Lawyers for a 14-year-old transgender boy on Friday urged the Supreme Court to leave in place a ruling by a federal appeals court that requires a South Carolina school district to allow the student to use the boysâ bathroom for now. The teen, known only as John Doe, is challenging a state law that requires students to use the bathrooms that correspond to their biological sex âat the time of birth.â Lawyers for the teen emphasized that the order by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit is a narrow one that âonly applies to Johnâ and âdoes not otherwise prohibit the government from continuing to enforce its state-wide ban on transgender studentsâ use of public school restrooms while Johnâs appeal proceeds at the Fourth Circuit.â
South Carolina first enacted the law in its 2024-25 budget appropriations bill, and then again in its 2025-26 bill. School districts that do not comply with the ban face the loss of 25% of the state funds allocated to them.
During the 2024-25 school year, Doe, then in eighth grade, was suspended for a day for using the boysâ bathroom, and school officials said Doe could potentially be expelled by continuing to do so. Doeâs parents pulled him out of in-person school, using online school options instead. But the family decided that Doe should return to in-person school for the 2025-26 school year, which began on Aug. 13.
In his lawsuit, Doe alleged that the state law violates federal civil rights laws prohibiting gender discrimination in educational programs that receive federal funding, as well as the Constitutionâs equal protection clause, which generally requires the government to treat similarly situated people the same.
A federal district court put the case on hold after the Supreme Court agreed to review the 4th Circuitâs decision in West Virginia v. B.P.J., which struck down a state law barring transgender girls from participating on girlsâ sports teams because it discriminated âon the basis of sex.â Â
Doe asked the 4th Circuit to allow his case to move forward and to order the school district to allow him to use the boysâ bathroom while litigation continued, and the court of appeals agreed. It pointed to the 4th Circuitâs 2020 decision in Grimm v. Gloucester County School Board, in which it held that a Virginia school districtâs refusal to allow a transgender boy to use the boysâ bathroom violated both federal law and the Constitution. The school board policy in Grimm, the court noted in Doeâs case, âwas in all material respects identical toâ South Carolinaâs law.
The state came to the Supreme Court last week, asking the justices to intervene. âIn recent years,â the state wrote, âa growing judicial consensus has recognized that this practice of âseparating school bathrooms based on biological sex passes constitutional muster and comports with Title IX.ââ Calling the 4th Circuitâs decision in Grimm a âdiscredited outlierâ that âshould (and may soon) be overturned,â the state argued that in its recent decision in United States v. Skrmetti, in which the court upheld Tennesseeâs ban on certain medical treatments for transgender teens, the court applied a less stringent standard of review than the 4th Circuit in Grimm and ârejected Grimmâs view of discrimination âon the basis of sex.ââ And the state warned that unless the Supreme Court steps in, South Carolina â along with the school district and students â will âsuffer[] actual, ongoing, material harms.â
In a 40-page filing, Doeâs lawyers stressed that the governmentâs âapplication for emergency relief concerns one ninth-graderâs restroom use.â Because South Carolina can enforce the law everywhere else in the state, they wrote, â[t]hat is hardly an emergency warranting a stay from this Court, an extraordinary intervention in an ongoing appeal.â They noted that South Carolina had been âunable to identify a single concrete injury it would sufferâ if the Supreme Court did not intervene â often a key criterion for the justices in deciding whether to grant emergency relief. âBy contrast,â they continued, âJohn desperately needs the Fourth Circuitâs injunction âto perform a basic bodily function at school without the stateâs interference.ââ
Doeâs lawyers pushed back against South Carolinaâs suggestion that Skrmetti âensures its success.â Skrmetti, they contended, âdoes not speak to the questionsâ in Doeâs case. âThe appeals courts are in agreement that a ban likeâ South Carolinaâs âclassifies based on sex, and the government cannot show in this posture and on this record that this law will survive heightened scrutiny.â
Posted in Emergency appeals and applications, Featured
Cases: South Carolina v. Doe
Recommended Citation:
Amy Howe,
Lawyers ask Supreme Court to allow transgender boy to use boysâ bathroom,
SCOTUSblog (Sep. 5, 2025, 5:00 PM),
https://www.scotusblog.com/2025/09/lawyers-urge-supreme-court-to-allow-transgender-boy-to-use-boys-bathroom/





