Constitutional Law—Gender-Based Classifications in Alimony Statutes Violate Equal Protection Clause

Note by Lindsay Ellis

Plaintiff instituted a contempt proceeding against her former husband to enforce the alimony provision of their divorce decree. The defendant husband submitted a motion challenging the constitutionality of Alabama's alimony statutes, which imposed an obligation to pay alimony on husbands but not on wives. The trial court denied the husband's motion, and the Alabama Court of Civil Appeals affirmed, holding that the statutory scheme did not violate the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment since the statute was reasonably designed to further the state's policy of providing financial assistance to the wife of a broken marriage. The Supreme Court of Alabama granted the husband's petition for a writ of certiorari but subsequently quashed the writ as improvidently granted. In reviewing this judgment, the United States Supreme Court held that the gender-based classification in the statute violated the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment because the statute's compensatory and ameliorative purposes would be served just as well by a gender-neutral classification. Orr v. Orr, 440 U.S. 268 (1979).


About the Author

Lindsay Ellis.

Citation

54 Tul. L. Rev. 500 (1980)