Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Shelley v. Kraemer (1948) said state courts could not enforce racially restrictive covenants—private promises in property deeds that barred people of a certain race from living there. The Court said that when a judge enforces a private agreement the court is acting like the state, so enforcing race-based covenants would violate the Constitution’s rule that people must be treated equally. But that idea could force many private agreements to follow constitutional rules whenever people want a court’s help, so other courts mostly refused to keep using it and still enforce many contracts that a law could not impose. Critics also note the Court treated the racist covenants themselves as legal, which failed to condemn their harmful content.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the passage's 'attribution' rationale: the Court treated an enforcing party (the court/state) as responsible for the substantive terms of a private agreement. Choose the option that describes a third-party intermediary being held responsible for another party's private content or actions that it disseminated/enforced.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage4.Which one of the following describes an attribution of responsibility that is most analogous to the attribution central to what the author refers to as Shelley’s "attribution" rationale (second-to-last sentence of the second paragraph)?
Correct Answer
C
C is correct. The passage explains that the Court's 'attribution' rationale treated the act of enforcement as attributing responsibility to the enforcer: 'judicial enforcement of the covenants violated the Fourteenth Amendment because responsibility for a contract's substantive provisions should be attributed to the state when a court enforces it.' It further explains this move as an 'attribution' rationale that makes the enforcer responsible for private substantive provisions: 'According to this attribution rationale, courts could enforce only those contractual provisions that could have been enacted into general law.' Option C parallels this structure: a newspaper (an intermediary/enforcer/disseminator) can be held responsible for the content of a columnist's op-ed, i.e., responsibility for a private actor's expression is attributed to the third party that published it.
Upgrade Your Prep
Ready to go beyond free explanations?
LSAT Perfection is the #1 modern LSAT prep platform, trusted by thousands of students for comprehensive test strategies, advanced drilling, and full analytics on every PrepTest.
Detailed explanations for 59 PrepTests
Advanced drillset builder
Personalized analytics
Built-in Wrong Answer Journal