By Mike Appleton, Weekend Contributor
“Property does become clothed with a public interest when used in a manner to make it of public consequence and affect the community at large. When, therefore, one devotes his property to a use in which the public has an interest, he, in effect, grants to the public an interest in that use, and must submit to be controlled by the public for the common good, to the extent of the interest he has thus created. He may withdraw his grant by discontinuing the use, but, so long as he maintains the use, he must submit to the control.”
-Munn v. Illinois, 94 U.S. 113, 126 (1876)
The events in Indiana and Arkansas during the past week contain at least two lessons. The first is that hypocrisy is like teeth; most of us have some and exposure usually produces a nasty bite. Second, interminable debates on the topic of comparative victimology are, well, interminable. Neither lesson is useful. So perhaps it is time to take a deep breath and engage in a bit of dispassionate reflection on the scope and application of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
Let us begin with the oft repeated claim that a person operating a business ought to have the right to refuse service to anyone at any time for any reason (or no reason at all). Whatever merits this claim may have as a philosophical position, it has never found approval as a principle of law. The reason is that historically the common law has recognized that there are categories of commercial enterprise of sufficient importance to the general welfare to mandate their availability to all members of the public on equal terms.Thus, in an early English case, the owner of the Bell Inn in Chepstow, Wales was indicted for refusing to provide a room for a late-arriving traveler. There was no suggestion of improper conduct or an inability to pay for the accommodations, and the court duly rendered a guilty verdict, finding that the innkeeper had violated a duty owed to the public. “The innkeeper is not to select his guests. He has no right to say to one, you shall come into my inn, and to another you shall not, as everyone coming and conducting himself in a proper manner has a right to be received … .” Rex v. Ivens, 7 Car. & P. 213, 173 Eng. Rep. 94 (1835).
The common law duty imposed upon operators of public houses also extended to other commercial enterprises deemed clothed with a public interest, most especially common carriers. As the court explained in the case of Messenger v. Pennsylvania R.R., 37 N.J. 531 (1874), “A service for the public necessarily implies equal treatment in its performance, when the right to the service is common. Because the institution, so to speak, is public, every member of the community stands on an equality as to the right to its benefit, and therefore, the carrier cannot discriminate between individuals for whom he will render the service.” 37 N.J. at 534. The point is that although I may generally set the terms and conditions under which I will offer my products or services to the public, that discretion is not absolute.
The debate over the Indiana and Arkansas RFRA legislation involves the impact of the Free Exercise Clause on the traditional notion that a business open to the general public must offer its goods and services to all legitimate customers without regard to considerations external to the transactions themselves. But the fact that the debate has become necessary at all is largely a consequence of sloppy jurisprudence and sloppy lawmaking.
In Employment Division v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872 (1990), the Supreme Court upheld a determination that two individuals fired for using peyote were ineligible for unemployment benefits, despite the fact that their drug use was for religious worship purposes. “We have never held,” the Court noted, “that an individual’s religious beliefs excuse him from compliance with an otherwise valid law prohibiting conduct that the State is free to regulate.” 494 U.S. at 878-879.
Although the Smith decision was thoughtful and sensible, it discarded the “compelling interest” test in the process, reasoning that “adopting such a system would be courting anarchy… . [W]e cannot afford the luxury of deeming presumptively invalid, as applied to the religious objector, every regulation of conduct that does not protect an interest of the highest order.” 494 U.S. at 888.
The decision in Smith became the catalyst for the adoption of the federal RFRA statute in 1993. It was obviously considered a good idea at the time, uniting both liberals and conservatives. It passed the House in a unanimous voice vote and the Senate by 97-3. The purpose of the statute was to restore the “compelling interest” test by requiring that no federal law may substantially burden the exercise of religion unless it is in “furtherance of a compelling government interest” and achieves the result in the “least restrictive” manner. 42 U.S.C. Section 2000bb, et seq.
Several years later the Court ruled that RFRA was unconstitutional as applied to state action. City of Boerne v. Flores, 521 U.S. 507 (1997). In response a number of states adopted their own RFRA laws patterned on the federal model. Nineteen states had enacted such laws prior to Indiana’s version.
The latest controversy arose because the Indiana and Arkansas proposals differed from the federal and state versions of RFRA in important respects, differences which can be traced in turn to two other court decisions. The first is Elane Photography v. Willock, 284 P.3d 428 (N.M. App. 2012), in which Christian owners of a photography studio were found to have violated the public accommodations provisions of New Mexico’s Human Rights Act by refusing to photograph a commitment ceremony for a lesbian couple. The Court rejected a proffered defense under the state’s RFRA statute, holding that the complaining party was not a “government agency” and that the RFRA statute did not apply to litigation between private parties.
Then, the Court in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., 134 S.Ct. 2751 (2014) held for the first time that for-profit corporations are entitled to assert free exercise rights and invoke the protections of RFRA against proposed government actions. In her dissent, Justice Ginsburg observed, “The Court, I fear, has ventured into a minefield . . . by its immoderate reading of RFRA.” 134 S.Ct. at 2805. She was correct, but the first person to step on a mine was Indiana governor Mike Pence.
Religious conservatives sensed that Hobby Lobby created a new opportunity to contest the rapid acceptance of gay marriage. This could be done by adopting a version of RFRA that applies to private as well as government action and that permits a business owner to raise an RFRA defense in a case in which a government unit is not a party. And that’s what Indiana (and Arkansas) did. That Gov. Pence understood the nuances in the new RFRA legislation is clear for several reasons. For one thing, he can read. In addition, proponents of the bill made no secret of their intentions. On the day the bill was signed, Eric Miller of Advance America hailed the “Victory At The State House” and the relief the law would now provide for “Christian bakers, florists and photographers.” http://www.advanceamerica.com/blog/?p=1849 . And the governor arranged for a private signing ceremony, excluding even members of the press.
When the bill was modified later in the week, those who had worked for passage of the initial version felt betrayed, and with good reason. Mr. Miller issued a press release denouncing the amendment as a “hammer to destroy religious freedom for Hoosiers around the state … .” Gay marriage opponents had been open and honest about their intentions from the beginning, and they understood that the addition of the amending language essentially defeats what the law attempted to accomplish.
What has been forgotten amid the charges and counter-charges of discrimination, however, is that the original federal RFRA was not drafted to deal with private discrimination claims. The Smith decision concerned government action that essentially criminalized participation in a religious sacrament, the very heart and soul of religious exercise. RFRA sought to erect barriers to that sort of government action. Unfortunately, the slippery slope created by the Court in Hobby Lobby sent religious conservatives rushing to dust off their toboggans.
This experience has taught Gov. Pence that stealth legislation is dangerous. It has also taught him never to ask Asa Hutchinson to be his partner in a tag-team wrestling match. What it has not done is resolve the question of religious objections to the non-discriminatory provision of goods and services to the general public. An analysis of that issue must be left for another post.
In the meantime, we need to remind ourselves that this nation is the most religiously diverse country in the world. That means that there is virtually no lawful activity which does not offend the religious sensibilities of someone somewhere. If our commitment to religious pluralism is to have meaning, we cannot permit the creation of a religiously balkanized society in which a product or service may lawfully be denied because the vendor has personal moral objections to the views or status of a prospective customer. When we examine how to construct a proper balance between competing claims of religious liberty and respect for human dignity, we would do well to commence by recalling the first principle of toleration learned at the feet of our parents many years ago: Mind your own business.
The views expressed in this posting are the author’s alone and not those of the blog, the host, or other weekend bloggers. As an open forum, weekend bloggers post independently without pre-approval or review. Content and any displays of art are solely their decision and responsibility.
Pogo, don’t you get tired of standing on your head and seeing the world upside down?
Gigi, YOU may not hate the person, but there are a multitude of others who will USE religion as a means of expressing their hatred, revulsion and fear of minority groups. It’s FAR more insidious than who bakes a cake for who.
Inga, repeating a lie doesn’t make it true.
Your refusal to acknowledge that Nazis and Mussolini were socialists (admired by FDR, who despised the right) is not my problem.
You are entirely wrong about this, and repeatedly posting erroneous rebuttals and PC dictionary entries doesn’t change the facts.
And Dietrich Bonhoeffer did indeed argue against judging others, but then he tried to kill Hitler.
So he had some conflicts about his earlier ‘not judging others’ belief.
See my point?
Ingannie,
If the baker, photographer, florist, and caterer are not important, then what’s the big legal fuss?
Refusing to do a service because you believe this one specific act is wrong, does not mean you hate the person, it means your conscientious belief will not allow you to participate in that one particular act, directly or indirectly.
Extreme RIGHTISTS=Fascists.
fas·cist
ˈfaSHəst/
noun
1.
an advocate or follower of fascism.
synonyms: authoritarian, totalitarian, autocrat, extreme right-winger, rightist; More
antonyms: liberal
adjective
adjective: fascist
1.
of or relating to fascism.
“a military coup threw out the old fascist regime”
synonyms: authoritarian, totalitarian, dictatorial, despotic, autocratic, undemocratic, illiberal; More
antonyms: democratic
Inga – Mussolini was a fascist, Hitler was a socialist.
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/defiant-theologian-dietrich-bonhoeffer-is-hanged
“Two days after Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, lecturer at Berlin University, took to the radio and denounced the Nazi Fuhrerprinzip, the leadership principle that was merely a synonym for dictatorship. Bonhoeffer’s broadcast was cut off before he could finish. Shortly thereafter, he moved to London to pastor a German congregation, while also giving support to the Confessing Church movement in Germany, a declaration by Lutheran and evangelical pastors and theologians that they would not have their churches co-opted by the Nazi government for propagandistic purposes. Bonhoeffer returned to Germany in 1935 to run a seminary for the Confessing Church; the government closed it in 1937. Bonhoeffer’s continued vocal objections to Nazi policies resulted in his losing his freedom to lecture or publish. He soon joined the German resistance movement, even the plot to assassinate Hitler. In April 1943, shortly after becoming engaged to be married, Bonhoeffer was arrested by the Gestapo. Evidence implicating him in the plot to overthrow the government came to light and he was court-martialed and sentenced to die. While in prison, he acted as a counselor and pastor to prisoners of all denominations. Bonhoeffer’s Letters and Papers from Prison was published posthumously. Among his celebrated works of theology are The Cost of Discipleship and Ethics.”
It was the Nazi’s who executed him. They were extreme rightist, in other terms, facists.
Inga – the Nazis were National Socialists.
You are correct, Inga.
Socialists quickly become tyrannical murderers.
Thanks for the reminders.
http://cdn.timesofisrael.com/blogs/uploads/2013/07/Times-Hitler-mod.jpg
Squeaky clean, Girl Reporter,
Your comment is very well said! I agree! Conscientiously objecting to baking
a cake because of a faith belief should be considered freedom of religion.
I doubt that the baker would conscientiously object to selling the gay couple hot cross buns, or apple pie. However, the state is forcing the baker to lower, or set aside, his/her religious standards and beliefs.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was subsequently involved in a conspiracy to assassinate Hitler, so there’s two sides to that coin.
Indeed, he was involved in trying to rescue Jews, which violated German laws at the time.
Yet liberals here demand following the law.
Tyrannical leftists like them executed Dietrich Bonhoeffer in the Flossenbürg concentration camp.
http://images.rarenewspapers.com/ebayimgs/8.62.2012/image065.jpg
Anyone watch the Cubs game on ESPN or the Cubs channel last night? The Cubs owners ruined Wrigley Field with some dumb huge TV screen in the outfield. We need a national campaign to demand removal. Wrigley Field is a sacred shrine. This worship of television and big screen tv is a curse. I think the screen jinked the cubs.
This case cites, and quotes from, all the major important cases on topic.
Now if Americans would just embrace Eight Day Dog Adventism then things would clear up. Much of the muddle comes from Foggy Bottom. Most of the screech comes from Pastures with white collars. If we could put these preachers out to pasture and take religion out of corporate America we would be better off. We are getting like the Holy Roller Empire.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer would turn over in his grave to see the similarities.
https://erikbuys.files.wordpress.com/2013/11/dietrich-bonhoeffer-on-blindness-to-evil.jpg
We are born with a natural right to discriminate and therefor should have
no discrimination laws. But as usual ,mommy and daddy government have stepped in, with their infinite wisdom, to control the people. All people have a
right to be left alone except when violating some one else’s rights. Discrimination laws are a boon for lawyers and a bane for employers and
others. We should not have any protected groups in America. Discrimination laws have taken away my rights to discriminate.
a
The Nazi’s also made laws that discriminated against groups of minorities.
Whatever happened to the Nazi’s anyway?
The Romans had a similar attempt to force the early Christians to give sacrifices to their gods and the Emperor.
Whatever happened to the Romans anyway?
And as with abortion, the battle will never end.
Liberals think that because the SCOTUS decided, it was decided.
But still we fight about it, viciously.
Declaring victory isn’t sufficient.
If Appleton is correct, then the state can coerce medical practitioners to provide abortions.
And gay bakers will have to make cakes that have anti-gay messages on them.
What you can expect from forcing people to do things that violate their religious beliefs are subtle forms of resistance.
In essence, the French labor tactic of “work to the rule.”
The purpose of a culture war is the same as any other war: to defeat your enemy. The Constitution has been pulled into it, kicking and screaming, but it’s not going to be resolved, if ever, by temperate, scholarly chronicles of court decisions. And it’s not a bridge game either, where you can tally the “point value” of the first amendment against the fourteenth’s implicit, and only implicit, authority to accept the government’s definition of “discriminatory” commercial conduct. The “gay rights” agenda is to accept no area of social intercourse, commercial or otherwise, that is shielded from scrutiny and control by elected public officials.