RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Alan Brownstein
While there is a lot of merit in what Eugene writes, it seems to me that he is identifying three arguments in support of the ministerial exemption: 1. It has strong historical roots. 2. There is a freedom of association dimension to it. 3. It is very circumscribed in its scope and involves far

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Marci Hamilton
Did you watch Sat night live last week w Charles Barkley? He did this hilarious piece about a supposed show called "white people problems". When I hear these guys talking about the needs of the churches to be shielded from liability for discrimination, for some reason that skit comes to mind..

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread James Edward Maule
Perhaps a comparison to the interpretation of "minister of the gospel" in Internal Revenue Code section 107, which provides a gross income exclusion for the rental value of housing provided to ministers of the gospel (the "parsonage exclusion") is helpful. Perhaps it raises more questions. Perha

Re: Hosanna-Tabor-- apologies

2012-01-12 Thread Hamilton02
My apologies for inadvertently sending a private message to the group. So much sending emails from my new IPhone... Marci A. Hamilton 36 Timber Knoll Drive Washington Crossing, PA 18977 215-353-8984 Paul R. Verkuil Chair in Public Law Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law Yeshiva University 55

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Ira Lupu
Does the line of cases that allow sexual harassment claims for damages by clergy against their religious employers (e.g., Bollard v. Cal. Province of Society of Jesus, 196 F. 3d 940 (9th Cir, 1999)) survive Hosanna-Tabor? Is that just another "employment discrimination suit," or is it more like "a

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Douglas Laycock
People could take an absolutist view of two realms in the Founders' time; they obviously cannot any more, with the enormous expansion of government. My commitment to religious liberty, including the ministerial exception, is based in a deep commitment to civil liberties more generally. There sho

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Volokh, Eugene
Alan: Doesn't that return us to the perennial question of whether Witters was rightly decided, whether the GI Bill should have been unconstitutional, and whether the Court has been right in saying that tax exemptions are generally a form of subsidy? After all, under Witters, the GI Bi

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Eric Rassbach
Alan -- I'd be interested to know how one might design such a formally religion-neutral voucher that would be used primarily and overwhelmingly by church members to make contributions to their churches. It doesn't seem that easy to me; perhaps you could explain to the group how one would desig

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Alan Brownstein
We disagree -- in part because I think it would be easy to draft a formally "religion-neutral" voucher that would be used primarily and overwhelmingly by church members to pay dues and in part because I think the Establishment Clause prohibits the government from taking over the financing of rel

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Alan Brownstein
As you know, Tom, I don't assign as much weight to the distinction between direct grants and vouchers as you, and the Court, do -- and my analysis of voucher programs is multi-factored. But for the purposes of this argument, let me point to two problems with the government paying the salary of

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Alan Brownstein
While there is a lot of merit in what Eugene writes, it seems to me that he is identifying three arguments in support of the ministerial exemption: 1. It has strong historical roots. 2. There is a freedom of association dimension to it. 3. It is very circumscribed in its scope and involves far

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Volokh, Eugene
1) It's hard to see how the Court's decision has "thrown [laws] into limbo." The Court took pretty much the same view taken for years by many lower courts; whatever doubt the Court's decision casts on these laws had already been cast on them by lower court decisions.

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Volokh, Eugene
It strikes me that the Texas Monthly conclusion -- that tax exemptions are equivalent to subsidies -- is quite persuasive. That's the rule the Court announced for religion-specific exemptions (Texas Monthly), for free speech cases (Taxation With Representation v. Regan), and for religio

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread ledewitz
I would like to return to the panel at AALS that John Taylor mentioned. Two of the panelists arguing in favor of the ministerial exception, Chris Lund and Douglas Laycock, would not be considered pro-religion in the conventional sense—both believe for example that the Pledge of Allegiance is in pr

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Volokh, Eugene
I think #3 is the most important item -- and if there were other ways to circumscribe particular categories of exemption requests that made logical sense and thus didn't seem gerrymandered (and, especially, that fit American traditions, something the Sherbert/Yoder doctrine did not), I t

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread David Cruz
It seems to me an easy distinction between the case of the undocumented minister posited by Howard and today's case is that if the government deports someone for being unlawfully present, that is in no way predicated upon a decision by a church to select that person as a minister; the church's d

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Steven Jamar
How is it that we as lawyers and law professors fell so deeply into thinking that *Smith* meant what it said? Or even what Scalia said it said in his opinion in *Hialeah*? Or even what Kennedy said it meant in Hialeah? Hosanna-Tabor is an easy case if one doesn't believe Scalia meant what he sai

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Scarberry, Mark
What if the church board fires a minister and admits, prior to the filing of an action, that it was not for religious reasons but because he was disabled or because of his race or for some other reason that ordinarily would be impermissible. If the church states that there is no religious reason

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Alan Brownstein
Tom, I have long since given up trying to predict how Supreme Court justices will decide future cases (or to assume that there will be logical consistency or even intellectual integrity in all opinions.) But Justice Roberts clearly and repeatedly emphasizes the title, status, and acknowledged r

Re: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Steven Green
The most interesting part of the decision is of course what the Court did not decide: who decides who is a minister in less obvious situations. I don't take Thomas' solo concurrence advocating near complete deference to church officials as indicating he is the only justice who may vote that way; r

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Alan Brownstein
Rick, As to lay teachers at religious schools, the Court said, "We express no view on whether someone with Perich's duties would be covered by the ministerial exception in the absence of the other considerations we have discussed." I thought that left open the issue of lay teachers at religiou

Re: Hosanna-Tabor-- apologies

2012-01-12 Thread David Cruz
And mine as well. David B. Cruz Professor of Law University of Southern California Gould School of Law Los Angeles, CA 90089-0071 U.S.A. From: Marci Hamilton mailto:hamilto...@aol.com>> Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 08:46:04 -0800 To: "mae.kuykend...@law.msu.edu" mail

Re: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious...

2012-01-12 Thread Hamilton02
Rick-- I hear you. The Court indicates that what is a "minister" will be fact intensive in each case. There are lay teachers in a wide variety of contexts and a wide variety of religious settings. It will be interesting to learn whether the courts treat, e.g., a coach who only coaches at a

Hosanna Tabor Decided By Supreme Court

2012-01-12 Thread Friedman, Howard M.
http://religionclause.blogspot.com/2012/01/supreme-court-upholds-ministerial.html Howard Friedman ___ To post, send message to Religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu To subscribe, unsubscribe, change options, or get password, see http://lists.ucla.edu/cgi-bin/mail

HOSANNA-TABOR EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN

2012-01-12 Thread Joel
HOSANNA-TABOR EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH ( ) 597 F. 3d 769, reversed. Syllabus Opinion [Roberts] Concurrence [Thomas] Concurrence [Alito] Syllabus NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Marci Hamilton
I agree with David, though I would characterize the Court's paradigmatic concern as being about the right to choose selection criteria. Catholics and Orthodox Jews plainly have the right to favor men over women and Hosanna Tabor Lutherans have the right to choose mediators instead of litigators

Hosanna-Tabor: note that unanimous Court characterized EEOC position as "extreme"

2012-01-12 Thread Scarberry, Mark
Has it happened before that the Court has unanimously given such a negative description of the view put forward by the solicitor general for the Justice Department on behalf of the EEOC? I suppose so, but I can't remember such a case. "Although the Sixth Circuit did not adopt the extreme positi

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Scarberry, Mark
It is interesting to note that Justice Thomas would defer to a religious organization's good faith determination that a person is a minister. Take the question whether a person has had formal religious education. That is a factor under the Court's decision, but not determinative. There certainly

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Marci Hamilton
Rick-- actually, I did not say that the decision is limited solely to selection criteria. Rather, they are the Court's "paradigmatic" concern based on the oral argument and the opinion itself. And that the decision leaves much open and makes the facts of any case critical to the outcome.

FW: Text of Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Scarberry, Mark
It's here: http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/10-553.pdf. Mark S. Scarberry Professor of Law Pepperdine Univ. School of Law ___ To post, send message to Religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu To subscribe, unsubscribe, change options, or get password, se

Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Douglas Laycock
Is anyone convinced by the Court's distinction of Smith? Well actually, all nine Justices were convinced, all twelve federal circuits have been convinced, and twelve state supreme courts have been convinced, with none going the other way. "Physical acts" is not the best label for the scope of Smit

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Paul Horwitz
No, the framing in terms of "physical acts" is not terribly descriptively useful here. But to adapt your language, one way we might see this decision, and certainly the issues it raises, is that it raises the very question of what "concerns the state" and what "concerns the church," rather tha

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Rick Garnett
Dear Mark, In my view, one of the welcome aspects of the Chief Justice's opinion is that it seems to make the *reason* for the employment action in question irrelevant . . . assuming we are dealing with a ministerial employee who is challenging his or her termination: The EEOC and Perich sugg

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread David Cruz
It seems to me that part of the problem with the framing of the distinction between Smith and Hosanna-Tabor is that "physical acts" vs. "internal governance" does not well describe in parallel the concerns of the state in both cases. Internal governance is what Hosanna Tabor protects for religious

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Samuel Krieger
Professor Friedman’s thoughtful post shows that the decision raises a line of questions regarding the IRS position on eligibility for the Parsonage exemption (see excerpt from IRS Audit Guide below) and local real property tax exemptions for clergy occupied properties . Can I be a “minister”

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Rick Garnett
Dear Marci, I guess not, but I think people usually think of "clergy" as ordained, or as otherwise officially designated. I think the opinion constitutionalizes an exception that covers a broader category of "ministers" (including, of course, many lay teachers at parochial schools, who are not

Re: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Marci Hamilton
Why would we think any of the 3 separate concurrers are expressing views shared by others? At least from the oral argument, I would think they are on the fringe of thinking on these issues. Don't forget Kagan was a prime mover behind RFRA and RLUIPA in the Clinton Administration. I would no

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Friedman, Howard M.
I think that the decision has much broader implications for church autonomy. I have just developed this argument in some detail in a posting on Religion Clause, for those who may be interested in reading it. http://religionclause.blogspot.com/2012/01/analysis-some-thoughts-on-church.html I wel

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread John Taylor
There was a very good panel on the case at AALS Saturday morning (organized by Chris Lund and featuring Doug, Rick, Bob Tuttle, Caroline Corbin, and Leslie Griffin) and it included, among other things, an exchange between Rick Garnett and Bob Tuttle on the rationale for the ministerial exception

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Rick Garnett
Dear Marci, I think you are right about the second sentence, but I disagree with your second. The opinion seems clearly to reach beyond "clergy." Best wishes, Rick Richard W. Garnett Professor of Law and Associate Dean Notre Dame Law School P.O. Box 780 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556-0780 574-631

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Volokh, Eugene
I agree with Doug on this, and want to add one item: The Sherbert/Yoder regime put courts in the position of having to evaluate a vast range of laws -- antidiscrimination laws, animal cruelty laws, assisted suicide bans, child labor laws, compelled testimony laws, copyright laws, drug l

Re: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread David Cruz
I agree. :-) And great to have seen you in DC! David B. Cruz Professor of Law University of Southern California Gould School of Law Los Angeles, CA 90089-0071 U.S.A. On Jan 11, 2012, at 6:49 PM, "Marci Hamilton" mailto:hamilto...@aol.com>> wrote: I agree with David, though I would characteri

Re: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Marci Hamilton
The decision is much narrower than Joel's description. It does not cover all employees of religious organizations--only clergy. And it only involves claims involving discrimination against the religious organization, leaving open litigation from even clergy on contract and tort theories. Mar

RE: Hosanna-Tabor

2012-01-12 Thread Douglas Laycock
He certainly could have said more about Smith, but I think they found it easy. The relevance of Smith was extensively briefed by all sides. And at oral argument, Scalia (the author of Smith) said emphatically that "This case has nothing to do with Smith." Douglas Laycock Robert E. Scott Distingui

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Berg, Thomas C.
Alan, I agree that the majority leaves open the issue of lay teachers. But since three justices take a broader approach to defining a minister, all you need for a majority in a later case is two more votes, and Roberts and Scalia seem reasonable prospects to me in a case that presents the issu

Re: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Marci Hamilton
Do we get anymore out of this opinion on this issue than the fact the Sixth Circuit reaches the wrong decision regarding whether she is an employee or a minister? There several tests out there and none are explicitly embraced or rejected. Marci On Jan 11, 2012, at 2:47 PM, Alan Brownstein

RE: Supreme Court sides with church on decision to fire employee on religious grounds

2012-01-12 Thread Berg, Thomas C.
Alan, I'm not predicting two more justices, let alone with any certainty, or talking about all lay teachers. I was only making the point that three justices adopted a broader standard than the majority, and the fact that one of them was Kagan is notable and makes the road to additional votes si