Standing
Under
the Religion Clauses
Establishment Clause
Standing. To
establish standing under Article III, a plaintiff must establish
(1) that he has personally suffered some actual or threatened injury
as
the
result of the challenged conduct, (2) that the injury to the
plaintiff
can
be traced to the challenged conduct, and (3) that the injury is
likely
to
be redressed by a decision in the plaintiff's favor. This
requirement is part of the case or controversy requirement of
Article III of the Constitution. In addition to the Article III
constitutional requirements for standing, the Supreme Court has also
developed prudential limits on who may have federal court
standing. If a case is brought in state court, the Article III
standing doctrine
does not apply and each state can design its own rules for state
court
standing. However, the situation changes if a case that is
originally brought in
a state court is reviewed by the United States Supreme Court. For
the
Supreme Court to review a case on the merits, the case must satisfy
the Article III justiciability requirements including standing.
I. Economic Injury
A. Taxpayer standing
(1) In Flast v. Cohen, the
Supreme Court held that federal taxpayer status is a sufficient
basis
for standing to sue
in federal court to challenge taxing and spending programs enacted
by
Congress as violative of
the Establishment Clause. In this respect the Establishment
Clause is unique because ordinarily taxpayer status, under the
decision
in Frothingham v. Mellon,
is
an
insufficient basis to challenge Congressional actions as violative
of
provisions in the Constitution. This different treatment of
Establishment Clause challenges is because the
Establishment Clause is viewed as a specific limitation on the
federal
power to
tax and spend thereby satisfying the 2 part test of Flast v. Cohen. Under that
test:
(1) the taxpayer
must establish a logical link between that status and the type of
Congressional enactment attacked; and (2) the taxpayer must
establish a
nexus between that status and the precise nature of the
constitutional
infringement alleged. Applying that test, the Court determined that
spending programs enacted under Congress's Article I, Section 8
power
to spend for the general welfare satisfy the requirement of a
logical
link between taxpayer status and the type of Congressional enactment
attacked. It also found that there is a nexus between taxpayer
status
and a constitutional challenge based on the Establishment Clause. By
contrast to Flast,
the Flast test was not
satisfied in the Valley Forge
Christian College case because (1) the case did not involve
a
challenge to a Congressional exercise of the taxing and spending
power
under Article I, Section 8, but was instead a challenge to executive
branch action; and (2) the Congressional enactment that authorized
the
property donation was an exercise of power under the Property Clause
of
Article IV, Section 3 rather than an exercise of the taxing and
spending power under Article I, Section 8. In addition, the Flast
test was not satisfied in Hein
v. Freedom From Religion
Foundation,
Inc.
because Congress did not authorize the expenditure of funds
specifically for the challenged activity. Instead the challenged
activity was by the executive branch using general executive branch
appropriations. Moreover, the Court refused to find the Flast exception applicable to
Arizona's tax credit for taxpayer contributions to organizations
that
provided financial support to religious schools. The Court held in Arizona Christian School Tuition
Organization v. Winn that taxpayer standing under Flast was only applicable
to
challenging governmental
expenditures. Tax
credits did not fall into this category because the taxpayer rather
than the government was contributing the money even though the
government was indirectly funding the contribution by providing a
tax
credit. These narrow interpretations of Flast indictate that the Court is
unwilling to expand Flast beyond situations that are exactly
parallel
to the facts in that case.
(2) Despite the decision in Arizona
Christian
School Tuition Organization v. Winn, state taxpayer
status serves as a basis for standing for a federal
court challenge to state expenditures of funds as violative of the
Establishment Clause as long as the program being challenged is a
bona
fide spending program.
(3) Municipal taxpayer status serves as a basis for standing for a
federal court challenge to a municipal expenditure on Establishment
Clause grounds because of the direct relationship that exists
between
the city and its residents. The only requirements are that money
must have been spent by the municipality to fund the asserted
unconstitutional activity and the individual who sues must be a
taxpayer of the municipality whose actions are being
challenged. Disputes over whether municipal taxpayer status is
sufficient for standing can arise in
situations where the amount of money spent is only a de minimus
amount.
B. Other economic injuries as a basis for standing
Other economic injuries such as to competitors or others who suffer
economic losses as the result of government conduct that grants
economic benefits in violation of the Establishment Clause will also
serve as a basis for standing.
II. Noneconomic injury
In addition to economic injuries, standing in Establishment Clause
cases can be based on a noneconomic injury, but not on a solely
psychological injury (like being offended) such as the kind of
injury
the Court found inadequate in Valley
Forge. To serve as the basis for standing, the noneconomic
injury can be:
A. A change in behavior as a result of the asserted Establishment
Clause violation such as a decision to refrain from an activity that
the plaintiff has previously engaged in, or some other alteration in
the challenger’s lifestyle or activities. An example of a change
in behavior could be a change in the route traveled in order to
avoid a
religious symbol on public property.
B. A decision to give up the use and enjoyment of
government property such as a state park. This was the basis for
standing in ACLU v. Raban County
Chamber of Commerce where the presence of the cross
interfered with the plaintiff’s willingness to camp on state
property. This form of standing may also satisfy the requirement
of a change in behavior. However, since the plaintiffs in Raban County had never camped
in
the particular state park at issue prior to the installation of the
cross, it is more easily classified as a decision to forego use of
the
park rather than a change from prior behavior.
C. Significant exposure or direct contact with offensive conduct
can be the basis of standing. A change in behavior is not always
viewed
as necessary to establish a noneconomic injury. For example, in Van Orden v. Perry, the Texas
Ten
Commandments case, Van Orden walked by the Ten Commandments monument
when he used the law library in the Supreme Court Building. Even
though he continued to use the library on a frequent basis, despite
his
objections to the monument, he satisfied the standing
requirement. In this circumstance, standing is created because the
government has placed the challenger in the position where the
challenger either has to refrain from an activity the challenger
would
otherwise engage in (camping in a state park or walking down a
pathway
to enter a government building) to avoid an objectionable religious
symbol or activity or engage in the activity and be forced to be
exposed to a religious symbol or activity that the challenger finds
objectionable. Noneconomic injury is often the basis for standing
in cases where public school pupils are challenging a religious
practice sponsored by the school they attend such as Bible reading
in Schempp or graduation
prayer and
the students endure the discomfort of being present for unwelcome
religious activity.
Free Exercise Standing - In
Free Exercise challenges, standing is based on the fact that the
challenger has had a substantial burden (either direct or indirect)
placed on his or her ability to engage in a religious practice by
the
government. The
burden could be that continuing to engage in the religious practice
could result in the loss of government benefits, the risk of
criminal
or civil penalties, or some other substantial burden. Free Exercise
standing cannot be based on a general status such as taxpayer
status.
Instead, challengers must show their personal rights have been
interfered with because their religious freedom has been
substantially
burdened by the government's conduct.