{"id":53691,"date":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/content.findlaw-admin.com\/ability-legal\/supreme\/legal-commentary\/the-navajo-nation-case.html"},"modified":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","modified_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","slug":"the-navajo-nation-case","status":"publish","type":"supreme","link":"https:\/\/supreme.findlaw.com\/legal-commentary\/the-navajo-nation-case.html","title":{"rendered":"The Navajo Nation Case,"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-9d6595d7  fl-block-columns fl-sectionWithSidebar fl-container fl-flex fl-flex-wrap fl-gap30\">\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-page-articles   fl-block-column fl-section-main fl-section-main-full-width\">\n        \n<!-- BEGIN MAIN BODY PRO CONTENT --><div class=\"yui-g\" id=\"leftcol-module\">\n      <!-- Right Line of Links Section -->\n      <!-- BEGIN PICTURE INSERTION -->\n      <!-- BEGIN TITLE AND AUTHOR INSERTION -->\n      <table>\n\n        <tr>\n\n          <td width=\"100\" rowspan=\"3\" class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/akhil-amar-and-vikram-amar-archive\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https://supreme.findlaw.com/static/f/images\/writ\/amar.brownstein.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Vikram\" david amar and alan brownstein><\/a><\/td>\n\n          <td class=\"wititle\"><h1>The Navajo Nation Case,<br> Which the Supreme Court May Soon Review, and How It Reveals the Complex Balance Envisioned by the Religious Freedom Restoration Act<\/h1><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/akhil-amar-and-vikram-amar-archive\" class=\"graybold\"><h2>By VIKRAM DAVID AMAR AND ALAN BROWNSTEIN <\/h2><br><\/a><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"widate\">Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2009<\/td>\n\n        <\/tr>\n      <\/table>\n\n<p>The U.S. Supreme Court will decide  in the coming weeks whether to take up an important and interesting case from  the U.S Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit involving religious liberties  and the seminal federal statute \u2013 the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA)  \u2013 designed to safeguard them. In this  column, we will discuss the issues the case raises; the reasons why the Ninth  Circuit&#8217;s resolution of these issues, while understandable, might not do  justice to the complex and competing interests involved; and the problems that  both the Supreme Court and lower courts face when trying to implement this  well-meaning but imperfectly-drafted Congressional statute.<\/p>\n\n<!-- 300x250 AD -->\n\n<p><strong>The Facts of the Navajo Nation Case,  and the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s Opinions in the Case<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The case, <em>Navajo Nation  v. U.S. Forest Service<\/em>, involves an effort by a group of Native  Americans to block the U.S. Forest Service&#8217;s plans to allow artificial snow  generated from recycled wastewater (containing small amounts of human waste) to  be made and placed on federal lands that are leased to ski operators, but which  also are used by the Native Americans for sacred rituals and activities. The plaintiff Native Americans contend that  use of such &#8220;dirty&#8221; snow desecrates the mountain, and thus the ceremonies they  hold on it, in violation of their religious sensibilities and rights under the  RFRA.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.ca9.uscourts.gov\/datastore\/opinions\/2007\/03\/12\/0615371.pdf\" rel=\"noopener\">A three-judge  panel of the Ninth Circuit ruled<\/a> in favor of the plaintiffs and  barred the Forest Service from allowing the recycled wastewater snow. But <a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-9th-circuit\/\" g rel=\"noopener\">an 11-judge en banc Ninth Circuit panel  undid that result,<\/a> and rejected the Native Americans&#8217; claim. Of particular importance, the en banc panel  held that RFRA did not protect the Native Americans in these circumstances  because RFRA&#8217;s threshold that must be surmounted before the statute offers any  protection \u2013 that a government action  &#8220;substantially burden the exercise&#8221; of someone&#8217;s religion \u2013 was not  implicated. The en banc panel  determined, largely out of a fear of a parade of horribles and a concern over  judicial overreaching, that a &#8220;substantial burden&#8221; does not exist unless  government has coerced, under threat of sanction, someone to act in violation  of his\/her religious principles, or conditioned a governmental benefit on  conduct that would violate a person&#8217;s religious convictions. <\/p>\n<p>It is this controversial definition  of the key statutory phrase &#8220;substantial burden&#8221; that many of the parties and  amicus curiae (friends of the Court) are doing battle over, in the papers filed  with the Supreme Court.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Difficulty with Defining What Is a  &#8220;Substantial Burden&#8221; Under RFRA<\/strong><br>\n    <strong>And the Problem with the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s  Answer<\/strong><\/p>\n<p> It is easy  to understand why the Ninth Circuit struggled to craft a working definition of  what constitutes a substantial burden under RFRA; the term&#8217;s meaning is not  self-evident. Moreover, <u>some<\/u> limiting definition of the term must be  found; it cannot be the case that any government regulation or decision that  has some attenuated consequence for the exercise of a religious practice  creates a cause of action under RFRA. So  identifying a substantial burden is a necessary &#8212; but necessarily hard &#8212; job.<\/p>\n<p> The  difficulty of the problem, however, cannot justify a court&#8217;s choosing a  seriously inadequate answer to solve it \u2013 and the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s  interpretation of RFRA in the <em>Navajo  Nation<\/em> case has some problems. What the court has done here is to formally  exclude one kind of burden from the coverage of RFRA. Again, the court held that government  interference with religious exercise <u>that does not coerce a practitioner&#8217;s  choice by threatening sanctions or denying benefits<\/u> requires no  justification from the government &#8212; regardless of how direct and heavy the  burden might be. Under that analysis, the state&#8217;s use of physical force and  power to prevent the exercise of religion can never support a claim under RFRA.<\/p>\n<p> Excluding  such cases from the coverage of RFRA, however, contributes nothing to solving  the real problem courts confront in interpreting RFRA \u2013 deciding when a burden  is too attenuated or insubstantial to warrant review under the statute. Under the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s standard, those  core issues remain unresolved for all the cases in which coercion can be  alleged. All that the Ninth Circuit has  accomplished is the rejection of one category of RFRA claims \u2013 and this  categorical rejection seems arbitrary, given the history and purpose of RFRA.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Key Legal Background: A Prior Supreme Court Case, and the Intent  Behind RFRA <\/strong><\/p>\n<p> To begin,  it is important to understand one of the key problems with the Supreme Court&#8217;s  decision in <em>Employment Division v. Smith<\/em> &#8212; the case that held that the free exercise clause of the Constitution  provides no protection against neutral laws of general applicability. This is the  case that led directly to RFRA&#8217;s enactment in Congress. One reason the Court&#8217;s ruling in <em>Smith <\/em>was so unsatisfactory to Congress  was that, under <em>Smith<\/em>, the government  could interfere with and prohibit religious exercise for completely trivial and  unimportant reasons. Freedom of religion did not need to be assigned any weight  at all in the government&#8217;s cost-benefit analysis. If there is one thing that  RFRA was enacted to change, it was a legal system where government could  cavalierly ignore the serious consequences of its action on religious practice.  That, however, is exactly what the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s interpretation of the  &#8220;substantial burden&#8221; language in RFRA permits. It allows the state to  physically control and prevent the exercise of religious for insignificant  reasons or, for all intents and purposes, for no legitimate reason at all.<\/p>\n<p> More  importantly, many of the specific religious liberty issues Congress identified  as reasons for enacting RFRA would fall outside of the statute&#8217;s coverage under  the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s test. One of the  concerns discussed by Congress when it explained the necessity of RFRA involved  government failures to respect religious beliefs about the conducting of  autopsies. Certain minority religions object to having autopsies performed on  adherents of their faith because bodily intrusion violates their beliefs about  the sanctity of the human form.  Obviously, however, government officials need not threaten legal  sanctions or the denial of benefits in order to perform an autopsy. Rather, they can simply seize the body of the  deceased and have the autopsy performed in a government morgue to which  offended co-religionists would be denied admittance. Under the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s standard, the  government&#8217;s rejection of religious objections regarding the handling of a  deceased family member&#8217;s body would not be deemed to substantially burden  religious exercise. That result seems  plainly wrong. <\/p>\n<p> It is also  clear that the Congress was concerned about the religious liberty of prison  inmates when it enacted RFRA. That  concern continued after the application of RFRA to state and local governments  was invalidated by the Supreme Court in <a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/521\/507.html\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>City of Boerne v. Flores<\/em><\/a>, and the  concern led directly to the enactment of the Religious Land Use and  Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) in 2000. Yet it is intrinsic to the  operation of prisons that many infringements of an inmate&#8217;s religious liberty  do not involve the threat of sanctions or the denial of benefits \u2013 and thus,  again, would not fall within the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s test. <\/p>\n<p>Prison authorities control all  aspects of prison life. They can deny religious books being shipped into the  prison and confiscate reading materials they consider unacceptable. Religious  symbols such as crosses and crucifixes can be confiscated. Authorities can  refuse to permit inmates to be released from their cells to attend religious  services. Grooming standards that  violate religious convictions can be imposed through physical force. Access to clergy can be limited and  controlled. In one noteworthy case,  officials even audiotaped an inmate&#8217;s sacramental confession to a Catholic  priest. <\/p>\n<p> None of  these actions by prison authorities clearly involve threats of legal sanction  or the denial of benefits, and thus none of these actions would implicate RFRA  under the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s approach. It  is hard to believe, however, that Congress did not intend for cases like these  to be actionable under RFRA or RLUIPA (whose relevant terms are very similar to  RFRA&#8217;s).<\/p>\n<p> Of course,  the fact that the action of prison authorities (or medical authorities  performing autopsies) is found to substantially burden religion does not  suggest that the burden cannot be justified.  Legitimate security concerns in the prison context (or investigatory  concerns where someone has died) often justify a decision by authorities that  burdens a person&#8217;s or a family&#8217;s ability to practice a faith. Congress was well aware of that reality when  it enacted RFRA and RLUIPA. The purpose  of these statutes was to ensure that the exercise of religion was not burdened  unnecessarily, not that the exercise wasn&#8217;t burdened at all. <\/p>\n<p>Thus, the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s  definition of substantial burden is problematic precisely because it  categorically prevents RFRA from being used to test the necessity of  interfering with a person&#8217;s exercise of his faith in a broad range of cases. <\/p>\n<p><strong>The Ninth Circuit&#8217;s Test Clashes  Sharply with the Supreme Court&#8217;s Approach In Its Only Substantive RFRA Application  Thus Far<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Indeed, the one case in which the  United States Supreme Court applied RFRA to federal government action, <a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/546\/418.html\" rel=\"noopener\"><em>Gonzales  v. O Centro Espirita Beneficente Uniao do Vegetal<\/em><\/a>, would be nothing  more than an exercise in futility under the <em>Navajo  Nation<\/em> definition of substantial burden.  In <em>O Centro<\/em>, a small religious  sect attempt to import hoasca<em>,<\/em> a  substance used to make a sacramental tea ingested by sect members. The plants from which the tea could be brewed  came only from the &#8220;Amazon region.&#8221;  Customs inspectors intercepted and seized a shipment of hoascathat had been sent to sect members  living in the United States because the plants contained a hallucinogen listed  and banned under the federal Controlled Substances Act (CSA). Customs officials threatened to prosecute  sect members for violating the CSA. The Supreme Court unanimously affirmed a  preliminary injunction prohibiting the government from enforcing the ban,  reasoning that the government had not demonstrated the sufficiently compelling  state interest required by RFRA to justify a substantial burden on religious  practice.<\/p>\n<p>Under the  Ninth Circuit&#8217;s analysis, government officials could not prosecute sect members  for importing or using <em>hoasca<\/em> for  religious purposes because RFRA would apply to block the threat of legal  sanctions against religious practitioners.  But the government does not have to prosecute anyone to enforce the Act  and prevent this religious practice. It  could instead simply authorize customs officials to continue to do exactly what  they had done in the <em>O Centro<\/em> case \u2013  to intercept and seize any shipments of <em>hoasca<\/em> into the United States. And according to  the Ninth Circuit, those actions could not be challenged under RFRA because  they do not involve the threat of legal sanction of the denial of  benefits. <\/p>\n<p> In other words, the fact that the  government knowingly makes it impossible for sect members to practice their  faith has no legal consequence under the Ninth Circuit approach. Under that  approach, the Supreme Court&#8217;s decision in <em>O  Centro<\/em> could be easily and effectively circumvented.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Ninth Circuit&#8217;s Test Is In Serious  Error, and the Court Exceeded Its Proper Role<\/strong><\/p>\n<p> Finally,  the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s truncated interpretation of what constitutes a substantial  burden is not only inconsistent with Congress&#8217; purposes in enacting RFRA and  Supreme Court caselaw; it also ignores a critical difference between the role  of the federal courts in applying RFRA and their role in interpreting the free  exercise clause of the First Amendment. <\/p>\n<p> In deciding what conduct by the  government invokes free exercise review, the courts have every reason to be  cautious in identifying and invalidating infringements of fundamental rights. The  consequences of constitutional errors are hard to monitor and the decisions  themselves are difficult to correct. As  UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh has argued, however, religious liberty  statutes are more easily modified and amended.  Congress can recognize and respond to new information and correct  statutory errors much more effectively than constitutional courts can alter  fundamental rights doctrine. Thus,  courts do not have to be as wary in interpreting religious liberty statutes as  they are in interpreting the First Amendment, and the Ninth Circuit need not  have been shy about implementing RFRA in a robust way.<\/p>\n<p> More  importantly, it is not the courts&#8217; job to repeal or amend statutes in the  process of interpreting them, even when the statutory terms are broad or hard  to effectuate. We believe the Ninth Circuit&#8217;s definition of substantial burden  is unreasonably restrictive, but even if we are wrong about this as a public  policy matter, one point should be clear:  From a separation of powers perspective, federal courts should not be  substituting their own narrow understanding of what constitutes a substantial  burden for the more expansive meaning that Congress intended. <\/p>\n<p> If Congress wants to deny Native  American religions, and other faiths, the opportunity to challenge government  decisions that physically prevent the practice of their religion under RFRA, it  knows how to accomplish that result through the legislative process. There is no good reason for the federal  courts to take on that responsibility as a matter of judicial interpretation. <\/p>\n<hr size=\"1\">\n<p class=\"authorfoot\">\n\n<!-- BEGIN AUTHORS FOOTNOTE -->\n<\/p>\n\n<p class=\"authorfoot\">\n<a name=\"bio\"><\/a>Vikram David Amar is Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and a professor of law at the University of California, Davis School of Law. He is a 1988 graduate of the Yale Law School, and a former clerk to Justice Harry Blackmun. He is a co-author, along with William Cohen and Jonathan Varat, of a major constitutional law casebook, and a co-author of several volumes of the Wright &amp; Miller treatise on federal practice and procedure. Before teaching, Professor Amar spent a few years at the firm of Gibson, Dunn &amp; Crutcher.<br>\nAlan Brownstein is a Professor of Law and the Boochever and Bird Endowed Chair for the Study and Teaching of Freedom and Equality at the University of California, Davis, School of Law.  He has participated in the preparation of amicus briefs in the Navajo Nation case at the certiorari stage.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n <\/div>\n<div class=\"was-this-helpful\">\n    <div\n            class=\"was-this-helpful__question-container\"\n            aria-labelledby=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n            role=\"group\"\n    >\n        <span\n                id=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__question fl-text-lg-bold\"\n        >Was this helpful?<\/span>\n        <button\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__button fl-text-sm\"\n                aria-label=\"Yes\"\n                value=\"yes\"\n        >\n            <span class=\"was-this-helpful__button-text fl-text-bold\">Yes<\/span>\n            <i class=\"was-this-helpful__button-icon\">\n                <svg width=\"22\" height=\"22\" viewBox=\"0 0 22 22\" fill=\"none\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\">\n                    <g id=\"thumbs-up\" 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