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How Relevant to the United Kingdom are the ‘Religious’ Cases of the US Supreme Court?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 August 2016

Frank Cranmer*
Affiliation:
Fellow, St Chad's College, Durham Honorary Research Fellow, Centre for Law and Religion, Cardiff Law School

Abstract

High-profile cases in the Supreme Court of the United States (‘SCOTUS’) on religion tend to attract a certain amount of academic comment in the United Kingdom but US judgments are cited only infrequently by the superior courts in the UK. In return, SCOTUS rarely cites foreign judgments at all. The reason, it is suggested, is that the effect given by the First Amendment to the US Constitution is to render US case law of less relevance to the UK than, for example, judgments from jurisdictions such as Canada and Australia.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2016 

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References

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3 The exemption in Regulation 25A, Value Added Tax Regulations 1995 as amended.

4 Blackburn & Anor v Revenue & Customs [2013] UKFTT 525 (TC).

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6 Burwell v Hobby Lobby Stores Inc 573 US __ (2014).

7 Codified in 42 US Code Ch 21B (Religious Freedom Restoration).

8 Codified as 42 US Code Ch 21C §§ 2000cc–2000cc–5.

9 City of Boerne v Flores 521 US 507 (1997).

10 US Code Ch 21C § 2000cc–5 (Definitions).

11 Hobby Lobby, per Alito J, 18 (in the slip opinion).

12 Exmoor [71 & 72].

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17 Loi n°59-1557 du 31 décembre 1959 sur les rapports entre l'État et les établissements d'enseignement privés.

18 See Titre IV: les établissements d'enseignement privés. Chapitre II section 3: contrat d'association à l'enseignement public passé avec l'Etat par des établissements d'enseignement privés.

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97 United States v Windsor 570 US __ (2013), in which the Court held by 5–4 that the restriction to heterosexual unions of the federal interpretation of ‘marriage’ and ‘spouse’ imposed by section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act 1996 was a deprivation of the equal liberty of persons guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.

98 Town of Greece v Galloway 572 __ US (2014), in which the Court held by 5–4 that the practice of opening meetings of the town board with prayer by volunteer chaplains did not violate the Establishment Clause.

99 Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v Equal Employment Opportunity Commission 565 US __ (2012), on the ‘ministerial exception’: the right of religious organisations to discriminate in employment.

100 Obergefell v Hodges 576 US __ (2015), in which the Court held by 5–4 that the restriction of marriage to opposite-sex couples violated both the Due Process Clause and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Though ‘religion’ was certainly not the presenting issue, same-sex marriage has huge theological and ecclesiological implications for religious bodies.

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102 Scalia and Breyer, ‘Conversation’, p 524.

103 Conversely, though the UK domestic courts and the ECtHR occasionally rule on accommodating prisoners’ religious beliefs, it is difficult to imagine that we could ever have the seemingly endless procession of prisoner free-exercise cases that are such a feature of First Amendment jurisprudence.

104 Criminal law in Louisiana largely rests on Anglo-American common law but its private law is still based on the French and Spanish civilian codes in operation prior to the Louisiana Purchase in 1803.

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108 Galloway v Town of Greece 732 F Supp 2d 195 (2010).

109 Methodist Conference v Preston [2013] UKSC 29.

110 R v Big M Drug Mart Ltd [1985] 1 SCR 295, 1985 CanLII 69 (SCC).

111 Ibid at para 105. But that is not so for Canadian judgments generally: ‘when all cases are considered, statistics show that the Supreme Court of Canada has cited American case law almost forty times as often as the Supreme Court of the United States has cited Canadian case law’: Law Library of Congress, The Impact of Foreign Law on Domestic Judgments (Washington, DC, 2010), p 23, available at <https://www.loc.gov/law/help/domestic-judgment/impact-of-foreign-law.pdf>, accessed 22 February 2016.

112 Constitution of the Republic of South Africa 1996, s 15.

113 Constitution of the Republic of South Africa 1996, s 36.

114 A view supported by a recent analysis of citations in the judgments of the UKSC on human rights issues: for the period from its foundation to 2014 there were 14 US citations in total: Hélène Tyrrell, ‘The use of foreign jurisprudence in human rights cases before the UK Supreme Court’, unpublished PhD thesis, Queen Mary, University of London, 2014.

115 Hazard, G, ‘The Supreme Court as a legislature’, (1978) 64 Cornell Law Review 127 Google Scholar.

116 DeGirolami, M, ‘Constitutional contraction: religion and the Roberts Court’, (2015) 26 Stanford Law & Policy Review 385409 at 387Google Scholar. Presumably his article was written before Obergefell, in which Roberts CJ, Scalia, Thomas and Alito JJ all wrote individual dissenting opinions.