WTB&TS v Stratton, Ohio . . . . Court Tran...

by nicolaou 1 Replies latest social current

  • nicolaou
    nicolaou

    Not sure if this has been posted already, my apologies if it has.

    Nic'
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    Watchtower Bible & Tract Society of New York, Inc. etc. v. Stratton, Ohio, et al.
    00-1737

    Appealed From: 6th Circuit Court of Appeals (240 F.3d 553)

    Oral Argument: Feb. 26, 2002

    Opinion Issued:

    Subject: 1st Amendment, door-to-door solicitations

    Question(s) presented: Does a municipal ordinance that requires one to obtain a permit prior to engaging in the door-to-door advocacy of a political cause and to display upon demand that permit, which contains the person's name, violate the 1st Amendment protection accorded to anonymous pamphleteering or discourse?
    Jehovah’s Witnesses is a religious denomination with 6 million members worldwide, some of whom use door-to-door canvassing as a method to preach their message and introduce people to the church. Those church members who go door-to-door have found canvassing a difficult path to walk in Stratton, Ohio.

    Stratton, a small town in eastern Ohio with a population of about 300, passed an ordinance in 1998 to regulate door-to-door canvassing and solicitation of private homes in the village. Those interested in going door-to-door to "sell, advertise, promote or explain any product, service, organization or cause" were required to register with the mayor’s office.

    The registration form required individuals to explain their cause and why they were canvassing, as well as list all residences they intended to call upon. Registration entailed no fee. Once registered, individuals would receive a permit from the Mayor and could canvass any private residence in Stratton between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., except for owners who filed No Solicitation Forms with the city, or homes with a "No Solicitation" sign on the property.

    The No Solicitation Form listed a number of organizations that a resident could keep from coming to his or her home by placing a check mark next to their name. The only religious organization on this list was Jehovah’s Witnesses.

    If individuals did not follow the rules of the ordinance, they could be charged with a fourth-degree misdemeanor.

    In June 1999, the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, on behalf of the Wellsville, Ohio Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses, filed for an injunction against the ordinance in U.S. District Court for Southern Ohio. Lawyers for the society said the village’s ordinance was unconstitutional and infringed upon the group’s 1st Amendment rights. The village maintained the ordinance was content neutral and put in place to prevent fraud and protect its citizens’ rights to privacy.

    The district court rejected most of the society’s claims in August 1999, but held that three of the provisions violated the Constitution: the 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. time constraint, the section of the No Solicitation reform that listed Jehovah’s Witnesses and the requirement that registrants list each residence they intend to visit. Stratton officials agreed to modify these three provisions. The district court also ordered the village to pay the society’s legal fees, saying the society prevailed on three issues and thus, was entitled. rmined that plaintiffs were a prevailing party and therefore entitled to attorneys' fees. The total in attorneys’ fees and costs amounted to $58,892.41.

    Both sides appealed, and on Feb. 20, 2001, a 6th Circuit Court of Appeals panel affirmed 2-1 the district court’s judgment.

    In finding that the ordinance did not violate against the society’s 1st Amendment rights, the majority found that the ordinance was content neutral and that Stratton did not "apply the ordinance unequally," wrote Justice Cornelia Kennedy.

    Paul Polidoro, a lawyer for the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, argued the ordinance was unconstitutionally overbroad and prevented Jehovah’s Witnesses members from engaging in political and/or religious speech.

    "In this ordinance, the right of an individual to engage in anonymous speech is gone," he said. "They have to go to the mayor or have a permit in their hands" to go door-to-door.

    Abraham Cantor, an attorney who represents the Village of Stratton in this case, disagreed.

    "It’s not overbroad," he said. "By the nature of the conduct, it is not anonymous."

    The majority agreed with the town’s position, stating that individuals who go "door-to-door to engage in political speech are not anonymous by virtue of the fact that they reveal a portion of their identities - their physical identities - to the residents they canvass."

    The society also contended the ordinance was unconstitutionally vague, meaning a normal person would not understand what the ordinance meant, specifically the definition of the word "cause." The court rejected this claim.

    In his dissent, though Justice Ronald Gilman agreed that the ordinance was not unconstitutionally vague and did not violate the free exercise rights of the Jehovah's Witnesses, he argued that the ordinance violated 1st Amendment speech rights "by burdening substantially more speech than is necessary to further the Village’s legitimate interests."

    Gilman noted that by subjecting noncommercial solicitation to its permit requirements in the name of preventing fraud, the ordinance burdened "not only those wishing to engage in sales transactions -- a possible avenue for fraud -- but also … those wishing to engage in political, religious, or social advocacy."

    On Oct. 15, 2001, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari in the case, and limited review to the second question, cited above, in the Watchtower Bible's petition.

    Attorneys in this case:
    For Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, Inc., et al.:
    Paul D. Polidoro
    Legal Department
    100 Watchtower Drive
    Patterson, NY 12563
    845-306-1000

    For Village of Stratton, Ohio, et al.:
    Abraham Cantor
    Abraham Cantor & Associates
    9930 Johnnycake Ridge Road
    Concord, OH 44060
    440-354-7749

    (This brief written by Stephanie Kuenn)

    http://www.do-not-call.org

  • nicolaou
    nicolaou

    WASHINGTON, May 23 (UPI) -- The Supreme Court is poised to begin its final month of the term with 31 cases still to be decided.

    http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=23052002-114618-7721r

    Do aggressive proselytizers have a free speech right to knock on your door and regale you, even though you live in a community that specifically bans such tactics?

    Lawyers for Jehovah's Witnesses argued before the Supreme Court earlier this term that an Ohio community ordinance designed to keep them from going door to door is unconstitutional.

    The ordinance requires a permit before anyone can advocate a cause in the manner favored by Jehovah's Witnesses -- knocking on every door they can and engaging whoever answers in a religious discussion.

    "Jehovah's Witnesses consider it part of their individual responsibility to follow Jesus' example and go from house to house to speak to people about the Gospel of Christ," a Supreme Court petition for the church group said, "in imitation of Jesus himself going from door to door to teach people about his message."

    But one person's religious practice may be another person's nuisance, and Jehovah's Witnesses have not been popular with the authorities in the Village of Stratton, Ohio.

    Jehovah's Witness ministers associated with the congregation of Wellsville, Ohio, "have experienced difficulties with village officials," their petition said.

    "In the early 1990s, a village policeman chased a group of Jehovah's Witnesses out of town, stating 'I could care less about your rights,'" the petition said.

    Stratton's mayor personally confronted four female Jehovah Witnesses as they were leaving the village in 1998.

    According to the petition, the mayor "told the Witnesses that they were not allowed to be in the village, that people had moved to Stratton with the understanding that they would not be bothered by Jehovah's Witnesses, and that, if they had been men, he would have taken them and put them in jail."

    The Witnesses took their case to federal court. A federal judge ruled for the village in 1999.

    Although a provision of the permit application was "onerous" -- requiring an applicant to supply a list of the houses he or she wants to visit -- the judge said village had agreed to provide the Witnesses with addresses, so he let that stand.

    The judge did rule that only allowing door-to-door canvassing from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. was unreasonable, and ordered that the ordinance be changed.

    A federal appeals court eventually upheld the judge, saying the ordinance was "content-neutral" -- it applied to anyone wanting to go door to door, not just Jehovah's Witnesses -- and was not unconstitutionally broad.

    The Jehovah's Witnesses then asked the Supreme Court to intervene, arguing in part that their free exercise of religion was being violated (No. 00-1737, Watchtower Bible and Tract etc. and Wellsville, Ohio, Congregation of JWs vs. Stratton).

    The Supreme Court, however, agreed only to hear argument on whether an ordinance requiring a permit before going door to door, and requiring a canvasser to display that permit with the canvasser's name, violates the First Amendment's protection for anonymous pamphleteering and discourse.

    The Supreme Court has consistently protected such anonymous interaction, most recently in 1995's McIntyre vs. Ohio Elections Commission and 1999's Buckley vs. American Constitutional Law Foundation.

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