From Oyez:
Facts of the case
Petitioners Kendra Espinoza and others are low-income mothers who applied for scholarships to keep their children enrolled in Stillwater Christian School, in Kalispell, Montana. The Montana legislature enacted a tax-credit scholarship program in 2015 to provide a modest tax credit to individuals and businesses who donate to private, nonprofit scholarship organizations. Shortly after the program was enacted, the Montana Department of Revenue promulgated an administrative rule (“Rule 1”) prohibiting scholarship recipients from using their scholarships at religious schools, citing a provision of the state constitution that prohibits “direct or indirect” public funding of religiously affiliated educational programs.
Espinoza and the other mothers filed a lawsuit in state court challenging Rule 1. The court determined that the scholarship program was constitutional without Rule 1 and granted the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. On appeal, the Department of Revenue argued that the program is unconstitutional without Rule 1. The Montana Supreme Court agreed with the Department and reversed the lower court.
Question
Does a state law that allows for funding for education generally while prohibiting funding for religious schools violate the Religion Clauses or the Equal Protection Clause of the federal Constitution?
Conclusion
5–4 decision for Espinoza
The application of the Montana Constitution’s “no-aid” provision to a state program providing tuition assistance to parents who send their children to private schools discriminated against religious schools and the families whose children attend or hope to attend them in violation of the Free Exercise Clause. Chief Justice John Roberts authored the opinion on behalf of the 5-4 majority.
The Court first noted that the Free Exercise Clause “protects
religious observers against unequal treatment” and against “laws that
impose special disabilities on the basis of religious status.” In this
case, Montana’s no-aid provision excluded religious schools from public
benefits solely because of religious status. As such, the law must be
subject to strict scrutiny review; that is, the government must show
that its action advances “‘interests of the highest order” and that the
action is “narrowly tailored in pursuit of those interests.” Montana’s
interest in this case—which the Court described as creating greater
separation of church and state than the federal Constitution
requires—does not satisfy strict scrutiny given its infringement of free
exercise. Because the Free Exercise Clause barred the application of
Montana’s no-aid provision, the Montana Supreme Court lacked the
authority to invalidate the program on the basis of that provision.
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