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View Full Version : Eighth Circuit Affirms ‘Sea Change’ in Establishment Clause Jurisprudence




Swordsmyth
08-31-2018, 05:44 PM
Forty-five years ago, the Supreme Court broke the Establishment Clause in Lemon v. Kurtzman. Four years ago, it abandoned Lemon’s ahistorical aberration in Town of Greece v. Galloway. But despite decades of calling on the Supreme Court to free them from Lemon, federal appellate courts have in the last four years developed (https://www.nationalreview.com/bench-memos/establishment-clause-bormuth-v-county-jackson-case/) a type of judicial Stockholm Syndrome that has kept them from accepting the Supreme Court’s rescue by means of Town of Greece.
That changed on Tuesday. In a 2-1 opinion (https://s3.amazonaws.com/becketnewsite/Eighth-Circuit-opinion-in-New-Doe-Child-v-USA.pdf) where Lemon was conspicuous only by its absence, SCOTUS shortlister (https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/trump-scotus-short-lister-gruender-five-things-to-know) Judge Raymond Gruender of the Eighth Circuit found that Town of Greece set “an unequivocal directive” that the Establishment Clause “must be interpreted by reference to historical practices and understandings.” Judge Gruender recognized that this directive was a “major doctrinal shift” from past free-floating judicial Establishment Clause tests, which were unmoored from history and epitomized by Lemon. My firm, the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, had urged just such an approach in the friend-of-the-court brief (https://s3.amazonaws.com/becketnewsite/New-Doe-Child-8th-Cir-amicus-final.pdf) we filed in the appeal.

Judge Gruender also recognized that his opinion’s adherence to Town of Greece broke with the recent decisions of other federal circuits. For instance, panels in the Sixth, Seventh, and Tenth Circuits have failed to fully pull free of Lemon. Parting ways with them, Judge Gruender instead cited to and agreed with Judge Alice Batchelder’s 2015 Sixth Circuit concurring opinion (http://www.opn.ca6.uscourts.gov/opinions.pdf/15a0119p-06.pdf) that recognized Town of Greece’s “major doctrinal shift” as “a sea change in constitutional law.” He likewise relied on last year’s dissent (https://www.ca10.uscourts.gov/opinions/14/14-2149.pdf) by Judges Paul Kelly and Timothy Tymkovich from the en banc Tenth Circuit’s failure to reconsider an Establishment Clause ruling that was more faithful to Lemon than Town of Greece. And earlier this year, Judge Frank Easterbrook broke from (http://media.ca7.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/rssExec.pl?Submit=Display&Path=Y2018/D03-21/C:17-1591:J:Easterbrook:con:T:fnOp:N:2126856:S:0) a Seventh Circuit opinion that “d[id] not feel free to jettison” Lemon and thus failed to ground its analysis in “what the phrase ‘establishment of religion’ meant in the Eighteenth Century, when those words were adopted.”

More at: https://www.nationalreview.com/bench-memos/eighth-circuit-establishment-clause-jurisprudence/?utm_medium=referral&utm_source=idealmedia&utm_campaign=nationalreview.com&utm_term=68804&utm_content=1

fedupinmo
08-31-2018, 07:29 PM
Darmac and Jilad at Tanagra.

Grandmastersexsay
09-01-2018, 09:10 AM
Darmac and Jilad at Tanagra.

Lol, glad I wasn't the only one.

Swordsmyth
09-01-2018, 12:50 PM
Darmac and Jilad at Tanagra.


Lol, glad I wasn't the only one.

Originalism is returning 1stA jurisprudence.