CENTER FOR INQUIRY, INC., and Reba Boyd Wooden, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. MARION CIRCUIT COURT CLERK and Marion County Prosecutor, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 12-3751.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Decided July 14, 2014.
Argued April 19, 2013.
758 F.3d 869
Both inferences are reasonable, and which one the trier of fact makes is crucial to Ms. Wallace‘s case. If we make the first inference, as the district court did in granting summary judgment, Ms. Wallace‘s suit is untimely; if we make the second, as the district court did in denying the government‘s motion to dismiss, it is not. And while it is not unusual for a district court to deny a motion to dismiss because pleadings are sufficient but to grant summary judgment because evidence is lacking, this case does not fit that model. At both procedural stages, the question was the significance of the records request to the Friend Center, and at least two inferences were and are reasonable. The district court erred in granting summary judgment for the gоvernment on the ground that Ms. Wallace‘s suit was untimely. See Drazan, 762 F.2d at 59-60 (court cannot infer claim accrual from mere fact of requesting records from treatment provider; the issue is why the records were requested).
We therefore REVERSE the district court‘s grant of summary judgment and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Kenneth J. Falk, Indiana Civil Liberties Union, Indianapolis, IN, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Beth A. Garrison, Office of the Corporation Counsel, Thomas M. Fisher, Ashley Elizabeth Harwel, Office of the Attorney General, Indianapolis, IN, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before POSNER, EASTERBROOK, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
Indiana Code § 31-11-6-1 specifies who may solemnize a marriage—that is, per
Marriages may be solemnized by any of the following:
(1) A member of the clergy of a religious organization (even if the cleric does not perform religious functions for an individual congregation), such as a minister of the gospel, a priest, a bishop, an archbishop, or a rabbi.
(2) A judge.
(3) A mayor, within the mayor‘s county.
(4) A clerk or a clerk-treasurer of a city or town, within a county in which the city or town is located.
(5) A clerk of the circuit court.
(6) The Friends Church, in accordance with the rules of the Friends Church.
(7) The German Baptists, in accordance with the rules of their society.
(8) The Bahai faith, in accordance with the rules of the Bahai faith.
(9) The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, in accordance with the rules of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
(10) An imam of a mаsjid (mosque), in accordance with the rules of the religion of Islam.
This suit under
Reba Boyd Wooden is the Centеr‘s leader in Indiana and is among 23 persons across the nation certified by the Center as “secular celebrants“. She has been asked by members to solemnize their marriages, which she wants to do but can‘t because Indiana does not recognize humanist leaders as “clergy“—nor is the Center willing to classify itself as a “religious organization” in order to allow Wooden to be treated as “clergy“.† Two
The district court denied plaintiffs’ request for an injunction and entered judgment for the defendants, who enforce
Plaintiffs find these options unacceptable; they are unwilling to pretend to be something they are not, or prеtend to believe something they do not; they are shut out as long as they are sincere in following an ethical system that does not worship any god, adopt any theology, or accept a religious label. Adherents to Buddhism, Jainism, Shinto, and some forms of Taoism call themselves “religious” despite the absence of gods in their faiths; Indiana may treat some of these religions as having “clergy” (we discuss limitations later). But humanist groups that reject the label “religion” are excluded from Indiana‘s list of permissible celebrants.
It is hard to avoid the district court‘s point that accommodations, by definition, treat the accommodated religion differently from one or more secular grouрs. See Presiding Bishop v. Amos, 483 U.S. 327, 334 (1987); Salazar v. Buono, 559 U.S. 700, 719 (2010) (plurality opinion). But this cannot be a complete answer to plaintiffs’ contention that humanists are situated similarly to religions in everything except belief in a deity (and especially close to those religious that lack deities). An accommodation cannot treat religions favorably when secular groups are idеntical with respect to the attribute selected for that accommodation.
Neutrality is essential to the validity of an accommodation. See Kiryas Joel Village School District v. Grumet, 512 U.S. 687, 703 (1994); Cutter v. Wilkinson, 544 U.S. 709, 723-24 (2005). A state could not, for example, permit Catholic priests to solemnize weddings while forbidding Baptist ministers to do so. See, e.g., McCreary County v. ACLU, 545 U.S. 844, 860 (2005); Larson v. Valente, 456 U.S. 228, 244 (1982) (state can‘t choose favorites among denominаtions). See generally Michael W. McConnell, Accommo
The Supreme Court also has forbidden distinctions between religious and secular beliefs that hold the same place in adherents’ lives. See, e.g., Welsh v. United States, 398 U.S. 333 (1970) (serious and sincere moral system must be treated the same as theistiс religion for the purpose of conscientious objection); United States v. Seeger, 380 U.S. 163, 166 (1965) (same); Torcaso v. Watkins, 367 U.S. 488, 495 & n. 11 (1961) (secular humanism must be treated the same as religion). We recognize that Welsh and Seeger were decided under statutes rather than the Constitution (the Court interpreted the conscription statutes to avoid a declaration of unconstitutionality), but Torcaso was a constitutional decision. And althоugh both the text and note 11 in Torcaso might be characterized as dictum, we held in Kaufman v. McCaughtry, 419 F.3d 678 (7th Cir.2005), that, when making accommodations in prisons, states must treat atheism as favorably as theistic religion. What is true of atheism is equally true of humanism, and as true in daily life as in prison.
The district court stated that none of these decisions matters, because in plaintiffs’ own view humanism is not a religion. That misses the point of Torcaso and Kaufman. Atheists don‘t cаll their own stance a religion but are nonetheless entitled to the benefit of the First Amendment‘s neutrality principle, under which states cannot favor (or disfavor) religion vis-à-vis comparable secular belief systems. Plaintiffs contend that, when a secular moral system is equivalent to religion except for non-belief in God—is, indeed, equivalent to religions such as Shinto and Jainism that do not worship gods—those who embrace that secular system want their own views to be expressed by celebrants at marriages, the state must treat them the same way it treats religion. A state may accommodate religious views that impose extra burdens on adherents—for example, a state may and sоmetimes must allow Seventh-day Adventists to get unemployment benefits even though they won‘t work on Saturday, see Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S. 398 (1963)—but this does not imply an ability to favor religions over non-theistic groups that have moral stances that are equivalent to theistic ones except for non-belief in God or unwillingness to call themselves religions.
Indiana maintains that humanists are not excluded. Adherents to faiths with clergy can be married in two steps: first they obtain a license,
We mention Buddhism in particular because this statute does exclude Buddhists, who lack members of the clergy in the sense subsection (1) uses that phrase, and who are not covered in subsections (6) through (10). Counsel for Indiana confirmed this at oral argument, telling us that Buddhists arе excluded because their religion does not treat marriage as a sacrament and does not have (in the brief‘s words) an “organizational commitment to ... marriage.” Nor, the state adds, does secular humanism treat marriage as holding a special place in its set of values. (Rastafarianism and Jainism, among other religions, apparently would encounter the same obstacle in Indiana.) Counsel for Indiana added that Buddhists (and humanists) are ineligible because they lack “clergy.” Baha‘i and German Baptists would be ineligible for the same reason, except that they have their own exceptions in
At all events Quakers, who lack clergy and do not treat marriage as a sacrament, receive an accommodation in subsection (6), while adherents to Shinto, which has clergy but no immortal god, aрparently can perform marriages under subsection (1). Thus Indiana not only discriminates against non-religious ethical groups such as humanists but also discriminates among religions, preferring those with a particular structure (having clergy) and particular beliefs (according a sacred status to marriage).
The statutory list is not limited to religions that have “аn organizational commitment to ... marriage“. At oral argument Indiana‘s lawyer said that the high priestess of the Church of Satan (along with Wiccans and those who worship Baal) could solemnize marriages under subsection (1), while Buddhists, many other religions, and humanists cannot. This discrimination among ethical codes adds to Indiana‘s problems under the decisions to which we have referred. See Larson, 456 U.S. at 244 (“The clearest command of the Establishment Clause is that one religious denomination cannot be officially preferred over another.“).
These examples, and the state‘s willingness to recognize marriages performed by hypocrites, show that the statute violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as well as the
Marsh and Greece observe that the meaning of the Constitution‘s religion clauses depends in part on historical practices. One cannot understand centuries-old language apart from the culture in which the language was written and originally operated. The history of marriage is that the state came late to the party. For hundreds of years, in the legal tradition that we inherited from England, the persons who could solemnize marriages included clergy, public officials, sea captains, notaries public, and the celebrants themselves. When Indiana codified the list in 1857 (General Laws ch. 44 § 3) it left off captains, notaries, and the marrying couple, though it included Quakers and German Baptists. It also left off Islam, Baha‘i, and Mormons, which now have their own accommodations in subsections (8) through (10).
The current statute discriminates arbitrarily among religious and ethical beliefs. Plaintiffs say that they would be satisfied if notaries were added to the list; nothing in humanism makes it inappropriate for a leader (or any other member) to be a notary public. Since Indiana has never given a reason for excluding notaries, while including every mayor (subsection (3)) and clerk of court (subsection (5)), that hardly seems an excessive request.
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded with instructions to issue an injunction allowing certified secular humanist celеbrants to solemnize marriages in Indiana—to do this with legal effect, and without risk of criminal penalties. That is the relief plaintiffs request, and defendants have not made a counterproposal. If Indiana amends its statute to allow notaries to solemnize marriages, the district court should be receptive to a motion to modify the injunctiоn under
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
