Summary of facts: A devout Orthodox Jew wanted to host congregational prayer in his home on the Sabbath and High Holidays. The city in which he resided issued an order prohibiting him from hosting the group without a zoning permit. In response, he sued the city under the First Amendment and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA). The district court dismissed the case, holding that his claim was not ripe because he had not applied for a zoning permit and been denied. The plaintiff sought review in the U.S. Circuit Court for the Sixth Circuit, which affirmed the dismissal. He is now asking the U.S. Supreme Court to hear his case.
RFI’s position: The rule adopted by the Sixth Circuit threatens religious exercise in one of the core contexts that prompted RLUIPA’s enactment. Minority religious communities, including Muslims and Jews, disproportionately encounter implicit discrimination in land-use proceedings, and that discrimination takes the form of a delay rather than a clean denial. Nothing in RLUIPA supports a rigid final-decision rule, much less one that allows officials to defeat judicial review by stalling. At minimum, where delay and procedural obstruction impose the burden, those actions are sufficiently final to permit suit.
Read the brief here.
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