For-Profit Corporations, Free Exercise, and the HHS Mandate

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW
S. W. Gaylord
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, most employers must provide their employees with health insurance that covers all FDA approved contraceptive methods and sterilization procedures (the “HHS mandate”). Across the country, individuals, religious schools, and corporations have sued to enjoin the mandate, arguing, among other things, that it violates the free exercise clause of the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (“RFRA”). Federal district courts have reached conflicting decisions in the 15 cases decided to date, leaving the Third, Fourth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Tenth, and D.C. Circuits to sort out the complex relationship between the free exercise clause and laws, such as the HHS mandate, that are alleged to be neutral and generally applicable. But these cases are made even more difficult because of a specific claim that is raised in each case — that corporations can exercise religion under the First Amendment and RFRA. As several district courts have noted, “whether secular corporations can exercise religion is an open question.” This paper analyzes this novel and unresolved issue, arguing that, just as corporations can engage in free speech under Citizens United, for-profit corporations can exercise religion under the free exercise clause and RFRA. Although the Supreme Court has not addressed this specific issue, I argue that it has established rules for determining whether corporations can invoke particular constitutional rights and that, under these rules, corporations can invoke the protection of the free exercise clause. Several district courts have reached the opposite conclusion, while several others have avoided the issue altogether. Relying primarily on a single footnote in First Nat’l Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, the courts denying free exercise protection to for-profit corporations maintain that the free exercise of religion is a “purely personal” right that is limited to individuals and religious non-profit organizations. This paper contends, however, that a more detailed review of Bellotti, Citizens United, and the Court’s other decisions regarding the constitutional rights of corporations reveals that free exercise, like the freedom of speech, is not a “purely personal” right. Consequently, corporations — whether for-profit or non-profit — can claim its protection. Moreover, in the wake of Bellotti and Citizens United, neither the “profit motive” of a for-profit corporation nor the “religious nature” of religious organizations (e.g., churches) justifies limiting the free exercise clause only to individuals and non-profit religious organizations. Although many (perhaps most) corporations may choose not to engage in religious activities, there is no constitutional basis for precluding a priori all for-profit businesses from raising free exercise claims.
营利性公司、自由行使和卫生与公众服务部的授权
根据《患者保护和平价医疗法案》,大多数雇主必须为员工提供涵盖FDA批准的所有避孕方法和绝育程序的健康保险(“HHS授权”)。在全国范围内,个人、宗教学校和公司纷纷提起诉讼,要求禁止这项命令,理由之一是它违反了《第一修正案》和《宗教自由恢复法案》(“RFRA”)的自由行使条款。到目前为止,联邦地区法院在15起案件中做出了相互矛盾的裁决,这使得第三、第四、第六、第七、第八、第十和华盛顿特区巡回法院不得不理清自由行使条款与法律之间的复杂关系,比如卫生与公众服务部的授权,这些法律被认为是中立的,普遍适用的。但这些案件变得更加困难,因为在每个案件中都提出了一个具体的主张——公司可以根据《第一修正案》和《自由贸易法》行使宗教信仰。正如几个地区法院所指出的那样,“世俗公司是否可以行使宗教信仰是一个悬而未决的问题。”本文分析了这一新颖而未解决的问题,认为正如公司可以根据“联合公民”享有言论自由一样,营利性公司也可以根据“自由行使条款”和“RFRA”行使宗教信仰。虽然最高法院没有处理这一具体问题,但我认为,最高法院已经制定了规则,以确定公司是否可以援引特定的宪法权利,并且根据这些规则,公司可以援引自由行使条款的保护。几个地方法院得出了相反的结论,而其他几个地方法院则完全回避了这个问题。主要依据波士顿第一国民银行诉贝洛蒂案的一个脚注,法院否认对营利性公司的自由行使保护,认为宗教自由是一项“纯粹个人”权利,仅限于个人和宗教非营利组织。然而,本文认为,对贝洛蒂案、联合公民案和最高法院关于公司宪法权利的其他判决进行更详细的审查,就会发现,自由行使,就像言论自由一样,并不是一项“纯粹的个人”权利。因此,公司——无论是营利性还是非营利性——都可以要求它的保护。此外,在贝洛蒂案和联合公民案之后,营利性公司的“利润动机”和宗教组织(如教会)的“宗教性质”都不能成为将自由行使条款只限制于个人和非营利性宗教组织的理由。尽管许多(也许是大多数)公司可能选择不从事宗教活动,但没有宪法依据可以排除所有营利性企业先验地提出自由行使权利的主张。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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