Personnel Administrator v. Feeney, 442 U.S. 256 (1979)
Personnel Administrator v. Feeney is a pivotal case in the realm of constitutional law where the U.S.
Does a state statute that gives employment preference to veterans violate the Equal Protection Clause when it results in a disparate impact on female applicants?
To establish a violation of the Equal Protection Clause based on disparate impact, plaintiffs must prove that the law was enacted or maintained with a discriminatory purpose, not merely that it results in a disproportionate impact.
The Supreme Court held that the Massachusetts veterans' preference statute did not violate the Equal Protection Clause because it was not enacted with the intent to discriminate against women.
Personnel Administrator v. Feeney is critical for law students as it clarifies the necessity of proving discriminatory intent in equal protection claims involving statutes with disparate impacts. It illustrates the difference between laws that are inherently discriminatory and those that result in adverse effects due to historical or societal contexts. Feeney establishes the precedent that unequal effects alone are not sufficient to invalidate laws under the Equal Protection Clause when lacking purposeful discrimination.