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Sample
Cases & Exercises: |
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Sante
Fe Independent School District v.
Doe
Supreme
Court of the United States
Argued
March 29, 2000.
Decided
June 19, 2000.
Case Text
Class
Exercises
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Justice
STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Prior
to 1995, the Santa Fe High School student who occupied
the school's elective office of student council chaplain
delivered a prayer over the public address system before
each varsity football game for the entire season. This
practice, along with others, was challenged in District
Court as a violation of the Establishment Clause of the
First Amendment.... [T]he school district [then] adopted
a different policy that permits, but does not require,
prayer initiated and led by a student at all home games....
I.
Respondents are two sets of current or former students
and their respective mothers. One family is Mormon and
the other is Catholic. The District Court permitted respondents
(Does) to litigate anonymously to protect them from intimidation
or harassment....
Respondents ... alleged that the District had engaged
in several proselytizing practices, such as promoting
attendance at a Baptist revival meeting, encouraging membership
in religious clubs, chastising children who held minority
religious beliefs, and distributing Gideon Bibles on school
premises. They also alleged that the District allowed
students to read Christian invocations and benedictions
from the stage at graduation ceremonies, and to deliver
overtly Christian prayers over the public address system
at home football games.
On May 10, 1995, the District Court entered an interim
order.... [T]he order provided that "nondenominational
prayer" consisting of "an invocation and/or
benediction" could be presented by a senior student
or students selected by members of the graduating class.
The text of the prayer was to be determined by the students,
without scrutiny or preapproval by school officials. References
to particular religious figures "such as Mohammed,
Jesus, Buddha, or the like" would be permitted "as
long as the general thrust of the prayer is non-proselytizing."...
In response ... the District adopted a series of policies
over several months dealing with prayer at school functions....
The August policy, which was titled "Prayer at Football
Games," ... authorized two student elections, the
first to determine whether "invocations" should
be delivered, and the second to select the spokesperson
to deliver them.... it contained two parts, an initial
statement that omitted any requirement that the content
of the invocation be "nonsectarian and nonproselytising,"
and a fallback provision that automatically added that
limitation if the preferred policy should be enjoined.
On August 31, 1995 ... [t]he district's high school students
voted to determine whether a student would deliver prayer
at varsity football games....The students chose to allow
a student to say a prayer at football games."...
A week later, in a separate election, they selected a
student "to deliver the prayer at varsity football
games."...
The ... [October policy] is essentially the same as the
August policy, though it omits the word "prayer"
from its title, and refers to "messages" and
"statements" as well as "invocations."...
... We conclude, as did the Court of Appeals, that ...
the District's policy permitting student-led, student-initiated
prayer at football games violates the Establishment Clause.
II.
... The fact that the District's policy provides for the
election of the speaker only after the majority has voted
on her message identifies an obvious distinction between
this case and the typical election of a "student
body president, or even a newly elected prom king or queen."...
...While Santa Fe's majoritarian election might ensure
that most of the students are represented, it does
nothing to protect the minority; indeed, it likely serves
to intensify their offense.
Moreover, the District has failed to divorce itself from
the religious content in the invocations. It has not succeeded
in doing so, either by claiming that its policy is "one
of neutrality rather than endorsement"... or by characterizing
the individual student as the "circuit-breaker"...
in the process. Contrary to the District's repeated assertions
that it has adopted a "hands-off" approach to
the pregame invocation ... its policy involves both perceived
and actual endorsement of religion.... [T]he "degree
of school involvement" makes it clear that the pregame
prayers bear "the imprint of the State and thus put
school-age children who objected in an untenable position."...
The District has attempted to disentangle itself from
the religious messages by developing the two-step student
election process. The text of the October policy, however,
exposes the extent of the school's entanglement. The elections
take place at all only because the school "board
has chosen to permit students to deliver a brief
invocation and/or message."... The elections thus
"shall" be conducted "by the high school
student council" and "[u]pon advice and direction
of the high school principal."... The decision whether
to deliver a message is first made by majority vote of
the entire student body, followed by a choice of the speaker
in a separate, similar majority election. Even though
the particular words used by the speaker are not determined
by those votes, the policy mandates that the "statement
or invocation" be "consistent with the goals
and purposes of this policy," which are "to
solemnize the event, to promote good sportsmanship and
student safety, and to establish the appropriate environment
for the competition."...
In addition to involving the school in the selection of
the speaker, the policy, by its terms, invites and encourages
religious messages. The policy itself states that the
purpose of the message is "to solemnize the event."
A religious message is the most obvious method of solemnizing
an event. Moreover, the requirements that the message
"promote good sportsmanship" and "establish
the appropriate environment for competition" further
narrow the types of message deemed appropriate, suggesting
that a solemn, yet nonreligious, message, such as commentary
on United States foreign policy, would be prohibited....
Indeed, the only type of message that is expressly endorsed
in the text is an "invocation"--a term that
primarily describes an appeal for divine assistance....
In fact, as used in the past at Santa Fe High School,
an "invocation" has always entailed a focused
religious message. Thus, the expressed purposes of the
policy encourage the selection of a religious message,
and that is precisely how the students understand the
policy. The results of the elections... make it clear
that the students understood that the central question
before them was whether prayer should be a part of the
pregame ceremony....
The actual or perceived endorsement of the message, moreover,
is established by factors beyond just the text of the
policy. Once the student speaker is selected and the message
composed, the invocation is then delivered to a large
audience assembled as part of a regularly scheduled, school-sponsored
function conducted on school property. The message is
broadcast over the school's public address system, which
remains subject to the control of school officials. It
is fair to assume that the pregame ceremony is clothed
in the traditional indicia of school sporting events,
which generally include not just the team, but also cheerleaders
and band members dressed in uniforms sporting the school
name and mascot. The school's name is likely written in
large print across the field and on banners and flags.
The crowd will certainly include many who display the
school colors and insignia on their school T-shirts, jackets,
or hats and who may also be waving signs displaying the
school name. It is in a setting such as this that "[t]he
board has chosen to permit" the elected student to
rise and give the "statement or invocation."
In this context the members of the listening audience
must perceive the pregame message as a public expression
of the views of the majority of the student body delivered
with the approval of the school administration. In cases
involving state participation in a religious activity,
one of the relevant questions is "whether an objective
observer, acquainted with the text, legislative history,
and implementation of the statute, would perceive it as
a state endorsement of prayer in public schools."...
Regardless of the listener's support for, or objection
to, the message, an objective Santa Fe High School student
will unquestionably perceive the inevitable pregame prayer
as stamped with her school's seal of approval....
According to the District, the secular purposes of the
policy are to "foste[r] free expression of private
persons ... as well [as to] solemniz[e] sporting events,
promot[e] good sportsmanship and student safety, and establis[h]
an appropriate environment for competition."... [H]owever
... the District's approval of only one specific kind
of message, an "invocation," is not necessary
to further any of these purposes. Additionally, the fact
that only one student is permitted to give a content-limited
message suggests that this policy does little to "foste[r]
free expression." Furthermore, regardless of whether
one considers a sporting event an appropriate occasion
for solemnity, the use of an invocation to foster such
solemnity is impermissible when, in actuality, it constitutes
prayer sponsored by the school....
School sponsorship of a religious message is impermissible
because it sends the ancillary message to members of the
audience who are nonadherents "that they are outsiders,
not full members of the political community, and an accompanying
message to adherents that they are insiders, favored members
of the political community."... The delivery of such
a message--over the school's public address system, by
a speaker representing the student body, under the supervision
of school faculty, and pursuant to a school policy that
explicitly and implicitly encourages public prayer--is
not properly characterized as "private" speech.
III.
The District next argues that its football policy ...
does not coerce students to participate in religious observances.
Its argument has two parts: first, that there is no impermissible
government coercion because the pregame messages are the
product of student choices; and second, that there is
really no coercion at all because attendance at an extracurricular
event, unlike a graduation ceremony, is voluntary.
..
... [T]he issue resolved in the first election was "whether
a student would deliver prayer at varsity football games"...
and the controversy in this case demonstrates that the
views of the students are not unanimous on that issue.
One of the purposes served by the Establishment Clause
is to remove debate over this kind of issue from governmental
supervision or control.... [T]he "preservation and
transmission of religious beliefs and worship is a responsibility
and a choice committed to the private sphere."...
The two student elections authorized by the policy, coupled
with the debates that presumably must precede each, impermissibly
invade that private sphere. The election mechanism ...
reflects a device the District put in place that determines
whether religious messages will be delivered at home football
games. The mechanism encourages divisiveness along religious
lines in a public school setting, a result at odds with
the Establishment Clause. Although it is true that the
ultimate choice of student speaker is "attributable
to the students"... the District's decision to hold
the constitutionally problematic election is clearly "a
choice attributable to the State"...
... Attendance at a high school football game, unlike
showing up for class, is certainly not required in order
to receive a diploma. Moreover, we may assume that the
District is correct in arguing that the informal pressure
to attend an athletic event is not as strong as a senior's
desire to attend her own graduation ceremony.
There are some students, however, such as cheerleaders,
members of the band, and, of course, the team members
themselves, for whom seasonal commitments mandate their
attendance, sometimes for class credit. The District also
minimizes the importance to many students of attending
and participating in extracurricular activities as part
of a complete educational experience....To assert that
high school students do not feel immense social pressure,
or have a truly genuine desire, to be involved in the
extracurricular event that is American high school football
is "formalistic in the extreme."...
... the delivery of a pregame prayer has the improper
effect of coercing those present to participate in an
act of religious worship.... "[W]hat to most believers
may seem nothing more than a reasonable request that the
nonbeliever respect their religious practices, in a school
context may appear to the nonbeliever or dissenter to
be an attempt to employ the machinery of the State to
enforce a religious orthodoxy."... The constitutional
command will not permit the District "to exact religious
conformity from a student as the price" of joining
her classmates at a varsity football game....
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is, accordingly,
affirmed.
Chief Justice REHNQUIST, with whom Justice SCALIA and
Justice THOMAS join, dissenting.
The Court distorts existing precedent to conclude that
the school district's student-message program is invalid
on its face under the Establishment Clause. But even more
disturbing than its holding is the tone of the Court's
opinion; it bristles with hostility to all things religious
in public life. Neither the holding nor the tone of the
opinion is faithful to the meaning of the Establishment
Clause....
... [T]he Court ... holds that the "policy is invalid
on its face because it establishes an improper majoritarian
election on religion, and unquestionably has the purpose
and creates the perception of encouraging the delivery
of prayer at a series of important school events."...
The Court's reliance on each of these conclusions misses
the mark.
First, the Court misconstrues the nature of the "majoritarian
election" permitted by the policy as being an election
on "prayer" and "religion."... To
the contrary, the election permitted by the policy is
a two-fold process whereby students vote first on whether
to have a student speaker before football games at all,
and second, if the students vote to have such a speaker,
on who that speaker will be.... It is conceivable that
the election could become one in which student candidates
campaign on platforms that focus on whether or not they
will pray if elected. It is also conceivable that the
election could lead to a Christian prayer before 90 percent
of the football games. If, upon implementation, the policy
operated in this fashion, we would have a record before
us to review whether the policy, as applied, violated
the Establishment Clause or unduly suppressed minority
viewpoints. But it is possible that the students might
vote not to have a pregame speaker, in which case there
would be no threat of a constitutional violation. It is
also possible that the election would not focus on prayer,
but on public speaking ability or social popularity. And
if student campaigning did begin to focus on prayer, the
school might decide to implement reasonable campaign restrictions....
But the Court ignores these possibilities by holding that
merely granting the student body the power to elect a
speaker that may choose to pray, "regardless of the
students' ultimate use of it, is not acceptable."...
The Court so holds despite that any speech that may occur
as a result of the election process here would be private,
not government, speech. The elected student, not
the government, would choose what to say. Support for
the Court's holding cannot be found in any of our cases.
And it essentially invalidates all student elections.
A newly elected student body president, or even a newly
elected prom king or queen, could use opportunities for
public speaking to say prayers. Under the Court's view,
the mere grant of power to the students to vote for such
offices, in light of the fear that those elected might
publicly pray, violates the Establishment Clause.
Second, with respect to the policy's purpose, the Court
holds that "the simple enactment of this policy,
with the purpose and perception of school endorsement
of student prayer, was a constitutional violation."...
But the policy itself has plausible secular purposes:
"[T]o solemnize the event, to promote good sportsmanship
and student safety, and to establish the appropriate environment
for the competition."... Where a governmental body
"expresses a plausible secular purpose" for
an enactment, "courts should generally defer to that
stated intent."... The Court grants no deference
to--and appears openly hostile toward--the policy's stated
purposes, and wastes no time in concluding that they are
a sham....
... [T]he school district was acting diligently to come
within the governing constitutional law. The District
Court ordered the school district to formulate a policy
... which permitted a school district to have a prayer-only
policy.... But the school district went further than required
by the District Court order and eventually settled on
a policy that gave the student speaker a choice to deliver
either an invocation or a message. In so doing, the school
district exhibited a willingness to comply with, and exceed,
Establishment Clause restrictions. Thus, the policy cannot
be viewed as having a sectarian purpose....
... Here ... the potential speech at issue, if the policy
had been allowed to proceed, would be a message or invocation
selected or created by a student. That is, if there were
speech at issue here, it would be private speech.
The "crucial difference between government
speech endorsing religion, which the Establishment Clause
forbids, and private speech endorsing religion,
which the Free Speech and Free Exercise Clauses protect,"
applies with particular force to the question of endorsement....
Finally, the Court seems to demand that a government policy
be completely neutral as to content or be considered one
that endorses religion.... This is undoubtedly a new requirement,
as our Establishment Clause jurisprudence simply does
not mandate "content neutrality." That concept
is found in our First Amendment speech cases....
EXERCISE
4.3. Suzie Smith was named valedictorian
of your high school graduating class by virtue of her
grade point average. She is a devout Muslim who has written
her valedictorian address about the importance in her
life of Mohammed and why she thinks students who abuse
drugs and alcohol or belong to gangs need to discover
Mohammed in their personal lives. She wants to finish
by inviting her fellow graduates to come with her to her
mosque before they leave for college or work. The principal
is nervous about letting her give such a speech, but students
in the past have always been allowed to speak about the
topic of their choice, and their remarks are traditionally
edited for length, clarity, and style only. The principal
does not want to be sued by non-Muslim parents, but she
also does not want to be sued by Suzie and her family.
Knowing that you are taking this class, the principal
asks your advice on how to handle the situation without
violating the establishment clause or Suzie's free speech
and free exercise of religion rights. How will you advise
the principal to act in this majority Christian community?
(What if Suzie were a Methodist? A Jehovah's Witness?
A Hare Krishna? A follower of Rev. Sun Myung Moon? Would
that change your views?) Discuss the problem with your
classmates and come up with what you think is sound
legal and policy advice for the principal.
FOR THE CLASS: INTERVIEWING
THE JUSTICES. Select two students
to play the anchors of an evening television news talk
show like Nightline. The anchors have an unusual
assignment: they will be interviewing the nine Supreme
Court justices about their opinions in Santa Fe v.
Doe. Select one set of students to play Justice
Stevens (who wrote the Court's majority opinion) and
the five justices who agreed with him. Select a second
set of students to play Chief Justice Rehnquist (who
wrote the dissenting opinion) and the two justices who
dissented alongside him. Try to get to the bottom of
the views of each justice. Why did those who sided with
the majority think that the football invocation violated
the establishment clause? How did they think that such
statements affected students, team players, cheerleaders,
and fans? And why did the dissenters object to the majority's
decision? The news anchors should invite additional
student guests to play teachers and students to discuss
their own thoughts about the case. (This exercise is
for fun and learning; in reality, Supreme Court justices
almost never discuss their opinions in public, and certainly
never in a format like this.)
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