*1047 by Circuit Judge RUTH BADER GINSBURG.
This case presents a first amendment free exercise clause challenge to the District of Columbia’s requirement that applicants for driver’s licenses provide the District with their Social Security numbers. The district court, based on a misreading of recent Supreme Court precedent, dismissed the case.
Leahy v. District of Columbia,
I.
In April 1983, plaintiff John C. Leahy, Jr., then a resident of the District of Columbia, applied for a District of Columbia driver’s license. The municipal regulations of the District specify that each driver’s license aрplication shall state the applicant’s social security number. See D.C. Mun.Regs. tit. 18, § 103.2 (1981). 1 Asserting religious objections to the requirement, Leahy refused to supply his social security number; as alternate means of identification, Leahy presented his passport and birth certificate. The licensing examination supervisor did not accept these substitutes. Leahy was not permitted to take the license examination and was not issued a driver’s license.
Shortly thereafter, on April 7, 1983, Le-ahy wrote to Marion Barry, Mayor of the District of Columbia, requesting that Le-ahy’s application for a driver’s license be processed notwithstanding his refusal to provide his social security number. Mayor Barry forwarded Leahy’s letter to Thomas Downs, Director of the District of Columbia Department of Transportation. Director Downs, in a May 6,1983 response to Leаhy, denied the request.
Leahy subsequently commenced a civil action against the District of Columbia in federal district court alleging violations of the first amendment and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982); Leahy’s complaint sought declaratory and injunctive relief as well as money damages.
2
After limited discovery, Leahy moved for summary judgment. The district court denied the motion and dismissed the case
sua sponte,
effectively granting summary judgment for the District. Opinion and Order,
Leahy v. District of Columbia,
Leahy obtained a social security number in the mid-1960’s; he assеrts that in approximately 1978 or 1979 he came to believe that “use of his social security number for any purpose not related to the administration of his social security account would endanger his chances of being chosen for life after death.” Plaintiff’s Statement of Material Facts Not in Dispute ¶ 8 (Plaintiffs Facts).
3
The theological
*1048
roots of Leahy’s asserted belief,
see Wisconsin v. Yoder,
II.
Assuming for purposes of its opinion that Leahy’s belief was sincere, the district court proceeded to balance Leahy’s interest in freely exercising his rights under the first amendment agаinst the District’s stated safety and efficiency interests in requiring social security numbers in applications for driver’s licenses. Were it not for a misreading of
Bowen v. Roy,
Apparently because of the frаgmented character of the Supreme Court’s disposition in
Roy,
the district court took that case to have limited the application of
Sherbert
and
Thomas
and to have an
*1049
nounced a less rigorous standard of scrutiny (“reasonable meаns of promoting a legitimate public interest”) under which Le-ahy’s claim would fail. This standard, proposed by Chief Justice Burger in a portion of his
Roy
opinion joined by only two other Justices (Justices Powell and Rehnquist),
In dismissing the case, the district court construed all relevant facts in a light most favorable to Leahy. For the purpose of summary disposition, the district cоurt was unquestionably correct in assuming that Leahy’s belief was sincerely held. However, because we have determined that dismissal of the complaint was improper as a matter of law, this case returns to its former posture — a motion by Leahy for summary judgment denied by the district court. Placed in that framework, the dispute between Leahy and the District over his sincerity is eminently material; the district court therefore cannot be faulted for refusing Leahy’s application for immediate judgment in his favor. Accordingly, we remand this case to the district court for further proceedings to determine Leahy’s sincerity and, if necessary thereafter, for a determination of any relief to which he may be entitled. See supra note 2. We remind the district court that, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 42(b), it may order a separate trial 7 on the limited question of sincerity if it deems this to be convenient or expedient.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
.The section provides:
Each application shall state the applicant’s true and lawful name (which shall include the applicant’s full and complete name, including any given middle name or names); the applicant's date of birth; sex; social security number; the residence address of the applicant; and a brief description of the applicant, including, but not necessarily limited to, the applicant’s height, weight, color of eyes, and color of hair.
. Leahy has since moved to Maryland and obtained, without provision of his social security number, a Maryland driver’s license. Although this development makes his request for injunc-tive relief moot, his claim for damages survives.
. There is some indication that Leahy now believes use of his social security number even for *1048 the administration of his social security account may endanger his immortal soul. See Deposition of John C. Leahy, Jr. at 25-27.
. The District urges us not to spread the application of the compelling state interest test from the administration of benefits programs to requiremеnts impinging upon religious liberty imposed in the course of administering public safety statutes, such as the driver's license regulation in question here. A public safety regime, the District maintains, should be assessed under a less rigorоus standard, not one that calls for any significant inconvenience in accommodating the free exercise assertion. Nothing in current Supreme Court precedent warrants acceptance by a lower court of the proffered distinction between public safety and public benefit legislation for the purpose at hand. In its most recent pronouncement in this area, albeit in the setting of a рublic benefits (unemployment compensation) scheme, the Supreme Court resoundingly rejected modification of the "strict scrutiny/compelling interest” test:
[0]nly those interests of the highest order and those not otherwise served can overbalance legitimate claims to the free exercise of religion.
Hobbie v. Unemployment Appeals Comm'n of Florida,
— U.S. —,
. Upon receiving the district court’s opinion and realizing that the court had miscounted the adherents to the final portion of Chief Justice Burger’s opinion in Roy, counsel should have alerted the district court, promptly, to the simple arithmetic error. Plaintiffs counsel indicated at oral argument that he received the opinion too late to return to the district court in view of the impending expiration of the time for filing a notice of appeal. The District of Columbia timely received the opinion and offers no explanation for its failure to inform the district court of the plain error that court had made. We admonish counsel, in instances such as this one, to be mindful constantly of their obligation of candor toward the court. See MODEL RULES OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT Rule 3.3(a)(3) (1983); MODEL CODE OF PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY DR 7-106(B)(l) (1980).
. Leahy observed that accommodating his оbjection would not require the District to establish new procedures, for the city already had in place an alternate system of numbers, used for issuing diplomatic driver’s licenses. Brief for Appellant at 10-11, 29-30.
. Because neither party has demanded a jury trial as of right, the district court may try any or all issues in the manner that court finds most appropriate. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 39(b).
