Library/PT 151/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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

Look for the general principle the author relies on: he treats courts' refusal to adopt a past decision's rationale as evidence that the rationale is questionable. Find sentences linking courts' hesitation to the author's rejection of Shelley's attribution rationale.

Passage Stimulus

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6.

Which one of the following principles is most clearly operative in the author’s argument?

Correct Answer
D
Correct. The author relies on the principle that courts' hesitation to apply a past decision's rationale is evidence that the rationale is questionable. Support from the passage: "Primarily for this reason, neither the Supreme Court nor lower courts later applied Shelley's approach." The author explains why courts were hesitant: "Shelley's attribution logic threatened to dissolve the distinction between state action, to which Fourteenth Amendment limitations apply, and private action, which falls outside of the Fourteenth Amendment's purview," and notes that "Shelley's approach, consistently applied, would require individuals to conform their private agreements to constitutional standards..." These passages show the author treats courts' unwillingness to adopt the attribution rationale as grounds for rejecting that rationale, which matches choice D.
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