Endres, Benjamin v. Indiana State Police , 334 F.3d 618 ( 2003 )


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  •                           In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________
    No. 02-1247
    BENJAMIN P. ENDRES, JR.,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    and
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Intervening Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    INDIANA STATE POLICE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ____________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division.
    No. 3:01-CV-0518—Robert L. Miller, Jr., Chief Judge.
    ____________
    No. 02-1377
    PATRICIA HOLMES,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    and
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Intervening Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    MARION COUNTY OFFICE OF FAMILY AND CHILDREN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    2                                     Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    ____________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
    No. IP 00-0677-C-M/S—Larry J. McKinney, Chief Judge.
    ____________
    ARGUED NOVEMBER 1, 2002—DECIDED JUNE 27, 2003
    ____________
    Before BAUER, POSNER, and EASTERBROOK, Circuit
    Judges.
    EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. Benjamin Endres lost his
    job with the Indiana State Police after he refused to work
    at a casino, an enterprise that contravenes his religious
    beliefs. Patricia Holmes, an employee of Indiana’s child-
    welfare system, took two days of paid leave rather than
    comply with a directive to remove a headwrap required
    by her faith. Endres and Holmes have sued under Title
    VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, contending that
    Indiana discriminated against them on account of their reli-
    gion. Plaintiffs rely on a definition in §701(j) of that Act,
    42 U.S.C. §2000e(j), which provides that religion “includes
    all aspects of religious observance and practice, as well
    as belief, unless an employer demonstrates that he is
    unable to reasonably accommodate to an employee’s or
    prospective employee’s religious observance or practice
    without undue hardship on the conduct of the employer’s
    business.”
    Both defendants concede that they have a duty not
    to discriminate against any religious faith but rely on
    Employment Division v. Smith, 
    494 U.S. 872
     (1990), for the
    proposition that they need not accommodate religiously
    inspired practices adversely affected by rules that are
    neutral with respect to religion. To the extent an accom-
    modation requirement extends beyond the first amend-
    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377                                     3
    ment, defendants insist, it rests on the Constitution’s com-
    merce clause and not on §5 of the fourteenth amendment.
    That does not undermine §701(j)’s validity as applied to
    state employees, see Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan
    Transit Authority, 
    469 U.S. 528
     (1985), but does affect
    where litigation must occur—for, when Congress acts only
    under the commerce power, the eleventh amendment
    permits states to insist that suit be in state court. Compare
    Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, 
    427 U.S. 445
     (1976), with Seminole
    Tribe v. Florida, 
    517 U.S. 44
     (1996). In Boerne v.
    Flores, 
    521 U.S. 507
     (1997), the Court concluded that the
    Religious Freedom Restoration Act, 42 U.S.C. §2000bb to
    §2000bb-4, exceeds the power granted by §5 and therefore
    may not support a private action in federal court against
    a state. Defendants submit that §701(j), which like the
    RFRA requires accommodation rather than neutrality, also
    is not §5 legislation. After the United States intervened
    to defend the constitutionality of Title VII, each district
    judge rejected Indiana’s argument and held that litigation
    may proceed in federal court. Endres v. Indiana State
    Police, No. 3:01-CV-0518 (N.D. Ind. Dec. 28, 2001) (unpub-
    lished order); Holmes v. Marion County Office of Family and
    Children, 
    184 F. Supp. 2d 828
     (S.D. Ind. 2002). Defendants
    took interlocutory appeals. See Lapides v. University of
    Georgia, 
    535 U.S. 613
     (2002); Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer
    Authority v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., 
    506 U.S. 139
     (1993). We
    consolidated the cases for briefing and argument.
    I.
    Endres joined the State Police in 1991. After Indiana
    began to license casinos, the State Police designated
    some of its officers as Gaming Commission agents. In
    March 2000 Endres was assigned to a full-time position
    as an agent at the Blue Chip Casino in Michigan City,
    Indiana. Endres worships at the Community Baptist
    4                                   Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    Church in South Bend; he and other congregants believe
    they must neither gamble nor help others to do so, be-
    cause games of chance are sinful. Endres told the
    State Police that providing law-enforcement services at a
    casino would violate his religious beliefs because it
    would facilitate gambling. He asked for a different as-
    signment; the State Police declined. Endres then refused
    to report for duty and was fired for insubordination. The
    record does not reflect why Endres was deputed as a
    Gaming Commission agent, but he does not contend that
    this occurred because of, rather than in spite of, his reli-
    giously based opposition to gambling. See Personnel
    Administrator of Massachusetts v. Feeney, 
    442 U.S. 256
    (1979). Nor did the State Police hold his views against
    him; it responded to his deeds, not his faith, and Endres
    does not contend that he was treated more severely than
    he would have been had he refused the same assignment
    for secular reasons. As a result, neither the posting nor the
    decision not to accommodate Endres’s desire for differ-
    ent duties violated the free exercise clause of the first
    amendment, as Smith understands that clause.
    Before taking up the question whether §701(j) is an
    exercise of §5 powers, we first inquire whether §701(j)
    obliges states to afford the sort of accommodation that
    Endres requested. A negative answer will enable the
    court to avoid a constitutional issue, which makes it
    prudent to follow the model that the Supreme Court
    established in Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 201 (2001), for
    qualified-immunity appeals by state actors: determine
    whether the complaint states a claim before inquiring
    whether the defendants have immunity. Because the
    eleventh amendment does not curtail subject-matter
    jurisdiction (if it did, states could not consent to litigate
    in federal court, as Lapides holds that they may), a court
    is free to tackle the issues in this order, when it makes
    sense to do so, without violating the rule that jurisdic-
    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377                                     5
    tional issues must be resolved ahead of the merits. See
    Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. United States
    ex rel. Stevens, 
    529 U.S. 765
    , 778-80 (2000).
    Endres contends that §701(j) gives law-enforcement
    personnel a right to choose which laws they will enforce,
    and whom they will protect from crime. Many officers
    have religious scruples about particular activities: to give
    just a few examples, Baptists oppose liquor as well as
    gambling, Roman Catholics oppose abortion, Jews and
    Muslims oppose the consumption of pork, and a few
    faiths (such as the one at issue in Smith) include halluci-
    nogenic drugs in their worship and thus oppose legal
    prohibitions of those drugs. If Endres is right, all of these
    faiths, and more, must be accommodated by assigning
    believers to duties compatible with their principles. Does
    §701(j) require the State Police to assign Unitarians to
    guard the abortion clinic, Catholics to prevent thefts
    from liquor stores, and Baptists to investigate claims that
    supermarkets mis-weigh bacon and shellfish? Must prosti-
    tutes be left exposed to slavery or murder at the hands of
    pimps because protecting them from crime would en-
    courage them to ply their trade and thus offend almost
    every religious faith?
    The Supreme Court held in Trans World Airlines, Inc. v.
    Hardison, 
    432 U.S. 63
    , 84 (1977), that §701(j) does not
    require an accommodation that would cause more than
    minimal hardship to the employer or other employees. See
    also Ansonia Board of Education v. Philbrook, 
    479 U.S. 60
    ,
    67-69 (1986). Juggling assignments to make each compati-
    ble with the varying religious beliefs of a heterogeneous
    police force would be daunting to managers and difficult
    for other officers who would be called on to fill in for
    the objectors. Whether or not a paramilitary organiza-
    tion could accommodate task-specific conscientious objec-
    tion without undue hardship, however, the demand
    would not be reasonable—and §701(j) calls only for reason-
    6                                   Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    able accommodations. Reasonableness and the avoid-
    ance of undue hardship are distinct. Cf. Vande Zande v.
    Wisconsin Department of Administration, 
    44 F.3d 538
     (7th
    Cir. 1995) (discussing the difference between “reasonable”
    accommodation and “undue hardship” under the Americans
    with Disabilities Act). Selective objection to some of the
    employer’s goals raises problems on the “reasonableness”
    branch as well as the “undue hardship” branch. See Reed v.
    Great Lakes Cos., No. 02-3371 (7th Cir. May 30, 2003).
    This is the third time we have had to consider how §701(j)
    applies to requests by law-enforcement personnel to
    choose which crimes they will investigate and which
    potential victims they will protect. In Ryan v. Department
    of Justice, 
    950 F.2d 458
     (7th Cir. 1991), an FBI agent
    claimed a right to be free of any assignment concerning
    nonviolent opposition to military activities—such as, for
    example, protesters who vandalize military installations,
    see United States v. Urfer, 
    287 F.3d 663
     (7th Cir. 2002), or
    pour blood on military records, see United States v.
    Berrigan, 
    437 F.2d 750
     (4th Cir. 1971). Agent Ryan’s
    views stemmed from the U.S. Bishops’ Pastoral Letter on
    War and Peace; his sincerity was not in doubt. Nonethe-
    less, we held, §701(j) did not protect him from discharge
    for insubordination:
    It is difficult for any organization to accommodate
    employees who are choosy about assignments; for
    a paramilitary organization the tension is even
    greater. Conscientious objectors in the military seek
    discharge, which accommodates their beliefs and
    the military’s need for obedience. Ryan received
    discharge but does not want it. He wants to be
    an agent and to choose his assignments too. With
    good will all around, and flexibility on the part of
    Ryan’s fellow agents, it just might be possible to
    make a go of it. Title VII does not, however, compel
    the FBI to attempt this. Legal institutions lack the
    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377                                       7
    sense of nuance that will tell an experienced agent
    how far the rules may be bent without injury to the
    FBI’s mission. Compelled, as it is by Title VII, to
    have one rule for all of the diverse religious beliefs
    and practices in the United States, the FBI may
    choose to be stingy with exceptions lest the de-
    mand for them overwhelm it.
    
    950 F.2d at 462
    . Our second case was Rodriguez v. Chicago,
    
    156 F.3d 771
     (7th Cir. 1998). Rodriguez, like Ryan a
    Roman Catholic, refused to protect abortion clinics and
    their clients. Again the sincerity of his views was unques-
    tioned; again the officer lost, this time because an accom-
    modation had been offered in the form of an opportunity
    to transfer to a precinct without abortion clinics (which
    avoided the need to determine whether the offer had
    been required). Chief Judge Posner filed a concurring
    opinion addressing the question that the majority had
    ducked and concluding, in part on the authority of Ryan,
    that agencies such as police and fire departments de-
    signed to protect the public from danger may insist that
    all of their personnel protect all members of the pub-
    lic—that they leave their religious (and other) views be-
    hind so that they may serve all without favor on religious
    grounds. That is, after all, an obligation both state law
    and the Constitution fasten on the police. If police and
    fire departments must enforce the law and protect poten-
    tial victims free of religious favoritism, then they may
    insist that all members of their forces (volunteers rather
    than conscripts) do their parts in fulfilling this duty.
    “[P]ublic protectors such as police and firefighters must
    be neutral in providing their services.” Shelton v. University
    of Medicine & Dentistry, 
    223 F.3d 220
    , 228 (3d Cir. 2000).
    Perhaps one could say that Ryan does not compel
    this conclusion; agent Ryan had been offered one form of
    accommodation (a swap of assignments with a fellow agent),
    and officer Endres lacked any similar way out. Yet what
    8                                    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    principally led to Ryan’s discharge (as opposed to lesser
    discipline) was his failure to follow a direct order, coupled
    with a claim of entitlement in the future to choose
    which crimes would be investigated and which potential
    victims protected. Endres has made the same claim of
    entitlement as Ryan did; it is, we hold, a claim that it
    would be unreasonable to require any police or fire de-
    partment to tolerate.
    Law-enforcement agencies need the cooperation of all
    members. Even if it proves possible to swap assignments
    on one occasion, another may arise when personnel are
    not available to cover for selective objectors, or when (as
    in Hardison) seniority systems or limits on overtime cur-
    tail the options for shuffling personnel. Beyond all of this
    is the need to hold police officers to their promise to en-
    force the law without favoritism—as judges take an oath
    to enforce all laws, without regard to their (or the liti-
    gants’) social, political, or religious beliefs. Firefighters
    must extinguish all fires, even those in places of worship
    that the firefighter regards as heretical. Just so with police.
    The public knows that its protectors have a private
    agenda; everyone does. But it would like to think
    that they leave that agenda at home when they
    are on duty—that Jewish policemen protect neo-
    Nazi demonstrators, that Roman Catholic police-
    men protect abortion clinics, that Black Muslim
    policemen protect Christians and Jews, that fun-
    damentalist Christian policemen protect noisy
    atheists and white-hating Rastafarians, that Mor-
    mon policemen protect Scientologists, and that
    Greek-Orthodox policemen of Serbian ethnicity
    protect Roman Catholic Croats. We judges certainly
    want to think that U.S. Marshals protect us from
    assaults and threats without regard to whether, for
    example, we vote for or against the pro-life position
    in abortion cases.
    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377                                    9
    Rodriguez, 
    156 F.3d at 779
     (Posner, C.J., concurring). And,
    we add, that Baptist policemen protect gamblers from
    theft and fraud (and casino operators from sticky-fingered
    gamblers and employees). Cf. Gillette v. United States,
    
    401 U.S. 437
     (1971) (selective conscientious objection
    does not excuse military service).
    Endres advanced a claim under 
    42 U.S.C. §1983
     as well
    as one under Title VII. The Indiana State Police, as a unit
    of state government, is not a “person” as §1983 uses that
    term and therefore is not amenable to a suit for damages
    under that statute. See Will v. Michigan Department
    of State Police, 
    491 U.S. 58
     (1989). There is no point in
    remanding to allow Endres to fix this problem by adding
    other defendants. His claim under the free exercise clause
    is incompatible with Smith, and only §701(j) offered any
    prospect of success. The district court’s disposition of
    Endres’s suit therefore is reversed outright; his complaint
    fails to state a claim on which relief may be granted.
    II
    Holmes has a much better claim for accommodation. Her
    complaint, the only thing we have to go on, alleges: “August
    13, 1998, I wore a geles (headwrap) as part of my religious
    practice. My supervisor, Teresa Howard, informed me if
    I didn’t remove my headgear I would be written up for
    insubordination for violating a dress code policy. I in-
    formed Ms. Howard that due to religious reasons I could
    not take my geles off. I had to take two vacation days to
    avoid being disciplined.” Although the Constitution does
    not compel a public employer to allow religious head-
    coverings that violate neutral dress codes, see Goldman
    v. Weinberger, 
    475 U.S. 503
     (1986); Menora v. Illinois
    High School Association, 
    683 F.2d 1030
     (7th Cir. 1982),
    toleration of religious diversity in this respect is a wise
    policy in a pluralistic society. See United States v. James,
    10                                  Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    
    328 F.3d 953
    , 957-58 (7th Cir. 2003). Accommodation
    would be reasonable. Whether Indiana could establish
    “undue hardship” is not at issue this early in the case. It
    is enough to say that the complaint survives any chal-
    lenge under Rule 12(b)(6), so we must decide whether
    further litigation takes place in state rather than fed-
    eral court.
    A
    Before doing this, however, we need to say more about
    our own jurisdiction. There are two potential problems,
    even taking as given the holding of Lapides and Puerto
    Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Authority that a state’s invoca-
    tion of the eleventh amendment normally permits an
    interlocutory appeal.
    The first is that the case is in federal court to stay.
    Holmes alleged, after the language we have quoted: “Other
    employees wore headgear or hats and were not threat-
    ened as I was.” That disparate-treatment claim does not
    depend on the accommodation rule in §701(j). Indiana
    concedes that it may be litigated in federal court, because
    Title VII is §5 legislation to the extent it enforces the
    Constitution’s own rule against religious discrimination.
    One may wonder what sense it makes to entertain an
    interlocutory appeal about a single line of legal argu-
    ment even though another legal theory requires the same
    defendant to litigate in the same court no matter how the
    appeal comes out. Holmes advances only one claim for
    relief, supported by multiple legal theories, each of which
    (if successful) would lead to the same money damages:
    two days’ pay. But Behrens v. Pelletier, 
    516 U.S. 299
    , 311-12
    (1996), says that an interlocutory immunity appeal may
    contest a single theory of liability, even though success will
    not end the case, at least if the potential relief differs—and
    Holmes’s victory on an accommodation theory would lead to
    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377                                    11
    prospective relief different from what would follow victory
    on a disparate-treatment theory. After Behrens, the fact
    that a defendant is not asserting an unqualified “right not
    to be tried in federal court” does not preclude an interlocu-
    tory appeal based on a claim of immunity.
    Second, and more complex, is the question whether the
    Marion County Office of Family and Children, the defen-
    dant in Holmes’s suit, is the State of Indiana. If, as its
    name implies, it is a unit of county rather than state
    government, then it gets no benefit from the eleventh
    amendment, see Lincoln County v. Luning, 
    133 U.S. 529
    (1890), and is amenable to suit in federal court whether or
    not §701(j) “enforces” the fourteenth amendment. See
    University of Alabama v. Garrett, 
    531 U.S. 356
    , 368 (2001).
    Twenty-five years ago we ruled that Indiana’s county
    welfare departments are not “the state” for purposes of the
    eleventh amendment. See Mackey v. Stanton, 
    586 F.2d 1126
    , 1130-31 (7th Cir. 1978). In 1986 Indiana revised
    the organization of its child-welfare system; county wel-
    fare departments became county offices of family and
    children, and their workers became state employees. Baxter
    v. Vigo County School Corp., 
    26 F.3d 728
    , 732-33 (7th
    Cir. 1994), holds that these changes do not affect Mackey’s
    conclusion: these organizations still are units of local
    rather than state government, principally because the
    money to pay for child-welfare services comes from local
    taxes.
    Relying on J.A.W. v. Indiana, 
    687 N.E.2d 1202
     (Ind.
    1997), the state asks us to overrule Baxter. The Supreme
    Court of Indiana concluded in J.A.W. that we misunder-
    stood how the state’s child-welfare system is organized
    after the 1986 legislation. That law, J.A.W. concluded, made
    all family-welfare officials full-fledged state employees in
    a chain of command that extends to the Governor. All of
    these workers are paid directly from the state treasury.
    12                                  Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    County offices are part of the state in such a structure
    in the same way the Indianapolis office of the Department
    of Health and Human Services is part of the federal
    government. Some taxes to raise funds for welfare bene-
    fits are collected at the local level, but J.A.W. holds that
    the county acts in this respect as an agent of the state:
    “county governments were largely rendered tax collec-
    tors for the State” (687 N.E.2d at 1213). “When the county
    departments were transformed into subordinate agencies
    of the state[ ] in 1986, the county governments became—
    with respect to these activities—financial agents of the
    state. We so hold as a matter of state law.” Id. at 1215.
    Indiana’s system brings to mind the way the United
    States apportioned direct taxes among the states before
    the sixteenth amendment. Sharing of authority among
    units of government complicates both practical admin-
    istration and legal characterization. Even if as a matter
    of state law the counties act as agents of the state in rais-
    ing and remitting revenues, it remains a matter of fed-
    eral law whether this makes each county’s department
    part of the state. See Hess v. Port Authority Trans-Hudson
    Corp., 
    513 U.S. 30
     (1994). The dispositive question is
    more “who pays?” than “who raised the money?”. See
    University of California v. Doe, 
    519 U.S. 425
     (1997) (if state
    pays, the fact that the money came to the state from the
    federal Treasury does not matter). We need not decide
    whether J.A.W. alone would cause us to overturn the
    holding of Baxter, however, because Indiana changed its
    law again in 2000.
    Baxter relied principally on I.C. 12-19-3-2, which estab-
    lished a welfare fund in each county. The fund was raised
    by a tax on all taxable property in the county, plus the
    issuance of bonds secured by future property taxes, see I.C.
    12-19-3-12 through 12-19-3-16. These provisions were
    repealed effective January 1, 2000, by I.C. 12-19-1-21.
    Counties still have the ability to levy taxes to fund certain
    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377                                      13
    services (the fund is called the “family and children’s fund”),
    but that money is used only for “child services.” I.C. 12-19-
    7-3. “Child services” is a defined term, see I.C. 12-19-7-1,
    that does not include any personnel or administrative
    costs. These come exclusively from the state treasury. See
    I.C. 12-19-1-8 and 12-19-1-9. The damages Holmes seeks
    therefore would be paid by the state itself. (The events
    of which she complains occurred in 1998, but Indiana
    charges damages against current appropriations.) The
    combination of J.A.W. and the 2000 legislation leads us to
    conclude that county offices of family and children in
    Indiana now must be classified as part of the state for
    purposes of the eleventh amendment. This does not re-
    quire the overruling of Baxter, which dealt with super-
    seded legislation. It is enough to say that the statutes
    now in force make county offices part of the state, as J.A.W.
    held and as the formal organization chart now shows them.
    B
    Thus we arrive at the question whether a claim against
    a state, based on the accommodation clause of §701(j),
    may be litigated in federal court. The parties’ dispute
    concerns venue, not substance: it is the validity of §701(a),
    to the extent it authorizes private parties to sue a state
    in federal court, and not the validity of §701(j), that is
    at issue—for legislation based on the commerce clause
    may be applied to states (as employers) via suits brought
    by the federal government in federal court, or via private
    suits in state courts that are already open to litigation
    against the state. See Alden v. Maine, 
    527 U.S. 706
     (1999).
    Indiana’s argument is a simple one. Section 5 of the
    fourteenth amendment authorizes Congress to “enforce” the
    other provisions of that amendment. A requirement of
    accommodation does not “enforce” the free exercise clause
    (applied to the states by §1 of the fourteenth amendment),
    14                                 Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    for Smith holds that a state complies with the free exer-
    cise clause by maintaining neutrality toward religiously
    motivated practices. Accommodation means departure
    from neutrality, and Boerne accordingly holds that the
    Religious Freedom Restoration Act is not based on the
    power to “enforce” the fourteenth amendment. In Boerne
    not a single Justice thought that a statutory demand for
    accommodation could be deemed a law to “enforce” the free
    exercise clause as Smith had interpreted it; the only
    seriously debated question was whether to overrule Smith
    (which the Court did not do). Likewise Garrett holds that
    the Americans with Disabilities Act, to the extent it re-
    quires accommodation rather than disregard of disabil-
    ities, does not rest on the §5 enforcement power. See also
    Erickson v. Northeastern Illinois University, 
    207 F.3d 945
     (7th Cir. 2000). Indiana asks us to equate accom-
    modation under §701(j) with accommodation under the
    RFRA and the ADA.
    Plaintiffs and the United States reply that §701(j) can
    be enforcement legislation even though it departs from
    the Constitution’s own rules, provided that it is “congruent
    and proportional” to them—in other words, that it is a
    reasonable way to prevent evasions of constitutional rules.
    See Nevada Department of Human Resources v. Hibbs, 
    123 S. Ct. 1972
     (2003), which holds that the family-leave
    provisions of the Family and Medical Leave Act may be
    sustained under the §5 power because they root out sex-
    based stereotypes. The Court stressed in Hibbs that
    Congress compiled a legislative record showing that
    many states used to discriminate explicitly on account of
    sex and may continue to do so (either subconsciously
    or deliberately but in disguise) in the absence of preven-
    tive legislation. Family leave is “congruent” to the consti-
    tutional rule because designed to reduce the scope for
    stereotypical thinking and “proportional” because it im-
    poses a modest requirement: family leave is limited in
    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377                                   15
    time and is unpaid. Limits built into §701(j) satisfy the
    proportionality element of this analysis: §701(j) demands
    much less of a state than the RFRA did (and less than the
    FMLA does, too). The RFRA demanded that the state show a
    compelling interest, while under Hardison even a slight
    burden is “undue hardship.” Yet the employer’s burden
    under §701(j) is identical to that under the ADA, which
    Garrett held to be unsupported by §5. So we must inquire
    whether §701(j) is “congruent” to the free exercise clause,
    even though the RFRA was not (and the ADA’s accommoda-
    tion rule has been held not congruent to the equal protec-
    tion clause).
    The idea behind “congruence” is that Congress may
    respond to a history of concealable violations by adopt-
    ing precautionary rules that reduce either the chance of
    evasion or the influence of lingering stereotypical beliefs.
    Congress can’t change the constitutional rule of decision,
    but it may add teeth so that the Constitution’s rule has
    practical bite. Many violations of the equal protection
    clause are concealable, for disparate impact is not action-
    able, and the disparate-treatment rule requires proof
    of intent to use the forbidden characteristic. See, e.g.,
    Washington v. Davis, 
    426 U.S. 229
     (1976). When stereo-
    typical thinking underlies a decision, the line between
    disparate treatment and disparate impact blurs, and it
    may be difficult indeed to prove a claim. The Court held
    in Hibbs that, when a history of real discrimination
    has been documented, §5 permits Congress to address
    established patterns of stereotypical thinking without
    requiring proof of discriminatory intent.
    Section 701(j) does not fit that model. Discrimination by
    public employers against their employees’ religiously
    inspired practices does not have the same history as
    discrimination on account of race or sex, and states rarely
    have resorted to legislation with a veneer of neutrality
    designed to mask a forbidden discriminatory plan. Church
    16                                  Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    of Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. Hialeah, 
    508 U.S. 520
     (1993),
    offers one of the few examples—and as it was not enough
    to persuade the Court that the RFRA matches a constitu-
    tional problem, it is hard to see why §701(j) would be
    congruent to a constitutional problem. (Note that Lukumi
    Babalu Aye itself had nothing to do with employment
    by state agencies.) Hibbs stressed that, before enacting
    the FMLA, Congress had compiled a record of subtle sex
    discrimination reflected in employers’ leave policies. Be-
    fore enacting Title VII, Congress had not compiled such
    a record of subtle discrimination against religious prac-
    tices. In 1964 the legislature concentrated on race dis-
    crimination; religion and sex were afterthoughts. There
    was no legislative record at all in the Senate, where the
    bill was not referred to committee, lest it be bottled up
    by opponents.
    The United States concedes that before enacting Title
    VII Congress did not compile any legislative record on the
    question whether states were violating their constitu-
    tional obligations with respect to religious practices in
    public workplaces. If the history were written elsewhere
    for all to see, as the history of race and sex discrimination
    is, then the lack of a legislative record could not matter.
    Often a “legislative record” reflects only the ability of
    advocacy groups to have favorable tidbits recited by tame
    witnesses during staged hearings. Members of Congress
    are not professional historians; they do not conduct schol-
    arly research or even make findings after the fashion of
    juries. Legislative “records” are compiled but not eval-
    uated, voted on, or presented to the President (or the
    judiciary) for approval. Section 5 does not condition legisla-
    tive power on the ability of interest groups or committee
    chairmen to ladle anecdotes into hearing transcripts.
    Legislative power under §5 depends on the state of the
    world, not the state of the Congressional Record.
    Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377                                    17
    Yet the Executive Branch did not file in this court a
    brief that supplies the details missing from the legisla-
    tive record; nor does the United States’ brief point to
    any scholarly writings that illuminate the history. We
    have been given no reason whatever to think that subtle,
    hard-to-catch, discrimination against religious practices
    is now, or ever has been, a problem in state employ-
    ment. Although hostility to Catholicism was common
    in many states during the nineteenth century, and some
    states adopted local versions of the Blaine Amendment, see
    Mitchell v. Helms, 
    530 U.S. 793
    , 828-29 (2000) (plurality
    opinion), that period was behind us long before the en-
    actment of Title VII. For much of the twentieth century,
    public employers counteracted religious discrimination
    in the private sector, hiring those who had difficulty find-
    ing private jobs suited to their skills. The foundation for
    a decision such as Hibbs is missing with respect to §701(j).
    Logic does not furnish what history lacks. An accommoda-
    tion requirement does not reinforce the constitutional
    approach; to the contrary, neutrality (which is both neces-
    sary to avoid disparate treatment and, under Smith,
    sufficient to avoid any violation) differs substantially from
    accommodation. Neutrality is blind to religion; accom-
    modation requires consciousness of religion and entails
    a demand that believers and non-believers receive differ-
    ent treatment. One Justice believes that, for this reason,
    accommodation is itself a violation of the establish-
    ment clause. See Boerne, 
    521 U.S. at 536-37
     (Stevens, J.,
    concurring). Though this is a minority view, all of the
    other Justices recognize that there is a difference and a
    potential tension between an anti-discrimination rule
    and an accommodation requirement. So in the absence
    of some need to use accommodation to counteract evasions
    of the anti-discrimination principle, §701(j) cannot be
    called an ancillary rule that is congruent with the consti-
    tutional norm that Congress is entitled to enforce. This
    18                                Nos. 02-1247 & 02-1377
    means that §701(j) rests on the commerce clause alone,
    and that §701(a) therefore may not be used to compel a
    state to defend in federal court a private suit seeking
    accommodation of a religious practice. Holmes has not
    named any state official as a defendant in order to seek
    prospective relief, contrast Bruggeman v. Blagojevich, 
    324 F.3d 906
    , 912-13 (7th Cir. 2003) (discussing the applica-
    tion of Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
     (1908)), so all varia-
    tions of the accommodation theory belong in state court.
    The decision of the district court in Endres is reversed,
    and that case is remanded with instructions to enter
    judgment for the State Police on the merits. The decision
    of the district court in Holmes is vacated, and that case
    is remanded with instructions to dismiss that portion of
    the complaint that deals with failure to accommodate,
    while retaining that portion of the complaint that deals
    with disparate treatment.
    A true Copy:
    Teste:
    ________________________________
    Clerk of the United States Court of
    Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
    USCA-02-C-0072—6-27-03
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 02-1247

Citation Numbers: 334 F.3d 618

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 6/27/2003

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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