Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Establishment Clause Cross-Winds

This is a news report about a hearing before Judge Loretta Preska (SDNY) on the Bronx Household of Faith case, discussed previously here and here.  The story may be behind a wall, so I will summarize some of it.  Bronx Household of Faith obtained a preliminary injunction and is now seeking a permanent injunction against New York City, which would stop the City from excluding Bronx Household and any other religious organization from equal access to public school facilities. 

The City's ground for excluding Bronx Household was that it was engaging in "worship" while other groups using public facilities were not.  This rationale was accepted by the majority of a Second Circuit panel (Judge Walker dissented) as not constituting viewpoint discrimination, even though it was bound by the Supreme Court's holding in Good News Club v. Milford Central School that the City could not exclude religious expression.  The panel further held that the City had an anti-establishment interest in avoiding the appearance of an endorsement which justified the policy of exclusion of "worship." 

The case is now before Judge Preska on free exercise and establishment grounds.  Judge Preska seems skeptical in the news report that the City can determine what constitutes "worship" and what doesn't without running into entanglement problems. Traditionally in constitutional law, excessive entanglement has been the third part of the Court's Lemon Test -- a still-viable though much criticized Establishment Clause test.  The entanglement prong has always seemed to me to be one of the more important parts of the test but it has faded from significance over the years (though one might argue that a concern about excessive entanglement is what grounds the Establishment Clause component of the Hosanna-Tabor decision).

But Judge Preska's reported questioning suggests that excessive entanglement is where she may mean to focus her decision.  If that is how the decision comes down, it will result in the following interesting situation:

  • The Second Circuit holds that the (appearance of violating the) Establishment Clause justifies the City in excluding "worship."
  • The District Court holds that the Establishment Clause prevents the City from deciding what "worship" is.

This seems somewhat unstable.

https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2012/06/establishment-clause-cross-winds.html

DeGirolami, Marc | Permalink

TrackBack URL for this entry:

https://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d834515a9a69e20168ec13a90d970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Establishment Clause Cross-Winds :

Comments


                                                        Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Hello, Mirror of Justice readers. Thanks for taking the time to read my posts.

I have decided to take a more involved role in moderating comments in this and my future posts. I will delete comments which make no effort at all to respond to and engage in an intelligent way with the substance of my post. I will also delete comments which are snide, snarky, or not respectful either of me or of the other people who have commented thoughtfully on my posts. In this spirit, I have deleted the previous two comments as being entirely non-responsive to the subject matter of my post.

I am sorry if this causes consternation. Some of the comments at Mirror of Justice are thoughtful, and many times those comments are made by people with whom I disagree. But sometimes the comments to my posts simply use my posts to deposit some extraneous squirt of a thought that has nothing to do with what I am talking about. And sometimes the comments can be snide or sarcastic or otherwise unhelpful. My new policy will be to delete those comments, sans mots, as it were. If this is upsetting, I commend you to the plenitude of the Internet, where your thought and its manner of expression will surely find a home.