Supreme Court Backs Door to Door Solicitors

by DevonMcBride 4 Replies latest jw friends

  • DevonMcBride
    DevonMcBride

    WASHINGTON (June 17) - The Constitution protects the right of missionaries, politicians and others to knock on doors without first getting permission from local authorities, the Supreme Court ruled Monday.

    The court struck down a local law that leaders of a small Ohio town said was meant to protect elderly residents from being bothered at home - a law challenged by the Jehovah's Witnesses, whose religion calls for doorstep proselytizing.

    With two weeks left in the court term, the justices still have more than a dozen high-profile cases to decide, including legal disputes involving the death penalty and government vouchers for church schools.

    In other cases decided Monday, the justices:

    - Ruled that police who want to look for drugs or evidence of other crimes do not have to first inform public transportation passengers of their legal rights. The court rejected arguments that passengers, confined to small spaces, might feel coerced.

    - Decided that the Internal Revenue Service can use estimates of cash tips received by restaurant staff to make sure it is collecting enough Social Security taxes from their employers.

    - Rejected arguments that Texas redistricting hurt Hispanics. The justices, without hearing arguments, affirmed congressional and state legislative boundaries that favor Republicans.

    In the doorstep-solicitation case, by a vote of 8 to 1, the court reasoned that the First Amendment right to free speech includes the entitlement to take a message directly to someone's door, and that the right cannot be limited by a requirement to register by name ahead of time.

    ''The mere fact that the ordinance covers so much speech raises constitutional concerns,'' Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for himself and Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, Anthony M. Kennedy, David H. Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer.

    ''It is offensive, not only to the values protected by the First Amendment, but to the very notion of a free society, that in the context of everyday public discourse a citizen must first inform the government of her desire to speak to her neighbors and then obtain a permit to do so.''

    Two of the court's most conservative justices, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, agreed with the outcome of the case but did not sign on to Stevens' reasoning.

    Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist dissented.

    Stratton, Ohio, required a permit for any door-to-door soliciting by salesmen or anyone else. Theoretically, girl scouts would have to get such a permit to sell cookies, as would a candidate for the school board or a student raising money for a class trip.

    The majority in Monday's case said the law was too broad. Had it been much more narrowly written to guard against unwanted sales calls, it might have withstood constitutional scrutiny, Stevens wrote.

    People who do not want to listen to a political candidate or other canvasser need not do so, the court said. Residents may post a ''No Solicitations'' sign at the door, or simply refuse to engage in conversation.

    The court also rejected the town's claim that the law helped prevent crime. There is no evidence that a criminal casing a neighborhood would be deterred by the need to get a permit, the court said.

    The case turned in part on the notion of anonymity when speaking one's mind.

    The court already has held that the Constitution gives people the right to anonymously distribute campaign literature. Monday's ruling extends that right to door-to-door soliciting for other causes.

    The church argued that it needs no one's permission to pursue what it views as its mission to take religion to people's homes. Someone going door to door may choose to introduce himself, but should not be required to do so, the church argued.

    Two lower federal courts found the permit rules evenhanded, and the church appealed. The Supreme Court reversed, and sent the case back to a lower court.

    Rehnquist's dissent mentioned the killings of two university professors in New Hampshire, allegedly by men who had cased the neighborhood by going door to door.

    Stratton's law was intended to address such ''very grave risks associated with canvassing,'' and did not unduly limit free speech, Rehnquist wrote.

    Stratton, population 287, includes many retirees who were sick of being pestered by Jehovah's Witnesses and others, the town's mayor has said.

    The town has had a testy history with the Jehovah's Witnesses congregation in nearby Wellsville.

    Anyone who wants to go door to door must first go to the mayor's office and fill out a permit application. The form requires a name and other identifying information, and is kept on file. There is no fee.

    About 15 people have applied for permits since the law took effect, and no one has been turned away. Jehovah's Witnesses did not apply, because they considered the permit unconstitutional.

    The church won victories in the 1930s and 1940s that have helped form the court's modern interpretation of the First Amendment.

    Stevens took note of the World War II-era cases, saying they repeatedly saved Jehovah's Witnesses ''from petty prosecutions.''

    ''The value judgment that then motivated a united democratic people fighting to defend those very freedoms from totalitarian attack is unchanged. It motivates our decision today,'' Stevens wrote.

    The case is Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York Inc. v. Village of Stratton, Ohio, et al., 00-1737.

    AP-NY-06-17-02 1059EDT

    Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

  • D8TA
    D8TA

    I dont see what the hoop-lah is all about on this. This is about obtaining a permit from local (to national) government, in order to solicit to people on their private property. Does this ruling in anyway NEGATE YOUR PERSONAL AND LEGAL RIGHT TO REFUSE ENTRY OR REMOVE ANYONE from your private property? NO it does NOT. It's just about the permit being issued by government. If you don't want people on your private property, I highly suggest everyone to research their local, county, state, and national private property rights. If you dont want anyone at your door, on your driveway, within your private property...you have the RIGHT (legal and personal) to prevent and refuse entry to anyone. (errr, unless it's a criminal matter in which there is a warrant and/or extreme circumstances which allow law enforcement to come upon your property).

    People like to put up NO TRESPASSING signs, so that if anyone does enter their private property uninvited get a WARNING on doing so. BEWARE OF DOG helps also.

    For people in WA state; I HIGHLY HIGHLY HIGHLY suggest that you get in contact with your local (it's easier this way) police department and inquire about your private property rights. I think you will be suprised as to how far your rights go in this state, as to those uninvited guests at your door (hint hint). A simple phone call, or walk in to the local police station and just ask about it.

    D8TA

  • bonovox
    bonovox

    Very true d8ta, you have every right in most areas to ask peeps to leave and if they wont, in some cases even remove them forcibly.

    Now if I could just get those f****ng natural gas resellers to stop sending illiterate fools to my door every 3 days trying to convince me to give them my gas bill so they can deceptively sign me up for some scam that'll supposedly save me money....but I guess those idiots dont have a 'do not call' system in place...

  • nancee park
    nancee park

    But does the Supreme Court:

    BACK DOOR-TO-DOOR PEDOPHILES?

  • mustang
    mustang

    JW's have always maintained that they weren't salesmen; they have fought and held onto that "right" to APPROACH YOUR DOOR. Wonderful, they actually have helped freedom and rights.

    But, as D8TA notes, IT ONLY GOES SO FAR. What they have done is held onto the RIGHT TO A FIRST APPROACH. They cannot do anything about your RIGHT TO REFUSAL (FIRST, LAST OR ALWAYS).

    This includes a RIGHT OF EASEMENT; RIGHT OF EASEMENT allows anybody to go straight to your door and knock on it. (NO detours allowed.)

    However, a RIGHT OF EASEMENT can be REVOKED!!!

    So, if JW's ARE a significant problem in your neighborhood, a sign that specifically mentions them will STOP THEM COLD. It's that simple.

    You have already suffered the FIRST APPROACH; you deem them PERSONA NON GRATA. You now have the RIGHT TO REVOKE the JW's RIGHT OF EASEMENT. They CAN'T ABRIDGE THAT RIGHT!!!

    Sorry, Stratton, Ohio, nice try; get out the sign posts & paint.

    Mustang

    Nothing that I write or utter is to be considered legal advice. Consult proper counsel for such matters. Further, all that I write or utter, is protected by religious freedom under the 1st Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, as the "free exercise", as well as "freedom of speech" clauses.

    Edited by - mustang on 17 June 2002 19:55:10

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