The Smith Decision
The Court Returns to the Belief-Action Distinction
As a result of the Supreme Court’s repeated refusal
to uphold free exercise claims in virtually all contexts
other than Yoder and a handful of unemployment
compensation cases, many legal scholars
began to wonder whether the distinction between
religious belief and action established in the 19th century
polygamy cases (and thought to be overturned
in Sherbert) was still operative. In 1990, the
Supreme Court seemed to settle this uncertainty
when it took a dramatic and unexpected step that
largely re-established that distinction.
Employment Division v. Smith (1990)
| Majority: | Minority: |
| Kennedy | Blackmun |
| O’Connor | Brennan |
| Rehnquist | Marshall |
| Scalia | |
| Stevens | |
| White | |
The case, Employment Division v. Smith, involved a
challenge brought by two Native Americans, Alfred
Smith and Galen Black, who had been dismissed
from their jobs as drug rehabilitation counselors
because they had ingested the hallucinogen peyote
as part of a religious ritual in the Native American Church. The state of Oregon denied their application
for unemployment benefits because they had
been fired for work-related misconduct. Smith and
Black took their case to the courts, where they
argued they should not be denied government
benefits because the cause of their dismissal – the
use of peyote for religious purposes – was protected
by the Free Exercise Clause.
In an opinion that stunned many in the legal
world, the court, by a vote of 6-3, rejected the
Native Americans’ claim. Justice Antonin Scalia’s
opinion, joined by four other justices, concluded
that in most circumstances, generally applicable
laws that impose a burden on religious practice –
such as Oregon’s criminal prohibition on the use
of peyote – are not subject to the compelling
interest test. Scalia’s opinion explicitly hearkened
back to the reasoning in Reynolds, the first
polygamy case. The Free Exercise Clause protects
religious beliefs, he wrote, but it does not insulate
religiously motivated actions from laws, unless the
laws single out religion for disfavored treatment.
Such nondiscriminatory, general laws should be
evaluated, the court ruled, under the “rational
basis” standard. Under this standard, which is
much more deferential to the government than
the compelling interest test, a law is constitutional
as long as there is a rational or legitimate reason
for it; it does not need to further an important or
compelling government interest. Because Oregon
had a rational basis for outlawing peyote – it is a
hallucinogenic drug – the court concluded that
the Free Exercise Clause did not exempt those
who used the drug for religious reasons.
Scalia distinguished the court’s ruling in Smith
from prior decisions – such as Yoder and Cantwell
– by arguing that in those cases, the right to free
exercise had been bolstered by a second, companion
right under the Constitution. In Yoder, for
instance, free exercise had been linked to the right
of parents to direct and control the upbringing of
their children, he wrote. In Cantwell, he pointed
out, free exercise had been connected to the right
of free expression. These combinations produce
“hybrid” rights, Scalia asserted. Had this combination
of rights not been present, he argued, the
court would have rejected those religious freedom
claims, just as it was now doing in Smith.
The Smith opinion narrowed the impact of
Sherbert and its progeny and limited the use of the
compelling interest test to circumstances in which
state law already allows for certain people to be
exempt from the law’s requirements for specific
reasons. In Sherbert, for instance, exemptions were
available to those seeking unemployment benefits
in South Carolina if they could demonstrate a justifiable
reason for refusing work. In cases involving
unemployment compensation or other contexts
where these types of exemptions are available, such
as zoning, the government must have a compelling
reason when it rejects religious hardship as such a
cause. But where the government does not routinely
grant exemptions to a law, such as in the
case of most criminal prohibitions, the Free Exercise Clause does not trigger any entitlement
to a religious exemption.
In the Smith decision, Scalia also asserted that
those seeking exemptions from legal requirements
based on religious grounds should look for redress
in the political arena by petitioning the legislative
or executive branches of government. He stated
that the courts are not the best venue for those
seeking exemptions because each judge or court
can have a different view of laws and rights, and
thus produce inconsistent decisions.
The court in Smith recognized that its new
approach would sometimes make things difficult
for religious minorities, whose need for exemption
from general rules might well be ignored in the
political process. Scalia concluded, however, that
this “unavoidable consequence of democratic government
must be preferred to a system in which
each conscience is a law unto itself or in which
judges weigh the social importance of … laws
against … religious beliefs.”
The Smith opinion produced several forceful
responses from other justices. In her concurrence,
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor argued against the
central thrust of the majority opinion and in favor
of retaining the compelling interest test in free
exercise cases as a means of protecting religious
minorities. O’Connor concurred with the decision
only because she agreed with the ultimate ruling in
the case; she believed that Smith and Black should
lose precisely because the state of Oregon had a
compelling interest in outlawing all uses of peyote.
In his dissent, Justice Harry Blackmun (joined by
Justices William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall)
agreed with O’Connor that the compelling interest
test should be retained as a way for courts to
mitigate “the severe impact of a state’s restrictions
on the adherents of a minority religion.” Unlike
O’Connor, however, Blackmun argued that Smith
and Black’s interest in using peyote in religious
sacraments outweighed Oregon’s interest in applying
its anti-peyote laws to them.
The Smith decision produced a significant political
protest from religious organizations and civil liberties
groups such as the American Civil Liberties
Union. These critics saw the ruling as a serious
retreat from judicial protection of free exercise
rights.They argued that the decision would threaten
the religious liberty of many people, and especially
those of minority faiths, who engaged in religiously
motivated acts that might conflict with general laws.
Photo credit: Oswald Eckstein/Corbis