MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP, LTD. v. COLORADO
Syllabus
- Syllabus [HTML] [PDF]
- Opinion, Kennedy [HTML] [PDF]
- Concurrence, Kagan [HTML] [PDF]
- Concurrence, Gorsuch [HTML] [PDF]
- Concurrence, Thomas [HTML] [PDF]
- Dissent, Ginsburg [HTML] [PDF]
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus
(headnote) will be released, as is being done in connection with this
case, at the time the opinion is issued.The syllabus constitutes no part
of the opinion of the Court but has been prepared by the Reporter of
Decisions for the convenience of the reader.See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co.,
200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd., et al.
v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission et al.
certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
No. 16–111. Argued December 5, 2017—Decided June 4, 2018
Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd., is a Colorado
bakery owned and operated by Jack Phillips, an expert baker and devout
Christian. In 2012 he told a same-sex couple that he would not create a
cake for their wedding celebration because of his religious opposition
to same-sex marriages—marriages that Colorado did not then recognize—but
that he would sell them other baked goods, e.g., birthday
cakes. The couple filed a charge with the Colorado Civil Rights
Commission (Commission) pursuant to the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act
(CADA), which prohibits, as relevant here, discrimination based on
sexual orientation in a “place of business engaged in any sales
to the public and any place offering services . . . to the public.”
Under CADA’s administrative review system, the Colorado Civil Rights
Division first found probable cause for a violation and referred the
case to the Commission. The Commission then referred the case for a
formal hearing before a state Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), who ruled
in the couple’s favor. In so doing, the ALJ rejected Phillips’
First Amendment
claims: that requiring him to create a cake for a same-sex wedding
would violate his right to free speech by compelling him to exercise his
artistic talents to express a message with which he disagreed and would
violate his right to the free exercise of religion. Both the
Commission and the Colorado Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: The Commission’s actions in this case violated the Free Exercise Clause. Pp. 9–18.
(a) The laws and the Constitution can, and in
some instances must, protect gay persons and gay couples in the exercise
of their civil rights, but religious and philosophical objections to
gay marriage are protected views and in some instances protected forms
of expression. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U. S.
___, ___. While it is unexceptional that Colorado law can protect gay
persons in acquiring products and services on the same terms and
conditions as are offered to other members of the public, the law must
be applied in a manner that is neutral toward religion. To Phillips,
his claim that using his artistic skills to make an expressive
statement, a wedding endorsement in his own voice and of his own
creation, has a significant
First Amendment
speech component and implicates his deep and sincere religious beliefs.
His dilemma was understandable in 2012, which was before Colorado
recognized the validity of gay marriages performed in the State and
before this Court issued United States v. Windsor,
570 U. S. 744, or Obergefell.
Given the State’s position at the time, there is some force to
Phillips’ argument that he was not unreasonable in deeming his decision
lawful. State law at the time also afforded storekeepers some latitude
to decline to create specific messages they considered offensive.
Indeed, while the instant enforcement proceedings were pending, the
State Civil Rights Division concluded in at least three cases that a
baker acted lawfully in declining to create cakes with decorations that
demeaned gay persons or gay marriages. Phillips too was entitled to a
neutral and respectful consideration of his claims in all the
circumstances of the case. Pp. 9–12.
(b) That consideration was compromised,
however, by the Commission’s treatment of Phillips’ case, which showed
elements of a clear and impermissible hostility toward the sincere
religious beliefs motivating his objection. As the record shows, some
of the commissioners at the Commission’s formal, public hearings
endorsed the view that religious beliefs cannot legitimately be carried
into the public sphere or commercial domain, disparaged Phillips’ faith
as despicable and characterized it as merely rhetorical, and compared
his invocation of his sincerely held religious beliefs to defenses of
slavery and the Holocaust. No commissioners objected to the comments.
Nor were they mentioned in the later state-court ruling or disavowed in
the briefs filed here. The comments thus cast doubt on the fairness and
impartiality of the Commission’s adjudication of Phillips’ case.
Another indication of hostility is the
different treatment of Phillips’ case and the cases of other bakers with
objections to anti-gay messages who prevailed before the Commission.
The Commission ruled against Phillips in part on the theory that any
message on the requested wedding cake would be attributed to the
customer, not to the baker. Yet the Division did not address this point
in any of the cases involving requests for cakes depicting anti-gay
marriage symbolism. The Division also considered that each bakery was
willing to sell other products to the prospective customers, but the
Commission found Phillips’ willingness to do the same irrelevant. The
State Court of Appeals’ brief discussion of this disparity of treatment
does not answer Phillips’ concern that the State’s practice was to
disfavor the religious basis of his objection. Pp. 12–16.
(c) For these reasons, the Commission’s treatment of Phillips’ case violated the State’s duty under the
First Amendment
not to base laws or regulations on hostility to a religion or religious
viewpoint. The government, consistent with the Constitution’s
guarantee of free exercise, cannot impose regulations that are hostile
to the religious beliefs of affected citizens and cannot act in a manner
that passes judgment upon or presupposes the illegitimacy of religious
beliefs and practices. Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. Hialeah,
508 U. S. 520.
Factors relevant to the assessment of governmental neutrality include
“the historical background of the decision under challenge, the specific
series of events leading to the enactment or official policy in
question, and the legislative or administrative history, including
contemporaneous statements made by members of the decisionmaking body.”
Id., at 540. In view of these factors, the record here
demonstrates that the Commission’s consideration of Phillips’ case was
neither tolerant nor respectful of his religious beliefs. The
Commission gave “every appearance,” id., at 545, of
adjudicating his religious objection based on a negative normative
“evaluation of the particular justification” for his objection and the
religious grounds for it, id., at 537, but government has no
role in expressing or even suggesting whether the religious ground for
Phillips’ conscience-based objection is legitimate or illegitimate. The
inference here is thus that Phillips’ religious objection was not
considered with the neutrality required by the Free Exercise Clause.
The State’s interest could have been weighed against Phillips’ sincere
religious objections in a way consistent with the requisite religious
neutrality that must be strictly observed. But the official expressions
of hostility to religion in some of the commissioners’ comments were
inconsistent with that requirement, and the Commission’s disparate
consideration of Phillips’ case compared to the cases of the other
bakers suggests the same. Pp. 16–18.
370 P. 3d 272, reversed.
Kennedy, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Roberts, C. J., and Breyer, Alito, Kagan, and Gorsuch, JJ., joined. Kagan, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which Breyer, J., joined. Gorsuch, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which Alito, J., joined. Thomas, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, in which Gorsuch, J., joined. Ginsburg, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Sotomayor, J., joined.
TOP Opinion
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal
revision before publication in the preliminary print of the United
States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of
Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543,
of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that corrections
may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 16–111
_________________
MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP, LTD., et al., PETITIONERS v. COLORADO CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION, et al.
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 4, 2018]
Justice Kennedy delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 2012 a same-sex couple visited
Masterpiece Cakeshop, a bakery in Colorado, to make inquiries about
ordering a cake for their wedding reception. The shop’s owner told the
couple that he would not create a cake for their wedding because of his
religious opposition to same-sex marriages—marriages the State of
Colorado itself did not recognize at that time. The couple filed a
charge with the Colorado Civil Rights Commission alleging discrimination
on the basis of sexual orientation in violation of the Colorado
Anti-Discrimination Act.
The Commission determined that the shop’s
actions violated the Act and ruled in the couple’s favor. The Colorado
state courts affirmed the ruling and its enforcement order, and this
Court now must decide whether the Commission’s order violated the
Constitution.
The case presents difficult questions as to
the proper reconciliation of at least two principles. The first is the
authority of a State and its governmental entities to protect the rights
and dignity of gay persons who are, or wish to be, married but who face
discrimination when they seek goods or services. The second is the
right of all persons to exercise fundamental freedoms under the
First Amendment, as applied to the States through the
Fourteenth Amendment.
The freedoms asserted here are both the
freedom of speech and the free exercise of religion. The free speech
aspect of this case is difficult, for few persons who have seen a
beautiful wedding cake might have thought of its creation as an exercise
of protected speech. This is an instructive example, however, of the
proposition that the application of constitutional freedoms in new
contexts can deepen our understanding of their meaning.
One of the difficulties in this case is that
the parties disagree as to the extent of the baker’s refusal to provide
service. If a baker refused to design a special cake with words or
images celebrating the marriage—for instance, a cake showing words with
religious meaning—that might be different from a refusal to sell any
cake at all. In defining whether a baker’s creation can be protected,
these details might make a difference.
The same difficulties arise in determining
whether a baker has a valid free exercise claim. A baker’s refusal to
attend the wedding to ensure that the cake is cut the right way, or a
refusal to put certain religious words or decorations on the cake, or
even a refusal to sell a cake that has been baked for the public
generally but includes certain religious words or symbols on it are just
three examples of possibilities that seem all but endless.
Whatever the confluence of speech and free
exercise principles might be in some cases, the Colorado Civil Rights
Commission’s consideration of this case was inconsistent with the
State’s obligation of religious neutrality. The reason and motive for
the baker’s refusal were based on his sincere religious beliefs and
convictions. The Court’s precedents make clear that the baker, in his
capacity as the owner of a business serving the public, might have his
right to the free exercise of religion limited by generally applicable
laws. Still, the delicate question of when the free exercise of his
religion must yield to an otherwise valid exercise of state power needed
to be determined in an adjudication in which religious hostility on the
part of the State itself would not be a factor in the balance the State
sought to reach. That requirement, however, was not met here. When
the Colorado Civil Rights Commission considered this case, it did not
doso with the religious neutrality that the Constitution requires.
Given all these considerations, it is proper
to hold that whatever the outcome of some future controversy involving
facts similar to these, the Commission’s actions here violated the Free
Exercise Clause; and its order must be set aside.
I
A
Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd., is a bakery in
Lakewood, Colorado, a suburb of Denver. The shop offers a variety of
baked goods, ranging from everyday cookies and brownies to elaborate
custom-designed cakes for birthday parties, weddings, and other events.
Jack Phillips is an expert baker who has
owned and operated the shop for 24 years. Phillips is a devout
Christian. He has explained that his “main goal in life is to be
obedient to” Jesus Christ and Christ’s “teachings in all aspects of his
life.” App. 148. And he seeks to “honor God through his work at
Masterpiece Cakeshop.” Ibid. One of Phillips’ religious
beliefs is that “God’s intention for marriage from the beginning of
history is that it is and should be the union of one man and one woman.”
Id., at 149. To Phillips, creating a wedding cake for a
same-sex wedding would be equivalent to participating in a celebration
that is contrary to his own most deeply held beliefs.
Phillips met Charlie Craig and Dave Mullins
when they entered his shop in the summer of 2012. Craig and Mullins
were planning to marry. At that time, Colorado did not recognize
same-sex marriages, so the couple planned to wed legally in
Massachusetts and afterwards to host a reception for their family and
friends in Denver. To prepare for their celebration, Craig and Mullins
visited the shop and told Phillips that they were interested in ordering
a cake for “our wedding.” Id., at 152 (emphasis de-leted). They did not mention the design of the cake they envisioned.
Phillips informed the couple that he does not “create” wedding cakes for same-sex weddings. Ibid.
He explained, “I’ll make your birthday cakes, shower cakes, sell you
cookies and brownies, I just don’t make cakes for same sex weddings.” Ibid. The couple left the shop without further discussion.
The following day, Craig’s mother, who had
accompanied the couple to the cakeshop and been present for their
interaction with Phillips, telephoned to ask Phillips why he had
declined to serve her son. Phillips explained that he does not create
wedding cakes for same-sex weddings because of his religious opposition
to same-sex marriage, and also because Colorado (at that time) did not
recognize same-sex marriages. Id., at 153. He later explained
his belief that “to create a wedding cake for an event that celebrates
something that directly goes against the teachings of the Bible, would
have been a personal endorsement and participation in the ceremony and
relationship that they were entering into.” Ibid. (emphasis deleted).
B
For most of its history, Colorado has
prohibited discrimination in places of public accommodation. In 1885,
less than a decade after Colorado achieved statehood, the General
Assembly passed “An Act to Protect All Citizens in Their Civil Rights,”
which guaranteed “full and equal enjoyment” of certain public facilities
to “all citizens,” “regardless of race, color or previous condition of
servitude.” 1885 Colo. Sess. Laws pp. 132–133. A decade later, the
General Assembly expanded the requirement to apply to “all other places
of public accommodation.” 1895 Colo. Sess. Laws ch. 61, p. 139.
Today, the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act
(CADA) carries forward the state’s tradition of prohibiting
discrimination in places of public accommodation. Amended in 2007 and
2008 to prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation as
well as other protected characteristics, CADA in relevant part provides
as follows:
“It is a discriminatory practice and
unlawful for a person, directly or indirectly, to refuse, withhold from,
or deny to an individual or a group, because of disability, race,
creed, color, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, national origin,
or ancestry, the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services,
facilities, privileges, advantages, or accommodations of a place of
public accommodation.” Colo. Rev. Stat. §24–34–601(2)(a) (2017).
The Act defines “public accommodation”
broadly to include any “place of business engaged in any sales to the
public and any place offering services . . . to the public,” but
excludes “a church, synagogue, mosque, or other place that is
principally used for religious purposes.” §24–34–601(1).
CADA establishes an administrative system
for the resolution of discrimination claims. Complaints of
discrimination in violation of CADA are addressed in the first instance
by the Colorado Civil Rights Division. The Division investigates each
claim; and if it finds probable cause that CADA has been violated, it
will refer the matter to the Colorado Civil Rights Commission. The
Commission, in turn, decides whether to initiate a formal hearing before
a state Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), who will hear evidence and
argument before issuing a written decision. See §§24–34–306,
24–4–105(14). The decision of the ALJ may be appealed to the full
Commission, a seven-member appointed body. The Commission holds a
public hearing and deliberative session before voting on the case. If
the Commission determines that the evidence proves a CADA violation, it
may impose remedial measures as provided by statute. See §24–34–306(9).
Available remedies include, among other things, orders to
cease-and-desist a discriminatory policy, to file regular compliance
reports with the Commission, and “to take affirmative action, including
the posting of notices setting forth the substantive rights of the
public.” §24–34–605. Colorado law does not permit the Commission to
assess money damages or fines. §§24–34–306(9), 24–34–605.
C
Craig and Mullins filed a discrimination
complaint against Masterpiece Cakeshop and Phillips in August 2012,
shortly after the couple’s visit to the shop. App. 31. The complaint
alleged that Craig and Mullins had been denied “full and equal service”
at the bakery because of their sexual orientation, id., at 35, 48, and that it was Phillips’ “standard business practice” not to provide cakes for same-sex weddings, id., at 43.
The Civil Rights Division opened an
investigation. The investigator found that “on multiple occasions,”
Phillips “turned away potential customers on the basis of their sexual
orientation, stating that he could not create a cake for a same-sex
wedding ceremony or reception” because his religious beliefs prohibited
it and because the potential customers “were doing something illegal” at
that time. Id., at 76. The investigation found that Phillips
had declined to sell custom wedding cakes to about six other same-sex
couples on this basis. Id., at 72. The investigator also
recounted that, according to affidavits submitted by Craig and Mullins,
Phillips’ shop had refused to sell cupcakes to a lesbian couple for
their commitment celebration because the shop “had a policy of not
selling baked goods to same-sex couples for this type of event.” Id.,
at 73. Based on these findings, the Division found probable cause that
Phillips violated CADA and referred the case to the Civil Rights
Commission. Id., at 69.
The Commission found it proper to conduct a
formal hearing, and it sent the case to a State ALJ. Finding no dispute
as to material facts, the ALJ entertained cross-motions for summary
judgment and ruled in the couple’s favor. The ALJ first rejected
Phillips’ argument that declining to make or create a wedding cake for
Craig and Mullins did not violate Colorado law. It was undisputed that
the shop is subject to state public accommodations laws. And the ALJ
determined that Phillips’ actions constituted prohibited discrimination
on the basis of sex-ual orientation, not simply opposition to same-sex
marriage as Phillips contended. App. to Pet. for Cert. 68a–72a.
Phillips raised two constitutional claims
before the ALJ. He first asserted that applying CADA in a way that
would require him to create a cake for a same-sex wedding would violate
his
First Amendment
right to free speech by compelling him to exercise his artistic talents
to express a message with which he disagreed. The ALJ rejected the
contention that preparing a wedding cake is a form of protected speech
and did not agree that creating Craig and Mullins’ cake would force
Phillips to adhere to “an ideological point of view.” Id., at 75a. Applying CADA to the facts at hand, in the ALJ’s view, did not interfere with Phillips’ freedom of speech.
Phillips also contended that requiring him
to create cakes for same-sex weddings would violate his right to the
free exercise of religion, also protected by the First Amendment.
Citing this Court’s precedent in Employment Div., Dept. of Human Resources of Ore. v. Smith,
494 U. S. 872
(1990), the ALJ determined that CADA is a “valid and neutral law of
general applicability” and therefore that applying it to Phillips in
this case did not violate the Free Exercise Clause. Id., at
879; App. to Pet. for Cert. 82a–83a. The ALJ thus ruled against
Phillips and the cakeshop and in favor of Craig and Mullins on both
constitutional claims.
The Commission affirmed the ALJ’s decision in full. Id.,
at 57a. The Commission ordered Phillips to “cease and desist from
discriminating against . . . same-sex couples by refusing to sell them
wedding cakes or any product [they] would sell to heterosexual couples.”
Ibid. It also ordered additional remedial measures,
including “comprehensive staff training on the Public Accommodations
section” of CADA “and changes to any and all company policies to comply
with . . . this Order.” Id., at 58a. The Commission
additionally required Phillips to prepare “quarterly compliance reports”
for a period of two years documenting “the number of patrons denied
service” and why, along with “a statement describing the remedial
actions taken.” Ibid.
Phillips appealed to the Colorado Court of
Appeals, which affirmed the Commission’s legal determinations and
remedial order. The court rejected the argument that the “Commission’s
order unconstitutionally compels” Phillips and the shop “to convey a
celebratory message about same sex marriage.” Craig v. Masterpiece Cakeshop, Inc.,
370 P. 3d 272, 283 (2015). The court also rejected the argument that
the Commission’s order violated the Free Exercise Clause. Relying on
this Court’s precedent in Smith, supra, at 879, the
court stated that the Free Exercise Clause “does not relieve an
individual of the obligation to comply with a valid and neutral law of
general applicability” on the ground that following the law would
interfere with religious practice or belief. 370 P. 3d, at 289. The
court concluded that requiring Phillips to comply with the statute did
not violate his free exercise rights. The Colorado Supreme Court
declined to hear the case.
Phillips sought review here, and this Court
granted certiorari. 582 U. S. ___ (2017). He now renews his claims
under the Free Speech and Free Exercise Clauses of the
First Amendment.
II
A
Our society has come to the recognition that
gay persons and gay couples cannot be treated as social outcasts or as
inferior in dignity and worth. For that reason the laws and the
Constitution can, and in some instances must, protect them in the
exercise of their civil rights. The exercise of their freedom on terms
equal to others must be given great weight and respect by the courts.
At the same time, the religious and philosophical objections to gay
marriage are protected views and in some instances protected forms of
expression. As this Court observed in Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U. S. ___ (2015), “[t]he
First Amendment
ensures that religious organizations and persons are given proper
protection as they seek to teach the principles that are so fulfilling
and so central to their lives and faiths.” Id., at ___ (slip
op., at 27). Nevertheless, while those religious and philosophical
objections are protected, it is a general rule that such objections do
not allow business owners and other actors in the economy and in society
to deny protected persons equal access to goods and services under a
neutral and generally applicable public accommodations law. See Newman v. Piggy Park Enterprises, Inc.,
390 U. S. 400, 402, n. 5 (1968) (per curiam); see also Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc.,
515 U. S. 557,
572 (1995) (“Provisions like these are well within the State’s usual
power to enact when a legislature has reason to believe that a given
group is the target of discrimination, and they do not, as a general
matter, violate the First or
Fourteenth Amendments”).
When it comes to weddings, it can be assumed
that a member of the clergy who objects to gay marriage on moral and
religious grounds could not be compelled to perform the ceremony without
denial of his or her right to the free exercise of religion. This
refusal would be well understood in our constitutional order as an
exercise of religion, an exercise that gay persons could recognize and
accept without serious diminishment to their own dignity and worth. Yet
if that exception were not confined, then a long list of persons who
provide goods and services for marriages and weddings might refuse to do
so for gay persons, thus resulting in a community-wide stigma
inconsistent with the history and dynamics of civil rights laws that
ensure equal access to goods, services, and public accommodations.
It is unexceptional that Colorado law can
protect gay persons, just as it can protect other classes of
individuals, in acquiring whatever products and services they choose on
the same terms and conditions as are offered to other members of the
public. And there are no doubt innumerable goods and services that no
one could argue implicate the
First Amendment.
Petitioners conceded, moreover, that if a baker refused to sell any
goods or any cakes for gay weddings, that would be a different matter
and the State would have a strong case under this Court’s precedents
that this would be a denial of goods and services that went beyond any
protected rights of a baker who offers goods and services to the general
public and is subject to a neutrally applied and generally applicable
public accommodations law. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 4–7, 10.
Phillips claims, however, that a narrower
issue is presented. He argues that he had to use his artistic skills to
make an expressive statement, a wedding endorsement in his own voice
and of his own creation. As Phillips would see the case, this
contention has a significant
First Amendment
speech component and implicates his deep and sincere religious beliefs.
In this context the baker likely found it difficult to find a line
where the customers’ rights to goods and services became a demand for
him to exercise the right of his own personal expression for their
message, a message he could not express in a way consistent with his
religious beliefs.
Phillips’ dilemma was particularly
understandable given the background of legal principles and
administration of the law in Colorado at that time. His decision and
his actions leading to the refusal of service all occurred in the year
2012. At that point, Colorado did not recognize the validity of gay
marriages performed in its own State. See Colo. Const., Art. II, §31
(2012); 370 P. 3d, at 277. At the time of the events in question, this
Court had not issued its decisions either in United States v. Windsor,
570 U. S. 744 (2013), or Obergefell.
Since the State itself did not allow those marriages to be performed
in Colorado, there is some force to the argument that the baker was not
unreasonable in deeming it lawful to decline to take an action that he
understood to be an expression of support for their validity when that
expression was contrary to his sincerely held religious beliefs, at
least insofar as his refusal was limited to refusing to create and
express a message in support of gay marriage, even one planned to take
place in another State.
At the time, state law also afforded
storekeepers some latitude to decline to create specific messages the
storekeeper considered offensive. Indeed, while enforcement proceedings
against Phillips were ongoing, the Colorado Civil Rights Division
itself endorsed this proposition in cases involving other bakers’
creation of cakes, concluding on at least three occasions that a baker
acted lawfully in declining to create cakes with decorations that
demeaned gay persons or gay marriages. See Jack v. Gateaux, Ltd., Charge No. P20140071X (Mar. 24, 2015); Jack v. Le Bakery Sensual, Inc., Charge No. P20140070X (Mar. 24, 2015); Jack v. Azucar Bakery, Charge No. P20140069X (Mar. 24, 2015).
There were, to be sure, responses to these
arguments that the State could make when it contended for a different
result in seeking the enforcement of its generally applicable state
regulations of businesses that serve the public. And any decision in
favor of the baker would have to be sufficiently constrained, lest all
purveyors of goods and services who object to gay marriages for moral
and religious reasons in effect be allowed to put up signs saying “no
goods or services will be sold if they will be used for gay marriages,”
something that would impose a serious stigma on gay persons. But,
nonetheless, Phillips was entitled to the neutral and respectful
consideration of his claims in all the circumstances of the case.
B
The neutral and respectful consideration to
which Phillips was entitled was compromised here, however. The Civil
Rights Commission’s treatment of his case has some elements of a clear
and impermissible hostility toward the sincere religious beliefs that
motivated his objection.
That hostility surfaced at the Commission’s
formal, public hearings, as shown by the record. On May 30, 2014, the
seven-member Commission convened publicly to consider Phillips’ case.
At several points during its meeting, commissioners endorsed the view
that religious beliefs cannot legitimately be carried into the public
sphere or commercial domain, implying that religious beliefs and persons
are less than fully welcome in Colorado’s business community. One
commissioner suggested that Phillips can believe “what he wants to
believe,” but cannot act on his religious beliefs “if he decides to do
business in the state.” Tr. 23. A few moments later, the commissioner
restated the same position: “[I]f a businessman wants to do business in
the state and he’s got an issue with the—the law’s impacting his
personal belief system, he needs to look at being able to compromise.” Id.,
at 30. Standing alone, these statements are susceptible of different
interpretations. On the one hand, they might mean simply that a
business cannot refuse to provide services based on sexual orientation,
regardless of the proprietor’s personal views. On the other hand, they
might be seen as inappropriate and dismissive comments showing lack of
due consideration for Phillips’ free exercise rights and the dilemma he
faced. In view of the comments that followed, the latter seems the more
likely.
On July 25, 2014, the Commission met again.
This meeting, too, was conducted in public and on the record. On this
occasion another commissioner made specific reference to the previous
meeting’s discussion but said far more to disparage Phillips’ beliefs.
The commissioner stated:
“I would also like to reiterate what we said
in the hearing or the last meeting. Freedom of religion and religion
has been used to justify all kinds of discrimination throughout history,
whether it be slavery, whether it be the holocaust, whether it be—I
mean, we—we can list hundreds of situations where freedom of religion
has been used to justify discrimination. And to me it is one of the
most despicable pieces of rhetoric that people can use to—to use their
religion to hurt others.” Tr. 11–12.
To describe a man’s faith as “one of the
most despicable pieces of rhetoric that people can use” is to disparage
his religion in at least two distinct ways: by describing it as
despicable, and also by characterizing it as merely rhetorical—something
insubstantial and even insincere. The commissioner even went so far as
to compare Phillips’ invocation of his sincerely held religious beliefs
to defenses of slavery and the Holocaust. This sentiment is
inappropriate for a Commission charged with the solemn responsibility of
fair and neutral enforcement of Colorado’s antidiscrimination law—a law
that protects discrimination on the basis of religion as well as sexual
orientation.
The record shows no objection to these
comments from other commissioners. And the later state-court ruling
reviewing the Commission’s decision did not mention those comments, much
less express concern with their content. Nor were the comments by the
commissioners disavowed in the briefs filed in this Court. For these
reasons, the Court cannot avoid the conclusion that these statements
cast doubt on the fairness and impartiality of the Commission’s
adjudication of Phillips’ case. Members of the Court have disagreed on
the question whether statements made by lawmakers may properly be taken
into account in determining whether a law intentionally discriminates on
the basis of religion. See Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. Hialeah,
508 U. S. 520, 540–542 (1993); id.,
at 558 (Scalia, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment). In
this case, however, the remarks were made in a very different
context—by an adjudicatory body deciding a particular case.
Another indication of hostility is the
difference in treatment between Phillips’ case and the cases of other
bakers who objected to a requested cake on the basis of conscience and
prevailed before the Commission.
As noted above, on at least three other
occasions the Civil Rights Division considered the refusal of bakers to
create cakes with images that conveyed disapproval of same-sex marriage,
along with religious text. Each time, the Division found that the
baker acted lawfully in refusing service. It made these determinations
because, in the words of the Division, the requested cake included
“wording and images [the baker] deemed derogatory,” Jack v. Gateaux, Ltd., Charge No. P20140071X, at 4; featured “language and images [the baker] deemed hateful,” Jack v. Le Bakery Sensual, Inc., Charge No. P20140070X, at 4; or displayed a message the baker “deemed as discriminatory, Jack v. Azucar Bakery, Charge No. P20140069X, at 4.
The treatment of the conscience-based
objections at issue in these three cases contrasts with the Commission’s
treatment of Phillips’ objection. The Commission ruled against
Phillips in part on the theory that any message the requested wedding
cake would carry would be attributed to the customer, not to the baker.
Yet the Division did not address this point in any of the other cases
with respect to the cakes depicting anti-gay marriage symbolism.
Additionally, the Division found no violation of CADA in the other cases
in part because each bakery was willing to sell other products,
including those depicting Christian themes, to the prospective
customers. But the Commission dismissed Phillips’ willingness to sell
“birthday cakes, shower cakes, [and] cookies and brownies,” App. 152, to
gay and lesbian customers as irrelevant. The treatment of the other
cases and Phillips’ case could reasonably be interpreted as being
inconsistent as to the question of whether speech is involved, quite
apart from whether the cases should ultimately be distinguished. In
short, the Commission’s consideration of Phillips’ religious objection
did not accord with its treatment of these other objections.
Before the Colorado Court of Appeals,
Phillips protested that this disparity in treatment reflected hostility
on the part of the Commission toward his beliefs. He argued that the
Commission had treated the other bakers’ conscience-based objections as
legitimate, but treated his as illegitimate—thus sitting in judgment of
his religious beliefs themselves. The Court of Appeals addressed the
disparity only in passing and relegated its complete analysis of the
issue to a footnote. There, the court stated that “[t]his case is
distinguishable from the Colorado Civil Rights Division’s recent
findings that [the other bakeries] in Denver did not discriminate
against a Christian patron on the basis of his creed” when they refused
to create the requested cakes. 370 P. 3d, at 282, n. 8. In those
cases, the court continued, there was no impermissible discrimination
because “the Division found that the bakeries . . . refuse[d] the
patron’s request . . . because of the offensive nature of the requested
message.” Ibid.
A principled rationale for the difference in
treatment of these two instances cannot be based on the government’s
own assessment of offensiveness. Just as “no official, high or petty,
can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion,
or other matters of opinion,” West Virginia Bd. of Ed. v. Barnette,
319 U. S. 624,
642 (1943), it is not, as the Court has repeatedly held, the role of
the State or its officials to prescribe what shall be offensive. See Matal v. Tam, 582 U. S. ___, ___–___ (2017) (opinion of Alito,
J.) (slip op., at 22–23). The Colorado court’s attempt to account for
the difference in treatment elevates one view of what is offensive over
another and itself sends a signal of official disapproval of Phillips’
religious beliefs. The court’s footnote does not, therefore, answer the
baker’s concern that the State’s practice was to disfavor the religious
basis of his objection.
C
For the reasons just described, the Commission’s treatment of Phillips’ case violated the State’s duty under the
First Amendment not to base laws or regulations on hostility to a religion or religious viewpoint.
In Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, supra,
the Court made clear that the government, if it is to respect the
Constitution’s guarantee of free exercise, cannot impose regulations
that are hostile to the religious beliefs of affected citizens and
cannot act in a manner that passes judgment upon or presupposes the
illegitimacy of religious beliefs and practices. The Free Exercise
Clause bars even “subtle departures from neutrality” on matters of
religion. Id., at 534. Here, that means the Commission was
obliged under the Free Exercise Clause to proceed in a manner neutral
toward and tolerant of Phillips’ religious beliefs. The Constitution
“commits government itself to religious tolerance, and upon even slight
suspicion that proposals for state intervention stem from animosity to
religion or distrust of its practices, all officials must pause to
remember their own high duty to the Constitution and to the rights it
secures.” Id., at 547.
Factors relevant to the assessment of
governmental neutrality include “the historical background of the
decision under challenge, the specific series of events leading to the
enactment or official policy in question, and the legislative or
administrative history, including contemporaneous statements made by
members of the decisionmaking body.” Id., at 540. In view of
these factors the record here demonstrates that the Commission’s
consideration of Phillips’ case was neither tolerant nor respectful of
Phillips’ religious beliefs. The Commission gave “every appearance,” id.,
at 545, of adjudicating Phillips’ religious objection based on a
negative normative “evaluation of the particular justification” for his
objection and the religious grounds for it. Id., at 537. It
hardly requires restating that government has no role in deciding or
even suggesting whether the religious ground for Phillips’
conscience-based objection is legitimate or illegitimate. On these
facts, the Court must draw the inference that Phillips’ religious
objection was not considered with the neutrality that the Free Exercise
Clause requires.
While the issues here are difficult to
resolve, it must be concluded that the State’s interest could have been
weighed against Phillips’ sincere religious objections in a way
consistent with the requisite religious neutrality that must be strictly
observed. The official expressions of hostility to religion in some of
the commissioners’ comments—comments that were not disavowed at the
Commission or by the State at any point in the proceedings that led to
affirmance of the order—were inconsistent with what the Free Exercise
Clause requires. The Commission’s disparate consideration of Phillips’
case compared to the cases of the other bakers suggests the same. For
these reasons, the order must be set aside.
III
The Commission’s hostility was inconsistent with the
First Amendment’s
guarantee that our laws be applied in a manner that is neutral toward
religion. Phillips was entitled to a neutral decisionmaker who would
give full and fair consideration to his religious objection as he sought
to assert it in all of the circumstances in which this case was
presented, considered, and decided. In this case the adjudication
concerned a context that may well be different going forward in the
respects noted above. However later cases raising these or similar
concerns are resolved in the future, for these reasons the rulings of
the Commission and of the state court that enforced the Commission’s
order must be invalidated.
The outcome of cases like this in other
circumstances must await further elaboration in the courts, all in the
context of recognizing that these disputes must be resolved with
tolerance, without undue disrespect to sincere religious beliefs, and
without subjecting gay persons to indignities when they seek goods and
services in an open market.
The judgment of the Colorado Court of Appeals is reversed.
It is so ordered.
TOP Concurrence
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 16–111
_________________
MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP, LTD., et al., PETITIONERS v. COLORADO CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION, et al.
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 4, 2018]
Justice Kagan, with whom Justice Breyer joins, concurring.
“[I]t is a general rule that [religious and
philosophical] objections do not allow business owners and other actors
in the economy and in society to deny protected persons equal access to
goods and services under a neutral and generally applicable public
accommodations law.” Ante, at 9. But in upholding that
principle, state actors cannot show hostility to religious views;
rather, they must give those views “neutral and respectful
consideration.” Ante, at 12. I join the Court’s opinion in
full because I believe the Colorado Civil Rights Commission did not
satisfy that obligation. I write separately to elaborate on one of the
bases for the Court’s holding.
The Court partly relies on the “disparate
consideration of Phillips’ case compared to the cases of [three] other
bakers” who “objected to a requested cake on the basis of conscience.” Ante,
at 14, 18. In the latter cases, a customer named William Jack sought
“cakes with images that conveyed disapproval of same-sex marriage, along
with religious text”; the bakers whom he approached refused to make
them. Ante, at 15; see post, at 3 (Ginsburg, J.,
dissenting) (further describing the requested cakes). Those bakers
prevailed before the Colorado Civil Rights Division and Commission,
while Phillips—who objected for religious reasons to baking a wedding
cake for a same-sex couple—did not. The Court finds that the legal
reasoning of the state agencies differed in significant ways as between
the Jack cases and the Phillips case. See ante, at 15. And
the Court takes especial note of the suggestion made by the Colorado
Court of Appeals, in comparing those cases, that the state agencies
found the message Jack requested “offensive [in] nature.” Ante,
at 16 (internal quotation marks omitted). As the Court states, a
“principled rationale for the difference in treatment” cannot be “based
on the government’s own assessment of offensiveness.” Ibid.
What makes the state agencies’ consideration
yet more disquieting is that a proper basis for distinguishing the
cases was available—in fact, was obvious. The Colorado
Anti-Discrimination Act (CADA) makes it unlawful for a place of public
accommodation to deny “the full and equal enjoyment” of goods and
services to individuals based on certain characteristics, including
sexual orientation and creed. Colo. Rev. Stat. §24–34–601(2)(a) (2017).
The three bakers in the Jack cases did not violate that law. Jack
requested them to make a cake (one denigrating gay people and same-sex
marriage) that they would not have made for any customer. In refusing
that request, the bakers did not single out Jack because of his
religion, but instead treated him in the same way they would have
treated anyone else—just as CADA requires. By contrast, the same-sex
couple in this case requested a wedding cake that Phillips would have
made for an opposite-sex couple. In refusing that request, Phillips
contravened CADA’s demand that customers receive “the full and equal
enjoyment” of public accommodations irrespective of their sexual
orientation. Ibid. The different outcomes in the Jack cases
and the Phillips case could thus have been justified by a plain reading
and neutral application of Colorado law—untainted by any bias against a
religious belief.
1
*
I read the Court’s opinion as fully consistent with that view. The Court limits its analysis to the reasoning
of the state agencies (and Court of Appeals)—“quite apart from whether
the [Phillips and Jack] cases should ultimately be distinguished.” Ante, at 15. And the Court itself recognizes the principle that would properly account for a difference in result
between those cases. Colorado law, the Court says, “can protect gay
persons, just as it can protect other classes of individuals, in
acquiring whatever products and services they choose on the same terms
and conditions as are offered to other members of the public.” Ante,
at 10. For that reason, Colorado can treat a baker who discriminates
based on sexual orientation differently from a baker who does not
discriminate on that or any other prohibited ground. But only, as the
Court rightly says, if the State’s decisions are not infected by
religious hostility or bias. I accordingly concur.
Notes
1* Justice Gorsuch
disagrees. In his view, the Jack cases and the Phillips case must be
treated the same because the bakers in all those cases “would not sell
the requested cakes to anyone.” Post, at 4. That description
perfectly fits the Jack cases—and explains why the bakers there did not
engage in unlawful discrimination. But it is a surprising
characterization of the Phillips case, given that Phillips routinely
sells wedding cakes to opposite-sex couples. Justice Gorsuch can make the claim only because he does not think a “wedding cake” is the relevant product. As Justice Gorsuch
sees it, the product that Phillips refused to sell here—and would
refuse to sell to anyone—was a “cake celebrating same-sex marriage.” Ibid.; see post,
at 3, 6, 8–9. But that is wrong. The cake requested was not a special
“cake celebrating same-sex marriage.” It was simply a wedding cake—one
that (like other standard wedding cakes) is suitable for use at
same-sex and opposite-sex weddings alike. See ante, at 4
(majority opinion) (recounting that Phillips did not so much as discuss
the cake’s design before he refused to make it). And contrary to Justice Gorsuch’s view,
a wedding cake does not become something different whenever a vendor
like Phillips invests its sale to particular customers with “religious
significance.” Post, at 11. As this Court has long held, and
reaffirms today, a vendor cannot escape a public accommodations law
because his religion disapproves selling a product to a group of
customers, whether defined by sexual orientation, race, sex, or other
protected trait. See Newman v. Piggie Park Enterprises, Inc.,
390 U. S. 400, 402, n. 5 (1968) (per curiam)
(holding that a barbeque vendor must serve black customers even if he
perceives such service as vindicating racial equality, in violation of
his religious beliefs); ante, at 9. A vendor can choose the
products he sells, but not the customers he serves—no matter the reason.
Phillips sells wedding cakes. As to that product, he unlawfully
discriminates: He sells it to opposite-sex but not to same-sex couples.
And on that basis—which has nothing to do with Phillips’ religious
beliefs—Colorado could have distinguished Phillips from the bakers in
the Jack cases, who did not engage in any prohibited discrimination.
TOP Concurrence
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 16–111
_________________
MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP, LTD., et al., PETITIONERS v. COLORADO CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION, et al.
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 4, 2018]
Justice Gorsuch, with whom Justice Alito joins, concurring.
In Employment Div., Dept. of Human Resources of Ore. v. Smith, this Court held that a neutral and generally applicable law will usually survive a constitutional free exercise challenge.
494 U. S. 872, 878–879 (1990). Smith
remains controversial in many quarters. Compare McConnell, The Origins
and Historical Understanding of Free Exercise of Religion, 103 Harv. L.
Rev. 1409 (1990), with Hamburger, A Constitutional Right of Religious
Exemption: An Historical Perspective, 60 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 915 (1992).
But we know this with certainty: when the government fails to act
neutrally toward the free exercise of religion, it tends to run into
trouble. Then the government can prevail only if it satisfies strict
scrutiny, showing that its restrictions on religion both serve a
compelling interest and are narrowly tailored. Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. Hialeah,
508 U. S. 520, 546 (1993).
Today’s decision respects these principles.
As the Court explains, the Colorado Civil Rights Commission failed to
act neutrally toward Jack Phillips’s religious faith. Maybe most
notably, the Commission allowed three other bakers to refuse a
customer’s request that would have required them to violate their
secular commitments. Yet it denied the same accommodation to Mr.
Phillips when he refused a customer’s request that would have required
him to violate his religious beliefs. Ante, at 14–16. As the
Court also explains, the only reason the Commission seemed to supply for
its discrimination was that it found Mr. Phillips’s religious beliefs
“offensive.” Ibid. That kind of judgmental dismissal of a sincerely held religious belief is, of course, antithetical to the
First Amendment
and cannot begin to satisfy strict scrutiny. The Constitution protects
not just popular religious exercises from the condemnation of civil
authorities. It protects them all. Because the Court documents each of
these points carefully and thoroughly, I am pleased to join its opinion
in full.
The only wrinkle is this. In the face of so
much evidence suggesting hostility toward Mr. Phillips’s sincerely held
religious beliefs, two of our colleagues have written separately to
suggest that the Commission acted neutrally toward his faith when it
treated him differently from the other bakers—or that it could have
easily done so consistent with the
First Amendment. See post, at 4–5, and n. 4 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting); ante, at 2–3, and n. (Kagan, J., concurring). But, respectfully, I do not see how we might rescue the Commission from its error.
A full view of the facts helps point the way
to the problem. Start with William Jack’s case. He approached three
bakers and asked them to prepare cakes with messages disapproving
same-sex marriage on religious grounds. App. 233, 243, 252. All three
bakers refused Mr. Jack’s request, stating that they found his request
offensive to their secular convictions. Id., at 231, 241, 250. Mr. Jack responded by filing complaints with the Colorado Civil Rights Division. Id.,
at 230, 240, 249. He pointed to Colorado’s Anti-Discrimination Act,
which prohibits discrimination against customers in public
accommodations because of religious creed, sexual orientation, or
certain other traits. See ibid.; Colo. Rev. Stat.
§24–34–601(2)(a) (2017). Mr. Jack argued that the cakes he sought
reflected his religious beliefs and that the bakers could not refuse to
make them just because they happened to disagree with his beliefs. App.
231, 241, 250. But the Division declined to find a violation,
reasoning that the bakers didn’t deny Mr. Jack service because of his
religious faith but because the cakes he sought were offensive to their
own moral convictions. Id., at 237, 247, 255–256. As proof,
the Division pointed to the fact that the bakers said they treated Mr.
Jack as they would have anyone who requested a cake with similar
messages, regardless of their religion. Id., at 230–231, 240, 249. The
Division pointed, as well, to the fact that the bakers said they were
happy to provide religious persons with other cakes expressing other
ideas. Id., at 237, 247, 257. Mr. Jack appealed to the
Colorado Civil Rights Commission, but the Commission summarily denied
relief. App. to Pet. for Cert. 326a–331a.
Next, take the undisputed facts of Mr.
Phillips’s case. Charlie Craig and Dave Mullins approached Mr. Phillips
about creating a cake to celebrate their wedding. App. 168. Mr.
Phillips explained that he could not prepare a cake celebrating a
same-sex wedding consistent with his religious faith. Id., at 168–169. But Mr. Phillips offered to make other baked goods for the couple, including cakes celebrating other occasions. Ibid. Later,
Mr. Phillips testified without contradiction that he would have refused
to create a cake celebrating a same-sex marriage for any customer,
regardless of his or her sexual orientation. Id., at 166–167
(“I will not design and create wedding cakes for a same-sex wedding
regardless of the sexual orientation of the customer”). And the record
reveals that Mr. Phillips apparently refused just such a request from
Mr. Craig’s mother. Id., at 38–40, 169. (Any suggestion that
Mr. Phillips was willing to make a cake celebrating a same-sex marriage
for a heterosexual customer or was not willing to sell other products to
a homosexual customer, then, would simply mistake the undisputed
factual record. See post, at 4, n. 2 (Ginsburg, J., dissenting); ante, at 2–3, and n. (Kagan, J.,
concurring)). Nonetheless, the Commission held that Mr. Phillips’s
conduct violated the Colorado public accommodations law. App. to Pet.
for Cert. 56a–58a.
The facts show that the two cases share all
legally sa-lient features. In both cases, the effect on the customer
was the same: bakers refused service to persons who bore a statutorily
protected trait (religious faith or sexual orientation). But in both
cases the bakers refused service intending only to honor a personal
conviction. To be sure, the bakers knew their conduct promised
the effect of leaving a customer in a protected class unserved. But
there’s no indication the bakers actually intended to refuse service because of
a customer’s protected characteristic. We know this because all of the
bakers explained without contradiction that they would not sell the
requested cakes to anyone, while they would sell other cakes to members
of the protected class (as well as to anyone else). So, for example,
the bakers in the first case would have refused to sell a cake
denigrating same-sex marriage to an atheist customer, just as the baker
in the second case would have refused to sell a cake celebrating
same-sex marriage to a heterosexual customer. And the bakers in the
first case were generally happy to sell to persons of faith, just as the
baker in the second case was generally happy to sell to gay persons.
In both cases, it was the kind of cake, not the kind of customer, that
mattered to the bakers.
The distinction between intended and
knowingly accepted effects is familiar in life and law. Often the
purposeful pursuit of worthy commitments requires us to accept unwanted
but entirely foreseeable side effects: so, for example, choosing to
spend time with family means the foreseeable loss of time for charitable
work, just as opting for more time in the office means knowingly
forgoing time at home with loved ones. The law, too, sometimes
distinguishes between intended and foreseeable effects. See, e.g.,
ALI, Model Penal Code §§1.13, 2.02(2)(a)(i) (1985); 1 W. LaFave,
Substantive Criminal Law §5.2(b), pp. 460–463 (3d ed. 2018). Other
times, of course, the law proceeds differently, either conflating intent
and knowledge or presuming intent as a matter of law from a showing of
knowledge. See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Torts §8A (1965); Radio Officers v. NLRB,
347 U. S. 17, 45 (1954).
The problem here is that the Commission
failed to act neutrally by applying a consistent legal rule. In Mr.
Jack’s case, the Commission chose to distinguish carefully between
intended and knowingly accepted effects. Even though the bakers
knowingly denied service to someone in a protected class, the Commission
found no violation because the bakers only intended to distance
themselves from “the offensive nature of the requested message.” Craig v. Masterpiece Cakeshop, Inc.,
370 P. 3d 272, 282, n. 8 (Colo. App. 2015); App. 237, 247, 256; App. to
Pet. for Cert. 326a–331a; see also Brief for Respondent Colorado Civil
Rights Commission 52 (“Businesses are entitled to reject orders for any
number of reasons, including because they deem a particular product
requested by a customer to be ‘offensive’ ”). Yet, in Mr. Phillips’s
case, the Commission dismissed this very same argument as resting on a
“distinction without a difference.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 69a. It
concluded instead that an “intent to disfavor” a protected class of
persons should be “readily . . . presumed” from the knowing failure to
serve someone who belongs to that class. Id., at 70a. In its
judgment, Mr. Phillips’s intentions were “inextricably tied to the
sexual orientation of the parties involved” and essentially
“irrational.” Ibid.
Nothing in the Commission’s opinions
suggests any neutral principle to reconcile these holdings. If Mr.
Phillips’s objection is “inextricably tied” to a protected class, then
the bakers’ objection in Mr. Jack’s case must be “inextricably tied” to
one as well. For just as cakes celebrating same-sex weddings are
(usually) requested by persons of a particular sexual orientation, so
too are cakes expressing religious opposition to same-sex weddings
(usually) requested by persons of particular religious faiths. In both
cases the bakers’ objection would (usually) result in turning down
customers who bear a protected characteristic. In the end, the
Commission’s decisions simply reduce to this: it presumed that
Mr. Phillip harbored an intent to discriminate against a protected class
in light of the foreseeable effects of his conduct, but it declined to
presume the same intent in Mr. Jack’s case even though the effects of
the bakers’ conduct were just as foreseeable. Underscoring the double
standard, a state appellate court said that “no such showing” of actual
“animus”—or intent to discriminate against persons in a protected
class—was even required in Mr. Phillips’s case. 370 P. 3d, at 282.
The Commission cannot have it both ways. The Commission cannot slide up and down the mens rea
scale, picking a mental state standard to suit its tastes depending on
its sympathies. Either actual proof of intent to discriminate on the
basis of membership in a protected class is required (as the Commission
held in Mr. Jack’s case), or it is sufficient to “presume” such intent
from the knowing failure to serve someone in a protected class (as the
Commission held in Mr. Phillips’s case). Perhaps the Commission could
have chosen either course as an initial matter. But the one thing it
can’t do is apply a more generous legal test to secular objections than
religious ones. See Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, 508 U. S., at 543–544. That is anything but the neutral treatment of religion.
The real explanation for the Commission’s
discrimination soon comes clear, too—and it does anything but help its
cause. This isn’t a case where the Commission self-consciously
announced a change in its legal rule in all public accommodation cases.
Nor is this a case where the Commission offered some persuasive reason
for its discrimination that might survive strict scrutiny. Instead, as
the Court explains, it appears the Commission wished to condemn Mr.
Phillips for expressing just the kind of “irrational” or “offensive
. . . message” that the bakers in the first case refused to endorse. Ante, at
16. Many may agree with the Commission and consider Mr. Phillips’s
religious beliefs irrational or offensive. Some may believe he
misinterprets the teachings of his faith. And, to be sure, this Court
has held same-sex marriage a matter of constitutional right and various
States have enacted laws that preclude discrimination on the basis of
sexual orientation. But it is also true that no bureaucratic judgment
condemning a sincerely held religious belief as “irrational” or
“offensive” will ever survive strict scrutiny under the
First Amendment.
In this country, the place of secular officials isn’t to sit in
judgment of religious beliefs, but only to protect their free exercise.
Just as it is the “proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence”
that we protect speech that we hate, it must be the proudest boast of
our free exercise jurisprudence that we protect religious beliefs that
we find offensive. See Matal v. Tam, 582 U. S. ___, ___ (2017) (plurality opinion) (slip op., at 25) (citing United States v. Schwimmer,
279 U. S. 644,
655 (1929) (Holmes, J., dissenting)). Popular religious views are easy
enough to defend. It is in protecting unpopular religious beliefs that
we prove this country’s commitment to serving as a refuge for religious
freedom. See Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, supra, at 547; Thomas v. Review Bd. of Indiana Employment Security Div.,
450 U. S. 707, 715–716 (1981); Wisconsin v. Yoder,
406 U. S. 205, 223–224 (1972); Cantwell v. Connecticut,
310 U. S. 296, 308–310 (1940).
Nor can any amount of after-the-fact
maneuvering by our colleagues save the Commission. It is no answer, for
example, to observe that Mr. Jack requested a cake with text on it
while Mr. Craig and Mr. Mullins sought a cake celebrating their wedding
without discussing its decoration, and then suggest this distinction
makes all the difference. See post, at 4–5, and n. 4 (Ginsburg, J.,
dissenting). It is no answer either simply to slide up a level of
generality to redescribe Mr. Phillips’s case as involving only a wedding
cake like any other, so the fact that Mr. Phillips would make one for
some means he must make them for all. See ante, at 2–3, and n. (Kagan, J., concurring). These arguments, too, fail to afford Mr. Phillips’s faith neutral respect.
Take the first suggestion first. To suggest
that cakes with words convey a message but cakes without words do
not—all in order to excuse the bakers in Mr. Jack’s case while
penalizing Mr. Phillips—is irrational. Not even the Commission or court
of appeals purported to rely on that distinction. Imagine Mr. Jack
asked only for a cake with a symbolic expression against same-sex
marriage rather than a cake bearing words conveying the same idea.
Surely the Commission would have approved the bakers’ intentional wish
to avoid participating in that message too. Nor can anyone reasonably
doubt that a wedding cake without words conveys a message. Words or not
and whatever the exact design, it celebrates a wedding, and if the
wedding cake is made for a same-sex couple it celebrates a same-sex
wedding. See 370 P. 3d, at 276 (stating that Mr. Craig and Mr. Mullins
“requested that Phillips design and create a cake
to celebrate their same-sex wedding”) (emphasis
added). Like “an emblem or flag,” a cake for a same-sex wedding is a
symbol that serves as “a short cut from mind to mind,” signifying
approval of a specific “system, idea, [or] institution.” West Virginia Bd. of Ed. v. Barnette,
319 U. S. 624,
632 (1943). It is precisely that approval that Mr. Phillips intended
to withhold in keeping with his religious faith. The Commission denied
Mr. Phillips that choice, even as it afforded the bakers in Mr. Jack’s
case the choice to refuse to advance a message they deemed offensive to
their secular commitments. That is not neutral.
Nor would it be proper for this or any court
to suggest that a person must be forced to write words rather than
create a symbol before his religious faith is implicated. Civil
authorities, whether “high or petty,” bear no license to declare what is
or should be “orthodox” when it comes to religious beliefs, id., at 642, or whether an adherent has “correctly perceived” the commands of his religion, Thomas, supra,
at 716. Instead, it is our job to look beyond the formality of written
words and afford legal protection to any sincere act of faith. See
generally Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc.,
515 U. S. 557,
569 (1995) (“[T]he Constitution looks beyond written or spoken words as
mediums of ex-pression,” which are “not a condition of constitutional
protection”).
The second suggestion fares no better.
Suggesting that this case is only about “wedding cakes”—and not a
wedding cake celebrating a same-sex wedding—actually points up the
problem. At its most general level, the cake at issue in Mr. Phillips’s
case was just a mixture of flour and eggs; at its most specific level,
it was a cake celebrating the same-sex wedding of Mr. Craig and Mr.
Mullins. We are told here, however, to apply a sort of Goldilocks rule:
describing the cake by its ingredients is too general; understanding it as celebrating a same-sex wedding is too specific; but regarding it as a generic wedding cake is just right.
The problem is, the Commission didn’t play with the level of
generality in Mr. Jack’s case in this way. It didn’t declare, for
example, that because the cakes Mr. Jack requested were just cakes about
weddings generally, and all such cakes were the same, the bakers had to
produce them. Instead, the Commission accepted the bakers’ view that
the specific cakes Mr. Jack requested conveyed a message offensive to
their convictions and allowed them to refuse service. Having done that
there, it must do the same here.
Any other conclusion would invite civil
authorities to gerrymander their inquiries based on the parties they
prefer. Why calibrate the level of generality in Mr. Phillips’s case at
“wedding cakes” exactly—and not at, say, “cakes” more generally or
“cakes that convey a message regarding same-sex marriage” more
specifically? If “cakes” were the relevant level of generality, the
Commission would have to order the bakers to make Mr. Jack’s requested
cakes just as it ordered Mr. Phillips to make the requested cake in his
case. Conversely, if “cakes that convey a message regarding same-sex
marriage” were the relevant level of generality, the Commission would
have to respect Mr. Phillips’s refusal to make the requested cake just
as it respected the bakers’ refusal to make the cakes Mr. Jack
requested. In short, when the same level of generality is applied to
both cases, it is no surprise that the bakers have to be treated the
same. Only by adjusting the dials just right—fine-tuning the
level of generality up or down for each case based solely on the
identity of the parties and the substance of their views—can you
engineer the Commission’s outcome, handing a win to Mr. Jack’s bakers
but delivering a loss to Mr. Phillips. Such results-driven reasoning is
improper. Neither the Commission nor this Court may apply a more
specific level of generality in Mr. Jack’s case (a cake that conveys a
message regarding same-sex marriage) while applying a higher level of
generality in Mr. Phillips’s case (a cake that conveys no message
regarding same-sex marriage). Of course, under Smith a vendor cannot escape a public accommodations law just because his religion frowns on it. But for any law to comply with the
First Amendment and Smith, it must be applied in a manner that treats religion with neutral respect. That means the government must apply the same level of generality across cases—and that did not happen here.
There is another problem with sliding up the
generality scale: it risks denying constitutional protection to
religious beliefs that draw distinctions more specific than the
government’s preferred level of description. To some, all wedding cakes
may appear indistinguishable. But to Mr. Phillips that is not
the case—his faith teaches him otherwise. And his religious beliefs
are entitled to no less respectful treatment than the bakers’ secular
beliefs in Mr. Jack’s case. This Court has explained these same points
“[r]epeatedly and in many different contexts” over many years. Smith, 494 U. S. at 887. For example, in Thomas
a faithful Jehovah’s Witness and steel mill worker agreed to help
manufacture sheet steel he knew might find its way into armaments, but
he was unwilling to work on a fabrication line producing tank turrets.
450 U. S., at 711. Of course, the line Mr. Thomas drew wasn’t the same
many others would draw and it wasn’t even the same line many other
members of the same faith would draw. Even so, the Court didn’t try to
suggest that making steel is just making steel. Or that to offend his
religion the steel needed to be of a particular kind or shape. Instead,
it recognized that Mr. Thomas alone was entitled to define the nature
of his religious commitments—and that those commitments, as defined by
the faithful adherent, not a bureaucrat or judge, are entitled to
protection under the
First Amendment. Id., at 714–716; see also United States v. Lee,
455 U. S. 252, 254–255 (1982); Smith, supra,
at 887 (collecting authorities). It is no more appropriate for the
United States Supreme Court to tell Mr. Phillips that a wedding cake is
just like any other—without regard to the religious significance his
faith may attach to it—than it would be for the Court to suggest that
for all persons sacramental bread is just bread or a kippah is just a cap.
Only one way forward now remains. Having
failed to afford Mr. Phillips’s religious objections neutral
consideration and without any compelling reason for its failure, the
Commission must afford him the same result it afforded the bakers in Mr.
Jack’s case. The Court recognizes this by reversing the judgment below
and holding that the Commission’s order “must be set aside.” Ante, at
18. Maybe in some future rulemaking or case the Commission could adopt
a new “knowing” standard for all refusals of service and offer neutral
reasons for doing so. But, as the Court observes, “[h]owever later
cases raising these or similar concerns are resolved in the future,
. . . the rulings of the Commission and of the state court that enforced
the Commission’s order” in this case “must be invalidated.” Ibid. Mr. Phillips has conclusively proven a
First Amendment violation and, after almost six years facing unlawful civil charges, he is entitled to judgment.
TOP Concurrence
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 16–111
_________________
MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP, LTD., et al., PETITIONERS v. COLORADO CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION, et al.
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 4, 2018]
Justice Thomas, with whom Justice Gorsuch joins, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
I agree that the Colorado Civil Rights
Commission (Commission) violated Jack Phillips’ right to freely exercise
his religion. As Justice Gorsuch
explains, the Commission treated Phillips’ case differently from a
similar case involving three other bakers, for reasons that can only be
explained by hostility toward Phillips’ religion. See ante, at
2–7 (concurring opinion). The Court agrees that the Commission treated
Phillips differently, and it points out that some of the Commissioners
made comments disparaging Phillips’ religion. See ante, at
12–16. Although the Commissioners’ comments are certainly disturbing,
the discriminatory application of Colorado’s public-accommodations law
is enough on its own to violate Phillips’ rights. To the extent the
Court agrees, I join its opinion.
While Phillips rightly prevails on his
free-exercise claim, I write separately to address his free-speech
claim. The Court does not address this claim because it has some
uncertainties about the record. See ante, at 2. Specifically, the parties dispute whether Phillips refused to create a custom wedding cake for the individual respondents, or whether he refused to sell them any
wedding cake (including a premade one). But the Colorado Court of
Appeals resolved this factual dispute in Phillips’ favor. The court
described his conduct as a refusal to “design and create a cake to
celebrate [a] same-sex wedding.” Craig v. Masterpiece Cakeshop, Inc., 370 P. 3d 272, 276 (2015); see also id., at 286 (“designing and selling a wedding cake”); id., at 283 (“refusing to create a wedding cake”). And it noted that the Commission’s order required Phillips to sell “ ‘any product [he] would sell to heterosexual couples,’ ” including custom wedding cakes. Id., at 286 (emphasis added).
Even after describing his conduct this way,
the Court of Appeals concluded that Phillips’ conduct was not expressive
and was not protected speech. It reasoned that an outside observer
would think that Phillips was merely complying with Colorado’s
public-accommodations law, not expressing a message, and that Phillips
could post a disclaimer to that effect. This reasoning flouts bedrock
principles of our free-speech jurisprudence and would justify virtually
any law that compels individuals to speak. It should not pass without
comment.
I
The
First Amendment, applicable to the States through the
Fourteenth Amendment,
prohibits state laws that abridge the “freedom of speech.” When
interpreting this command, this Court has distinguished between
regulations of speech and regulations of conduct. The latter generally
do not abridge the freedom of speech, even if they impose “incidental
burdens” on expression. Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc.,
564 U. S. 552, 567 (2011). As the Court explains today, public-accommodations laws usually regulate conduct. Ante, at 9–10 (citing Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc.,
515 U. S. 557, 572 (1995)). “[A]s a general matter,” public-accommodations laws do not “target speech” but instead prohibit “the act of discriminating against individuals in the provision of publicly available goods, privileges, and services.” Id., at 572 (emphasis added).
Although public-accommodations laws
generally regulate conduct, particular applications of them can burden
protected speech. When a public-accommodations law “ha[s] the effect of
declaring . . . speech itself to be the public accommodation,” the
First Amendment applies with full force. Id., at 573; accord, Boy Scouts of America v. Dale,
530 U. S. 640, 657–659 (2000). In Hurley,
for example, a Massachusetts public-accommodations law prohib-ited
“ ‘any distinction, discrimination or restriction on ac-count of . . .
sexual orientation . . . relative to the admission of any person to, or
treatment in any place of public accommodation.’ ” 515 U. S.,
at 561 (quoting Mass. Gen. Laws §272:98 (1992); ellipsis in original).
When this law required the sponsor of a St. Patrick’s Day parade to
include a parade unit of gay, lesbian, and bisexual Irish-Americans, the
Court unanimously held that the law violated the sponsor’s right to
free speech. Parades are “a form of expression,” this Court explained,
and the application of the public-accommodations law “alter[ed] the
expressive content” of the parade by forcing the sponsor to add a new
unit. 515 U. S., at 568, 572–573. The addition of that unit compelled
the organizer to “bear witness to the fact that some Irish are gay,
lesbian, or bisexual”; “suggest . . . that people of their sexual
orientation have as much claim to unqualified social acceptance as
heterosexuals”; and imply that their participation “merits celebration.”
Id., at 574. While this Court acknowledged that the unit’s exclusion might have been “misguided, or even hurtful,” ibid.,
it rejected the notion that governments can mandate “thoughts and
statements acceptable to some groups or, indeed, all people” as the
“antithesis” of free speech, id., at 579; accord, Dale, supra, at 660–661.
The parade in Hurley was an example
of what this Court has termed “expressive conduct.” See 515 U. S., at
568–569. This Court has long held that “the Constitution looks beyond
written or spoken words as mediums of expression,” id., at 569, and that “[s]ymbolism is a primitive but effective way of communicating ideas,” West Virginia Bd. of Ed. v. Barnette,
319 U. S. 624,
632 (1943). Thus, a person’s “conduct may be ‘sufficiently imbued with
elements of communication to fall within the scope of the First and
Fourteenth Amendments.’ ” Texas v. Johnson,
491 U. S. 397,
404 (1989). Applying this principle, the Court has recognized a wide
array of conduct that can qualify as expressive, including nude dancing,
burning the American flag, flying an upside-down American flag with a
taped-on peace sign, wearing a military uniform, wearing a black
armband, conducting a silent sit-in, refusing to salute the American
flag, and flying a plain red flag.
1
Of course, conduct does not qualify as
protected speech simply because “the person engaging in [it] intends
thereby to express an idea.” United States v. O’Brien,
391 U. S. 367,
376 (1968). To determine whether conduct is sufficiently expressive,
the Court asks whether it was “intended to be communicative” and, “in
context, would reasona-bly be understood by the viewer to be
communicative.” Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
468 U. S. 288,
294 (1984). But a “ ‘particularized message’ ” is not required, or
else the freedom of speech “would never reach the unquestionably
shielded painting of Jackson Pollock, music of Arnold Schöenberg, or
Jabberwocky verse of Lewis Carroll.” Hurley, 515 U. S., at 569.
Once a court concludes that conduct is
expressive, the Constitution limits the government’s authority to
restrict or compel it. “[O]ne important manifestation of the principle
of free speech is that one who chooses to speak may also decide ‘what
not to say’ ” and “tailor” the content of his message as he sees fit. Id., at 573 (quoting Pacific Gas & Elec. Co. v. Public Util. Comm’n of Cal.,
475 U. S. 1,
16 (1986) (plurality opinion)). This rule “applies not only to
expressions of value, opinion, or endorsement, but equally to statements
of fact the speaker would rather avoid.” Hurley, supra,
at 573. And it “makes no difference” whether the government is
regulating the “creati[on], distributi[on], or consum[ption]” of the
speech. Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Assn.,
564 U. S. 786, 792, n. 1 (2011).
II
A
The conduct that the Colorado Court of
Appeals ascribed to Phillips—creating and designing custom wedding
cakes—is expressive. Phillips considers himself an artist. The logo
for Masterpiece Cakeshop is an artist’s paint palate with a paintbrush
and baker’s whisk. Behind the counter Phillips has a picture that
depicts him as an artist painting on a canvas. Phillips takes
exceptional care with each cake that he creates—sketching the design out
on paper, choosing the color scheme, creating the frosting and
decorations, baking and sculpting the cake, decorating it, and
delivering it to the wedding. Examples of his creations can be seen on
Masterpiece’s website. See http://masterpiececakes.com/wedding-cakes
(as last visited June 1, 2018).
Phillips is an active participant in the
wedding celebration. He sits down with each couple for a consultation
before he creates their custom wedding cake. He discusses their
preferences, their personalities, and the details of their wedding to
ensure that each cake reflects the couple who ordered it. In addition
to creating and delivering the cake—a focal point of the wedding
celebration—Phillips sometimes stays and interacts with the guests at
the wedding. And the guests often recognize his creations and seek his
bakery out afterward. Phillips also sees the inherent symbolism in
wedding cakes. To him, a wedding cake inherently communicates that “a
wedding has occurred, a marriage has begun, and the couple should be
celebrated.” App. 162.
Wedding cakes do, in fact, communicate this
message. A tradition from Victorian England that made its way to
America after the Civil War, “[w]edding cakes are so packed with
symbolism that it is hard to know where to begin.” M. Krondl, Sweet
Invention: A History of Dessert 321 (2011) (Krondl); see also ibid. (explaining
the symbolism behind the color, texture, flavor, and cutting of the
cake). If an average person walked into a room and saw a white,
multi-tiered cake, he would immediately know that he had stumbled upon a
wedding. The cake is “so standardised and inevitable a part of getting
married that few ever think to question it.” Charsley, Interpretation
and Custom: The Case of the Wedding Cake, 22 Man 93, 95 (1987). Almost
no wedding, no matter how spartan, is missing the cake. See id.,
at 98. “A whole series of events expected in the context of a wedding
would be impossible without it: an essential photograph, the cutting,
the toast, and the distribution of both cake and favours at the wedding
and afterwards.” Ibid. Although the cake is eventually eaten, that is not its primary purpose. See id.,
at 95 (“It is not unusual to hear people declaring that they do not
like wedding cake, meaning that they do not like to eat it. This
includes people who are, without question, having such cakes for their
weddings”); id., at 97 (“Nothing is made of the eating
itself”); Krondl 320–321 (explaining that wedding cakes have long been
described as “inedible”). The cake’s purpose is to mark the beginning
of a new marriage and to celebrate the couple.
2
Accordingly, Phillips’ creation of custom
wedding cakes is expressive. The use of his artistic talents to create a
well-recognized symbol that celebrates the beginning of a marriage
clearly communicates a message—certainly more so than nude dancing, Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
501 U. S. 560, 565–566 (1991), or flying a plain red flag, Stromberg v. California,
283 U. S. 359, 369 (1931).
3
By forcing Phillips to create custom wedding cakes for
same-sex weddings, Colorado’s public-accommodations law “alter[s] the
expressive content” of his message. Hurley, 515 U. S., at 572.
The meaning of expressive conduct, this Court has explained, depends
on “the context in which it occur[s].” Johnson, 491 U. S., at
405. Forcing Phillips to make custom wedding cakes for same-sex
marriages requires him to, at the very least, acknowledge that same-sex
weddings are “weddings” and suggest that they should be celebrated—the
precise message he believes his faith forbids. The
First Amendment prohibits Colorado from requiring Phillips to “bear witness to [these] fact[s],” Hurley, 515 U. S., at 574, or to “affir[m] . . . a belief with which [he] disagrees,” id., at 573.
B
The Colorado Court of Appeals nevertheless
concluded that Phillips’ conduct was “not sufficiently expressive” to be
protected from state compulsion. 370 P. 3d, at 283. It noted that a
reasonable observer would not view Phillips’ conduct as “an endorsement
of same-sex marriage,” but rather as mere “compliance” with Colorado’s
public-accommodations law. Id., at 286–287 (citing Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc.,
547 U. S. 47, 64–65 (2006) (FAIR); Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of Univ. of Va.,
515 U. S. 819, 841–842 (1995); PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins,
447 U. S. 74,
76–78 (1980)). It also emphasized that Masterpiece could
“disassociat[e]” itself from same-sex marriage by posting a “disclaimer”
stating that Colorado law “requires it not to discriminate” or that
“the provision of its services does not constitute an endorsement.” 370
P. 3d, at 288. This reasoning is badly misguided.
1
The Colorado Court of Appeals was wrong to
conclude that Phillips’ conduct was not expressive because a reasonable
observer would think he is merely complying with Colorado’s
public-accommodations law. This argument would justify any law that
compelled protected speech. And, this Court has never accepted it.
From the beginning, this Court’s compelled-speech precedents have
rejected arguments that “would resolve every issue of power in favor of
those in authority.” Barnette, 319 U. S., at 636. Hurley,
for example, held that the application of Massachusetts’
public-accommodations law “requir[ed] [the organizers] to alter the
expressive content of their parade.” 515 U. S., at 572–573. It did not
hold that reasonable observers would view the organizers as merely
complying with Massachusetts’ public-accommodations law.
The decisions that the Colorado Court of
Appeals cited for this proposition are far afield. It cited three
decisions where groups objected to being forced to provide a forum for a
third party’s speech. See FAIR, supra, at 51 (law school refused to allow military recruiters on campus); Rosenberger, supra, at 822–823 (public university refused to provide funds to a religious student paper); PruneYard, supra,
at 77 (shopping center refused to allow individuals to collect
signatures on its property). In those decisions, this Court rejected
the argument that requiring the groups to provide a forum for
third-party speech also required them to endorse that speech. See FAIR, supra, at 63–65; Rosenberger, supra, at 841–842; PruneYard, supra, at 85–88. But these decisions do not suggest that the government can force speakers to alter their own message. See Pacific Gas & Elec., 475 U. S., at 12 (“Notably absent from PruneYard was any concern that access . . . might affect the shopping center owner’s exercise of his own right to speak”); Hurley, supra, at 580 (similar).
The Colorado Court of Appeals also noted
that Masterpiece is a “for-profit bakery” that “charges its customers.”
370 P. 3d, at 287. But this Court has repeatedly rejected the notion
that a speaker’s profit motive gives the government a freer hand in
compelling speech. See Pacific Gas & Elec., supra, at 8, 16 (collecting cases); Virginia Bd. of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc.,
425 U. S. 748,
761 (1976) (deeming it “beyond serious dispute” that “[s]peech . . . is
protected even though it is carried in a form that is ‘sold’ for
profit”). Further, even assuming that most for-profit companies
prioritize maximizing profits over communicating a message, that is not
true for Masterpiece Cakeshop. Phillips routinely sacri-fices profits
to ensure that Masterpiece operates in a waythat represents his
Christian faith. He is not open on Sundays, he pays his employees a
higher-than-average wage, and he loans them money in times of need.
Phillips also refuses to bake cakes containing alcohol, cakes with
racist or homophobic messages, cakes criticizing God, and cakes
celebrating Halloween—even though Halloween is one of the most lucrative
seasons for bakeries. These efforts to exercise control over the
messages that Masterpiece sends are still more evidence that Phillips’
conduct is expressive. See Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo,
418 U. S. 241, 256–258 (1974); Walker v. Texas Div., Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc., 576 U. S. ___, ___ (2015) (slip op., at 15).
2
The Colorado Court of Appeals also erred by
suggesting that Phillips could simply post a disclaimer, disassociating
Masterpiece from any support for same-sex marriage. Again, this
argument would justify any law compelling speech. And again, this Court
has rejected it. We have described similar arguments as “beg[ging] the
core question.” Tornillo, supra, at 256. Because
the government cannot compel speech, it also cannot “require speakers to
affirm in one breath that which they deny in the next.” Pacific Gas & Elec., 475 U. S., at 16; see also id., at 15, n. 11 (citing PruneYard,
447 U. S., at 99 (Powell, J., concurring in part and concurring in
judgment)). States cannot put individuals to the choice of “be[ing]
compelled to affirm someone else’s belief” or “be[ing] forced to speak
when [they] would prefer to remain silent.” Id., at 99.
III
Because Phillips’ conduct (as described by
the Colorado Court of Appeals) was expressive, Colorado’s
public-accommodations law cannot penalize it unless the law withstands
strict scrutiny. Although this Court sometimes reviews regulations of
expressive conduct under the more lenient test articulated in O’Brien,
4
that test does not apply unless the government would have punished the conduct regardless of its expressive component. See, e.g.,
Barnes, 501 U. S., at 566–572 (applying O’Brien to evaluate the application of a general nudity ban to nude dancing); Clark, 468 U. S., at 293 (applying O’Brien to
evaluate the application of a general camping ban to a demonstration in
the park). Here, however, Colorado would not be punishing Phillips if
he refused to create any custom wedding cakes; it is punishing him
because he refuses to create custom wedding cakes that express approval
of same-sex marriage. In cases like this one, our precedents demand
“ ‘the most exacting scrutiny.’ ” Johnson, 491 U. S., at 412; accord, Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project,
561 U. S. 1, 28 (2010).
The Court of Appeals did not address whether
Colo-rado’s law survives strict scrutiny, and I will not do so in the
first instance. There is an obvious flaw, however, with one of the
asserted justifications for Colorado’s law. According to the individual
respondents, Colorado can compel Phillips’ speech to prevent him from
“ ‘denigrat[ing] the dignity’ ” of same-sex couples, “ ‘assert[ing]
[their] inferior-ity,’ ” and subjecting them to “ ‘humiliation,
frustration, and embarrassment.’ ” Brief for Respondents Craig et al.
39 (quoting J. E. B. v. Alabama ex rel. T. B.,
511 U. S. 127, 142 (1994); Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. v. United States,
379 U. S. 241, 292 (1964) (Goldberg, J., concurring)). These justifications are completely foreign to our free-speech jurisprudence.
States cannot punish protected speech
because some group finds it offensive, hurtful, stigmatic, unreasonable,
or undignified. “If there is a bedrock principle underlying the
First Amendment,
it is that the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea
simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable.”
Johnson, supra, at 414. A contrary rule would allow the government to stamp out virtually any speech at will. See Morse v. Frederick,
551 U. S. 393,
409 (2007) (“After all, much political and religious speech might be
perceived as offensive to some”). As the Court reiterates today, “it is
not . . . the role of the State or its officials to prescribe what
shall be offensive.” Ante, at 16. “ ‘Indeed, if it is the
speaker’s opinion that gives offense, that consequence is a reason for
according it constitutional protection.’ ” Hustler Magazine, Inc. v. Falwell,
485 U. S. 46, 55 (1988); accord, Johnson, supra,
at 408–409. If the only reason a public-accommodations law regulates
speech is “to produce a society free of . . . biases” against the
protected groups, that purpose is “decidedly fatal” to the law’s
constitutionality, “for it amounts to nothing less than a proposal to
limit speech in the service of orthodox expression.” Hurley, 515 U. S., at 578–579; see also United States v. Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc.,
529 U. S. 803,
813 (2000) (“Where the designed benefit of a content-based speech
restriction is to shield the sensibilities of listeners, the general
rule is that the right of expression prevails”). “[A] speech burden
based on audience reactions is simply government hostility . . . in a
different guise.” Matal v. Tam, 582 U. S. ___, ___ (2017) (Kennedy, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (slip op., at 4).
Consider what Phillips actually said to the
individual respondents in this case. After sitting down with them for a
consultation, Phillips told the couple, “ ‘I’ll make your birthday
cakes, shower cakes, sell you cookies and brownies, I just don’t make
cakes for same sex weddings.’ ” App. 168. It is hard to see how this
statement stigmatizes gays and lesbians more than blocking them from
marching in a city parade, dismissing them from the Boy Scouts, or
subjecting them to signs that say “God Hates Fags”—all of which this
Court has deemed protected by the
First Amendment. See Hurley, supra, at 574–575; Dale, 530 U. S., at 644; Snyder v. Phelps,
562 U. S. 443,
448 (2011). Moreover, it is also hard to see how Phillips’ statement
is worse than the racist, demeaning, and even threatening speech toward
blacks that this Court has tolerated in previous decisions. Concerns
about “dignity” and “stigma” did not carry the day when this Court
affirmed the right of white supremacists to burn a 25-foot cross, Virginia v. Black,
538 U. S. 343 (2003); conduct a rally on Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, Forsyth County v. Nationalist Movement,
505 U. S. 123
(1992); or circulate a film featuring hooded Klan members who were
brandishing weapons and threatening to “ ‘Bury the niggers,’ ” Brandenburg v. Ohio,
395 U. S. 444, 446, n. 1 (1969) (per curiam).
Nor does the fact that this Court has now decided Obergefell v. Hodges,
576 U. S. ___ (2015), somehow diminish Phillips’ right to free speech.
“It is one thing . . . to conclude that the Constitution protects a
right to same-sex marriage; it is something else to portray everyone who
does not share [that view] as bigoted” and unentitled to express a
different view. Id., at ___ (Roberts,
C. J., dissenting) (slip op., at 29). This Court is not an authority
on matters of conscience, and its decisions can (and often should) be
criticized. The
First Amendment gives individuals the right to disagree about the correctness of Obergefell and the morality of same-sex marriage. Obergefell
itself emphasized that the traditional understanding of marriage “long
has been held—and continues to be held—in good faith by reasonable and
sincere people here and throughout the world.” Id., at ___
(majority opinion) (slip op., at 4). If Phillips’ continued adherence
to that understanding makes him a minority after Obergefell, that is all the more reason to insist that his speech be protected. See Dale, supra,
at 660 (“[T]he fact that [the social acceptance of homosexuality] may
be embraced and advocated by increasing numbers of people is all the
more reason to protect the
First Amendment rights of those who wish to voice a different view”).
* * *
In Obergefell, I warned that the
Court’s decision would “inevitabl[y] . . . come into conflict” with
religious liberty, “as individuals . . . are confronted with demands to
participate in and endorse civil marriages between same-sex couples.”
576 U. S., at ___ (dissenting opinion) (slip op., at 15). This case
proves that the conflict has already emerged. Because the Court’s
decision vindicates Phillips’ right to free exercise, it seems that
religious liberty has lived to fight another day. But, in future cases,
the freedom of speech could be essential to preventing Obergefell from
being used to “stamp out every vestige of dissent” and “vilify
Americans who are unwilling to assent to the new orthodoxy.” Id., at ___ (Alito,
J., dissenting) (slip op., at 6). If that freedom is to maintain its
vitality, reasoning like the Colorado Court of Appeals’ must be
rejected.
Notes
1 Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
501 U. S. 560, 565–566 (1991); Texas v. Johnson,
491 U. S. 397, 405–406 (1989); Spence v. Washington,
418 U. S. 405, 406, 409–411 (1974) (per curiam); Schacht v. United States,
398 U. S. 58, 62–63 (1970); Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School Dist.,
393 U. S. 503, 505–506 (1969); Brown v. Louisiana,
383 U. S. 131, 141–142 (1966) (opinion of Fortas, J.); West Virginia Bd. of Ed. v. Barnette,
319 U. S. 624, 633–634 (1943); Stromberg v. California,
283 U. S. 359, 361, 369 (1931).
2 The
Colorado Court of Appeals acknowledged that “a wedding cake, in some
circumstances, may convey a particularized message celebrating same-sex
marriage,” depending on its “design” and whether it has “written
inscriptions.” Craig v. Masterpiece Cakeshop, Inc.,
370 P. 3d 272, 288 (2015). But a wedding cake needs no particular
design or written words to communicate the basic message that a wedding
is occurring, a marriage has begun, and the couple should be celebrated.
Wedding cakes have long varied in color, decorations, and style, but
those differences do not prevent people from recognizing wedding cakes
as wedding cakes. See Charsley, Interpretation and Custom: The Case of
the Wedding Cake, 22 Man 93, 96 (1987). And regardless, the
Commission’s order does not distinguish between plain wedding cakes and
wedding cakes with particular designs or inscriptions; it requires
Phillips to make any wedding cake for a same-sex wedding that he would
make for an opposite-sex wedding.
3 The dissent faults Phillips for not “submitting . . . evidence” that wedding cakes communicate a message. Post, at 2, n. 1 (opinion of Ginsburg,
J.). But this requirement finds no support in our precedents. This
Court did not insist that the parties submit evidence detailing the
expressive nature of parades, flags, or nude dancing. See Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc.,
515 U. S. 557, 568–570 (1995); Spence, 418 U. S., at 410–411; Barnes, 501 U. S., at 565–566. And we do not need extensive evidence here to conclude that Phillips’ artistry is expressive, see Hurley, 515 U. S., at 569, or that wedding cakes at least communicate the basic fact that “this is a wedding,” see id.,
at 573–575. Nor does it matter that the couple also communicates a
message through the cake. More than one person can be engaged in
protected speech at the same time. See id., at 569–570. And
by forcing him to provide the cake, Colorado is requiring Phillips to be
“intimately connected” with the couple’s speech, which is enough to
implicate his
First Amendment rights. See id., at 576.
4 “[A]
government regulation [of expressive conduct] is sufficiently justified
if it is within the constitutional power of the Government; if it
furthers an important or substantial governmental interest; if the
governmental interest is unrelated to the suppression of free
expression; and if the incidental restriction on alleged
First Amendment freedoms is no greater than is essential to the furtherance of that interest.” United States v. O’Brien,
391 U. S. 367, 377 (1968).
TOP Dissent
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 16–111
_________________
MASTERPIECE CAKESHOP, LTD., et al., PETITIONERS v. COLORADO CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION, et al.
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 4, 2018]
Justice Ginsburg, with whom Justice Sotomayor joins, dissenting.
There is much in the Court’s opinion with
which I agree. “[I]t is a general rule that [religious and
philosophical] objections do not allow business owners and other actors
in the economy and in society to deny protected persons equal access to
goods and services under a neutral and generally applicable public
accommodations law.” Ante, at 9. “Colorado law can protect
gay persons, just as it can protect other classes of individuals, in
acquiring whatever products and services they choose on the same terms
and conditions as are offered to other members of the public.” Ante,
at 10. “[P]urveyors of goods and services who object to gay marriages
for moral and religious reasons [may not] put up signs saying ‘no goods
or services will be sold if they will be used for gay marriages.’ ” Ante, at 12. Gay persons may be spared from “indignities when they seek goods and services in an open market.” Ante, at 18.
1
I strongly disagree, however, with the Court’s
conclusion that Craig and Mullins should lose this case. All of the
above-quoted statements point in the opposite direction.
The Court concludes that “Phillips’
religious objection was not considered with the neutrality that the Free
Exercise Clause requires.” Ante, at 17. This conclusion
rests on evidence said to show the Colorado Civil Rights Commission’s
(Commission) hostility to religion. Hostility is discernible, the Court
maintains, from the asserted “disparate consideration of Phillips’ case
compared to the cases of” three other bakers who refused to make cakes
requested by William Jack, an amicus here. Ante, at 18. The Court also finds hostility in statements made at two public hearings on Phillips’ appeal to the Commission. Ante,
at 12–14. The different outcomes the Court features do not evidence
hostility to religion of the kind we have previously held to signal a
free-exercise violation, nor do the comments by one or two members of
one of the four decisionmaking entities considering this case justify
reversing the judgment below.
I
On March 13, 2014—approximately three months
after the ALJ ruled in favor of the same-sex couple, Craig and Mullins,
and two months before the Commission heard Phillips’ appeal from that
decision—William Jack visited three Colorado bakeries. His visits
followed a similar pattern. He requested two cakes
“made to resemble an open Bible. He also
requested that each cake be decorated with Biblical verses. [He]
requested that one of the cakes include an image of two groomsmen,
holding hands, with a red ‘X’ over the image. On one cake, he requested
[on] one side[,] . . . ‘God hates sin. Psalm 45:7’ and on the
opposite side of the cake ‘Homosexuality is a detestable sin. Leviticus
18:2.’ On the second cake, [the one] with the image of the two
groomsmen covered by a red ‘X’ [Jack] requested [these words]: ‘God
loves sinners’ and on the other side ‘While we were yet sinners Christ
died for us. Romans 5:8.’ ” App. to Pet. for Cert. 319a; see id., at 300a, 310a.
In contrast to Jack, Craig and Mullins
simply requested a wedding cake: They mentioned no message or anything
else distinguishing the cake they wanted to buy from any other wedding
cake Phillips would have sold.
One bakery told Jack it would make cakes in
the shape of Bibles, but would not decorate them with the requested
messages; the owner told Jack her bakery “does not discriminate” and
“accept[s] all humans.” Id., at 301a (internal quotation marks
omitted). The second bakery owner told Jack he “had done open Bibles
and books many times and that they look amazing,” but declined to make
the specific cakes Jack described because the baker regarded the
messages as “hateful.” Id., at 310a (internal quotation marks
omitted). The third bakery, according to Jack, said it would bake the
cakes, but would not include the requested message. Id., at 319a.
2
Jack filed charges against each bakery with
the Colo-rado Civil Rights Division (Division). The Division found no
probable cause to support Jack’s claims of unequal treatment and denial
of goods or services based on his Christian religious beliefs. Id.,
at 297a, 307a, 316a. In this regard, the Division observed that the
bakeries regularly produced cakes and other baked goods with Christian
symbols and had denied other customer requests for designs demeaning
people whose dignity the Colorado Antidiscrimination Act (CADA)
protects. See id., at 305a, 314a, 324a. The Commission summarily affirmed the Division’s no-probable-cause finding. See id., at 326a–331a.
The Court concludes that “the Commission’s
consideration of Phillips’ religious objection did not accord with its
treatment of [the other bakers’] objections.” Ante, at 15. See also ante, at 5–7 (Gorsuch, J.,
concurring). But the cases the Court aligns are hardly comparable.
The bakers would have refused to make a cake with Jack’s requested
message for any customer, regardless of his or her religion. And the
bakers visited by Jack would have sold him any baked goods they would
have sold anyone else. The bakeries’ refusal to make Jack cakes of a
kind they would not make for any customer scarcely resembles Phillips’
refusal to serve Craig and Mullins: Phillips would not sell to
Craig and Mullins, for no reason other than their sexual orientation, a
cake of the kind he regularly sold to others. When a couple contacts a
bakery for a wedding cake, the product they are seeking is a cake
celebrating their wedding—not a cake celebrating heterosexual
weddings or same-sex weddings—and that is the service Craig and Mullins
were denied. Cf. ante, at 3–4, 9–10 (Gorsuch,
J., concurring). Colorado, the Court does not gainsay, prohibits
precisely the discrimination Craig and Mullins encountered. See supra,
at 1. Jack, on the other hand, suffered no service refusal on the
basis of his religion or any other protected characteristic. He was
treated as any other customer would have been treated—no better, no
worse.
3
The fact that Phillips might sell other cakes and cookies to gay and lesbian customers
4
was irrelevant to the issue Craig and Mullins’ case
presented. What matters is that Phillips would not provide a good or
service to a same-sex couple that he would provide to a heterosexual
couple. In contrast, the other bakeries’ sale of other goods to
Christian customers was relevant: It shows that there were no goods the
bakeries would sell to a non-Christian customer that they would refuse
to sell to a Christian customer. Cf. ante, at 15.
Nor was the Colorado Court of Appeals’
“difference in treatment of these two instances . . . based on the
government’s own assessment of offensiveness.” Ante, at 16.
Phillips declined to make a cake he found offensive where the
offensiveness of the product was determined solely by the identity of
the customer requesting it. The three other bakeries declined to make
cakes where their objection to the product was due to the demeaning
message the requested product would literally display. As the Court
recognizes, a refusal “to design a special cake with words or images
. . . might be different from a refusal to sell any cake at all.” Ante, at 2.
5
The Colorado Court of Appeals did not distinguish
Phillips and the other three bakeries based simply on its or the
Division’s finding that messages in the cakes Jack requested were
offensive while any message in a cake for Craig and Mullins was not.
The Colorado court distinguished the cases on the ground that Craig and
Mullins were denied service based on an aspect of their identity that
the State chose to grant vigorous protection from discrimination. See
App. to Pet. for Cert. 20a, n. 8 (“The Division found that the bakeries
did not refuse [Jack’s] request because of his creed, but rather because
of the offensive nature of the requested message. . . . [T]here was no
evidence that the bakeries based their decisions on [Jack’s] religion
. . . [whereas Phillips] discriminat[ed] on the basis of sexual
orientation.”). I do not read the Court to suggest that the Colorado
Legislature’s decision to include certain protected characteristics in
CADA is an impermissible government prescription of what is and is not
offensive. Cf. ante, at 9–10. To repeat, the Court affirms
that “Colorado law can protect gay persons, just as it can protect other
classes of individuals, in acquiring whatever products and services
they choose on the same terms and conditions as are offered to other
members of the public.” Ante, at 10.
II
Statements made at the Commission’s public
hearings on Phillips’ case provide no firmer support for the Court’s
holding today. Whatever one may think of the statements in historical
context, I see no reason why the comments of one or two Commissioners
should be taken to overcome Phillips’ refusal to sell a wedding cake to
Craig and Mullins. The proceedings involved several layers of
independent decisionmaking, of which the Commission was but one. See
App. to Pet. for Cert. 5a–6a. First, the Division had to find probable
cause that Phillips violated CADA. Second, the ALJ entertained the
parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. Third, the Commission
heard Phillips’ appeal. Fourth, after the Commission’s ruling, the
Colorado Court of Appeals considered the case de novo. What
prejudice infected the determinations of the adjudicators in the case
before and after the Commission? The Court does not say. Phillips’
case is thus far removed from the only precedent upon which the Court
relies, Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. Hialeah,
508 U. S. 520
(1993), where the government action that violated a principle of
religious neutrality implicated a sole decisionmaking body, the city
council, see id., at 526–528.
* * *
For the reasons stated, sensible application
of CADA to a refusal to sell any wedding cake to a gay couple should
occasion affirmance of the Colorado Court of Appeals’ judgment. I would
so rule.
Notes
1 As Justice Thomas observes, the Court does not hold that wedding cakes are speech or expression entitled to
First Amendment protection. See ante, at 1 (opinion concurring in part and concurring in judgment). Nor could it, consistent with our
First Amendment precedents. Justice Thomas
acknowledges that for conduct to constitute protected expression, the
conduct must be reasonably understood by an observer to be
communicative. Ante, at 4 (citing Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
468 U. S. 288,
294 (1984)). The record in this case is replete with Jack Phillips’
own views on the messages he believes his cakes convey. See ante, at 5–6 (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (describing how Phillips “considers”
and “sees” his work). But Phillips submitted no evidence showing that
an objective observer understands a wedding cake to convey a message,
much less that the observer understands the message to be the baker’s,
rather than the marrying couple’s. Indeed, some in the wedding industry
could not explain what message, or whose, a wedding cake conveys. See
Charsley, Interpretation and Custom: The Case of the Wedding Cake, 22
Man 93, 100–101 (1987) (no explanation of wedding cakes’ symbolism was
forthcoming “even amongst those who might be expected to be the
experts”); id., at 104–105 (the cake cutting tradition might
signify “the bride and groom . . . as appropriating the cake” from the
bride’s parents). And Phillips points to no case in which this Court
has suggested the provision of a baked good might be expressive conduct.
Cf. ante, at 7, n. 2 (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment); Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc.,
515 U. S. 557, 568–579 (1995) (citing previous cases recognizing parades to be expressive); Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
501 U. S. 560, 565 (1991) (noting precedents suggesting nude dancing is expressive conduct); Spence v. Washington,
418 U. S. 405, 410 (1974) (observing the Court’s decades-long recognition of the symbolism of flags).
2 The record provides no ideological explanation for the bakeries’ refusals. Cf. ante, at 1–2, 9, 11 (Gorsuch, J., concurring) (describing Jack’s requests as offensive to the bakers’ “secular” convictions).
3 Justice Gorsuch argues that the situations “share all legally sa-lient features.” Ante, at 4 (concurring opinion). But what criticallydifferentiates them is the role the customer’s “statutorily protected trait,” ibid.,
played in the denial of service. Change Craig and Mullins’ sexual
orientation (or sex), and Phillips would have provided the cake. Change
Jack’s religion, and the bakers would have been no more willing to
comply with his request. The bakers’ objections to Jack’s cakes had
nothing to do with “religious opposition to same-sex weddings.” Ante, at 6 (Gorsuch,
J., concurring). Instead, the bakers simply refused to make cakes
bearing statements demeaning to people protected by CADA. With respect
to Jack’s second cake, in particular, where he requested an image of two
groomsmen covered by a red “X” and the lines “God loves sinners” and
“While we were yet sinners Christ died for us,” the bakers gave not the
slightest indication that religious words, rather than the demeaning
image, prompted the objection. See supra, at 3. Phillips did, therefore, discriminate because of sexual orientation; the other bakers did not discriminate because of religious belief; and the Commission properly found discrimination in one case but not the other. Cf. ante, at 4–6 (Gorsuch, J., concurring).
4 But see ante,
at 7 (majority opinion) (acknowledging that Phillips refused to sell to
a lesbian couple cupcakes for a celebration of their union).
5 The
Court undermines this observation when later asserting that the
treatment of Phillips, as compared with the treatment of the other three
bakeries, “could reasonably be interpreted as being inconsistent as to
the question of whether speech is involved.” Ante, at 15. But
recall that, while Jack requested cakes with particular text inscribed,
Craig and Mullins were refused the sale of any wedding cake at all.
They were turned away before any specific cake design could be
discussed. (It appears that Phillips rarely, if ever, produces wedding
cakes with words on them—or at least does not advertise such cakes. See
Masterpiece Cakeshop, Wedding, http://www.masterpiececakes.com/
wedding-cakes (as last visited June 1, 2018) (gallery with 31 wedding
cake images, none of which exhibits words).) The Division and the Court
of Appeals could rationally and lawfully distinguish between a case
involving disparaging text and images and a case involving a wedding
cake of unspecified design. The distinction is not between a cake with
text and one without, see ante, at 8–9 (Gorsuch, J., concurring); it is between a cake with a particular design and one whose form was never even discussed.
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