Do the rights of religious freedom and free speech, as guaranteed in both the federal and the California Constitutions, exempt a medical clinic’s physicians from complying with the California Unruh Civil Rights Act’s prohibition against discrimination based on a person’s sexual orientation? The California Supreme Court says “No.”
Today, the California Supreme Court unanimously issued its long awaited ruling in Benitez v. North Coast Women’s Care Medical Group. This case involved, Guadalupe Benitez, 36, of Oceanside who said that the doctors treated her with fertility drugs and instructed her how to inseminate herself at home but told her that their religious beliefs prevented them from performing the procedure. One of the doctors referred her to another fertility specialist where she ultimately received treatment.
In issuing the decision, the California Supreme Court relied on the 1990 United States Supreme Court case Employment Division v. Smith, the California Supreme Court said that the law requiring physicians to treat was neutrally worded not designed to discriminate against any particular religious belief.
Further, the court referenced the fact that the physicians had originally claimed not to want to treat the lesbian couple because they were “unmarried,” not because they were lesbians. Lawyers for the physicians had reasoned that because gay marriage was not legal, that this marriage defense would stand under the theory that sexual orientation was a clearly protected class.
Regardless of one’s view of the outcome, the fact that the court used Smith as a basis for its decision is troubling because smith stands for the protection that the actual language of a statute will survive even if it has a discriminatory effect so long as it is worded neutrally and was not intended to discriminate. What this means is that a legislature can pass a discriminatory law, and if it meets these criteria, it can stand even when it has an adverse effect on a minority group.
Other applications of this law, which is becoming enshrined in American jurisprudence, would protect the state in any situation in which a group was inadvertently disadvantaged by a generally applicable law that appeared to be neutral on its face. In other words, if your beliefs preclude something that the law requires, you will not be protected even if you could be easily accommodated.
If you are a Seventh-day Adventist, for instance, and the law requires a professional test is required to be held on Saturday, you may have to choose between forfeiture and violating your religious beliefs. After all, the law is neutrally worded and was not designed to single you out. Although you may be accommodated, that is only due to the good graces of the organizers. Otherwise, the law requires no exception even if reasonable alternatives are available.
The Benitez court relied on the overly broad strokes of Smith to write a decision that will make it difficult for California employees to be exempted from those job duties that require them to act against their faith. When added to the requirements of Hardison v. TWA, the U.S. Supreme Court case that said that employers do not have to accommodate the religious beliefs of their employees if it costs more than a “di minimis” amount, America’s religious employees are going to have a much more difficult time receiving accommodation if their faith conflicts with their job duties.
Of course, this raises the interesting question of just who is being discriminated against. Is it the lesbian couple who seeks a common medical procedure, or is it the doctors who are forced to provide the procedure against their religious beliefs? What if the doctor is fired for refusing to provide the procedure?
We live in an age when rights conflict, and when both sides can legitimately claim discrimination. However, when the courts make these decisions, we can only hope that they are based on solid legal ground. This decision was overly broad and its effect will cut both ways.
You can read the full decision at
Aug 18 2008 |
S142892 [PDF][DOC] |
North Coast etc. v. Super. Ct. 8/18/08 SC |
I think that the government has no right to order any physician to perform treatment on any patient that they are not comfortable performing. I think that that this is very much crossing the line and that the government is taking over more and more of our individual freedoms. What is next?
I think that the government has no right to order any physician to perform treatment on any patient that they are not comfortable performing. I think that that this is very much crossing the line and that the government is taking over more and more of our individual freedoms. What is next?
Why do they have to make the law so complicated? What happen to doctors just doing what is expected of them as doctors? If I was in the patient situation, I would be so mad and so confuse I won’t know where to turn for help. Now I see there is a reason to why everyone should keep their religious beliefs to themselves.
Why do they have to make the law so complicated? What happen to doctors just doing what is expected of them as doctors? If I was in the patient situation, I would be so mad and so confuse I won’t know where to turn for help. Now I see there is a reason to why everyone should keep their religious beliefs to themselves.