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
Read the surrounding sentences to identify the rhetorical function of the quoted question: it flags the central legal puzzle—how the Fourteenth Amendment's state-action requirement can apply when the covenants were private contracts.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage5.In the fourth sentence of the second paragraph, the author asks the question, "...where, then, was the state action that is necessary for invoking the Fourteenth Amendment, given that the restrictive covenants were private contracts?" primarily in order to
Correct Answer
B
The author asks the question to draw attention to a potentially confusing, central legal issue needed to understand the Court's reasoning. Support from the passage: "This amendment had long been held to apply to state actors but not individuals. Shelley did not purport to alter this. But where, then, was the state action that is necessary for invoking the Fourteenth Amendment, given that the restrictive covenants were private contracts?" The passage immediately addresses the Court's answer and later observes that "Shelley's attribution logic threatened to dissolve the distinction between state action, to which Fourteenth Amendment limitations apply, and private action," showing that the question's primary purpose is to highlight a puzzling issue central to the decision.
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