South Carolina asked the Supreme Court to pause an order by a federal appeals court that requires a public school in the state to allow a transgender boy to use the boysâ bathroom while he challenges a state law that requires students to use bathrooms based on their biological sex at birth. Describing the school district as ânow stuck between an impossible rock and hard place,â the state cited the Supreme Courtâs recent decision in United States v. Skrmetti, in which six justices upheld Tennesseeâs ban on certain forms of medical treatments for transgender minors, as the basis to put the ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit on hold for now.
The stateâs request, which was distributed to reporters on Thursday, is an early test of the broader impact of the courtâs 6-3 decision in Skrmetti. Although South Carolinaâs application came to the justices on the courtâs emergency docket, one of the factors that the justices consider when deciding whether to grant temporary relief is the likelihood that the litigant seeking the stay will ultimately prevail on the merits of the dispute.
The student, known in the litigation only as John Doe, filed the lawsuit last year. Doe alleged that the bathroom law violates the Constitutionâs equal protection clause, which generally prohibits the government from treating people in a similar situation differently, as well as Title IX of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, a federal civil rights law that bars sex-based discrimination in educational programs that receive federal financial assistance.
A federal district court in South Carolina put the case on hold after the Supreme Court agreed to take up West Virginia v. B.P.J., in which the 4th Circuit had struck down a state law banning participation by transgender girls on girlsâ sports teams.
But on Aug. 12, the 4th Circuit ordered the school district to allow Doe to use the boysâ bathroom while litigation continues. The court of appeals relied on its own 2020 decision in Grimm v. Gloucester County School Board, in which it held that a Virginia schoolâs refusal to allow a transgender boy to use the boysâ restroom violated the equal protection clause and Title IX because it discriminated âon the basis of sex.â
Calling the ruling in Grimm a âdiscredited outlier,â South Carolina came to the Supreme Court on Thursday, asking the justices to intervene. Skrmetti, South Carolina Deputy Solicitor General Joseph Spate argued, âis irreconcilable with Grimm.â The Supreme Court in Skrmetti applied a less stringent standard of review (rational basis review) than in Grimm, Spate stressed, and it ârejected Grimmâs view of discrimination âon the basis of sex.’â Â
Moreover, Spate contended, unless the Supreme Court steps in, âthe State, the school district, and its students are suffering actual, ongoing, material harms.â By contrast, he wrote, if the 4th Circuitâs order were blocked, Doe would have âaccess to multi-occupancy girlsâ restrooms at school,â as well as âthe accommodation of a single-stall restroom.â
Posted in Emergency appeals and applications, Featured
Cases: South Carolina v. Doe
Recommended Citation:
Amy Howe,
Transgender studentâs bathroom case comes to the Supreme Court on the emergency docket,
SCOTUSblog (Aug. 28, 2025, 5:10 PM),
https://www.scotusblog.com/2025/08/transgender-student-bathroom-case-comes-to-supreme-court-on-emergency-docket/




