New Paper at SSRN: “Status, Conduct, Belief, and Message”

And, continuing the wedding vendor theme from the last post, my draft paper on the wedding vendor cases, “Status, Conduct, Belief, and Message,” is now available for downloading on the SSRN site. The paper will appear in a forthcoming symposium edition of the Chicago-Kent Law Review. Comments welcome! Here’s the abstract:

This essay explores the constitutional and cultural tensions underlying the “wedding vendor cases,” in which small business owners decline from religious conviction to provide services for same-sex weddings. Litigants often invoke conceptual distinctions among status, conduct, belief, and message, but these distinctions are too indeterminate to resolve the cases in a principled way. The ultimate question is whether LGBT rights should override religious and expressive freedoms in the marketplace. In two recent wedding vendor cases, Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission and 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis, the Court has avoided addressing this fundamental question directly. Instead, the Court has issued narrow rulings based on specific facts and party stipulations, thereby limiting the broader implications of its decisions. While this strategy sacrifices doctrinal clarity and leaves lower courts grappling with uncertainty, it also helps avoid exacerbating cultural polarization on an intensely divisive issue. In the current political climate, incremental case-by-case adjudication—a sort of “passive virtues” approach—may represent a prudent judicial strategy, even if it leaves both sides of the cultural divide dissatisfied.

Movsesian Interviewed on the Wedding Vendor Cases

I was delighted to join my friend and former colleague, Marc DeGirolami, and my friend and Marc’s current colleague, Kevin Walsh, as a guest last week on their excellent podcast, Sub Deo. We discussed the Supreme Court’s recent wedding vendor cases, Masterpiece Cakeshop and 303 Creative. I have a draft on the subject on the SSRN site and thought I’d heard everything about the cases, but Marc and Kevin came up with new and profound questions for me to think about. It was great fun and I thank Marc and Kevin for the opportunity to kick around some ideas. The link is here:

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-23-in-which-we-reflect-on-the-legal-categories/id1736221891?i=1000704913852