daughter or her physician, if they so wish,
results in little or no delay, and is therefore constitutional. Pp. 496-497.
2. Subdivision 6 of the statute - which requires two-parent notification
unless the pregnant minor obtains a judicial bypass - is constitutional. By
creating a judicial mechanism to identify, and exempt from the strictures of the
law, those cases in which the minor is mature or in which parental notification
is not in her best interest, subdivision 6 precisely addresses the concern
underlying the Court's invalidation of subdivision 2: the possibility that, in
some cases, two-parent notification would not work to the benefit of minors or
their parents. In providing for the bypass, moreover, Minnesota has simply
attempted to fit its legislation into the framework supplied by this Court's
previous cases, particularly Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.S. 622, which stands for
the proposition that a two-parent consent law is constitutional if it provides
for a sufficient judicial bypass alternative. See id., at 643 (opinion of
Powell, J.); id., at 656-657 (WHITE, J., dissenting). The conclusion that
subdivision 6 must be sustained is compelled not only by Bellotti but also by
H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U.S. 398, in which the Court held that a two-parent notice
statute without a bypass was constitutional as applied to immature minors whose
best interests would be served by notice. If that is the case, but if such a law
is not constitutional as applied to minors who are mature or whose best
interests are not so served, a judicial bypass is an expeditious and efficient
means by which to separate the applications of the law which are constitutional
from those which are not. Pp. 497-501.
STEVENS, J., announced the judgment of the Court and delivered the opinion of
the Court with respect to Parts I, II, IV, and VII, in which BRENNAN, MARSHALL,
BLACKMUN, and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined, an opinion with respect to Part III, in
which BRENNAN, J., joined, an opinion with [497
U.S. 417, 421] respect to Parts V and VI, in which O'CONNOR, J., joined,
and a dissenting opinion with respect to Part VIII. O'CONNOR, J., filed an
opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, post, p. 458.
MARSHALL, J., filed an opinion concurring in part, concurring in the judgment in
part, and dissenting in part, in which BRENNAN and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined, post,
p. 461. SCALIA, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment in part and
dissenting in part, post, p. 479. KENNEDY, J., filed an opinion concurring in
the judgment in part and dissenting in part, in which REHNQUIST, C.J., and WHITE
and SCALIA, JJ., joined, post, p. 480.
Janet Benshoof argued the cause for petitioners in No. 88-1125 and
respondents in No. 88-1309. With her on the briefs were Rachel N. Pine, Lynn M.
Paltrow, Kathryn Kolbert, John A. Powell, William Z. Pentelovitch, and Rebecca
A. Palmer.
John R. Tunheim, Chief Deputy Attorney General of Minnesota, Argued the cause
for respondents in No. 88-1125 and petitioners in No. 88-1309. With him on the
briefs were Hubert H. Humphrey III, Attorney General, Catharine F. Haukedahl,
Solicitor General, Kenneth E. Raschke, Jr., Assistant Attorney General, and John
B. Galus, Special Assistant Attorney General.Fn
Fn [497 U.S. 417, 421] Briefs of amici
curiae urging reversal were filed for the American Psychological Association et
al. by Donald N. Bersoff and Mark D. Schneider; and for the Anti-Defamation
League of B'Nai B'rith et al. by Kenneth J. Bialkin, Peggy L. Kerr, Meyer
Eisenberg, Justin J. Finger, Jeffrey P. Sinensky, Steven M. Freeman, Jill L.
Kahn, and Livia D. Thompson.
Clarke D. Forsythe and Kent Masterson Brown filed a brief for the Association
of American Physicians and Surgeons as amicus curiae urging affirmance.
Briefs of amici curiae were filed for the United States by Solicitor General
Starr, Acting Assistant Attorney General Schiffer, Deputy Solicitor General
Merrill, Paul J. Larkin, Jr., Stephen J. Marzen, and Steven R. Valentine; for
the State of Louisiana et al. by William J. Guste, Jr., Attorney General of
Louisiana, Jenifer Schaye and Meredith H. Lieux, Assistant Attorneys General, Jo
Ann P. Levert, Thomas A. Rayner, Robert K. Corbin, Attorney General of Arizona,
William L. Webster, Attorney General of Missouri, and Ernest D. Preate, Jr.,
Attorney General of Pennsylvania; for 274 Organizations in Support of Roe v.
Wade by Kathleen [497 U.S. 417, 422] M.
Sullivan, Susan R. Estrich, Barbara Jordan, and Estelle H. Rogers; for the
American Academy of Medical Ethics by Joseph W. Dellapenna; for the American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists et al. by Carter G. Phillips,
Elizabeth H. Esty, Ann E. Allen, Stephan E. Lawton, Laurie R. Rockett, and Joel
I. Klein; for American Family Association, Inc., by Peggy M. Coleman; for the
Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights et al. by Nancy J. Gannon and
Thomas W. Strahan; for the Center for Population Options et al. by John H. Henn;
for the Elliot Institute for Social Sciences Research et al. Stephen R.
Kaufmann; for Focus on the Family et al. by H. Robert Showers; for the Knights
of Columbus by Brendan V. Sullivan, Jr., Kevin J. Hasson, and Carl A. Anderson;
for the Luthern Church-Missouri Synod by Philip E. Draheim; for the National
Right to Life Committee, Inc., by James Bopp, Jr.; for the United States
Catholic Conference by Mark E. Chopko; for Representative Christopher H. Smith
et al. by Mr. Bopp; for Members of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania by Maura K. Quinlin and Philip J. Murren; for 13 Individual Members
of the Panel in Adolescent Pregnancy and Childbearing or the Committee on Child
Development Research and Public Policy by Hannah E. M. Lieberman and Pamela H.
Anderson; and for James Joseph Lynch, Jr., pro se. [497 U.S. 417, 422]
JUSTICE STEVENS announced the judgment of the Court and delivered the opinion
of the Court with respect to Parts I, II, IV, and VII, an opinion with respect
to Part III in which JUSTICE BRENNAN joins, an opinion with respect to Parts V
and VI in which JUSTICE O'CONNOR joins, and a dissenting opinion with respect to
Part VIII.
A Minnesota statute, Minn. Stat. 144.343(2)-(7) (1988), provides, with
certain exceptions, that no abortion shall be performed on a woman under 18
years of age until at least 48 hours after both of her parents have been
notified. In subdivisions 2-4 of the statute, the notice is mandatory unless (1)
the attending physician certifies that an immediate abortion is necessary to
prevent the woman's death and there is insufficient time to provide the required
notice; (2) both of her parents have consented in writing; or (3) the woman
declares that she is a victim of parental abuse or neglect, in which event
notice of her declaration must be given to the proper authorities. The United
States Court of Appeals for the [497 U.S. 417,
423] Eighth Circuit, sitting en banc, unanimously held this provision
unconstitutional. In No. 88-1309, we granted the State's petition to review that
holding. Subdivision 6 of the same statute provides that, if a court enjoins the
enforcement of subdivision 2, the same notice requirement shall be effective
unless the pregnant woman obtains a court order permitting the abortion to
proceed. By a vote of 7-3, the Court of Appeals upheld the constitutionality of
subdivision 6. In No. 88-1125, we granted the plaintiffs' petition to review
that holding.
For reasons that follow, we now conclude that the requirement of notice to
both of the pregnant minor's parents is not reasonably related to legitimate
state interests, and that subdivision 2 is unconstitutional. A different
majority of the Court, for reasons stated in separate opinions, concludes that
subdivision 6 is constitutional. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of
Appeals in its entirety is affirmed.
I
The parental notice statute was enacted in 1981 as an
amendment to the Minors' Consent to Health Services Act. The earlier statute,
which remains in effect as subdivision 1 of 144.343 and as 144.346, had modified
the common law requirement of parental consent for any medical procedure
performed on minors. It authorized "[a]ny minor" to give effective consent
without any parental involvement for the treatment of "pregnancy and conditions
associated therewith, venereal disease, alcohol and other drug abuse."1 [497 U.S. 417, 424] The statute, unlike others
of its age,2 applied to abortion services.
The 1981 amendment qualified the authority of an "unemancipated minor"3 to give effective consent to an abortion by
requiring that either her physician or an agent notify "the parent" personally
or by certified mail at least 48 hours before the procedure is performed.4 The term "parent" is defined in subdivision 3
to mean "both parents of the pregnant woman if they are both living." No
exception is made for [497 U.S. 417, 425]
a divorced parent, a noncustodial parent, or a biological parent who never
married or lived with the pregnant woman's mother.5 The statute does provide however, that if only one parent is
living, or "if the second one cannot be located through reasonably diligent
effort," notice to one parent is [497 U.S. 417,
426] sufficient.6
It also makes exceptions for cases in which emergency treatment prior to notice
"is necessary to prevent the woman's death," both parents have already given
their consent in writing, or the proper authorities are advised that the minor
is a victim of sexual or physical abuse.7 The
statute subjects a person performing an abortion in violation of its terms to
criminal sanctions and to civil liability in an action brought by any person
"wrongfully denied notification."8 [497 U.S. 417, 427]
Subdivision 6 authorizes a judicial bypass of the two-parent notice
requirement if subdivision 2 is ever "temporarily or permanently" enjoined by
judicial order. If the pregnant minor can convince "any judge of a court of
competent jurisdiction" that she is "mature and capable of giving informed
consent to the proposed abortion," or that an abortion without notice to both
parents would be in her best interest, the court can authorize the physician to
proceed without notice. The statute provides that the bypass procedure shall be
confidential, that it shall be expedited, that the minor has a right to
court-appointed counsel, and that she shall be afforded free access to the court
"24 hours a day, seven days a week." An order denying an abortion can be
appealed on an expedited basis, but an order authorizing an abortion without
notification is not subject to appeal.9 [497 U.S. 417, 428]
The statute contains a severability provision, but it does not include a
statement of its purposes. The Minnesota Attorney General has advised us that
those purposes are apparent from the statutory text and that they "include the
recognition and fostering of parent-child relationships, promoting counsel to a
child in a difficult and traumatic choice, and providing for notice to those who
are naturally most concerned for the child's welfare."10
The District Court found that the primary purpose of the legislation was to
protect the well-being of minors by encouraging them to discuss with their
parents the decision whether to terminate their pregnancies.11 It also found that the legislature was motivated by a
[497 U.S. 417, 429] desire to deter and dissuade minors from choosing to
terminate their pregnancies.12 The Attorney General, however, disclaims any reliance on this
purpose.13
II
This litigation was commenced on July 30, 1981, two days
before the effective date of the parental notification statute. The plaintiffs
include two Minnesota doctors who specialize in obstetrics and gynecology, four
clinics providing abortion and contraceptive services in metropolitan areas in
Minnesota, six pregnant minors representing a class of pregnant minors, and the
mother of a pregnant minor. Plaintiffs alleged that the statute violated the Due
Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment and various
provisions of the Minnesota Constitution.
Based on the allegations in their verified complaint, the District Court
entered a temporary restraining order enjoining
[497 U.S. 417, 430]
the enforcement of subdivision 2 of the statute. After a hearing, the court
entered a preliminary injunction which still remains in effect. App. 31. The
District Court refused, however, to rule on the validity of the judicial bypass
procedure in advance of trial.14
In 1986, after a 5-week trial, the District Court concluded that both the
two-parent notification requirement and the 48-hour waiting period were invalid.
It further concluded that the definition of the term "parent," which is carried
over into the notification requirement, was not severable from the remainder of
the statute. The court declared the entire statute unconstitutional and enjoined
the defendants from enforcing it.
A three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed. The court first held
that a compulsory notification requirement is invalid if it does not provide the
pregnant minor with the option of an alternative court procedure in which she
can demonstrate either her maturity or that performance of an abortion without
notification would be in her best interests. App. to Pet. for Cert. in No.
88-1125, p. 62a. Second, relying heavily on the findings of the District Court
concerning the impact of a two-parent notice requirement on families in which
the parents are divorced, separated, or unmarried, the panel also concluded that
the unconstitutional notification requirement could not be saved by the judicial
bypass. The court reasoned that a mature minor and her custodial parent are in a
better position than a court to determine whether notifying the noncustodial
parent would be in the child's best interests and that they should not be forced
to submit to a "Hobson's choice" between an unconstitutional notice requirement
and a burdensome court bypass.15
The panel [497 U.S. 417, 431] further held
that the two-parent notice requirement was not severable.16
The panel opinion was vacated, and the Court of Appeals reheard the case en
banc. 853 F.2d 1452 (CA8 1988). The court unanimously and summarily rejected the
State's submission that the two-parent notice requirement was constitutional
without any bypass procedure. Id., at 1456-1457. The majority concluded,
however, that subdivision 6 of the statute was valid. It agreed with the
District Court that the development of a full factual record may demonstrate
that a facially valid statute is "unconstitutional in operation," id., at 1459,
and that "the detailed factual findings concerning the general difficulties of
obtaining an abortion in Minnesota and the trauma of the bypass procedure,
compared to its effectiveness, raise considerable questions about the [497 U.S. 417, 432] practical wisdom of this statute."
Ibid. In the majority's opinion, however, those questions were for the
legislature to consider because the statute served valid state interests: the
interest in "encouraging an unmarried pregnant minor to seek the help and advice
of her parents in making the very important decision whether or not to bear a
child,"17 as well as the independent interest of the parents in the
upbringing of their children.18
After noting that the State did not challenge the District Court's findings,
id., at 1462, the court concluded that these findings placed undue emphasis on
one-parent and no-parent households. For even though the two-parent notice
requirement may not further the interests of the pregnant minor in such cases,
the rights of "best-interest" and mature minors were nevertheless protected by
the bypass procedure. More importantly, "as applied to all pregnant minors,
regardless of their family circumstances, the district court did not consider
whether parental and family interests (as distinguished from the interests of
the minor alone) justified the two-parent notice requirement. Id., at 1463. The
court wrote:
"The district court enjoined the entire statute because of the impact of
the two-parent notice requirement primarily upon one group of pregnant
minors, without considering the effect of the bypass or the parental and
family interests which have been recognized by the Supreme Court. In
concentrating upon the impact of the statute on the pregnant minor not
living with both parents, and on the mature or non best-interest pregnant
[497 U.S. 417, 433] minor, the district court gave only limited
consideration to the 50% or more pregnant minors who live with both parents
and to pregnant minors who are immature and whose best interests may require
parental involvement. The district court's determination that an undue
burden on the one group renders the statute unconstitutional for all is
contrary to the Supreme Court's decision that a notice-consent/bypass
procedure plainly serves important state interests and is narrowly drawn to
protect only those interests. . . . Considering the statute as a whole and
as applied to all pregnant minors, the two-parent notice requirement does
not unconstitutionally burden the minor's abortion right." Id., at 1464-1465
(citation omitted).
The Court of Appeals also rejected the argument that the 48-hour waiting
period imposed a significant burden on the minor's abortion right, finding that
the waiting period could run concurrently with the scheduling of an appointment
for the procedure. Accordingly, the court reversed the judgment of the District
Court without reaching the question of severability.19
In dissent, two members of the court criticized the majority for ignoring
"the evidence amassed in a five-week trial," for relying on the judicial bypass
procedure "to uphold an unconstitutional two-parent notification requirement,"
and for creating "a new right, apparently of constitutional dimension, for
noncustodial parents to receive notice of their minor children's activities."
Id., at 1466. One of the dissenters joined a third dissenter in expressing the
opinion that "a single-parent notification requirement would withstand
constitutional challenge." Id., at 1472. We granted certiorari, 492 U.S. 917
(1989). [497 U.S. 417, 434]
III
There is a natural difference between men and women: only
women have the capacity to bear children. A woman's decision to beget or to bear
a child is a component of her liberty that is protected by the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. See Harris v. McRae, 448
U.S. 297, 316-318 (1980); Carey v. Population Services International, 431 U.S.
678, 685, 687 (1977); Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur, 414 U.S. 632,
639-640 (1974); Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 152-153 (1973); id., at 168-170
(Stewart, J., concurring); Eisenstadt v. Baird, 405 U.S. 438, 453 (1972);
Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 502-503 (1965) (WHITE, J., concurring in
judgment). That Clause, as interpreted in those cases, protects the woman's
right to make such decisions independently and privately, see Whalen v. Roe, 429
U.S. 589, 598-600, and n. 23 (1977), free of unwarranted governmental intrusion.
"Moreover, the potentially severe detriment facing a pregnant woman, see
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S., at 153, is not mitigated by her minority. Indeed,
considering her probable education, employment skills, financial resources,
and emotional maturity, unwanted motherhood may be exceptionally burdensome
for a minor. In addition, the fact of having a child brings with it adult
legal responsibility, for parenthood, like attainment of the age of
majority, is one of the traditional criteria for the termination of the
legal disabilities of minority. In sum, there are few situations in which
denying a minor the right to make an important decision will have
consequences so grave and indelible." Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.S. 622, 642
(1979) (Bellotti II) (opinion of Powell, J.).
As we stated in Planned Parenthood of Central Mo. v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52,
74 (1976), the right to make this decision "do[es] not mature and come into
being magically only when [497 U.S. 417, 435]
one attains the state-defined age of majority." Thus, the constitutional
protection against unjustified state intrusion into the process of deciding
whether or not to bear a child extends to pregnant minors as well as adult
women.
In cases involving abortion, as in cases involving the right to travel or the
right to marry, the identification of the constitutionally protected interest is
merely the beginning of the analysis. State regulation of travel and of marriage
is obviously permissible even though a State may not categorically exclude
nonresidents from its borders, Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U.S. 618, 631 (1969), or
deny prisoners the right to marry, Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78, 94-99 (1987).
But the regulation of constitutionally protected decisions, such as where a
person shall reside or whom he or she shall marry, must be predicated on
legitimate state concerns other than disagreement with the choice the individual
has made. Cf. Turner v. Safley, supra; Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1, 12
(1967). In the abortion area, a State may have no obligation to spend its own
money, or use its own facilities, to subsidize nontherapeutic abortions for
minors or adults. See, e.g., Maher v. Roe, 432 U.S. 464 (1977); cf. Webster v.
Reproductive Health Services, 492 U.S. 490, 508-511 (1989); id., at 523-524
(O'CONNOR, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment). A State's value
judgment favoring childbirth over abortion may provide adequate support for
decisions involving such allocation of public funds, but not for simply
substituting a state decision for an individual decision that a woman has a
right to make for herself. Otherwise, the interest in liberty protected by the
Due Process Clause would be a nullity. A state policy favoring childbirth over
abortion is not, in itself, a sufficient justification for overriding the
woman's decision or for placing "obstacles - absolute or otherwise - in the
pregnant woman's path to an abortion." Maher, 432 U.S., at 474; see also Harris
v. McRae, 448 U.S., at 315-316. [497 U.S. 417,
436]
In these cases, the State of Minnesota does not rest its defense of this
statute on any such value judgment. Indeed, it affirmatively disavows that state
interest as a basis for upholding this law.20
Moreover, it is clear that the state judges who have interpreted the statute in
over 3,000 decisions implementing its bypass procedures have found no
legislative intent to disfavor the decision to terminate a pregnancy. On the
contrary, in all but a handful of cases, they have approved such decisions.21 Because the Minnesota statute unquestionably places obstacles
in the pregnant minor's path to an abortion, the State has the burden of
establishing its constitutionality. Under any analysis, the Minnesota statute
cannot be sustained if the obstacles it imposes are not reasonably related to
legitimate state interests. Cf. Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S., at 97; Carey v.
Population Services International, 431 U.S., at 704 (opinion of Powell, J.); Doe
v. Bolton, 410 U.S. 179, 194-195 (1973).
IV
The Court has considered the constitutionality of statutes
providing for parental consent or parental notification in six abortion cases
decided during the last 14 years.22
Although the Massachusetts statute reviewed in Bellotti v. Baird, 428 U.S. 132
(1976) (Bellotti I), and Bellotti II required the consent of both parents, and
the Utah statute reviewed in H.L. [497 U.S. 417,
437] v. Matheson, 450 U.S. 398 (1981), required notice to "the parents,"23 none of the opinions in any of those cases focused on the
possible significance of making the consent or the notice requirement applicable
to both parents instead of just one. In contrast, the arguments in these cases,
as well as the extensive findings of the District Court, are directed primarily
at that distinction. It is therefore appropriate to summarize these findings
before addressing the constitutionality of the 48-hour waiting period or the
two-parent notification requirement, particularly since none of the findings has
been challenged in either this Court or the Court of Appeals.
Approximately one out of every two marriages ends in divorce. 648 F.Supp.
756, 768 (Minn. 1986). Unrebutted evidence indicates that only 50% of minors in
the State of Minnesota reside with both biological parents. Ibid.; App. 125-126.
This conclusion is substantially corroborated by a study indicating that 9% of
the minors in Minnesota live with neither parent and 33% live with only one
parent. 648 F.Supp. at 768.24 [497 U.S. 417, 438]
The District Court found - on the basis of extensive testimony at trial -
that the two-parent notification requirement had particularly harmful effects on
both the minor and the custodial parent when the parents were divorced or
separated. Relations between the minor and absent parent were not reestablished
as a result of the forced notification, thereby often producing disappointment
in the minor "when an anticipated reestablishment of her relationship with the
absent parent d[id] not occur." Id., at 769. Moreover, "[t]he reaction of the
custodial parent to the requirement of forced notification is often one of
anger, resentment and frustration at the intrusion of the absent parent," ibid.,
and fear that notification will threaten the custody rights of the parent or
otherwise promote intra-family violence. Tragically, those fears were often
realized:
"Involuntary involvement of the second biological parent is especially
detrimental when the minor comes from an abusive, dysfunctional family.
Notification of the minor's pregnancy and abortion decision can provoke
violence, even where the parents are divorced or separated. Studies have
shown that violence and harassment may continue well beyond the divorce,
especially when children are involved.
". . . Furthermore, a mother's perception in a dysfunctional family that
there will be violence if the father learns of the daughter's pregnancy is
likely to be an accurate perception." Id., at 769.
The District Court further found:
"Twenty to twenty-five percent of the minors who go to court either are
accompanied by one parent who knows and consents to the abortion or have
already told one parent of their intent to terminate their pregnancy. The
vast majority of these voluntarily informed parents
[497 U.S. 417, 439] are women who are divorced or separated from
spouses whom they have not seen in years. Going to court to avoid notifying
the other parent burdens the privacy of both the minor and the accompanying
parent. The custodial parents are angry that their consent is not
sufficient, and fear that notification will bring the absent parent back
into the family in an intrusive and abusive way." Ibid.
The District Court also found that the two-parent notification requirement
had adverse effects in families in which the minor lives with both parents.
These effects were particularly pronounced in the distressingly large number of
cases in which family violence is a serious problem. The court found that many
minors in Minnesota "live in fear of violence by family members" and "are, in
fact, victims of rape, incest, neglect and violence."25
The District Court found that few minors can take advantage of the exception for
a minor who declares that she is a victim of sexual or physical abuse because of
the obligation to report the information to the authorities and the attendant
loss of privacy. See Findings 46 and 47, [497
U.S. 417, 440] 648 F.Supp. at 764.26 This concern about family violence helps to
explain why the District Court found that in many instances the requirement that
both parents be notified actually impairs family communication. Minors who
otherwise would inform one parent were unwilling to do so when such notification
likely would also involve the parent in the torturous ordeal of explaining to a
court why the second parent should not be notified. The court found:
"Minors who ordinarily would notify one parent may be dissuaded from doing
so by the two-parent requirement. A minor who must go to court for
authorization in any event may elect not to tell either parent. In these
instances, the requirement that minors notify both biological parents
actually reduces parent-child communication." Id., at 769.27
The great majority of bypass petitions are filed in the three metropolitan
counties in Minnesota, where courts schedule bypass hearings on a regular basis
and have in place procedures for hearing emergency petitions. Id., at 762.
Courts in the nonmetropolitan areas are acquainted with the statute and, for the
most part, apply it conscientiously, but a number of counties are served by
judges who are unwilling to hear bypass petitions. Id., at 763. Aside from the
unavoidable [497 U.S. 417, 441]
notification of court officials, the confidentiality of minors has been
maintained. Ibid.
During the period between August 1, 1981, and March 1, 1986, 3,573 judicial
bypass petitions were filed in Minnesota courts. All but 15 were granted.28 The judges who adjudicated over 90% of these petitions
testified; none of them identified any positive effects of the law.29 The court experience produced fear, tension, anxiety, and
shame among minors, [497 U.S. 417, 442]
causing some who were mature, and some whose best interests would have been
served by an abortion, to "forgo the bypass option and either notify their
parents or carry to term." Finding 44, 648 F.Supp. at 763. Among parents who
supported their daughters in the bypass proceedings, the court experience evoked
similar reactions.30
Scheduling petitions in the Minnesota court typically required minors to wait
only two or three days for hearings. The District Court found, however, that the
statutory waiting period of 48 hours was frequently compounded by a number of
other factors that "commonly" created a delay of 72 hours, id., at 764-765, and,
"in many cases" a delay of a week or more in effecting a decision to terminate a
pregnancy. Id., at 765. A delay of that magnitude increased the medical risk
associated with the abortion procedure to "a statistically significant degree."
Finding 43, 648 F.Supp. at 763. While recognizing that a mandatory delay
following the notice to a minor's parent served the State's interest in
protecting pregnant minors, the court found that that interest could be served
by a shorter waiting period. Id., at 779-780.
At least 37 witnesses testified to the issue whether the statute furthered
the State's interest in protecting pregnant minors. Only two witnesses testified
that a two-parent notification statute did minors more good than harm; neither
of these witnesses had direct experience with the Minnesota statute. Summarizing
its findings on the question whether the statute as a whole furthered the
State's interests, the District Court wrote:
"Of the remaining witnesses who spoke to the issue whether Minn. Stat.
144.343 effectuates the State's interest in protecting pregnant minors, all
but four of [497 U.S. 417, 443] these are personally
involved in the statute's implementation in Minnesota. They are judges,
public defenders, guardians ad litem, and clinic counselors. None of these
witnesses testified that the statute has a beneficial effect upon the minors
whom it affects. Some testified the law has a negligible effect upon
intra-family communication and upon the minors' decisionmaking process.
Others testified the statute has a deleterious effect on the wellbeing of
the minors to whom it applies because it increases the stress attendant to
the abortion decision without creating any corresponding benefit. Thus five
weeks of trial have produced no factual basis upon which this court can find
that Minn. Stat. 144.343(2)-(7) on the whole furthers in any meaningful way
the state's interest in protecting pregnant minors or assuring family
integrity." Id., at 775.
Focusing specifically on the statutory requirement that both parents be
notified, the District Court concluded:
"The court finds that this requirement places a significant burden upon
pregnant minors who do not live with both parents. Particularly in these
cases, notification of an abusive, or even a disinterested, absent parent
has the effect of reintroducing that parent's disruptive or unhelpful
participation into the family at a time of acute stress. Similarly, the
two-parent notification requirement places a significant obstacle in the
path of minors in two-parent homes who voluntarily have consulted with one
parent but not with the other out of fear of psychological, sexual, or
physical abuse toward either the minor or the notified parent. In either
case, the alternative of going to court to seek authorization to proceed
without notifying the second parent introduces a traumatic distraction into
her relationship with the parent whom the minor has notified. The anxiety
attending either option tends to interfere with and burden the parent-child [497 U.S. 417, 444] communication the minor voluntarily
initiated with the custodial parent.
. . . . .
". . . Indeed, 20 to 25% of minors seeking judicial authorization to
proceed with an abortion without parental notification are accompanied to
court by one parent, or at least have obtained the approval of one parent.
In these cases, the necessity either to notify the second parent despite the
agreement of both the minor and the notified parent that such notification
is undesirable, or to obtain a judicial waiver of the notification
requirement, distracts the minor and her parent and disrupts their
communication. Thus, the need to notify the second parent or to make a
burdensome court appearance actively interferes with the parent-child
communication voluntarily initiated by the child, communication assertedly
at the heart of the State's purpose in requiring notification of both
parents. In these cases, requiring notification of both parents
affirmatively discourages parent-child communication." Id., at 777-778.
V
Three separate but related interests - the interest in the
welfare of the pregnant minor, the interest of the parents, and the interest of
the family unit - are relevant to our consideration of the constitutionality of
the 48-hour waiting period and the two-parent notification requirement.
The State has a strong and legitimate interest in the welfare of its young
citizens, whose immaturity, inexperience, and lack of judgment may sometimes
impair their ability to exercise their rights wisely. See Bellotti II, 443 U.S.,
at 634-639 (opinion of Powell, J.); Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158,
166-167 (1944).31
That interest, which justifies [497 U.S. 417,
445]
state-imposed requirements that a minor obtain his or her parent's consent
before undergoing an operation, marrying, or entering military service, see
Parham v. J.R., 442 U.S. 584, 603-604 (1979); Planned Parenthood of Central Mo.
v. Danforth, 428 U.S., at 95 (WHITE, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
part); id., at 102-103 (opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part),
extends also to the minor's decision to terminate her pregnancy. Although the
Court has held that parents may not exercise "an absolute, and possibly
arbitrary, veto" over that decision, Danforth, 428 U.S., at 74, it has never
challenged a State's reasonable judgment that the decision should be made after
notification to and consultation with a parent. See Ohio v. Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, post, at 510-511; Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive
Health, Inc., 462 U.S. 416, 428, n. 10, 439 (1983); H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U.S.,
at 409-410; Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 640-641 (opinion of Powell, J.); Danforth,
428 U.S., at 75. As Justice Stewart, joined by Justice Powell, pointed out in
his concurrence in Danforth:
"There can be little doubt that the State furthers a constitutionally
permissible end by encouraging an unmarried pregnant minor to seek the help
and advice of her parents in making the very important decision whether or
not to bear a child." Id., at 91.
Parents have an interest in controlling the education and upbringing of their
children, but that interest is "a counterpart of the responsibilities they have
assumed." Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248, 257 (1983); see also Parham, 442
U.S., at 602 (citing 1 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *447; [497 U.S. 417, 446] 2 J. Kent, Commentaries on American
Law *190); Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510, 535 (1925). The fact of
biological parentage generally offers a person only "an opportunity . . . to
develop a relationship with his offspring." Lehr, 463 U.S., at 262; see also
Caban v. Mohammed, 441 U.S. 380, 397 (1979) (Stewart, J., dissenting). But the
demonstration of commitment to the child through the assumption of personal,
financial, or custodial responsibility may give the natural parent a stake in
the relationship with the child rising to the level of a liberty interest. See
Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 651 (1972); Lehr, 463 U.S., at 261; Michael
H. v. Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, 157-160 (1989) (WHITE, J., dissenting); cf.
Caban, 441 U.S., at 393, n. 14. But see Michael H., 491 U.S., at 123-127
(plurality opinion).
While the State has a legitimate interest in the creation and dissolution of
the marriage contract, see Sosna v. Iowa, 419 U.S. 393, 404 (1975); Maynard v.
Hill, 125 U.S. 190, 205 (1888), the family has a privacy interest in the
upbringing and education of children and the intimacies of the marital
relationship which is protected by the Constitution against undue state
interference. See Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 233-234 (1972); Griswold v.
Connecticut, 381 U.S., at 495-496 (Goldberg, J., concurring); Poe v. Ullman, 367
U.S. 497, 551-552 (1961) (Harlan, J., dissenting); Gilbert v. Minnesota, 254
U.S. 325, 335-336 (1920) (Brandeis, J., dissenting); see also Michael H., 491
U.S., at 132 (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in part); Roberts v. United States
Jaycees, 468 U.S. 609, 618-620 (1984); Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur,
414 U.S. at, 639-640. The family may assign one parent to guide the children's
education and the other to look after their health.32
"The statist notion that governmental power should supersede parental authority
in [497 U.S. 417, 447] all cases because some
parents abuse and neglect children is repugnant to American tradition." Parham,
442 U.S., at 603. We have long held that there exists a "private realm of family
life which the state cannot enter." Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 U.S., at 166.
Thus, when the government intrudes on choices concerning the arrangement of the
household, this Court has carefully examined the "governmental interests
advanced and the extent to which they are served by the challenged regulation."
Moore v. East Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494, 499 (1977) (plurality opinion); id., at
507, 510-511 (BRENNAN, J., concurring); see also Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S.
390, 399-400 (1923).
A natural parent who has demonstrated sufficient commitment to his or her
children is thereafter entitled to raise the children free from undue state
interference. As JUSTICE WHITE explained in his opinion for the Court in Stanley
v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645 (1972):
"The Court has frequently emphasized the importance of the family. The
rights to conceive and to raise one's children have been deemed `essential,'
Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 399 (1923), `basic civil rights of man,'
Skinner v. Oklahoma, 316 U.S. 535, 541 (1942), and `[r]ights far more
precious . . . than property rights,' May v. Anderson, 345 U.S. 528, 533
(1953). It is cardinal with us that the custody, care and nurture of the
child reside first in the parents, whose primary function and freedom
include preparation for obligations the state can neither supply nor
hinder.' Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158, 166 (1944). The integrity of
the family unit has found protection in the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, Meyer v. Nebraska, supra, at 399, the Equal Protection
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, Skinner v. Oklahoma, supra, and the
Ninth Amendment, Griswold v. [497 U.S. 417,
448]
Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 496 (1965) (Goldberg, J., concurring)." Id., at
651.33
VI
We think it is clear that a requirement that a minor wait 48
hours after notifying a single parent of her intention to get an abortion would
reasonably further the legitimate state interest in ensuring that the minor's
decision is knowing and intelligent. We have held that when a parent or another
person has assumed "primary responsibility" for a minor's wellbeing, the State
may properly enact "laws designed to aid discharge of that responsibility."
Ginsberg v. New York, 390 U.S. 629, 639 (1968). To the extent that subdivision 2
of the Minnesota statute requires notification of only one parent, it does just
that. The brief waiting period provides the parent the opportunity to consult
with his or her spouse and a family physician, and it permits the parent to
inquire into the competency of the doctor performing the abortion, discuss the
religious or moral implications of the abortion decision, and provide the
daughter needed guidance and counsel in [497 U.S.
417, 449]
evaluating the impact of the decision on her future. See Zbaraz v. Hartigan, 763
F.2d 1532, 1552 (CA7 1985) (Coffey, J., dissenting), aff'd by an equally divided
Court, 484 U.S. 171 (1987).
The 48-hour delay imposes only a minimal burden on the right of the minor to
decide whether or not to terminate her pregnancy. Although the District Court
found that scheduling factors, weather, and the minor's school and work
commitments may combine, in many cases, to create a delay of a week or longer
between the initiation of notification and the abortion, 648 F.Supp. at 765,
there is no evidence that the 48-hour period itself is unreasonable or longer
than appropriate for adequate consultation between parent and child. The statute
does not impose any period of delay once the parents or a court, acting in loco
parentis, express their agreement that the minor is mature or that the procedure
would be in her best interest. Indeed, as the Court of Appeals noted and the
record reveals,34 the 48-hour waiting
period may run concurrently with the time necessary to make an appointment for
the procedure, thus resulting in little or no delay.35 [497 U.S. 417, 450]
VII
It is equally clear that the requirement that both parents be
notified, whether or not both wish to be notified or have assumed responsibility
for the upbringing of the child, does not reasonably further any legitimate
state interest. The usual justification for a parental consent or notification
provision is that it supports the authority of a parent who is presumed to act
in the minor's best interest, and thereby assures that the minor's decision to
terminate her pregnancy is knowing, intelligent, and deliberate. To the extent
that such an interest is legitimate, it would be fully served by a requirement
that the minor notify one parent, who can then seek the counsel of his or her
mate or any other party when such advice and support is deemed necessary to help
the child make a difficult decision. In the ideal family setting, of course,
notice to either parent would normally constitute notice to both. A statute
requiring two-parent notification would not further any state interest in those
instances. In many families, however, the parent notified by the child would not
notify the other parent. In those cases, the State has no legitimate interest in
questioning one parent's judgment that notice to the other parent would not
assist the minor or in presuming that the parent who has assumed parental duties
is incompetent to make decisions regarding the health and welfare of the child.
Not only does two-parent notification fail to serve any state interest with
respect to functioning families, it disserves the state interest in protecting
and assisting the minor with respect to dysfunctional families. The record
reveals that in the thousands of dysfunctional families affected by this
statute, the two-parent notice requirement proved positively harmful to the
minor and her family. The testimony [497 U.S. 417, 451] at trial established that this
requirement, ostensibly designed for the benefit of the minor, resulted in major
trauma to the child, and often to a parent as well. In some cases, the parents
were divorced and the second parent did not have custody or otherwise
participate in the child's upbringing. App. 244-245; id., at 466; id., at 115.
In these circumstances, the privacy of the parent and child was violated, even
when they suffered no other physical or psychological harm. In other instances,
however, the second parent had either deserted or abused the child, id., at 462,
464, had died under tragic circumstances, id., at 120-121, or was not notified
because of the considered judgment that notification would inflict unnecessary
stress on a parent who was ill. Id., at 204, 465.36 In these circumstances, the statute was not merely
ineffectual in achieving the State's goals, but actually counterproductive. The
focus on notifying the second parent distracted both the parent and minor from
the minor's imminent abortion decision.
The State does not rely primarily on the best interests of the minor in
defending this statute. Rather, it argues that, in the ideal family, the minor
should make her decision only [497 U.S. 417, 452]
after consultation with both parents, who should naturally be concerned with the
child's welfare, and that the State has an interest in protecting the
independent right of the parents "to determine and strive for what they believe
to be best for their children." Minn. Br. 26. Neither of these reasons can
justify the two-parent notification requirement. The second parent may well have
an interest in the minor's abortion decision, making full communication among
all members of a family desirable in some cases, but such communication may not
be decreed by the State. The State has no more interest in requiring all family
members to talk with one another than it has in requiring certain of them to
live together. In Moore v. East Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494 (1977), we invalidated a
zoning ordinance which "slic[ed] deeply into the family itself," id., at 498,
permitting the city to "standardiz[e] its children - and its adults - by forcing
all to live in certain narrowly defined family patterns." Id., at 506. Although
the ordinance was supported by state interests other than the state interest in
substituting its conception of family life for the family's own view, the
ordinance's relation to those state interests was too "tenuous" to satisfy
constitutional standards. By implication, a state interest in standardizing its
children and adults, making the "private realm of family life" conform to some
state-designed ideal, is not a legitimate state interest at all. See also Meyer
v. Nebraska, 262 U.S., at 399-400 (right to establish a home and bring up
children may not be interfered with by legislative action which is without
"reasonable relation to some purpose within the competency of the State to
effect").
Nor can any state interest in protecting a parent's interest in shaping a
child's values and lifestyle overcome the liberty interests of a minor acting
with the consent of a single parent or court. See Bellotti II, 443 U.S. 622
(1979); Bellotti I, 428 U.S. 132 (1976); Planned Parenthood of Central Mo. v.
Danforth, 428 U.S. 52 (1976). In Danforth, the majority identified the only
state interest in requiring parental
[497 U.S. 417, 453] consent as that in
"the safeguarding of the family unit and of parental authority," and held that
that state interest was insufficient to support the requirement that mature
minors receive parental consent. The Court summarily concluded that "[a]ny
independent interest the parent may have in the termination of the minor
daughter's pregnancy is no more weighty than the right of privacy of the
competent minor mature enough to have become pregnant." Id., at 75. It follows
that the combined force of the separate interest of one parent and the minor's
privacy interest must outweigh the separate interest of the second parent.
In Bellotti I and Bellotti II, we also identified the difference between
parental interests and the child's best interest. Although the District Court
invalidated the Massachusetts statute there under review on the grounds that it
permitted a parent or the court, acting in loco parentis, to refuse consent
based on the parent's own interests, the state Attorney General argued that the
parental right consisted "`exclusively of the right to assess independently, for
their minor child, what will serve that child's best interest.'" 428 U.S., at
144. Because we believed that the Attorney General's interpretation "would avoid
or substantially modify the federal constitutional challenge," id., at 148, we
ordered the District Court to certify the state-law question to the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts. Id., at 151-152. On review in this Court for
the second time, after the Supreme Judicial Court stated unambiguously that the
"good cause" standard required the judge to grant consent to an abortion found
to be in the minor's best interest, 443 U.S., at 630, 644, we confirmed that
such a construction satisfied "some of the concerns" about the statute's
constitutionality, id., at 644, and thereby avoided "much of what was
objectionable in the statute successfully challenged in Danforth." id., at 645.
Indeed, the constitutional defects that Justice Powell identified in the statute
- its failure to allow a minor who is found to be mature and fully competent to
make the abortion [497 U.S. 417, 454]
decision independently and its requirement of parental consultation even when an
abortion without notification would be in the minor's best interests - are
predicated on the assumption that the justification for any rule requiring
parental involvement in the abortion decision rests entirely on the best
interests of the child. Id., at 651.37
Unsurprisingly, the Minnesota two-parent notification requirement is an
oddity among state and federal consent provisions governing the health, welfare,
and education of children. A minor desiring to enlist in the armed services or
the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) need only obtain the consent of "his
parent or guardian." 10 U.S.C. 505(a); 2104(b)(4); 2107(b)(4). The consent of "a
parent or guardian" is also sufficient to obtain a passport for foreign travel
from the United States Department of State, 22 CFR 51.27 (1989), and to
participate as a subject in most forms of medical research. 45 CFR 46.404,
46.405 (1988). In virtually every State, the consent of one parent is enough to
obtain a driver's license or operator's permit. The same may be said with
respect to the decision to submit to any medical or surgical procedure other
than an abortion.38 Indeed, the only other
Minnesota statute that the State has identified which requires two-parent [497 U.S. 417, 455] consent is that authorizing
the minor to change his name. Tr. of Oral Arg. 30, 32; Reply Brief for
Petitioner in No. 88-1309, p. 5 (citing Minn. Stat. 259.10 (1988)). These
statutes provide testimony to the unreasonableness of the Minnesota two-parent
notification requirement and to the ease with which the State can adopt less
burdensome means to protect the minor's welfare. Cf. Clark v. Jeter, 486 U.S.
456, 464 (1988); Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. at, 98 (1987). We therefore hold
that this requirement violates the Constitution.
VIII
The Court holds that the constitutional objection to the
two-parent notice requirement is removed by the judicial bypass option provided
in subdivision 6 of the Minnesota statute. I respectfully dissent from that
holding.
A majority of the Court has previously held that a statute requiring one
parent's consent to a minor's abortion will be upheld if the State provides an
"`alternate procedure whereby a pregnant minor may demonstrate that she is
sufficiently mature to make the abortion decision herself or that, despite her
immaturity, an abortion would be in her best interests.'" Planned Parenthood
Assn. of Kansas City, Mo., Inc. v. Ashcroft, 462 U.S. 476, 491 (1983) (opinion
of Powell, J.); id., at 505 (opinion of O'CONNOR, J.). Indeed, in Bellotti II,
four Members of the Court expressed the same opinion about a statute requiring
the consent of both parents. See 443 U.S., at 643-644. Neither of those
precedents should control our decision today.
In Bellotti II, eight Members of the Court joined the judgment holding the
Massachusetts statute unconstitutional. Thus, the Court did not hold that the
judicial bypass set forth in that statute was valid; it held just the opposite.
Moreover, the discussion of the minimum requirements for a valid judicial bypass
in Justice Powell's opinion was joined by only four Members of the Court.
Indeed, neither the arguments of the parties, nor any of the opinions in the
case, [497 U.S. 417, 456] considered the
significant difference between a statute requiring the involvement of both
parents in the abortion decision and a statute that merely requires the
involvement of one. Thus, the doctrine of stare decisis does not require that
the standards articulated in Justice Powell's opinion be applied to a statute
that mandates the involvement of both parents.
Unlike Bellotti II, the judgment in Ashcroft sustained the constitutionality
of the statute containing a judicial bypass as an alternative to the requirement
of one parent's consent to a minor's abortion. The distinctions between notice
and consent and between notification of both parents rather than just one
arguably constitute a sufficient response to an argument resting on stare
decisis. Further analysis is necessary, however, because, at least on the
surface, the consent requirement would appear to be more onerous than a
requirement of mere notice.
The significance of the distinction between a statute requiring the consent
of one parent and a statute requiring notice to both parents must be tested by
the relationship of the respective requirements to legitimate state interests.
We have concluded that the State has a strong and legitimate interest in
providing a pregnant minor with the advice and support of a parent during the
decisional period. A general rule requiring the minor to obtain the consent of
one parent reasonably furthers that interest. An exception from the general rule
is necessary to protect the minor from an arbitrary veto that is motivated by
the separate concerns of the parent, rather than the best interest of the child.
Cf. Parham v. J.R., 442 U.S., at 604-608. But the need for an exception does not
undermine the conclusion that the general rule is perfectly reasonable - just as
a rule requiring the consent of either parent for any other medical procedure
would surely be reasonable if an exception were made for those emergencies in
which, for example, a parent might deny lifesaving [497 U.S. 417, 457] treatment to a child on
religious grounds. See id., at 602-603.
For reasons already set forth at length, a rule requiring consent or
notification of both parents is not reasonably related to the state interest in
giving the pregnant minor the benefit of parental advice. The State has not
called our attention to, nor am I aware of, any other medical situation in
Minnesota or elsewhere in which the provision of treatment for a child has been
conditioned on notice to, or consent by, both parents rather than just one.
Indeed, the fact that one-parent consent is the virtually uniform rule for any
other activity which affects the minor's health, safety or welfare emphasizes
the aberrant quality of the two-parent notice requirement.
A judicial bypass that is designed to handle exceptions from a reasonable
general rule, and thereby preserve the constitutionality of that rule, is quite
different from a requirement that a minor - or a minor and one of her parents -
must apply to a court for permission to avoid the application of a rule that is
not reasonably related to legitimate state goals. A requirement that a minor
acting with the consent of both parents apply to a court for permission to
effectuate her decision clearly would constitute an unjustified official
interference with the privacy of the minor and her family. The requirement that
the bypass procedure must be invoked when the minor and one parent agree that
the other parent should not be notified represents an equally unjustified
governmental intrusion into the family's decisional process. When the parents
are living together and have joint custody over the child, the State has no
legitimate interest in the communication between father and mother about the
child. "[W]here the parents are divorced, the minor and/or custodial parent, and
not a court, is in the best position to determine whether notifying the
noncustodial parent would be in the child's best interests." App. to Pet. for
Cert. in No. 88-1125, p. 69a. As the Court of Appeals panel originally [497 U.S. 417, 458] concluded, the minor and
custodial parent, . . . by virtue of their major interest and superior position,
should alone have the opportunity to decide to whom, if anyone, notice of the
minor's abortion decision should be given. Ibid. (citation omitted). I agree
with that conclusion.
* * *
The judgment of the Court of Appeals in its entirety is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Footnotes
[Footnote 1] Subdivision 1 of 144.343
presently provides:
"Any minor may give effective consent for medical, mental and other health
services to determine the presence of or to treat pregnancy and conditions
associated therewith, venereal disease, alcohol and other drug abuse, and
the consent of no other person is required."
The statute permits the health professional treating the minor to notify
parents only when a failure to do so would jeopardize the minor's health. Minn.
Stat. 144.346 (1988).
[Footnote 2] See Haw. Rev. Stat. 577A-2
(1976); Mo. Rev. Stat. 431.062 (Supp. 1971). See generally Pilpel & Zuckerman,
Abortion and the Rights of Minors, in Abortion, Society and the Law 275, 279-280
(D. Walbert & J. Butler eds. 1973).
[Footnote 3] Although there is no
statutory definition of emancipation in Minnesota, see Streitz v. Streitz, 363
N.W.2d 135, 137 (Minn. App. 1985), we have no reason to question the State's
representation that Minn. Stat. 144.341 and 144.342 (1988) apply to the minor's
decision to terminate her pregnancy. Brief for Respondents in No. 881125, p. 2,
n. 2. Those sections provide that a minor who is living separate and apart from
her parents or who is either married or has borne a child may give effective
consent to medical services without the consent of any other person.
The notification statute also applies to a woman for whom a guardian or
conservator has been appointed because of a finding of incompetency. 144.343(2).
This portion of the statute is not challenged in this case.
[Footnote 4] Subdivision 2 provides:
"Notwithstanding the provisions of section 13.02, subdivision 8, no
abortion operation shall be performed upon an unemancipated minor . . .
until at least 48 hours after written notice of the pending operation has
been delivered in the manner specified in subdivisions 2 to 4.
"(a) The notice shall be addressed to the parent at the usual place of
abode of the parent and delivered personally to the parent by the physician
or an agent.
"(b) In lieu of the delivery required by clause (a), notice shall be made
by certified mail addressed to the parent at the usual place of abode of the
parent with return receipt requested and restricted delivery to the
addressee which means postal employee can only deliver the mail to the
authorized addressee. Time of delivery shall be deemed to occur at 12
o'clock noon on the next day on which regular mail delivery takes place,
subsequent to mailing."
[Footnote 5] The Minnesota statute is the
most intrusive in the Nation. Of the 38 States that require parental
participation in the minor's decision to terminate her pregnancy, 27 make
express that the participation of only one parent is required. An additional
three States, Idaho, Tennessee, and Utah, require an unmarried minor to notify
"the parents or guardian" but do not specify whether "parents" refers to either
member of the parental unit or whether notice to one parent constitutes
constructive notice to both. See Idaho Code 18-609(6) (1987); Tenn. Code Ann.
39-15-202(f) (Supp. 1989); Utah Code Ann. 76-7-304(2) (1990). In contrast,
Arkansas does require an unmarried minor to notify both parents but provides
exceptions where the second parent "cannot be located through reasonably
diligent effort," or a parent's "whereabouts are unknown," the parent has not
been in contact with the minor's custodial parent or the minor for at least one
year, or the parent is guilty of sexual abuse. Ark. Code Ann. 2016-802, 20
16-808 (Supp. 1989). Delaware requires the consent only of parents who are
residing in the same household; if the minor is not living with both of her
parents, the consent of one parent is sufficient. Del. Code. Ann. Tit. 24,
1790(b)(3) (1987). Illinois law does not require the consent of a parent who has
deserted the family or is not available. Ill. Rev. Stat., ch. 38, _ 81-54(3)
(1989). Kentucky requires an unmarried minor to obtain the consent of a legal
guardian or "both parents, if available," but provides that if both parents are
not available, the consent of the available parent shall suffice. Ky. Rev. Stat.
Ann. 311 .732(2)(a), (b) (Michie 1990). Under Massachusetts law, an unmarried
minor need obtain the consent of only one parent if the other parent "is
unavailable to the physician within a reasonable time and in a reasonable
manner," or if the parents are divorced and the other parent does not have
custody. Mass. Gen. Laws 112, 12S (1988). Mississippi law requires only the
consent of the parent with primary custody, care and control of the minor if the
parents are divorced or unmarried and living apart and, in all other cases, the
consent of only one parent if the other parent is not available in a reasonable
time or manner. Miss. Code Ann. 41-41-53(2) (Supp. 1989). Finally, North Dakota
requires only the consent of the custodial parent if the parents are separated
and divorced, or the legal guardian if the minor is subject to guardianship. N.
D. Cent. Code 14-02.1-03.1 (1981).
[Footnote 6] Subdivision 3 provides, in
part:
"For purposes of this section, `parent' means both parents of the pregnant
woman if they are both living, one parent of the pregnant woman if only one
is living or if the second one cannot be located through reasonably diligent
effort, or the guardian or conservator if the pregnant woman has one."
[Footnote 7] Subdivision 4 provides:
"No notice shall be required under this section if:
"(a) The attending physician certifies in the pregnant woman's medical
record that the abortion is necessary to prevent the woman's death and there
is insufficient time to provide the required notice; or
"(b) The abortion is authorized in writing by the person or persons who are
entitled to notice; or
"(c) The pregnant minor woman declares that she is a victim of sexual
abuse, neglect, or physical abuse as defined in section 626.556. Notice of
that declaration shall be made to the proper authorities as provided in
section 626.556, subdivision 3."
Under Minn.Stat. 626.556 (1988), if the minor declares that she is the victim
of abuse, the notified physician or physician's agent must report the abuse to
the local welfare or law enforcement agency within 24 hours, 626.556(3)(a),
(3)(e), whereupon the welfare agency "shall immediately conduct an assessment
and offer protective social services for purposes of preventing further abuses,
safeguarding and enhancing the welfare of the abused or neglected minor, and
preserving family life whenever possible." 626.556(10)(a). If the agency
interviews the victim, it must notify the parent of the fact of the interview at
the conclusion of the investigation unless it obtains a court order.
626.556(10)(c). Individuals who are subjects of the investigation have a right
of access to the record of the investigation. 626.556(11).
[Footnote 8] Subdivision 5 provides:
"Performance of an abortion in violation of this section shall be a
misdemeanor and shall be grounds for a civil action by a person wrongfully
denied [497 U.S. 417, 427] notification. A person shall not be
held liable under this section if the person establishes by written evidence
that the person relied upon evidence sufficient to convince a careful and
prudent person that the representations of the pregnant woman regarding
information necessary to comply with this section are bona fide and true, or
if the person has attempted with reasonable diligence to deliver notice, but
has been unable to do so."
[Footnote 9] Subdivision 6 provides:
"If subdivision 2 of this law is ever temporarily or permanently restrained
or enjoined by judicial order, subdivision 2 shall be enforced as though the
following paragraph were incorporated as paragraph (c) of that subdivision,
provided, however, that if such temporary or permanent restraining order or
injunction is ever stayed or dissolved, or otherwise ceases to have effect,
subdivision 2 shall have full force and effect, without being modified by
the addition to the following substitute paragraph which shall have no force
or effect until or unless an injunction or restraining order is again in
effect.
"(c)(i) If such a pregnant woman elects not to allow the notification of
one or both of her parents or guardian or conservator, any judge of a court
of competent jurisdiction shall, upon petition, or motion, and after an
appropriate hearing, authorize a physician to perform the abortion if said
judge determines that the pregnant woman is mature and capable of giving
informed consent to the proposed abortion. If said judge determines that the
pregnant woman is not mature, or if the pregnant woman does not claim to be
mature, the judge shall determine whether the performance of [497 U.S. 417, 428] an abortion upon her without
notification of her parents, guardian, or conservator would be in her best
interests and shall authorize a physician to perform the abortion without
such notification if said judge concludes that the pregnant woman's best
interests would be served thereby.
"(ii) Such a pregnant woman may participate in proceedings in the court on
her own behalf and the court may appoint a guardian ad litem for her. The
court shall, however, advise her that she has a right to court appointed
counsel, and shall, upon her request, provide her with such counsel.
"(iii) Proceedings in the court under this section shall be confidential
and shall be given such precedence over other pending matters so that the
court may reach a decision promptly and without delay so as to serve the
best interests of the pregnant woman. A judge of the court who conducts
proceedings under this section shall make in writing specific factual
findings and legal conclusions supporting the decision and shall order a
record of the evidence to be maintained including the judge's own findings
and conclusions.
"(iv) An expedited confidential appeal shall be available to any such
pregnant woman for whom the court denies an order authorizing an abortion
without notification. An order authorizing an abortion without notification
shall not be subject to appeal. No filing fees shall be required of any such
pregnant woman at either the trial or the appellate level. Access to the
trial court for the purposes of such a petition or motion, and access to the
appellate courts for purposes of making an appeal from denial of the same,
shall be afforded such a pregnant woman 24 hours a day, seven days a week."
[Footnote 10] Brief for Petitioner in
No. 88-1309, p. 4 (hereinafter Minn. Br.); see also id., at 8-9.
[Footnote 11] "The Minnesota legislature
had several purposes in mind when it amended Minn. Stat. 144.343 in 1981. The
primary purpose was to [497 U.S. 417, 429]
protect the well-being of minors by encouraging minors to discuss with their
parents the decision whether to terminate their pregnancies. Encouraging such
discussion was intended to achieve several salutary results. Parents can provide
emotional support and guidance and thus forestall irrational and emotional
decisionmaking. Parents can also provide information concerning the minor's
medical history of which the minor may not be aware. Parents can also supervise
post-abortion care. In addition, parents can support the minor's psychological
wellbeing and thus mitigate adverse psychological sequelae that may attend the
abortion procedure." 648 F.Supp. 756, 765-766 (Minn. 1986).
[Footnote 12] The District Court's
finding 59 reads as follows:
"The court finds that a desire to deter and dissuade minors from choosing
to terminate their pregnancies also motivated the legislature. Testimony
before a legislative committee considering the proposed notification
requirement indicated that influential supporters of the measure hoped it
`would save lives' by influencing minors to carry their pregnancies to term
rather than aborting." Id., at 766.
[Footnote 13] "The court also found that
a desire to dissuade minors from choosing to terminate their pregnancies also
motivated the legislature. Finding 59, Hodgson Appendix 25a. This finding was
based on no more than the testimony before a legislative committee of some
supporters of the act who hoped it `would save lives.' There is no direct
evidence, however, that this was the motive of any legislator." Minn. Br. 4, n.
2.
[Footnote 14] On January 23, 1985, the
court granted partial summary judgment in favor of defendants on several of the
plaintiffs' claims, but reserved ruling on the constitutionality of subdivision
6 as applied until after trial.
[Footnote 15] "Where the underlying
notification provision is unconstitutional because, with respect to children of
broken families, it fails to further the [497
U.S. 417, 431] state's significant interests, however, a mature minor or
minor whose best interests are contrary to notifying the noncustodial parent is
forced to either suffer the unconstitutional requirement or submit to the
burdensome court bypass procedure. Such a Hobson's choice fails to further any
significant interest. Just as there must be a constitutional judicial
alternative to a notice requirement, so there must be a constitutional notice or
consent alternative to the court bypass.
"The second reason for our conclusion that the court bypass procedure does
not save the two-parent notification requirement is that, where the parents
are divorced, the minor and/or custodial parent, and not a court, is in the
best position to determine whether notifying the noncustodial parent would
be in the child's best interests. In situations where the minor has a good
relationship with the noncustodial parent but the custodial parent does not,
there is nothing to prevent the minor from consulting with the noncustodial
parent if she so desires. The minor and custodial parent, however, by virtue
of their major interest and superior position, should alone have the
opportunity to decide to whom, if anyone, notice of the minor's abortion
decision should be given." App. to Pet. for Cert. in No. 88-1125, pp.
68a-69a (citations omitted).
[Footnote 16] The panel did not reach
the question of the constitutionality or severability of the mandatory 48-hour
waiting period. A concurring judge agreed with the panel that a requirement that
a pregnant minor seeking an abortion notify a noncustodial parent could not
withstand constitutional scrutiny, and was not saved by a court bypass
procedure. Id., at 72a.
[Footnote 17] 853 F.2d, at 1460, quoting
from Justice Powell's opinion in Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.S. 622, 640-641 (1979)
(Bellotti II).
[Footnote 18] The court also suggested
that the statute furthered the "state interest in providing an opportunity for
parents to supply essential medical and other information to a physician," 853
F.2d, at 1461, but the State has not argued here that that interest provides an
additional basis for upholding the statute.
[Footnote 19] The court also rejected
the argument that the statute violated the Equal Protection Clause by singling
out abortion as the only pregnancy-related medical procedure requiring
notification. Id., at 1466. The equal protection challenge is not renewed here.
[Footnote 20] See n. 14, supra.
[Footnote 21] The District Court found:
"During the period for which statistics have been compiled, 3,573 bypass
petitions were filed in Minnesota courts. Six petitions were withdrawn
before decision. Nine petitions were denied and 3,558 were granted." Finding
No. 55, 648 F.Supp., at 765.
[Footnote 22] Planned Parenthood of
Central Mo. v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52, 72-75 (1976); Bellotti v. Baird, 428 U.S.
132 (1976) (Bellotti I); Bellotti II, 443 U.S. 622 (1979); H.L. v. Matheson, 450
U.S. 398 (1981); Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, Inc., 462 U.S.
416, 439-442 (1983); and Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas City, Mo., Inc. v.
Ashcroft, 462 U.S. 476, 490-493 (1983); id., at 505 (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in
judgment in part and dissenting in part).
[Footnote 23] The Utah statute reviewed
in Matheson required the physician to "[n]otify, if possible, the parents or
guardian of the woman upon whom the abortion is to be performed." Utah Code Ann.
76-7-304(2) (1990). Unlike the Minnesota statute under review today, the Utah
statute did not define the term "parents." The statute is ambiguous as to
whether the term refers to each parent individually or rather to the parental
unit, which could be represented by either the mother or the father, and neither
the argument nor the discussion in Matheson indicated that notice to both
parents was required. State law, to the extent it addresses the issue, is to the
contrary: although Utah law provides that a noncustodial parent retains the
right to consent to marriage, enlistment, and the performance of major medical
or surgical treatment, the right to notice of the minor's abortion is not among
the parent's specific residual rights and duties. Utah Code Ann. 78-3a-2(13)
(Supp. 1989).
[Footnote 24] The figures are not
dissimilar to those throughout the Nation. See, e.g., Brief for American
Psychological Association et al. as Amici Curiae 12-13 ("It is estimated that by
age 17, 70 percent of white children born in 1980 will have spent at least some
time with only one parent, and 94 percent of black children will have lived in
one-parent homes") (citing [497 U.S. 417, 438]
Hofferth, Updating Children's Life Course, 47 J. Marriage and Fam. 93 (1985)).
[Footnote 25] "Studies indicating that
family violence occurs in two million families in the United States
substantially underestimate the actual number of such families. In Minnesota
alone, reports indicate that there are an average of 31,200 incidents of assault
on women by their partners each year. Based on these statistics, state officials
suggest that the `battering' of women by their partners `has come to be
recognized as perhaps the most frequently committed violent crime in the state'
of Minnesota. These numbers do not include incidents of psychological or sexual
abuse, low-level physical abuse, abuse of any sort of the child of a batterer,
or those incidents which are not reported. Many minors in Minnesota live in fear
of violence by family members; many of them are, in fact, victims of rape,
incest, neglect and violence. It is impossible to accurately assess the
magnitude of the problem of family violence in Minnesota because members of
dysfunctional families are characteristically secretive about such matters and
minors are particularly reluctant to reveal violence or abuse in their families.
Thus the incidence of such family violence is dramatically underreported." 648
F.Supp., at 768-769.
[Footnote 26] "Minors who are victims of
sexual or physical abuse often are reluctant to reveal the existence of the
abuse to those outside the home. More importantly, notification to government
authorities creates a substantial risk that the confidentiality of the minor's
decision to terminate her pregnancy will be lost. Thus, few minors choose to
declare they are victims of sexual or physical abuse despite the prevalence of
such abuse in Minnesota, as elsewhere." Id., at 764.
[Footnote 27] As one of the guardians ad
litem testified, "We have had situations reported to me by my other guardians as
well as teenagers that I talked to myself who have said that they will consider
telling one parent, usually mom, sometimes dad, but since they would have to go
to court anyway, because they are absolutely sure they don't want the other
parent to know, they don't tell either one." App. 239 (Testimony of Susanne
Smith).
[Footnote 28] See n. 21, supra.
[Footnote 29] One testified that minors
found the bypass procedure "`a very nerve-racking experience,'" Finding 60, 648
F.Supp., at 766; another testified that the minor's "`level of apprehension is
twice what I normally see in court.'" Ibid. A Massachusetts judge who heard
similar petitions in that State expressed the opinion that "going to court was
`absolutely' traumatic for minors . . . `at a very, very difficult time in their
lives.'" Ibid. One judge stated that he did not "perceive any useful public
purpose to what I am doing in these cases" and that he did not "see anything
that is being accomplished that is useful to anybody." Testimony of Gerald C.
Martin, App. in No. 86-5423 (CA8), pp. A-488-A-489.
The public defenders and guardians ad litem gave similar testimony. See
Testimony of Cynthia Daly (public defender) App. 187 (bypass "was another hoop
to jump through and a very damaging and stress-producing procedure that didn't
do any good"); Testimony of Susanne Smith (guardian ad litem), id., at 234.
("The teenagers that we see in the guardian's office are very nervous, very
scared. Some of them are terrified about court processes. They are often
exhausted. . . . They are upset about and tell us that they are upset about the
fact that they have to explain very intimate details of their personal lives to
strangers. They talk about feeling that they don't belong in the court system,
that they are ashamed, embarrassed and somehow that they are being punished for
the situation they are in"); Testimony of Heather Sweetland (public defender)
App. in No. 86-5423 (CA8), p. A-585 ("Most of the women that are my clients in
these hearings are scared . . . Some of them will relax slightly, but the
majority of them are very nervous").
Doctor Hodgson, one of the plaintiffs in this case, testified that, when her
minor patients returned from the court process, "some of them are wringing wet
with perspiration. They're markedly relieved, many of them. They - they dread
the court procedure often more than the actual abortion procedure. And it - it's
frequently necessary to give them a sedative of some kind beforehand." App. 468.
[Footnote 30] According to the testimony
at trial, parents who participated in the bypass procedure - many of whom had
never before been in court - were "real upset" about having to appear in court,
id., at 167, and were "angry, they were worried about their kid and they were
nervous too." Id., at 186.
[Footnote 31] "Properly understood . . .
the tradition of parental authority is not inconsistent with our tradition of
individual liberty; rather, the former is one of the basic presuppositions of
the latter. Legal restrictions on minors, [497 U.S. 417, 445] especially those supportive of the
parental role, may be important to the child's chances for the full growth and
maturity that make eventual participation in a free society meaningful and
rewarding." Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 638-639 (opinion of Powell, J.).
See also Stanford v. Kentucky, 492 U.S. 361, 394-396 (1989) (BRENNAN, J.,
dissenting); Thompson v. Oklahoma, 487 U.S. 815, 825-826, n. 23 (1988)
(plurality opinion).
[Footnote 32] Under common-law
principles, one parent has authority to act as agent for the other in matters of
their child's upbringing and education. See E. Spencer, Law of Domestic
Relations 432 (1911); T. Reeve, Law of Baron and Femme 295 (1816).
[Footnote 33] "Certainly the
safeguarding of the home does not follow merely from the sanctity of property
rights. The home derives its preeminence as the seat of family life. And the
integrity of that life is something so fundamental that it has been found to
draw to its protection the principles of more than one explicitly granted
Constitutional right." Poe v. Ullman, 367 U.S. 497, 551-552 (1961) (Harlan, J.,
dissenting).
Far more than contraceptives, at issue in Poe and Griswold v. Connecticut,
381 U.S. 479 (1965), the married couple has a well-recognized interest in
protecting the sanctity of their communications from undue interference by the
State. See, e.g., Stein v. Bowman, 13 Pet. 209, 223 (1839) ("This rule is
founded upon the deepest and soundest principles of our nature. Principles which
have grown out of those domestic relations, that constitute the basis of civil
society and which are essential to the enjoyment of that confidence which should
subsist between those who are connected by the nearest and dearest relations of
life. To break down or impair the great principles which protect the sanctities
of husband and wife would be to destroy the best solace of human existence"); 2
W. Best, Principles of Law of Evidence 994-995 (1st Am. ed. 1876); 1 S.
Greenleaf, Law of Evidence 286 287 (12th ed. 1866); 1 M. Phillips, Law of
Evidence 69-80 (3d ed. 1849).
[Footnote 34] The record contains the
telephone training manual of one clinic which contemplates that notification
will be made on the date the patient contacts the clinic to arrange an abortion
so that the appointment can be scheduled for a few days later. Since that clinic
typically has a 1- to 2-day backlog, App. 146-147, the statutory waiting period
creates little delay.
[Footnote 35] Akron v. Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, Inc., 462 U.S., at 449, upon which the plaintiffs rely, is
not to the contrary. There we invalidated a provision that required that mature
women, capable of consenting to an abortion, wait 24 hours after giving consent
before undergoing an abortion. The only legitimate state interest asserted was
that the "woman's decision be informed." Id., at 450. We decided that "if a
woman, after appropriate counseling, is prepared to give her written informed
consent and proceed with the abortion, a State may not demand that she delay the
effectuation of that decision." Id., at 450-451. By contrast, in this case, the
State asserts a legitimate interest in protecting minor women from their own
immaturity. As we explain in the text, the right of the minor to make an
informed decision to terminate her pregnancy is not defeated by the 48-hour
waiting period. It is significant that the statute
[497 U.S. 417, 450]
does not impose a waiting period if a substitute competent decisionmaker - a
parent or court - gives affirmative consent to the abortion.
[Footnote 36] The most common reason for
not notifying the second parent was that that parent was a child or
spouse-batterer, App. at 204, and notification would have provoked further
abuse. For example, Judge Allen Oleisky, whose familiarity with the Minnesota
statute is based on his having heard over 1,000 petitions from minors, id., at
154, testified that battering is a frequent crime in Minnesota, that parents
seek an exemption from the notification requirement because they have been
battered or are afraid of assault, and that notification of the father would
"set the whole thing off again in some cases." Id., at 166-167. See also id., at
237, 245, 339. That testimony is confirmed by the uncontradicted testimony of
one of plaintiffs' experts that notice of a daughter's pregnancy "would
absolutely enrage [a batterer]. It would be much like showing a red cape to a
bull. That kind of information just plays right into his worst fears and his
most vulnerable spots. The sexual jealousy, his dislike of his daughter's going
out with anybody else, would make him very angry and would probably create
severe abuse as well as long-term communication difficulties." Id., at 194
(Testimony of Lenore Walker).
[Footnote 37] JUSTICE KENNEDY recognizes
that parental rights are coupled with parental responsibilities, post at 483,
and that "a State [may] legislate on the premise that parents, as a general
rule, are interested in their children's welfare and will act in accord with
it," post, at 485. That, of course, is precisely our point. What the State may
not do is legislate on the generalized assumptions that a parent in an intact
family will not act in his or her child's best interests and will fail to
involve the other parent in the child's upbringing when that involvement is
appropriate.
[Footnote 38] See, e.g., Brief for
American Psychological Association et al. as Amici Curiae 6, n. 8 (state law
typically allows a minor parent - whatever her age - to consent to the health
care of her child); Brief for the American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists et al. as Amici Curiae 25 ("In areas that do not deal with
sexuality or substance abuse, states require, at most, a single parent's consent
before performing medical procedures on a minor").
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment in part.
I
I join all but Parts III and VIII of JUSTICE STEVENS' opinion.
While I agree with some of the central points made in Part III, I cannot join
the broader discussion. I agree that the Court has characterized "[a] woman's
decision to beget or to bear a child [as] a component of her liberty that is
protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution." Ante, at 434. See, e.g., Carey v. Population Services
International, 431 U.S. 678, 685, 687 (1977); Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S.
479, 502-503 (1965) (WHITE, J., concurring in judgment). This Court extended
that liberty interest to minors in Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.S. 622, 642 (1979)
(Bellotti II), and Planned Parenthood of Central Mo. v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52,
74 (1976), albeit with some important limitations: "[P]arental notice and
consent are qualifications that typically may be imposed by the State on a
minor's right to make important decisions. As immature minors often lack the
ability to make fully informed choices that take account of both immediate and
long-range consequences, a State reasonably may determine that parental
consultation often is desirable and in the best interest of the minor." Bellotti
II, supra, at 640-641 (opinion of Powell, J.); see also H.L. v. Matheson, 450
U.S. 398, 423 (1981) (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment); cf. Thompson v. [497 U.S. 417, 459] Oklahoma, 487 U.S. 815, 835 (1988)
("Inexperience, less education, and less intelligence make the teenager less
able to evaluate the consequences of his or her conduct, while at the same time
he or she is much more apt to be motivated by mere emotion or peer pressure than
is an adult"); Stanford v. Kentucky, 492 U.S. 361, 395 (1989) (BRENNAN, J.,
dissenting) ("[M]inors are treated differently from adults in our laws, which
reflects the simple truth derived from communal experience, that juveniles as a
class have not the level of maturation and responsibility that we presume in
adults and consider desirable for full participation in the rights and duties of
modern life").
It has been my understanding in this area that "[i]f the particular
regulation does not "unduly burde[n]" the fundamental right, . . . then our
evaluation of that regulation is limited to our determination that the
regulation rationally relates to a legitimate state purpose." Akron v. Akron
Center for Reproductive Health, Inc., 462 U.S. 416, 453 (1983) (O'CONNOR, J.,
dissenting); see also Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, 492 U.S. 490, 530
(1989) (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment). It is with
that understanding that I agree with JUSTICE STEVENS' statement that the
"statute cannot be sustained if the obstacles it imposes are not reasonably
related to legitimate state interests. Cf. Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S., at 97;
Carey v. Population Services International, 431 U.S., at 704 (opinion of Powell,
J.); Doe v. Bolton, 410 U.S. 179, 194-195, 199 (1973)." Ante at 436.
I agree with JUSTICE STEVENS that Minnesota has offered no sufficient
justification for its interference with the family's decisionmaking processes
created by subdivision 2 - two-parent notification. Subdivision 2 is the most
stringent notification statute in the country. See ante at 425, n. 5. The only
other state that defines the generic term "parents," see, e.g., Tenn.Code Ann.
36-1-201, Art. III(6) (Supp. 1989) (adoption statute) ("`Parents'
[497 U.S. 417, 460]
means either the singular or plural of the word `parent'"); see also ante at
437, n. 23, as "both parents" is Arkansas, and that statute provides for
numerous exceptions to the two-parent notification requirement and permits
bypassing notification where notification would not be in the best interests of
the minor. See Ark.Code 20-16-802, 20-16-804, 20-16-808 (Supp. 1989).
The Minnesota exception to notification for minors who are victims of neglect
or abuse is, in reality, a means of notifying the parents. As JUSTICE STEVENS
points out, see ante, at 426, n. 7, to avail herself of the neglect or abuse
exception, the minor must report the abuse. A report requires the welfare agency
to immediately "conduct an assessment." Minn. Stat. 626.556(10)(a) (1988). If
the agency interviews the victim, it must notify the parent of the fact of the
interview; if the parent is the subject of an investigation, he has a right of
access to the record of the investigation. 626.556(10)(c); 626.556(11); see also
Tr. of Oral Arg. 19 ("[I]t turns out that the reporting statute in Minnesota
requires that, after it's reported to the welfare department, the welfare
department has to do an assessment and tell the parents about the assessment.
This could all be done in a timeframe even before the abortion occurs"). The
combination of the abused minor's reluctance to report sexual or physical abuse,
see ante, at 440, n. 26, with the likelihood that invoking the abuse exception
for the purpose of avoiding notice will result in notice, makes the abuse
exception less than effectual.
Minnesota's two-parent notice requirement is all the more unreasonable when
one considers that only half of the minors in the State of Minnesota reside with
both biological parents. See ante, at 437. A third live with only one parent.
Ibid. Given its broad sweep and its failure to serve the purposes asserted by
the State in too many cases, I join the Court's striking of subdivision 2.
[497 U.S. 417, 461]
II
In a series of cases, this Court has explicitly approved
judicial bypass as a means of tailoring a parental consent provision so as to
avoid unduly burdening the minor's limited right to obtain an abortion. See
Bellotti v. Baird, 428 U.S. 132, 147-148 (1976); Planned Parenthood of Central
Mo. v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52 (1976); Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 642-644. In
Danforth, the Court stated that the
"primary constitutional deficiency lies in [the notification statute's]
imposition of an absolute limitation on the minor's right to obtain an
abortion. . . . [A] materially different constitutional issue would be
presented under a provision requiring parental consent or consultation in
most cases but providing for prompt (i) judicial resolution of any
disagreement between the parent and the minor, or (ii) judicial
determination that the minor is mature enough to give an informed consent
without parental concurrence or that abortion in any event is in the minor's
best interest. Such a provision would not impose parental approval as an
absolute condition upon the minor's right, but would assure in most
instances consultation between the parent and child." 428 U.S., at 90-91.
Subdivision 6 passes constitutional muster because the interference with the
internal operation of the family required by subdivision 2 simply does not exist
where the minor can avoid notifying one or both parents by use of the bypass
procedure.
JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE BLACKMUN join,
concurring in part, concurring in the judgment in part, and dissenting in part.
I concur in Parts I, II, IV, and VII of JUSTICE STEVENS' opinion for the
Court in No. 88-1309.1 Although I do [497 U.S. 417, 462] not believe that the
Constitution permits a State to require a minor to notify or consult with a
parent before obtaining an abortion, compare ante, at 445 with infra, at
463-472, I am in substantial agreement with the remainder of the reasoning in
Part V of the JUSTICE STEVEN'S opinion. For the reasons stated by the Court,
ante, at 450-455, Minnesota's two-parent notification requirement is not even
reasonably related to a legitimate state interest. Therefore, that requirement
surely would not pass the strict scrutiny applicable to restrictions on a
woman's fundamental right to have an abortion.
I dissent from the judgment of the Court in No. 89-1125, however, that the
judicial bypass option renders the parental notification and 48-hour delay
requirements constitutional. See ante at 497-501 (opinion of O'CONNOR, J.);
post, at 497-501 (opinion of KENNEDY, J.). The bypass procedure cannot save
those requirements because the bypass itself is unconstitutional, both on its
face and as applied. At the very least, this scheme substantially burdens a
woman's right to privacy without advancing a compelling state interest. More
significantly, in some instances it usurps a young woman's control over her own
body by giving either a parent or a court the power effectively to veto her
decision to have an abortion.
I
This Court has consistently held since Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S.
113 (1973), that the constitutional right of privacy "is broad enough to
encompass a woman's decision whether or not to terminate her pregnancy." Id., at
153. We have also repeatedly stated that "[a] woman's right to make that choice
freely is fundamental." Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists, 476 U.S. 747, 772 (1986). Accord, Akron v. Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, Inc., 462 U.S. 416, 420, n. 1 (1983); Roe, supra, at
[497 U.S. 417, 463] 155. As we reiterated in American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists, supra, "Few decisions are more personal and
intimate, more properly private, or more basic to individual dignity and
autonomy, than a woman's decision - with the guidance of her physician and
within the limits specified in Roe - whether to end her pregnancy." Id., at 772.
Accordingly, we have subjected state laws limiting that right to the most
exacting scrutiny, requiring a State to show that such a law is narrowly drawn
to serve a compelling interest. Roe, supra, at 155; Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, supra, at 427. Only such strict judicial scrutiny is
sufficiently protective of a woman's right to make the intensely personal
decision whether to terminate her pregnancy.
Roe remains the law of the land. See Webster v. Reproductive Health Services,
492 U.S. 490, 521 (1989) (plurality opinion); id., at 525 (O'CONNOR, J.,
concurring in part and concurring in judgment); id., at 537, 560 (BLACKMUN, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part). Indeed, today's decision reaffirms
the vitality of Roe, as five Justices have voted to strike down a state law
restricting a woman's right to have an abortion. Accordingly, to be
constitutional, state restrictions on abortion must meet the rigorous test set
forth above.
II
I strongly disagree with the Court's conclusion that the State
may constitutionally force a minor woman either to notify both parents (or in
some cases only one parent2) and then wait
48 hours before proceeding with an abortion, or disclose her intimate affairs to
a judge and ask that he grant her permission to have an abortion. See post, at
497-501 (opinion of KENNEDY, J.). Cf. ante, at 448-449 (opinion of STEVENS, J.)
(finding that requiring minor to wait 48 hours after notifying one parent
reasonably furthers legitimate state interest).
[497 U.S. 417, 464] First, the parental notification and delay
requirements significantly restrict a young woman's right to reproductive
choice. I base my conclusion not on my intuition about the needs and attitudes
of young women, but on a sizable and impressive collection of empirical data
documenting the effects of parental notification statutes and of delaying an
abortion. Second, the burdensome restrictions are not narrowly tailored to serve
any compelling state interest. Finally, for the reasons discussed in Part III,
infra, the judicial bypass procedure does not save the notice and delay
requirements.
A
Neither the scope of a woman's privacy right nor the magnitude
of a law's burden is diminished because a woman is a minor. Bellotti v. Baird,
443 U.S. 622, 642 (1979) (Bellotti II) (opinion of Powell, J.); Planned
Parenthood of Central Mo. v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52, 74 (1976). Rather, a woman's
minority status affects only the nature of the State's interests. Although the
Court considers the burdens that the two-parent notification requirement imposes
on a minor woman's exercise of her right to privacy, ante, at 450-451, and n.
36, it fails to recognize that forced notification of only one parent also
significantly burdens a young woman's right to have an abortion, see ante, at
459-460 (opinion of O'CONNOR, J.); post, at 491-497 (opinion of KENNEDY, J.).
Cf. ante, at 448-449 (opinion of STEVENS, J.).
A substantial proportion of pregnant minors voluntarily consult with a parent
regardless of the existence of a notification requirement. See, e.g., Torres,
Forrest, & Eisman, Telling Parents: Clinic Policies and Adolescents' Use of
Family Planning and Abortion Services, 12 Family Planning Perspectives 284, 287,
288, 290 (1980) (51% of minors discussed abortion with parents in the absence of
a parental consent or notification requirement). Minors 15 years old or younger
are even more likely voluntarily to discuss the abortion decision with their
parents. Id., at 290 (69% of such minors voluntarily
[497 U.S. 417, 465] discuss abortion with parents). For these women, the
notification requirement by itself does not impose a significant burden. But for
those young women who would choose not to inform their parents, the burden is
evident: the notification requirement destroys their right to avoid disclosure
of a deeply personal matter. Cf. Whalen v. Roe, 429 U.S. 589, 599-600 (1977).
A notification requirement can also have severe physical and psychological
effects on a young woman. First, forced notification of one parent, like forced
notification of both parents, can be extremely traumatic for a young woman,
depending on the nature of her relationship with her parents. Cf. ante, at
450-451, and n. 36. The disclosure of a daughter's intention to have an abortion
often leads to a family crisis, characterized by severe parental anger and
rejection. Osofsky & Osofsky, Teenage Pregnancy: Psychosocial Considerations, 21
Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology 1161 1164-1165 (1978). The impact of any
notification requirement is especially devastating for minors who live in fear
of physical, psychological, or sexual abuse. See, e.g., Clary, Minor Women
Obtaining Abortions: A Study of Parental Notification in a Metropolitan Area, 72
American J. of Pub. Health 283, 284 (1982) (finding that many minors chose not
to inform parents voluntarily because of fear of negative consequences such as
physical punishment or other retaliation). See also Tr. 911 (testimony of Dr.
Elissa Benedek) (stating that usually minors accurately predict parental
reaction to news about daughters' pregnancies). Cf. ante, at 438-440, and n. 25.
Certainly, child abuse is not limited to families with two parents.
Second, the prospect of having to notify a parent causes many young women to
delay their abortions, thereby increasing the health risks of the procedure. See
Cates, Schulz & Grimes, The Risks Associated with Teenage Abortion, 309 New
England J. of Medicine 621, 623 (1983) (finding that for women 19 years old and
younger, the number of deaths per 100,000 abortions was 0.2 for the first 8
weeks of pregnancy, [497 U.S. 417, 466] 0.6 for weeks 9 through 12, 3.4 for
weeks 13 through 16, and 7.8 for week 17 and after). See also H.L. v. Matheson,
450 U.S. 398, 439 (1981) (MARSHALL, J., dissenting). The risks posed by this
delay are especially significant because adolescents already delay seeking
medical care until relatively late in their pregnancies, when risks are higher.
See 1 National Research Council, Risking the Future: Adolescent Sexuality,
Pregnancy, and Childbearing 114 (C. Hayes ed. 1987).
In addition, a notification requirement compels many minors seeking an
abortion to travel to a State without such a requirement to avoid notifying a
parent. Cartoof & Klerman, Parental Consent for Abortion: Impact of the
Massachusetts Law, 76 American J. of Pub. Health 397, 399 (1986) (finding that
one-third of minors seeking abortions traveled outside of State to avoid
Massachusetts' parental notice requirement). Other women may resort to the
horrors of self-abortion or illegal abortion rather than tell a parent. Torres,
Forrest, & Eisman, supra, at 288 (9% of minors attending family planning clinics
said they would have a self-induced or illegal abortion rather than tell a
parent); H.L. v. Matheson, supra, at 439, and n. 26 (MARSHALL, J., dissenting).
See also Greydanus & Railsback, Abortion in Adolescence, 1 Seminars in
Adolescent Medicine 213, 214 (1985) (noting 100-times greater death rate for
women who obtain illegal abortions than for those who obtain legal ones).3 Still others would forgo an abortion entirely and carry the
fetus to term, Torres, Forrest, & Eisman, supra, at 289, 291 (9% of minors in
family planning clinics said they would carry fetus [497 U.S. 417, 467] to term rather than inform parents of
decision to abort), subjecting themselves to the much greater health risks of
pregnancy and childbirth and to the physical, psychological, and financial
hardships of unwanted motherhood. See Greydanus & Railsback, supra, at 214
(noting that minor's overall risk of dying from childbirth is over nine times
greater than risk of dying from legal abortion); Lewis, Minors' Competence to
Consent to Abortion, 42 American Psychologist 84, 87 (1987) ("[P]regnancy
continuation poses far greater psychological, physical, and economic risks to
the adolescent than does abortion") (citation omitted). See also Bellotti II,
443 U.S., at 642 (plurality opinion) ("[C]onsidering her probable education,
employment skills, financial resources, and emotional maturity, unwanted
motherhood may be exceptionally burdensome for a minor"). Clearly, then,
requiring notification of one parent significantly burdens a young woman's right
to terminate her pregnancy.
B
The 48-hour delay after notification further aggravates the
harm caused by the pre-notification delay that may flow from a minor's fear of
notifying a parent. Moreover, the 48-hour delay burdens the rights of all
minors, including those who would voluntarily consult with one or both parents.4 JUSTICE STEVENS' assertion that the 48-hour delay "imposes
only a minimal burden," ante, at 449; see also post, at 496 (opinion of KENNEDY,
J.), ignores the increased health risks and costs that this delay entails. The
District Court specifically found as a matter of fact that "[d]elay of any
length in performing an abortion increases the statistical risk of mortality and
morbidity." 648 F.Supp. 756, 765 (Minn 1986). Even a brief delay can have a
particularly detrimental impact if it pushes the abortion into the second
trimester, when the operation is substantially more risky and costly. Ibid. See [497 U.S. 417, 468] also C. Tietze & S. Henshaw, Induced
Abortion: A World Review 1986, pp. 103-104 (6th ed. 1986) (rate of major
complications nearly doubles in the week following the end of the first
trimester and increases significantly thereafter). Moreover, the District Court
found that the 48-hour delay "frequently is compounded by scheduling factors
such as clinic hours, transportation requirements, weather, a minor's school and
work commitments, and sometimes a single parent's family and work commitments,"
often resulting in an effective delay of a week or more. 648 F.Supp., at 765.5 The increased risk caused by a delay of that magnitude, the
District Court found, is statistically significant at any point in the
pregnancy. Ibid. Certainly no pregnant woman facing these heightened risks to
her health would dismiss them as "minimal."6 [497 U.S. 417, 469]
C
Because the parental notification and delay requirements
burden a young woman's right freely to decide whether to terminate her
pregnancy, the State must show that these requirements are justified by a
compelling state interest and are closely tailored to further that interest. The
main purpose of the notification requirement is to "protect the well-being of
minors by encouraging minors to discuss with their parents the decision whether
to terminate their pregnancies" Id., at 766. The 44-hour delay, in turn, is
designed to provide parents with adequate time to consult with their daughters.
Ante, at 448-449 (opinion of STEVENS, J.); post, at 496 (opinion of KENNEDY,
J.). As JUSTICE STEVENS states, such consultation is intended to ensure that the
minor's decision is "knowing and intelligent." Ante, at 448. I need not
determine whether the State's interest ultimately outweighs young women's
privacy interests, however, because the strictures here are not closely tailored
to further the State's asserted goal.
For the many young women who would voluntarily consult with a parent before
having an abortion, see supra, at 464-465, the notification and delay
requirements are superfluous, and so do not advance the State's interest. The
requirements affect only those women who would not otherwise notify a parent.
But compelled notification is unlikely to result in productive consultation in
families in which a daughter does not feel comfortable consulting her parents
about intimate or sexual matters. See Melton, Legal Regulation of Adolescent
Abortion: Unintended Effects, 42 American Psychologist 79, 81 (1987) (stating
that, in many families, compelled parental notification is unlikely to result in
meaningful discussion about the daughter's predicament); Tr. 1357-1358
(testimony of Dr. Steven Butzer) (stating that involuntary disclosure is
disruptive to family and has "almost universally negative" effects, in accord
with minor's expectations). [497 U.S. 417, 470] Moreover, in those families
with a history of child abuse, a pregnant minor forced to notify a parent is
more likely to be greeted by physical assault or psychological harassment than
open and caring conversation about her predicament. See Tr. 316 (testimony of
Dr. Lenore Walker) (stating that forced notification in dysfunctional families
is likely to sever communication patterns and increase the risk of violence);
H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U.S., at 446 (MARSHALL, J., dissenting). Forced
notification in such situations would amount to punishing the daughter for the
lack of a stable and communicative family environment, when the blame for that
situation lies principally, if not entirely, with the parents. Parental
notification in the less-than-ideal family, therefore, would not lead to an
informed decision by the minor.7
The State also claims that the statute serves the interest of protecting
parents' independent right "to shape the[ir] child[ren]'s values and
lifestyle[s]" and "to determine and strive for what they believe to be best for
their children." Brief for Petitioners in No. 88-1309, p. 26. If this is so, the
statute is surely under-inclusive, as it does not require parental notification
where the minor seeks medical treatment for pregnancy, venereal disease, or
alcohol and other drug abuse. See Minn. Stat. 144.343(1) (1988). Are we to
believe that [497 U.S. 417, 471] Minnesota
parents have no interest in their children's wellbeing in these other contexts?
In any event, parents' right to direct their children's upbringing is a right
against state interference with family matters. See, e.g., Prince v.
Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158, 166 (1944) (noting that this Court's decisions
"have respected the private realm of family life which the state cannot enter").
See also Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 232 (1972); Pierce v. Society of
Sisters, 268 U.S. 510, 534-535 (1925). Yet, ironically, the State's requirements
here affirmatively interfere in family life by trying to force families to
conform to the State's archetype of the ideal family. Cf. Moore v. East
Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494, 506 (1977) ("[T]he Constitution prevents [the state]
from standardizing its children - and its adults - by forcing all to live in
certain narrowly defined family patterns"); ante, at 452. It is a strange
constitutional alchemy that would transform a limitation on state power into a
justification for governmental intrusion into family interactions. Moreover, as
a practical matter, "state intervention is hardly likely to resurrect parental
authority that the parents themselves are unable to preserve." H.L. v. Matheson,
supra, at 448 (MARSHALL, J., dissenting). See also Planned Parenthood of Central
Mo., 428 U.S., at 75 (finding it unlikely that parental veto power over abortion
"will enhance parental authority or control where the minor and the
nonconsenting parent are so fundamentally in conflict and the very existence of
the pregnancy already has fractured the family structure").
Even if the State's interest is construed as merely the facilitation of the
exercise of parental authority, the notification and delay requirements are not
narrowly drawn. Parental authority is not limitless. Certainly where parental
involvement threatens to harm the child, the parent's authority must yield.
Prince v. Massachusetts, supra, at 169-170; H.L. v. Matheson, supra, at 449
(MARSHALL, J., dissenting). Yet the notification and delay requirements
[497 U.S. 417, 472]
facilitate the exercise of parental authority even where it may physically or
psychologically harm the child. See supra, at 470.
Furthermore, the exercise of parental authority in some instances will take
the form of obstructing the minor's decision to have an abortion. A parent who
objects to the abortion, once notified, can exert strong pressure on the minor -
in the form of stern disapproval, withdrawal of financial support, or physical
or emotional abuse - to block her from getting an abortion. See Bellotti II, 443
U.S., at 647 (opinion of Powell, J.) ("[M]any parents hold strong views on the
subject of abortion, and young pregnant minors, especially those living at home,
are particularly vulnerable to their parents' efforts to obstruct . . . an
abortion"). See also H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U.S., at 438-439 (MARSHALL, J.,
dissenting). In such circumstances, the notification requirement becomes, in
effect, a consent requirement. As discussed below, infra, at 473, the State may
not permit any person, including a parent, to veto a woman's decision to
terminate her pregnancy. Because the notification and delay requirements
effectively give parents the opportunity to exercise an unconstitutional veto in
some situations, those requirements are not narrowly tailored to the State's
interest in facilitating legitimate exercises of parental authority.
III
The parental notification and 48-hour delay requirements,
then, do not satisfy the strict scrutiny applicable to laws restricting a
woman's constitutional right to have an abortion. The judicial bypass procedure
cannot salvage those requirements because that procedure itself is
unconstitutional.
A
The State argues that the bypass procedure saves the
notification and delay requirements because it provides an alternative way to
obtain a legal abortion for minors who would be harmed by those requirements.
This Court has upheld a [497 U.S. 417, 473] one-parent consent requirement where
the State provided an alternative judicial procedure "`whereby a pregnant minor
[could] demonstrate that she [was] sufficiently mature to make the abortion
decision herself or that, despite her immaturity, an abortion would be in her
best interests.'" Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas City, Inc. v. Ashcroft, 462
U.S. 476, 491 (1983) (opinion of Powell, J.) (quoting Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, 462 U.S., at 439-440).
I continue to believe, however, that a judicial bypass procedure of this sort
is itself unconstitutional because it effectively gives a judge "an absolute
veto over the decision of the physician and his patient." Planned Parenthood
Assn. of Kansas City, supra, at 504 (BLACKMUN, J., concurring in part and
dissenting in part); see also Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 655 (STEVENS, J.,
concurring in judgment) ("The provision of an absolute veto to a judge . . . is
to me particularly troubling. . . . It is inherent in the right to make the
abortion decision that the right may be exercised without public scrutiny and in
defiance of the contrary opinion of the sovereign or other third parties")
(footnote omitted); Planned Parenthood of Central Mo., supra, at 74 ("[T]he
State does not have the constitutional authority to give a third party an
absolute, and possibly arbitrary, veto over the decision of the physician and
his patient to terminate the patient's pregnancy, regardless of the reason for
withholding the consent"). No person may veto any minor's decision, made in
consultation with her physician, to terminate her pregnancy. An "immature" minor
has no less right to make decisions regarding her own body than a mature adult.
Minnesota's bypass provision allows a judge to authorize an abortion if he
determines either that a woman is sufficiently mature to make the decision on
her own or, if she is not sufficiently mature, that an abortion without parental
notification would serve her best interests. Minn. Stat. 144.343(6) (1988). Of
course, if a judge refuses to authorize [497 U.S. 417, 474] an abortion, a young woman
can then reevaluate whether she wants to notify a parent. But many women will
carry the fetus to term rather than notify a parent. See supra, at 466-467.
Other women may decide to inform a parent, but then confront parental pressure
or abuse so severe as to obstruct the abortion. For these women, the judge's
refusal to authorize an abortion effectively constitutes an absolute veto.
The constitutional defects in any provision allowing someone to veto a
woman's abortion decision are exacerbated by the vagueness of the standards
contained in this statute. The statute gives no guidance on how a judge is to
determine whether a minor is sufficiently "mature" and "capable" to make the
decision on her own. See Minn. Stat. 144.343(6)(c)(i) (1988) (judge shall
authorize abortion if he "determines that the pregnant woman is mature and
capable of giving informed consent to the proposed abortion"). Cf. Lewis, 42
American Psychologist, at 84, 87 (noting the absence of a judicial standard for
assessing maturity). The statute similarly is silent as to how a judge is to
determine whether an abortion without parental notification would serve an
immature minor's "best interests." 144.343(6)(c)(i) (judge shall authorize
abortion for immature minor without notification "if said judge concludes that
the pregnant woman's best interests would be served thereby"). Is the judge
expected to know more about the woman's medical needs or psychological makeup
than her doctor? Should he consider the woman's financial and emotional status
to determine the quality of life the woman and her future child would enjoy in
this world? Neither the record nor the Court answers such questions. As JUSTICE
STEVENS wrote in Bellotti II, the best interest standard "provides little real
guidance to the judge, and his decision must necessarily reflect personal and
societal values and mores whose enforcement upon the minor - particularly when
contrary to her own informed and reasonable decision - is fundamentally at odds
with privacy interests underlying the constitutional protection [497 U.S. 417, 475] afforded to her decision."
443 U.S., at 655-656 (opinion concurring in judgment). It is difficult to
conceive of any reason, aside from a judge's personal opposition to abortion,
that would justify a finding that an immature woman's best interests would be
served by forcing her to endure pregnancy and childbirth against her will.
B
Even if I did not believe that a judicial bypass procedure was
facially unconstitutional, the experience of Minnesota's procedure in operation
demonstrates that the bypass provision before us cannot save the parental
notification and delay requirements. This Court has addressed judicial bypass
procedures only in the context of facial challenges. See Planned Parenthood
Assn. of Kansas City, 462 U.S., at 490-493 (opinion of Powell, J.); Akron Center
for Reproductive Health, 462 U.S., at 439-442; Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 643-644
(opinion of Powell, J.). The Court has never considered the actual burdens a
particular bypass provision imposes on a woman's right to choose an abortion.
Such consideration establishes that, even if judges authorized every abortion
sought by petitioning minors, Minnesota's judicial bypass is far too burdensome
to remedy an otherwise unconstitutional statute.
The District Court found that the bypass procedure imposed significant
burdens on minors. First, "scheduling practices in Minnesota courts typically
require minors to wait two or three days between their first contact with the
court and the hearing on their petitions. This delay may combine with other
factors to result in a delay of a week or more. 648 F.Supp., at 763. As noted
above, supra, at 467-468, a delay of only a few days can significantly increase
the health risks to the minor; a week-long delay inevitably does. Furthermore,
in several counties in Minnesota, no judge is willing to hear bypass petitions,
forcing women in those areas to travel long distances to obtain a hearing. 648
F.Supp., at [497 U.S. 417, 476] 763;
Donovan, Judging Teenagers: How Minors Fare When They Seek Court-Authorized
Abortions, 15 Family Planning Perspectives 259, 264 (1983) (50% of Minnesota
minors utilizing bypass were not residents of city in which court was located);
Melton, 42 American Psychologist, at 80 ("In Minnesota, where judges in rural
counties have often recused themselves from participation in the abortion
hearings, minors sometimes have to travel a round-trip of more than 500 miles
for the hearing"). The burden of such travel, often requiring an overnight stay
in a distant city, is particularly heavy for poor women from rural areas.
Furthermore, a young woman's absence from home, school, or work during the time
required for such travel and for the hearing itself can jeopardize the woman's
confidentiality. See ibid.
The District Court also found that the bypass procedure can be extremely
traumatic for young women.
"The experience of going to court for a judicial authorization produces
fear and tension in many minors. Minors are apprehensive about the prospect
of facing an authority figure who holds in his hands the power to veto their
decision to proceed without notifying one or both parents. Many minors are
angry and resentful at being required to justify their decision before
complete strangers. Despite the confidentiality of the proceeding, many
minors resent having to reveal intimate details of their personal and family
lives to these strangers. Finally, many minors are left feeling guilty and
ashamed about their lifestyle and their decision to terminate their
pregnancy. Some mature minors and some minors in whose best interests it is
to proceed without notifying their parents are so daunted by the judicial
proceeding that they forego the bypass option and either notify their
parents or carry to term.
"Some minors are so upset by the bypass proceeding that they consider it
more difficult than the medical procedure itself. Indeed the anxiety
resulting from the bypass [497 U.S. 417, 477] proceeding may linger
until the time of the medical procedure and thus render the latter more
difficult than necessary." 648 F.Supp., at 763-764.8
Yet, despite the substantial burdens imposed by these proceedings, the bypass
is, in effect, a "rubber stamp," id., at 766 (testimony of Hon. William
Sweeney); only an extremely small number of petitions are denied, id., at 765.
See also Melton, supra, at 80 ("Available research indicates that judicial
bypass proceedings are merely pro forma. Although they represent substantial
intrusion on minors' privacy and take up significant amounts of court time,
there is no evidence that they promote more reasoned decisionmaking or screen
out adolescents who may be particularly immature or vulnerable. . . . The
hearings typically last less than 15 minutes. . . . Despite the complex issues
involved (maturity and the best interests of the minor), experts are rarely if
ever called to testify"). The judges who have adjudicated over 90% of the bypass
petitions between 1981 and 1986 could not identify any positive effects of the
bypass procedure. See 648 F.Supp., at 766; ante, at 441-442, and n. 29. The
large number of women who undergo the bypass process do not receive any sort of
counseling from the court - which is not surprising, given the court's limited
role and lack of expertise in that area. The bypass process itself thus cannot
serve the state interest of promoting informed decisionmaking by all minors. If
the State truly were concerned about ensuring [497 U.S. 417, 478] that all minors consult with a
knowledgeable and caring adult, it would provide for some form of counseling
rather than for a judicial procedure in which a judge merely gives or withholds
his consent.9
Thus, regardless of one's view of the facial validity of a bypass procedure,
Minnesota's procedure in practice imposes an excessive burden on young women's
right to choose an abortion. Cf. Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 655 (STEVENS, J.,
concurring in judgment) ("[T]he need to commence judicial proceedings in order
to obtain a legal abortion would impose a burden at least as great as, and
probably greater than, that imposed on the minor child by the need to obtain the
consent of a parent"). Furthermore, the process does not serve the State's
interest of ensuring that minors' decisions are informed. Surely, then, a State
could not require that all minor women seeking an abortion obtain judicial
approval.10 The Court's holding that the burdensome bypass procedure
saves the State's burdensome notification and delay requirements [497 U.S. 417, 479] thus strikes me as the
equivalent of saying that two wrongs make a right. I cannot accept such a novel
judicial calculus.
IV
A majority of the Court today strikes down an unreasonable and
vastly overbroad requirement that a pregnant minor notify both her parents of
her decision to obtain an abortion. With that decision I agree. At the same
time, though, a different majority holds that a State may require a young woman
to notify one or even both parents and then wait 48 hours before having an
abortion, as long as the State provides a judicial bypass procedure. From that
decision I vehemently dissent. This scheme forces a young woman in an already
dire situation to choose between two fundamentally unacceptable alternatives:
notifying a possibly dictatorial or even abusive parent and justifying her
profoundly personal decision in an intimidating judicial proceeding to a
black-robed stranger. For such a woman, this dilemma is more likely to result in
trauma and pain than in an informed and voluntary decision.
[Footnote 1] I concur in Part VII on the
understanding that the opinion does not dispute that a minor's liberty interest
alone outweighs the interest of the [497 U.S.
417, 462] second parent in shaping a child's values and lifestyles,
regardless of the interest of the first parent. Cf. ante, at 452-453.
[Footnote 2] The statute provides for
one-parent notification where only one parent is living or where the second
parent "cannot be located through reasonably diligent effort." Minn. Stat.
144.343(3) (1988).
[Footnote 3] Dr. Jane Hodgson testified
before the District Court that one 14-year-old patient, in order to keep her
pregnancy private, tried to induce an abortion with the help of her friends by
inserting a metallic object into her vagina, thereby tearing her body, scarring
her cervix, and causing bleeding. When that attempt failed to induce an
abortion, the patient, then four or five months pregnant, finally went to an
abortion clinic. Because of the damage to the patient's cervix, doctors had to
perform a hysterotomy, meaning that that woman must have a Cesarean section to
deliver a child in the future. App. 462.
[Footnote 4] As JUSTICE STEVENS notes,
ante, at 449, the 48-hour delay does not apply if a parent or court consents to
the abortion.
[Footnote 5] Although these other
factors would constrain a young woman's ability to schedule an abortion even in
the absence of the 48-hour delay requirement, the addition of the immutable
statutory delay reduces both the woman's and the clinic's scheduling
flexibility, and thus can exacerbate the effect of the other factors. For
instance, a woman might contact a clinic on Monday and find that her schedule
and the clinic's allow for only a Tuesday appointment for that week. Without the
48-hour delay requirement, the woman could be treated the next day; with the
statutory delay, however, the woman would be forced to wait a week.
[Footnote 6] JUSTICE STEVENS concludes
that the 48-hour delay requirement actually results in "little or no delay,"
because the statutory period "may run concurrently with the time necessary to
make an appointment for the procedure." Ante, at 449. See also post, at 496
(opinion of KENNEDY, J.) ("48-hour waiting period . . . results in little or no
delay"); 853 F.2d 1452, 1465 (CA8 1988) (en banc). JUSTICE STEVENS bases this
conclusion on the testimony of the co-administrator of one abortion clinic that
a 1- or 2-day scheduling backlog was typical. Ante, at 449, n. 34. "One or two
days" however, obviously means that the backlog is not necessarily 48 hours.
Furthermore, that witness also stated that if "a woman says that she must be
seen on a particular day, our policy is we will always see her." App. 147. But
because of the mandated 48-hour delay, the clinic cannot honor a woman's request
for an abortion until at least two full days have elapsed. The testimony
therefore is hardly sufficient to justify ignoring the District Court's factual
finding with regard to the effects of the delay requirement.
[Footnote 7] The State also asserts that
the requirements permit parents to provide doctors with relevant information
about their daughters' medical history and "to assist with ensuring that proper
after-care procedures are followed." Brief of Petitioners in No. 88-1309, pp.
34-36. See also ante, at 448 (opinion of JUSTICE STEVENS) (delay period "permits
the parent to inquire into the competency of the doctor performing the
abortion"). If these are actual state interests, it seems peculiar that the
State does not try to facilitate similar parental involvement in minors'
treatment for pregnancy and childbirth, see infra this page, which pose far
greater risks to the minor's health than abortion, see supra, 466-467. In any
event, compelled notification is unlikely to result in helpful parental
involvement in those families in which a parent reacts to the news of the
daughter's predicament by rejecting or abusing the young woman. See supra, this
page.
[Footnote 8] Dr. Hodgson testified that
some minors dread the court procedure so much that they become "wringing wet
with perspiration" and frequently require a sedative beforehand. App. 468. One
judge who has heard a significant number of bypass petitions testified that the
court experience is "very nervewracking" for young women. 648 F.Supp., at 766.
Another testified that pregnant minors' "`level of apprehension is twice what I
normally see in court. . . . You see all the typical things that you would see
with somebody under incredible amounts of stress - answering monosyllabically,
tone of voice, tenor of voice, shaky, wringing of hands, you know, one young
lady had her - her hands were turning blue and it was warm in my office.'" Ibid.
[Footnote 9] Maine, for example,
requires that a minor obtain the consent of a parent, guardian, or adult family
member, undergo a judicial bypass, or receive counseling from the physician or a
counselor according to specified criteria. See Me. Rev. Stat. Ann., Tit. 22,
1597-A (Supp. 1989). Wisconsin requires abortion providers to encourage parental
notification unless they determine that the minor has a valid reason for not
notifying her parents. Wis. Stat. 146.78 (1987-1988). In the latter situation,
the provider must encourage - but not require - the minor to notify "another
family member, close family friend, school counselor, social worker or other
appropriate person." 146.78(5)(c). I express no opinion on the constitutionality
or efficacy of these schemes, but raise them only as examples of alternatives
that seem more closely related than a judicial bypass procedure to the goal of
ensuring that the minor's decision is informed.
In any event, most abortion clinics already provide extensive counseling. See
1 National Research Council, Risking the Future: Adolescent Sexuality,
Pregnancy, and Childbearing 191-192 (C. Hayes ed. 1987) (90% of abortion clinics
routinely provide counseling for all first-abortion patients, and all clinics
make counseling available to all patients on request).
[Footnote 10] Indeed, the State
conceded in oral argument before the Eighth Circuit, sitting en banc, that a
judicial approval provision by itself would be unconstitutional. See 853 F.2d,
at 1469 (Lay, C.J., dissenting).
JUSTICE SCALIA, concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part.
As I understand the various opinions today: One Justice holds that two-parent
notification is unconstitutional (at least in the present circumstances) without
judicial bypass, but constitutional with bypass, ante, at 459-461 (O'CONNOR, J.,
concurring in part and concurring in judgment); four Justices would hold that
two-parent notification is constitutional with or without bypass, post, at
488-497 (KENNEDY, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissenting in part);
four Justices would hold that two-parent notification is unconstitutional with
or without bypass, though the four apply two different standards, ante, at
455-458 (opinion of STEVENS, J.), ante, at 472-479 (MARSHALL, J., concurring in
part and dissenting in part); [497 U.S. 417, 480]
six Justices hold that one-parent notification with bypass is constitutional,
though for two different sets of reasons, Ohio v. Akron Center for Reproductive
Health, post, at 510-517; post, at 522-524 (STEVENS, J., concurring in part and
concurring in judgment); and three Justices would hold that one-parent
notification with bypass is unconstitutional, post, at 526-527 (BLACKMUN, J.,
dissenting). One will search in vain the document we are supposed to be
construing for text that provides the basis for the argument over these
distinctions, and will find in our society's tradition regarding abortion no
hint that the distinctions are constitutionally relevant, much less any
indication how a constitutional argument about them ought to be resolved. The
random and unpredictable results of our consequently unchanneled individual
views make it increasingly evident, Term after Term, that the tools for this job
are not to be found in the lawyer's - and hence not in the judge's - workbox. I
continue to dissent from this enterprise of devising an Abortion Code, and from
the illusion that we have authority to do so.
JUSTICE KENNEDY, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE WHITE, and JUSTICE
SCALIA join, concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting in part.
"`There can be little doubt that the State furthers a constitutionally
permissible end by encouraging an unmarried pregnant minor to seek the help
and advice of her parents in making the very important decision whether or
not to bear a child. That is a grave decision, and a girl of tender years,
under emotional stress, may be ill-equipped to make it without mature advice
and emotional support.'" Bellotti v. Baird (Bellotti II), 443 U.S. 622,
640-641 (1979) (opinion of Powell, J.) (quoting Planned Parenthood of
Central Missouri v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52, 91 (1976) (Stewart, J.,
concurring)); see also H.L. v. Matheson, 450 U.S. 398, 409-411 (1981); id.,
at 422-423 (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment); Danforth, supra, at 94-95
(WHITE, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part); id., at 102-103
(STEVENS, J., concurring in [497 U.S. 417,
481] part and dissenting in part). Today the Court holds that a
statute requiring a minor to notify both parents that she plans to have an
abortion is not a permissible means of furthering the interest described
with such specificity in Bellotti II. This conclusion, which no doubt will
come as a surprise to most parents, is incompatible with our constitutional
tradition and any acceptable notion of judicial review of legislative
enactments. I dissent from the portion of the Court's judgment affirming the
Court of Appeals' conclusion that Minnesota two-parent notice statute is
unconstitutional.
The Minnesota statute also provides, however, that if the two-parent notice
requirement is invalidated, the same notice requirement is effective unless the
pregnant minor obtains a court order permitting the abortion to proceed. Minn.
Stat. 144.343(6) (1988). The Court of Appeals sustained this portion of the
statute, in effect a two-parent notice requirement with a judicial bypass. Five
Members of the Court, the four who join this opinion and JUSTICE O'CONNOR, agree
with the Court of Appeals' decision on this aspect of the statute. As announced
by JUSTICE STEVENS, who dissents from this part of the Court's decision, the
Court of Appeals' judgment on this portion of the statute is therefore affirmed.
I
The provisions of the statute before us are straightforward.
In essence, the statute provides that, before a physician in Minnesota may
perform an abortion on an unemancipated minor, the physician or the physician's
agent must notify both of the minor's parents, if each one can be located
through reasonable effort, either personally or by certified mail at least 48
hours before the abortion is performed. Minn. Stat. 144.343(2)-(3) (1988).
Notification is not required if the abortion is necessary to prevent the minor's
death; or if both parents have consented to the abortion; or if the minor
declares that she is the victim of sexual abuse, neglect, or physical abuse.
144.343(4). Failure to comply [497 U.S. 417, 482]
with these requirements is a misdemeanor, and the statute authorizes a civil
action against the noncomplying physician by the minor's parents. 144.343(5).
The statute also provides that, if a court enjoins the notice requirement of
subdivision 2, parental notice under the subdivision shall still be required
unless the minor obtains a court order dispensing with it. Under the statute,
the court is required to authorize the physician to perform the abortion without
parental notice if the court determines that the minor is "mature and capable of
giving informed consent to the proposed abortion" or that "the performance of an
abortion upon her without notification of her parents, guardian, or conservator
would be in her best interests." 144.343(6).
II
The State identifies two interests served by the law. The
first is the State's interest in the welfare of pregnant minors. The second is
the State's interest in acknowledging and promoting the role of parents in the
care and upbringing of their children. JUSTICE STEVENS, writing for two Members
of the Court, acknowledges the legitimacy of the first interest, but decides
that the second interest is somehow illegitimate, at least as to whichever
parent a minor chooses not to notify. I cannot agree that the Constitution
prevents a State from keeping both parents informed of the medical condition or
medical treatment of their child under the terms and conditions of this statute.
The welfare of the child has always been the central concern of laws with
regard to minors. The law does not give to children many rights given to adults,
and provides, in general, that children can exercise the rights they do have
only through and with parental consent. Parham v. J.R., 442 U.S. 584, 621 (1979)
(STEWART, J., concurring in judgment). Legislatures historically have acted on
the basis of the qualitative differences in maturity between children and
adults, see Schall v. Martin, 467 U.S. 253, 265-267 (1984); Thompson
[497 U.S. 417, 483]
v. Oklahoma, 487 U.S. 815, 853-854 (1988) (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in judgment)
(collecting cases); Stanford v. Kentucky, 492 U.S. 361, 384 (1989) (BRENNAN, J.,
dissenting), and not without reason. Age is a rough but fair approximation of
maturity and judgment, and a State has an interest in seeing that a child, when
confronted with serious decisions such as whether or not to abort a pregnancy,
has the assistance of her parents in making the choice. If anything is settled
by our previous cases dealing with parental notification and consent laws, it is
this point. See Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 640-641; Matheson, 450 U.S., at
409-411; id., at 422-423 (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment).
Protection of the right of each parent to participate in the upbringing of
her or his own children is a further discrete interest that the State recognizes
by the statute. The common law historically has given recognition to the right
of parents, not merely to be notified of their children's actions, but to speak
and act on their behalf. Absent a showing of neglect or abuse, a father
"possessed the paramount right to the custody and control of his minor children,
and to superintend their education and nurture." J. Schouler, Law of Domestic
Relations 337 (3d. ed. 1882); see also 1 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *452-*453;
2 J. Kent, Commentaries on American Law *203-*206; G. Field, Legal Relations of
Infants 63-80 (1888). In this century, the common law of most States has
abandoned the idea that parental rights are vested solely in fathers, with
mothers being viewed merely as agents of their husbands, cf. ante, at 446, n.
32; it is now the case that each parent has parental rights and parental
responsibilities, see W. Keeton, D. Dobbs, R. Keeton, & D. Owen, Prosser and
Keeton on the Law of Torts, ch. 4, 18, p. 115 (5th ed. 1984). Limitations have
emerged on the prerogatives of parents to act contrary to the best interests of
the child with respect to matters such as compulsory schooling and child labor.
As a general matter, however, it remains [497
U.S. 417, 484] "cardinal with us that the custody, care and nurture of
the child reside first in the parents, whose primary function and freedom
include preparation for obligations the state can neither supply nor hinder."
Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158, 166 (1944). "The history and culture of
Western civilization reflect a strong tradition of parental concern for the
nurture and upbringing of their children. This primary role of the parents in
the upbringing of their children is now established beyond debate as an enduring
American tradition." Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 232 (1972); see also
Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510, 535 (1925).
A State pursues a legitimate end under the Constitution when it attempts to
foster and preserve the parent-child relation by giving all parents the
opportunity to participate in the care and nurture of their children. We have
held that parents have a liberty interest, protected by the Constitution, in
having a reasonable opportunity to develop close relations with their children.
See Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 753-754 (1982); Caban v. Mohammed, 441
U.S. 380 (1979); Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 651-652 (1972). We have
recognized, of course, that there are limits to the constitutional right of
parents to have custody of or to participate in decisions affecting their
children. If a parent has relinquished the opportunity to develop a relation
with the child, and his or her only link to the child is biological, the
Constitution does not require a State to allow parental participation. See Lehr
v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248, 261-265 (1983); Quilloin v. Walcott, 434 U.S. 246,
254-256 (1978). But the fact that the Constitution does not protect the
parent-child relationship in all circumstances does not mean that the State
cannot attempt to foster parental participation where the Constitution does not
demand that it do so. A State may seek to protect and facilitate the
parent-child bond on the assumption that parents will act in their child's best
interests. See Parham v. J.R., supra, at 602-603; Ginsberg v. New York, 390 U.S.
629, 639 (1968). Indeed, [497 U.S. 417, 485]
we have held that a State cannot terminate parental rights based upon a
presumption that a class of parents is unfit without affording individual
parents an opportunity to rebut the presumption. See Stanley, supra, at 654-658;
Santosky, supra, at 753 ("The fundamental liberty interest of natural parents in
the care, custody, and management of their child does not evaporate simply
because they have not been model parents . . ."). If a State cannot legislate on
the broad assumption that classes of parents are unfit and undeserving of
parental rights without affording an opportunity to rebut the assumption, it is
at least permissible for a State to legislate on the premise that parents, as a
general rule, are interested in their children's welfare and will act in accord
with it.
The Court's descriptions of the State's interests in this case are
caricatures, both of the law and of our most revered institutions. The Court
labels these interests as ones in "standardizing its children and adults,".and
in ensuring that each family, to the extent possible, "conform to some
state-designed ideal." Ante, at 452; see also ante, at 471 (MARSHALL, J.,
concurring in part, concurring in judgment in part, and dissenting in part)
(accusing Minnesota of "trying to force families to conform to the State's
archetype of the ideal family"). Minnesota asserts no such purpose, by explicit
statement or by any permissible inference. All that Minnesota asserts is an
interest in seeing that parents know about a vital decision facing their child.
That interest is a valid one without regard to whether the child is living with
either one or both parents, or to the attachment between the minor's parents.
How the family unit responds to such notice is, for the most part, beyond the
State's control. The State would no doubt prefer that all parents, after being
notified under the statute, would contact their daughters and assist them in
making their decisions with the child's best interests at heart; but it has not,
contrary to the Court's intimation, "decreed" communication, nor could it. What
[497 U.S. 417, 486]
the State can do is make the communication possible by at least informing
parents of their daughter's intentions.
Minnesota has done no more than act upon the common-sense proposition that,
in assisting their daughter in deciding whether to have an abortion, parents can
best fulfill their roles if they have the same information about their own
child's medical condition and medical choices as the child's doctor does; and
that to deny parents this knowledge is to risk, or perpetuate, estrangement or
alienation from the child when she is in the greatest need of parental guidance
and support. The Court does the State, and our constitutional tradition, sad
disservice by impugning the legitimacy of these elemental objectives.
Given the societal interest that underlies parental notice and consent laws,
it comes as no surprise that most States have enacted statutes requiring that,
in general, a physician must notify or obtain the consent of at least one of her
parents or legal guardian before performing an abortion on a minor. See Wardle,
"Time Enough": Webster v. Reproductive Health Services and the Prudent Pace of
Justice, 41 Fla. L. Rev. 881, 963-965 (1989) (collecting statutes). Five States,
including Minnesota, appear to require, as a general rule, the notification of
both parents before a physician may perform an abortion on a minor. See Ark.
Code Ann. 20-16-801 through 20-16-808 (Supp. 1989); Idaho Code 18-610(6) (1987);
Tenn. Code Ann. 39-4-202 (1982); Utah Code Ann. 76-7-304 (1990). Another six
States appear to require, with varying exceptions, the consent of both parents.
See Del. Code Ann., Title 24, 1790(b)(3) (1987); Ill. Rev. Stat., ch. 38, _
81-54(3) (1989); Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. 311.732 (Michie 1990); Mass. Gen. Laws 112,
12S (1988); Miss. Code. Ann. 41-41-53 (Supp. 1989); N. D. Cent. Code
14-02.1-03.1 (1981). Whether these statutes are more or less restrictive than
the Minnesota statute is not the issue, although I pause to note that, because
the Court's decision today turns upon its perception that the law's
requirements, [497 U.S. 417, 487]
despite its exceptions, are the most "stringent" in the country, see ante, at
459 (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment), the Court's
decision has no import for the validity of these other statutes. What is
important is that Minnesota is not alone in acknowledging the vitality of these
governmental interests and adopting laws that, in the legislature's judgment,
are best suited to serving them while protecting the minor's welfare.
On a more general level, the current trend among state legislatures is to
enact joint custody laws making it the norm for divorced or separated parents to
share the legal responsibility and authority for making decisions concerning
their children's care, education, religion, and medical treatment. See 2 H.
Clark, Law of Domestic Relations in the United States 20.5 (2d ed. 1987);
Folberg, Joint Custody Law - The Second Wave, 23 J. Family L. 1, 14-55
(1984-1985) (collecting statutes). Under Minnesota law, for example, there
exists a presumption in divorce proceedings that joint custody, if requested by
either or both parents, is in the best interests of the child. See Minn. Stat.
518.17(2) (Supp. 1989). Even if joint custody is not awarded, Minnesota law
provides that each parent, unless the court specifically directs otherwise to
protect the welfare of a parent or the child, "has the right of access to, and
to receive copies of, school, medical, dental, religious training, and other
important records and information about the minor children; the responsibility
to "keep the other party informed as to the name and address of the school of
attendance of the minor children"; the responsibility to "notify the other party
of [an accident or serious illness of a minor child], and the name of the health
care provider and the place of treatment"; and "the right to reasonable access
and telephone contact with the minor children." Minn. Stat. 518.17(3) (1988).
Minnesota's two-parent notification law does no more than apply these general
principles to the specific case of abortion. [497
U.S. 417, 488]
Federal law contains similar provisions regulating the health and welfare of
children that require the notification or consent of both parents. For example,
one condition for obtaining a grant under the Adolescent Family Life Act is that
an applicant must provide assurances that it will "notify the parents or
guardians of any unemancipated minor requesting services [relating to family
planning] from the applicant and . . . will obtain the permission of such
parents or guardians with respect to the provision of such services." 42 U.S.C.
300z-5(a) (22)(A)(i) (1982 ed.); see 300z-5(a)(22)(A)(ii) (requiring only notice
to parents or guardians if the unemancipated minor is pregnant). See also 42
U.S.C. 5671(d) (1982 ed., Supp. V) (authorizing funding for certain experimental
juvenile drug and alcohol treatment programs if safeguards are established for
obtaining the informed consent of the "parents or guardians" of minors); 50
U.S.C. App. 454(c)(4) (1982 ed.) (permitting induction of 17-year-olds into the
Armed Forces with the written consent of his "parents or guardian"); 45 CFR
46.408 (1989) (requiring consent of both parents before a minor may participate
in medical research posing more than a "minimal" risk of harm). With all
respect, I submit the Court today errs when it states that Minnesota's
two-parent notice law is an "oddity among state and federal consent provisions."
Ante, at 454.
III
At least two Members of the Court concede, as they must, that
a State has a legitimate interest in the welfare of the pregnant minor and that,
in furtherance of this interest, the State may require the minor to notify, and
consult with, one of her parents. See ante, at 444-446 (opinion of STEVENS, J.);
cf. ante, at 469 (MARSHALL, J., concurring in part, concurring in judgment in
part, and dissenting in part). The Court nonetheless holds the Minnesota statute
unconstitutional because it requires the minor to notify not one parent, but
both parents, a requirement that the Court says bears [497 U.S. 417, 489] no reasonable relation to
the minor's welfare. See ante, at 450-455; cf. ante, at 469-472 (MARSHALL, J.,
concurring in part, concurring in judgment in part, and dissenting in part). The
Court also concludes that Minnesota does not have a legitimate interest in
facilitating the participation of both parents in the care and upbringing of
their children. Given the substantial protection that minors have under
Minnesota law generally, and under the statute in question, the judicial bypass
provisions of the law are not necessary to its validity. The two-parent
notification law enacted by Minnesota is, in my view, valid without the judicial
bypass provision of subdivision 6.
A
We have been over much of this ground before. It is beyond
dispute that in many families, whether the parents are living together or apart,
notice to both parents serves the interests of the parents and the minor, and
that the State can legislate with this fact in mind. In H.L. v. Matheson, 450
U.S. 398 (1981), we considered the constitutionality of a statute which required
a physician, before performing an abortion on a minor, to "`[n]otify, if
possible, the [minor's] parents or guardian.'" Id., at 400 (quoting Utah Code
Ann. 76-7-304 (1978)) (emphasis added). We held that the statute, as applied to
unmarried, dependent, and immature minors, "plainly serves important state
interests, is narrowly drawn to protect only those interests, and does not
violate any guarantees of the Constitution." 450 U.S., at 413. Our holding was
made with knowledge of the contentions, supported by citations to medical and
sociological literature, that are proffered again today for the proposition that
notification imposes burdens on minors. See id., at 436-441 (MARSHALL, J.,
dissenting). We nonetheless rejected arguments that a requirement of parental
notification was the equivalent of a requirement of parental consent, id., at
411; that the statute was unconstitutional because it required notification only
as to abortions, and not as to other medical [497
U.S. 417, 490]
procedures, id., at 412; and that the statute was unconstitutional because it
might deter some minors from seeking abortions, id., at 413.
Our decision was based upon the well-accepted premise that we must defer to a
reasonable judgment by the state legislature when it determines what is sound
public policy. JUSTICE STEVENS' opinion concurring in the Court's judgment
relied upon an explicit statement of this principle. Concluding that the Utah
statute requiring notification of both parents was valid as to all unmarried
minors, both mature and immature, JUSTICE STEVENS reasoned that the State's
interest in ensuring that a young woman considering an abortion receive
appropriate consultation was "plainly sufficient to support a state
legislature's determination that such appropriate consultation should include
parental advice." Id., at 423. The Court today departs from this rule. It now
suggests that a general requirement that both parents be notified is
unconstitutional because of its own conclusion that the law is unnecessary when
notice produces favorable results, see ante, at 450, and irrational in all of
the instances when it produces unfavorable results, see ante, at 450-451. In
Matheson, JUSTICE STEVENS rejected these same arguments as insufficient to
establish that the Utah statute was unconstitutional:
"Of course, a conclusion that the Utah statute is invalid would not prevent
young pregnant women from voluntarily seeking the advice of their parents
prior to making the abortion decision. But the State may legitimately decide
that such consultation should be made more probable by ensuring that parents
are informed of their daughter's decision . . . .
. . . . .
"Utah's interest in its parental-notice statute is not diminished by the
fact that there can be no guarantee that meaningful parent-child
communication will actually occur. Good-faith compliance with the statute's
requirements [497 U.S. 417, 491] would
tend to facilitate communication between daughters and parents regarding the
abortion decision. The possibility that some parents will not react with
compassion and understanding upon being informed of their daughter's
predicament or that, even if they are receptive, they will incorrectly
advise her, does not undercut the legitimacy of the State's attempt to
establish a procedure that will enhance the probability that a pregnant
young woman exercise as wisely as possible her right to make the abortion
decision. 450 U.S., at 423-424 (emphasis added).
JUSTICE STEVENS' reasoning was correct then and it remains correct today.
B
In applying the standards established in our prior decisions
to the case at hand, "we must keep in mind that when we are concerned with
extremely sensitive issues, such as the one involved here, `the appropriate
forum for their resolution in a democracy is the legislature. We should not
forget that "legislatures are ultimate guardians of the liberties and welfare of
the people in quite as great a degree as the courts." Missouri, K & T R. Co. v.
May, 194 U.S. 267, 270 (1904) (Holmes, J.).' Maher v. Roe, 432 U.S. 464, 479-480
(1977) (footnote omitted)." Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, Inc.,
462 U.S. 416, 465 (1983) (O'CONNOR, J., dissenting). The Minnesota Legislature,
like the legislatures of many States, has found it necessary to address the
issue of parental notice in its statutory laws. In my view it has acted in a
permissible manner.
All must acknowledge that it was reasonable for the legislature to conclude
that in most cases notice to both parents will work to the minor's benefit. See
Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 640, n. 20 (opinion of Powell, J.) (parental
involvement, if compassionate and supportive, is highly desirable). This is true
not only in what the Court calls the "ideal family setting," where both parents
and the minor live under one roof, [497 U.S. 417, 492] but also where the minor no
longer lives with both parents. The Court does not deny that many absent parents
maintain significant ties with their children, and seek to participate in their
lives, to guide, to teach, and to care for them. It is beyond dispute that these
attachments, in cases not involving mistreatment or abuse, are essential to the
minor's wellbeing, and that parental notice is supportive of this kind of family
tie. Although it may be true that notice to one parent will often result in
notice to both, the State need not rely upon the decision of one parent to
notify the other, particularly where both parents maintain ties with their
daughter but not with each other, and when both parents share responsibilities
and duties with respect to the child.
I acknowledge that, in some cases, notifying both parents will not produce
desirable results despite the fact that no actual instance is in the record
before us, as the two-parent notification requirement was enjoined before it
went into effect. Cf. ante, at 438 (stating as a matter of historical fact that
the "two-parent notification requirement had particularly harmful effects on
both the minor and the custodial parent" and that fears that notification of an
absent parent would produce harmful results "were often realized") (emphasis
added). We need not decide today, however, whether the Constitution permits a
State to require that a physician notify both biological parents before
performing an abortion on any minor, for the simple reason that Minnesota has
not enacted such a law.
The Minnesota statute in fact contains exceptions to ensure that the
statutory notice requirement does not apply if it proves a serious threat to the
minor's health or safety. First, the statute does not require notice at all
costs; to comply with the law, a physician need only use "reasonably diligent
effort" to locate and notify both of the minor's parents. If the second parent
cannot be located, as may be the case if the parent has deserted the family or
ceased to maintain contact with the minor or the other parent, the only notice
required is to the first parent. Minn. Stat. 144.343(3) (1988). [497 U.S. 417, 493]
Second, even where both parents can be located, notice is not required if the
physician certifies that the abortion is necessary to prevent the woman's death
and there is insufficient time to provide the required notice, 144.343(4)(a); if
the minor's parents have authorized the abortion in writing, 144.343(4)(b); or
if the minor declares that she is the victim of sexual abuse, neglect, or
physical abuse, 144.343(4)(c). Under Minnesota law, "neglect" of a minor means
the failure of a parent "to supply a child with necessary food, clothing,
shelter or medical care when reasonably able to do so or failure to protect a
child from conditions or actions which imminently and seriously endanger the
child's physical or mental health when reasonably able to do so," Minn. Stat.
626.556(2)(c) (Supp. 1989); physical abuse is defined as "any physical injury
inflicted by a person responsible for the child's care on a child other than by
accidental means," 626.556(2)(d); and sexual abuse includes any sexual contact
by a parent or other person responsible for the child's care or in a position of
authority with respect to the child. 626.556(2)(a). I cannot believe that these
exceptions are too narrow to eliminate from the statute's coverage those
instances in which notice would place the minor in danger of parental violence
or other conduct that is a real threat to the physical or mental health of the
child.
The Court challenges the efficacy of this last exception because it believes
that the statutory requirement that a physician report a minor's declaration of
abuse to appropriate authorities, see Minn. Stat. 144.343(4)(c) (1988), will
deter minors from using the exception. This is not a proper basis for declaring
the law invalid. Laws are not declared unconstitutional because of some general
reluctance to follow a statutory scheme the legislature finds necessary to
accomplish a legitimate state objective. Beyond any question, it is reasonable
for the State to require that physicians report declarations of abuse to ensure
that mistreatment is known to authorities responsible for the protection of
minors. This [497 U.S. 417, 494]
requirement is but a single manifestation of the broad duty in Minnesota to
report suspected cases of child abuse to the proper authorities. See Minn. Stat.
626.556(1) (1988) (declaring it to be the public policy of the State "to protect
children whose health or welfare may be jeopardized through physical abuse,
neglect or sexual abuse" and "to strengthen the family and make the home,
school, and community safer for children by promoting responsible child care in
all settings").
No one can contend that a minor who is pregnant is somehow less deserving of
the State's protection. It is reasonable to provide that any minor who contends
that she cannot notify her parent or parents because she is the victim of
neglect or abuse allow the State to use its power to investigate her declaration
and protect her from harm. Any parent, moreover, who responds to notice by
threatening or harming the minor or the other parent may be prosecuted by the
State to the full extent of its laws. See Minn. Stat. 518B.01 (1988) (Domestic
Abuse Act); Minn. Stat. 609.221, 609.222, 609.223, 609.224 (1988 and Supp. 1989)
(assault statutes); 609.341 through 609.345 (sexual abuse statutes); 609.378
(criminal neglect statute). Just as it relies upon such laws as its first line
of defense for dealing with all other instances of abuse in family situations,
so too is the State entitled to rely upon them here.
Notwithstanding the exceptions and protections we have discussed, it does
remain possible, of course, that in some instances notifying one or both parents
will not be in the minor's best interests. Allegations of a similar possibility,
based upon sociological evidence similar to that presented in this case, was
made by the appellant in Matheson. See Brief for Appellant H. L. v. Matheson, O.
T. 1980, No. 79-5903, pp. 10-11; Brief for Planned Parenthood Federation of
America, Inc., et al., as Amici Curiae in Matheson, 16-31. The Court there held
that the parental notification law was valid, at least as to immature minors,
for the simple reason that a [497 U.S. 417, 495]
law is not invalid if it fails to further the governmental interest in every
instance. This point formed the cornerstone of JUSTICE STEVENS's concurring
opinion in Matheson, see 450 U.S., at 423-424, and it finds its most explicit
statement in the Court's opinion in Parham v. J.R., 442 U.S., at 602-603:
"The law's concept of the family rests on a presumption that parents
possess what a child lacks in maturity, experience, and capacity for
judgment required for making life's difficult decisions. More importantly,
historically, it has recognized that natural bonds of affection lead parents
to act in the best interests of their children. . . .
"As with so many other legal presumptions, experience and reality may rebut
what the law accepts as a starting point; the incidence of child neglect and
abuse cases attest to this. That some parents may at times be acting against
the best interests of their children . . . creates a basis for caution, but
is hardly a reason to discard wholesale those pages of human experience that
teach that parents generally do act in the child's best interests."
The only cases in which a majority of the Court has deviated from this
principle are those in which a State sought to condition a minor's access to
abortion services upon receipt of her parent's consent to do so. In Planned
Parenthood of Central Mo. v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52 (1976), the Court invalidated
a Missouri law requiring that a physician obtain the consent of one parent
before performing an abortion. The Court's reasoning was unmistakable: "[T]he
State does not have the constitutional authority to give a third party an
absolute, and possibly arbitrary, veto over the decision of the physician and
his patient to terminate the patient's pregnancy, regardless of the reason for
withholding the consent." Id., at 74. The Court today, ignoring this statement,
relies heavily upon isolated passages from Danforth, see ante, at 452-453, and
other cases involving parental consent laws, [497
U.S. 417, 496] see, e.g., ante, at 453 (citing Bellotti II). JUSTICE
MARSHALL, on the other hand, expressly equates laws requiring parental consent
with laws requiring parental notification, see ante, at 471-472 (MARSHALL, J.,
concurring in part, concurring in judgment in part, and dissenting in part).
The difference between notice and consent was apparent to us before, and is
apparent now. Unlike parental consent laws, a law requiring parental notice does
not give any third party the legal right to make the minor's decision for her,
or to prevent her from obtaining an abortion should she choose to have one
performed. We have acknowledged this distinction as "fundamental," and as one
"substantially modify[ing] the federal constitutional challenge." Bellotti v.
Baird (Bellotti I), 428 U.S. 132, 145, 148 (1976); see also Matheson, supra, at
411, n. 17. The law before us does not place an absolute obstacle before any
minor seeking to obtain an abortion, and it represents a considered weighing of
the competing interests of minors and their parents.
"It cannot be doubted that as long as a state statute is within `the bounds
of reason and [does not] assum[e] the character of a merely arbitrary fiat .
. . [then] [t]he State . . . must decide upon measures that are needful for
the protection of its people . . . .'" Akron, 462 U.S., at 459 (O'CONNOR,
J., dissenting) (quoting Purity Extract & Tonic Co. v. Lynch, 226 U.S. 192,
204-205 (1912)). Like all laws of general application, the Minnesota statute
cannot produce perfect results in every situation to which it applies; but
the State is under no obligation to enact perfect laws. The statute before
us, including the 48-hour waiting period, which is necessary to enable
notified parents to consult with their daughter or their daughter's
physician, if they so wish, and results in little or no delay, represents a
permissible, reasoned attempt to preserve the parents' role in a minor's
decision to have an abortion without placing any absolute obstacles before a
minor who is determined to elect an abortion for her own interest as she
sees it. Section 144.343, without the [497 U.S. 417, 497] judicial bypass provision
of subdivision 6, is constitutional. I would reverse the contrary judgment
of the Court of Appeals.
IV
Because a majority of the Court holds that the two-parent
notice requirement contained in subdivision 2 is unconstitutional, it is
necessary for the Court to consider whether the same notice requirement is
constitutional if the minor has the option of obtaining a court order permitting
the abortion to proceed in lieu of the required notice. Minn. Stat. 144.343(6)
(1988). Assuming, as I am bound to do for this part of the analysis, that the
notice provisions standing alone are invalid, I conclude that the two-parent
notice requirement with the judicial bypass alternative is constitutional.
The Court concludes that Minnesota's two-parent notice law without a judicial
bypass is unconstitutional because of the possibility that, in some cases, the
rule would not work to the benefit of minors or their parents. If one were to
attempt to design a statute that would address the Court's concerns, one would
do precisely what Minnesota has done in 144.343(6): create a judicial mechanism
to identify, and exempt from the strictures of the law, those cases in which the
minor is mature or in which notification of the minor's parents is not in the
minor's best interests. The bypass procedure comports in all respects with our
precedents. See Bellotti II, 443 U.S., at 643-644; (opinion of Powell, J.);
Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas City, Mo. v. Ashcroft, 462 U.S. 476, 491
(1983) (opinion of Powell, J.); id., at 505 (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in
judgment in part and dissenting in part); Ohio v. Akron Center for Reproductive
Health, post, p. 502.
In providing for the bypass, Minnesota has done nothing other than attempt to
fit its legislation into the framework that we have supplied in our previous
cases. The simple fact is that our decision in Bellotti II stands for the
proposition that a two-parent consent law is constitutional if it provides
[497 U.S. 417, 498] for a sufficient judicial bypass alternative, and it
requires us to sustain the statute before us here. In Bellotti II, the Court
considered the constitutionality of a statute which required a physician to
obtain, in most circumstances, the consent of both of a minor's parents before
performing an abortion on the minor. See 443 U.S., at 625-626 (citing Mass. Gen.
Laws. Ann., ch. 112, 12S (West Supp. 1979)). Although eight Members of the Court
concluded that the statute was unconstitutional, five indicated that they would
uphold a two-parent consent statute with an adequate judicial bypass.
For four of the eight Justices forming the majority in Bellotti II, the
failure of the statute lay in its inadequate bypass procedure, not its
requirement that both of the minor's parents consent to the abortion. See 443
U.S., at 643 (opinion of Powell, J.). Justice Powell's opinion specifically
stated that "if the State decides to require a pregnant minor to obtain one or
both parents' consent to an abortion, it also must provide an alternative
procedure whereby authorization for the abortion can be obtained," ibid.
(emphasis added), and then stated the minimum requirements for such a procedure.
In response to the dissent's contention that his opinion was advisory, Justice
Powell stated that the four Members of the Court thought it necessary
"to provide some guidance as to how a State constitutionally may provide
for adult involvement - either by parents or a state official such as a
judge - in the abortion decision of minors. In view of the importance of the
issue raised, and the protracted litigation to which these parties already
have been subjected, we think it would be irresponsible simply to invalidate
[the Massachusetts law] without stating our views as to the controlling
principles." Id., at 652, n. 32.
See also id., at 651-652 (REHNQUIST, J., concurring) (joining Justice
Powell's opinion because "unless and until [the Court is willing to overrule
Danforth], literally thousands of judges [497
U.S. 417, 499] cannot be left with nothing more than the guidance offered
by a truly fragmented holding of this Court").
JUSTICE WHITE dissented from the Court's judgment that the Massachusetts
statute was unconstitutional. In his view, no bypass was necessary, so it must
follow that a two-parent consent statute with an adequate bypass procedure would
have been valid. See id., at 656-657. In sum, five Members of the Court in
Bellotti II found, either by express statement or by implication, that it was
permissible under the Constitution for a State to require the consent of two
parents, as long as it provides a consent substitute in the form of an adequate
judicial bypass procedure.
I cannot accept JUSTICE STEVENS' suggestion today that Justice Powell, in
announcing these rules, did not "consider" the fact that he was doing so in the
context of a two-parent consent requirement, see ante, at 34. The statute was
explicit in its command that both parents consent to the abortion. See 443 U.S.,
at 625-626. Justice Powell indicated that he was aware of this fact, see id., at
630, and n. 10, and the dissent drew a specific contrast between the two-parent
consent requirement then before the Court and the one-parent consent requirement
before the Court in Danforth, see 443 U.S., at 656-657 (opinion of WHITE, J.);
see also id., at 653 (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment). Aware of all of
these circumstances, Justice Powell stated the controlling principles with
specific reference to laws requiring the consent of "one or both" parents. Id.,
at 643. Justice Powell's considered reasoning, coupled with the dissenting views
of JUSTICE WHITE, was intended to set forth the dispositive principles of law
for deciding the constitutionality of parental consent laws. The Court has
relied upon these principles in deciding the constitutionality of laws requiring
notice or the consent of one parent, see Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive
Health, Inc., 462 U.S., at 439-442 (consent); Ohio v. Akron Center for
Reproductive Health, post, at 511-514 (notice). As Bellotti II dealt with the
far more demanding [497 U.S. 417, 500] requirement of two-parent consent,
and approved of such a requirement when coupled with a judicial bypass
alternative, I must conclude that these same principles validate a two-parent
notice requirement when coupled with a judicial bypass alternative.
A second precedent that compels the conclusion that a two-parent notice law
with a judicial bypass alternative is constitutional is our decision in
Matheson. There we held that a two-parent notice statute without a bypass was
constitutional as applied to immature minors whose best interests would be
served by notice. Like the statute before the Court in Matheson, the Minnesota
statute, as amended by subdivision 6, requires a physician to notify the parents
of those immature minors whose best interest will be served by the
communication.
If a two-parent notification law may be constitutional as applied to immature
minors whose best interests are served by the law, but not as applied to minors
who are mature or whose best interests are not so served, a judicial bypass is
an expeditious and efficient means by which to separate the applications of the
law which are constitutional from those which are not. JUSTICE STEVENS'
characterization of the judicial bypass procedure discussed in our past cases as
a necessary "exception" to a "reasonable general rule," such as a one-parent
consent requirement, see ante, at 456, 457, is far off the mark. If a judicial
bypass is mandated by the Constitution at all, it must be because a general
consent rule is unreasonable in at least some of its applications, and the
bypass is necessary to save the statute. See, e.g., Bellotti II, supra, at 643;
(opinion of Powell, J.); Matheson, 450 U.S., at 420 (Powell, J., concurring). No
reason can be given for refusing to apply a similar analysis to the less
demanding case of a notice statute. It follows that a similar result should
obtain: a law that requires notice to one or both parents is constitutional with
a bypass. I thus concur in that portion of the judgment announced, but not
agreed with, by JUSTICE STEVENS [497 U.S. 417,
501] which affirms the Court of Appeals' conclusion that 144.343(6) is
constitutional.
V
In this case, the Court rejects a legislature's judgment that
parents should at least be aware of their daughter's intention to seek an
abortion, even if the State does not empower the parents to control the child's
decision. That judgment is rejected, although it rests upon a tradition of a
parental role in the care and upbringing of children that is as old as
civilization itself. Our precedents do not permit this result.
It is true that, for all too many young women, the prospect of two parents,
perhaps even one parent, sustaining her with support that is compassionate and
committed is an illusion. Statistics on drug and alcohol abuse by parents and
documentations of child neglect and mistreatment are but fragments of the
evidence showing the tragic reality that becomes day-to-day life for thousands
of minors. But the Court errs in serious degree when it commands its own
solution to the cruel consequences of individual misconduct, parental failure,
and social ills. The legislative authority is entitled to attempt to meet these
wrongs by taking reasonable measures to recognize and promote the primacy of the
family tie, a concept which this Court now seems intent on declaring a
constitutional irrelevance. [497 U.S. 417, 502]
Copyright © 1994-1999 FindLaw Inc.

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