Palmore v. Sidoti, 466 U.S. 429 (1984) (U.S. Supreme Court)
Palmore v. Sidoti stands at the constitutional intersection of family law and equal protection.
Does the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment permit a state court to remove custody of a child from a natural mother based solely on the mother's interracial relationship or marriage and the anticipated social stigma that may result?
Racial classifications by the state are subject to strict scrutiny and are presumptively invalid. The Equal Protection Clause forbids the government from making decisions based on race and from giving effect to private racial biases or the potential harms they may inflict. A state's interest in child welfare, though important, cannot justify official action that employs race as a determinative factor.
No. The Equal Protection Clause does not permit a custody determination to be based on the race of a parent or that parent's spouse, nor on anticipated private biases or social stigma related to an interracial household. The judgment transferring custody from the mother to the father was reversed.
Palmore constitutionalizes a clear boundary for family courts: the best-interests-of-the-child standard cannot be implemented through racial classifications or anticipatory deference to societal prejudice. It reinforces strict scrutiny of race-based state action and the principle that government may not validate private bias. For law students, Palmore illustrates how constitutional norms constrain judicial discretion in domestic relations, how equal protection applies outside typical criminal or educational contexts, and how courts address the tension between child-welfare goals and foundational anti-discrimination rules.