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.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The Tale of Psychic Sophie: Denouement

Back in December, I wrote a couple of posts about "Psychic Sophie," --  Part I and Part II -- the "spiritual counselor" who was classified as a "fortune-teller" by Chesterfield County and in consequence was deemed to be violating various County zoning ordinances and a licensing requirement.  Psychic Sophie's free speech, free exercise, and RLUIPA complaint was dismissed by the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, and she appealed to the Fourth Circuit.

Things did not sound very good for Psychic Sophie at oral argument, and, as Kevin Walsh reports, the Fourth Circuit affirmed the grant of summary judgment for the County today.  From Kevin's post about the opinion:

With respect to the definition of religion, Judge Duncan distinguishes between “personal and philosophical choices consistent with a way of life,” on one hand, and “deep religious convictions shared by an organized group deserving of constitutional solicitude,” on the other hand. The court determined that Moore-King’s practices fit in the philosophical-not-religious category: “That a wide variety of sources–the New Age movement, the teachings of Jesus, natural healing, the study of metaphysics, etc.–inform and shape Moore-King’s ‘inner flow’ does not transform her personal philosophical beliefs into a religion any more than did Thoreau’s commitment to Transcendentalism and idealist philosophy render his views religious.”

From a practice perspective, it may be worth noting that Chesterfield County prevailed even though the court knocked down its lead defense to the free-speech claim. That defense rested on two premises, both of which the panel rejected: “(1) fortune telling is inherently deceptive; and (2) inherently deceptive speech warrants no protection under the First Amendment.”

The problem of the legal definition of religion only occasionally vexes courts, and the Supreme Court has never said anything definitive about it for constitutional purposes (Yoder may offer "guidance," as the court says, but its guidance is not definitive -- and I don't mean that in the least as a criticism of Yoder).  Judge Arlin Adams's Third Circuit concurring opinion in Malnak v. Yogi many years ago is certainly worth reading as a classic period opinion of the late 1970s on the subject, but it seems to me that the Fourth Circuit's approach is quite different (different times).

One final note.  Writing for the panel here, Judge Duncan said this: "Yoder teaches that [Psychic Sophie] must offer some organizing principle or authority other than herself that prescribes her religious convinctions, as to allow otherwise would threaten 'the very concept of ordered liberty.'  Yet [she] forswears such a view when she declares that instead of following any particular religion or organized recognized faith, she 'pretty much goes with [her] inner flow, and that seems to work best.'"  But, taking care not to "belittle" Psychic Sophie's beliefs, the court seems to hold here that a self-referential religion of one will not receive protection under the Constitution or RLUIPA.  

Perhaps the "Eisenhower principle" has its limits.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Me at the Catholic Lawyers Guild on Friday

I'll be giving a short talk at the Catholic Lawyers Guild of New York this Friday, March 1, at the kind invitation of Robert Crotty.  Mass is at 7:45, there is a little light breakfast thereafter, and then I'll offer some thoughts about the HHS contraceptives mandate, after which we'll talk together.

The location is the Church of Our Saviour, 59 Park Avenue (Park Avenue at 38th Street).  Please stop in and say hello.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

RIP, Ronald Dworkin

Via Larry Solum, I learn the news that the important philosopher of law and politics, Ronald Dworkin, has passed away.  I only met Professor Dworkin one time, in a law and philosophy class at Columbia co-taught by Professors Jeremy Waldron and Joseph Raz (it was a fun class).  Professor Dworkin was the first in a series of guest presenters, and I distinctly remember Professor Waldron telling the class before his arrival, "Remember, we don't want to argue with Professor Dworkin; we want to understand him."  He presented an early draft of a paper of what was to become a chapter in "Is Democracy Possible Here?  Principles for a New Political Debate."  My memory is that he was as fine a parser and distinguisher of factual situations as I have seen.

Professor Dworkin was also a superb writer.  Everyone writes differently, and for different reasons, but much of my own writing is generated, propelled, and sustained as a series of reactions or disagreements.  I intend it as a genuine tribute of respect to Professor Dworkin that his writing provoked, and still provokes, strong reactions in me.  I can think of no better example of the power of his writing to elicit such a reaction than the following passage:  

It is in the nature of legal interpretation—not just but particularly constitutional interpretation—to aim at happy endings. There is no alternative, except aiming at unhappy ones. . . . Telling it how it is means, up to a point, telling it how it should be. . . . That is a noble faith, and only optimism can redeem it.

Freedom's Law: The Moral Reading of the American Constitution.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Jay Williams

Not quite down the middle of the CST fairway, but this, I thought, was a very moving story about the talented, resilient, and gutsy Duke University point guard, Jay Williams. I may be a homer, but the story does a nice job of describing the power of institutions to support people in times of personal weakness and need.    

Saturday, February 9, 2013

On Corporations, Their Purposes, and Their Religious Exercise Under RFRA

Kevin Walsh (Richmond) has a superb post about the question whether for-profit corporations are "persons" who "exercise religion" pursuant to RFRA.  He makes his claims in the context of criticizing a recent panel decision of the Third Circuit.  You should read the whole thing, but here is a selection:

RFRA provides that “[g]overnment shall not substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion” unless the government satisfies strict scrutiny. 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb-1(a) (emphasis added). In the U.S. Code, “person” ordinarily encompasses “corporations, companies, associations, firms, partnerships, societies, and joint stock companies, as well as individuals.” 1 U.S.C. § 1. Nothing in RFRA excludes corporations generally. To the contrary, it is plain that corporations can assert claims under RFRA. The only Supreme Court case applying RFRA against the federal government involved a claim asserted by a corporation, O Centro Espírita Beneficente União do Vegetal . . . .

When one analyzes the claim, it turns out that the argument is not really about the meaning of the word “person” (even though the conclusion of the argument purports to be a claim about the meaning of this word). Rather, the argument pivots on “exercise of religion.” In the words of the district court opinion adopted by the Third Circuit, “a for-profit, secular corporation cannot exercise religion.”

Again, the claim is not that corporations cannot engage in exercise of religion. After all, corporations can, and do, exercise religion. Consider, for example,Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. or Corporation of the Presiding Bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. The claim, rather, is limited to “secular, for-profit corporations.” But the claim rests on a mistake about “exercise of religion” under federal law and a mistake about corporate action.

For Kevin's arguments about the meaning of "exercise of religion" under RFRA and about the purposes of corporate action, read the post.  I will add that on the former point, it is unquestionably the case as a historical matter that refusals to behave in a certain way can count as "exercises of religion": two of the earliest religious exemption questions -- the Quakers' resistance to military conscription and the opposition in some religious communities to swearing oaths -- take just this form.

Podcast on "First Amendment Institutions"

Paul Horwitz and I discuss his book in this podcast, the latest in the Federalist Society's worthwhile series of conversations on new books.    

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Horwitz, On His New Book

I have posted a little exchange that Paul Horwitz and I had about his new book, First Amendment Institutions (2013), over at CLR Forum, and invite you to have a look.  I'll note the podcast of our discussion when it is up.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Another "Establishment Clause Appearances" Decision from the Second Circuit

The Second Circuit has upheld the decision of a public school to forbid a student from closing a middle school speech with the following: "As we say our goodbyes and leave middle school behind, I say to you, may the Lord bless you and keep you; make His face shine upon you and be gracious to you; lift up His countenance upon you, and give you peace."  The student sued on free speech grounds, and the court concluded that though the restriction was content-based, because the standard in public schools is deferential to the school ("reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical concerns"), and notwithstanding the school's need to come up with an "overriding" state interest, the school had done so here. 

What was that "overriding" state interest "reasonably related to legitimate pedagogical concerns"?  It was the school's "desire to avoid violating the Establishment Clause."  But this was a student's own decision, uninfluenced by the school (indeed, opposed by the school).  That did not matter.  So long as the government "desires" to avoid an Establishment Clause violation -- whether the "desire" corresponds with what the Establishment Clause actually proscribes or not -- that is sufficient to overcome what might otherwise be an actual violation of a constitutional right (irrespective, I take it, of anybody's desires).  But desires are tricky.  People desire all sorts of things; sometimes those desires are constitutional, sometimes not, but I can't think of another context in which a constitutional dispute really depends so heavily on the desires of one of the parties, whether or not those desires correspond to actual realities.  But why not be more forthright?  This decision has nothing to do with the Establishment Clause.  It has to do with the school's desire not to permit the religious language of the student's speech.  So why is it necessary to bloat the Establishment Clause this way?  But the endorsement test put us on the path of Establishment Clause "desires" and "appearances" long ago.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Constitutions as Establishments

I've been thinking a little bit about the difference between establishments and disestablishments of religion.  Constitutions serve several functions, but for this post, I'm interested in one in particular: to entrench the idea that there is a law above the state's law -- a law that cannot be changed by ordinary legislation.  Could one say this about established religions in constitutional states?  The argument would be that established religions in constitutional states place the constitutional state above its ordinary law, and they thereby control and restrain (the reach of) ordinary law.  Establishments of religion sacralize the state.  If the claim works, then as a functional matter, one might think of the Constitution as an establishment of "religion" -- understood as that which is higher than ordinary law.  Just to put it intentionally controversially, the Constitution -- and, even more specifically, the First Amendment -- is our establishment.  It enshrines limits on the ordinary power of government, and in the case of the Free Exercise Clause, it can even subordinate the ordinary acts of government to higher law.  And the First Amendment is an establishment inasmuch as it incorporates certain relationships between the state and religion right into the fabric of the governmental structure -- relationships which it then fixes and removes from the purview of ordinary law.  The difference between constitutional states with establishments of religions and those without them is that in the former, God or the gods establish the state, while in the latter, people do.  But in both cases, constitutions 'establish' the (for lack of a better term) sacredness of the state and cement its position above ordinary law.  And so, from this perspective, the opposite of establishment is not so much disestablishment as tyranny.

The Politics of Religious Liberty: Three Perspectives

I thought to bring up again an issue that I've raised here before a few times.  It involves the alignment of support and opposition for religious liberty with political orientation, and whether that alignment is undergoing a fundamental shift or not.  Here are chunks of three writings to set the stage.

The first is from something I wrote a few years ago:

My horse sense is that the political history of law and religion scholarship might track (very) roughly the comparatively recent history of American politics.  It would evince, that is, a movement from a state of relative convergence on a set of agreed upon views to a state of increasing splintering and balkanization (or, to put it in more sanguine as well as ambiguous terms, to a state of increasing pluralism) of perspective.  Of course I don't mean that the earlier convergence among religion clause scholars tracked or mirrored an earlier political convergence, or that the current, more balkanized situation runs parallel to contemporary American politics.

What I mean is that if one were to survey the state of the field, say, roughly 30-40 years ago, one would probably see something approaching a rough similarity of perspective among many law and religion scholars -- folks who read both the Free Exercise and Establishment Clauses in a 'strong' way.  Many of the most important scholars of that generation held that general view, even as there may have been intramural differences among them.  Indeed, some of those very same folks were in attendance at our conference.  Of course there were dissenters from that general position 30-40 years ago too -- but the point is that there existed such a majority view, and that it was considered, for lack of a better term, mainstream, or eminently reasonable within the academic world -- a mid-20th century academic moderate liberal's view (which is not the same as a non-academic moderate liberal view).  Part of the power of the view was that a strong reading of the Establishment Clause gave these scholars a kind of bona fides -- certainly within academic circles -- when arguing for a strong reading of the Free Exercise Clause.  If you are against majoritarian religion, the chances might increase in the academy that people will listen to you when you argue in favor of anti-majoritarian religion. 

But today, I think it is much more difficult to identify any mainstream or consensus-like position.  There are those who like a strong EC and a weak FEC, those who prefer weak readings of both, those who go for a strong FEC and a weak EC, and those who hold to the strong reading of both.  But even those who prefer the dual strong reading aren't necessarily coming at the issue from the point de depart of mid-century academic moderate liberalism.  Some are coming from traditions of faith; some from radical political perspectives; some from rather specialized policy engagements; some from distinct philosophical traditions, and so on.  That variety of background has generated a broadening of normative preferences.  And so too, perhaps like the political culture itself, the political culture of law and religion scholarship exhibits a pattern of fragmentation -- it begins to look much more like a European parliamentary arrangement than the American situation at least as it once was.

The second is from a recent post by Nelson Tebbe:

Two questions come to mind about this familiar understanding of the interactions between methodology and politics among religious freedom theorists.  First, has this conceptualization [a division of the field methodologically into monists, skeptics, and pluralists] of the field ever been correct?  Has the role of politics been as complicated and unpredictable as it suggests?

If it has captured a measure of the truth, a second question is whether it still usefully describes the literature, or whether we are witnessing a realignment.  Certain debates have moved to the foreground — such as the conversation over whether religion deserves special constitutional protection as compared to deep secular commitments of conscience — and positions within those debates do not seem to be easily captured by the old typology.  Yet those positions do seem to track wider political affinities more readily than did the customary choice among monism, pluralism, and skepticism.  For example, liberals tend to think that religion is not special, conservatives usually argue that it is, and moderates believe that it only sometimes should be protected like secular conscience.  Does this shift, if it is happening at all, suggest a different kind or degree of politicization within the field of religious freedom theory?  Is any such shift clarifying or obfuscatory?

The third is an interesting comment by Eduardo Peñalver on a post about the recent Times story on Stanford Law School's new religious liberty clinic.  In response to my comment, Eduardo writes:

Marc — I’m not sure. I don’t know that I agree with Nelson that we are seeing a realignment in the academy. There are a few prominent people arguing that religion is not special (esp. Schragger and Schwartzman), but there were a few prominent people arguing the same thing a decade ago (Eisgruber and Sager). I’m not sure I see a consensus of liberal constitutional scholars coalescing around that position. On the political side, there are partisan disagreements now about some borderline free exercise claims (the contraception mandate and some issues related to recognition of gay marriage), but there seems to me to be a bipartisan commitment to broad free exercise rights. It seems to me that there have been efforts on the right to make religious freedom an ideological issue (accusing Obama of a war on religion, etc.), but i don’t think these have been successful in creating a realignment on the issue. The way I see it, there are lots of religious people and lots of people who care about religious liberty on both the left and the right.

Do any, or all, of these accounts ring true for readers?  Are some more persuasive than others?  Are all wrong, or only half right?  Comments are open.