Here is a bit of
background. Section 107 of the Internal Revenue Code provides: “In a case of a
minister of the gospel, gross income does not include (1) the rental value of a
home furnished to him as part of his compensation, or (2) the rental allowance
paid to him as part of his compensation, to the extent used by him to rent a
home or provide a home and to the extent such allowance does not exceed the
fair rental value of the home, including furnishings and appurtenances such as
a garage, plus the cost of utilities.”
This is
potentially suspect under the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment,
which provides that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion.” Indeed, it would unambiguously violate the Establishment Clause, as
that clause has come to be understood, if the rental exclusion were limited to
Christian “ministers of the gospel,” as distinct from, say, rabbis and imams. But
it has been interpreted as applying to the equivalent of “ministers of the
gospel” for religions generally – a concept that may involve considerable
ambiguity! (E.g., does “religion” have to involve belief in a God or gods, should
the IRS be on the lookout suspected sham religions, how broad is “minister” and
how does it track across religious affiliations.)
In Gaylor v. Mnuchin, 278 F. Supp.3rd
1081 (D. Wi. 2017), the section 107(2) exclusion for cash rental allowances was
held to violate the Establishment Clause. The case is on appeal to the Seventh
Circuit, oral argument took place last October, and a decision is expected
imminently. The main legal issue in dispute, other than section 107(2)’s
constitutionality, is whether the plaintiff has standing. In an earlier case,
the same judge had found standing but the Seventh Circuit had reversed. Here,
the plaintiffs sought to create standing (without which, there is no justiciable
case for the court to hear) by filing for a tax refund under section 107(2)
despite being employed by the Freedom From Religion Foundation, Inc., rather
than by a religious institution in the conventional sense. Thus, the options
available to the Seventh Circuit include reversing and dismissing the case on
standing grounds. If that happens and is upheld more generally (e.g., by the
Supreme Court upon appeal), then section 107(2) (in common, it appears, with
section 107(1)) might prove, as a practical matter, to be wholly immune to constitutional
challenge through litigation even if it does in fact violate the Establishment
Clause.
Reinhold’s
article argues that section 107 IS constitutional and ought to be upheld by
the courts even if there is standing (as
to which he is skeptical). The paper
raises 3 topics that I’ll (in varying detail) address here: constitutionality,
standing, and how we should think about the role of the courts and of
constitutional litigation.
1. Is section 107 constitutional? – Suppose
Gaylor v. Mnuchin ends up in the
Supreme Court, and is definitively addressed on the merits (i.e., the court
finds requisite standing). Then we might end up with a decisive precedent, to
the effect that section 107 (or at least section 107(2), the cash allowances
aspect) either is or isn’t constitutional.
If one were
handicapping the outcome of this still-hypothetical case, it would of course be
of enormous predictive moment that the Scalia seat ended up going to Neal
Gorsuch, rather than to Merrick Garland. I’d personally place a large bet (if
this were the type of thing I did) on the Court’s 5 conservatives finding
section 107 constitutional, if they reached the issue. But it also wouldn’t
surprise me if, upon reading such an opinion, I personally found it
unpersuasive and ascribed it to political and policy preferences (as distinct
from the legal grounds offered for the Court’s conclusions) that differ from
mine.
If that happened,
I might find myself concluding that the Supreme Court had (in my view) gotten
it “wrong,” and that section 107 “is” unconstitutional. But what does that mean
exactly, once we’ve untethered the notion of constitutionality from blind
adherence to precedents? The more general problem I am adverting to here is the
difficulty of setting forth definite criteria for determining constitutionality.
The inquiry is not well-specified, nor can a dispute between A and B on any such
question be resolved, other than if they sufficiently accept common premises
and one of them has made errors in reasoning from those premises.
Con law, in my
view, tends to be a lot murkier and less well-specified in this sense than,
say, disputes over tax policy between people who accept generally welfarist
frameworks and are open to empirical evidence that those frameworks make
normatively relevant.
But with all that
said, I am strongly inclined to view section 107 as unconstitutional under the
Establishment Clause. I view it as favoring religion, and funding it at the
expense of the non-religious, without sufficient justification. (For much more
detail than I will offer here, see this article by Adam Chodorow )
One can think of
the Establishment Clause as limiting permissible subsidies to religious
institutions and actors, and the Free Exercise Clause as limiting the permissible
imposition of special burdens on them. This suggests looking for neutrality in
some sense, notwithstanding baseline issues in defining it.
Consider sections
170 and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, which provide tax benefits to
charities, including religious organizations. I would question their
constitutionality, on Establishment Clause grounds, if they were ONLY for
religious organizations. I would also question their constitutionality, on Free
Exercise grounds, if they offered tax benefits to all charities EXCEPT
religious organizations. I don’t think we need to ask ourselves any sort of neutrality
question (requiring that one specify the baseline) with respect to having versus
not having special treatment for charities in general.
Now let’s look at
section 107 from this standpoint. It is JUST for “ministers of the gospel,” as
generalized to be nonsectarian within religions. This strikes me as exactly the
sort of thing that the Establishment Clause is supposed to inhibit.
As Reinhold’s
article notes, one counter-argument is that we actually have a broader category
of exempt housing, akin to the broader section 501(c)(3) that I noted above
with respect to exempting churches from federal income tax and allowing
charitable contribution deductions to those who donate to them. But it’s really
just dribs and drabs, apart from the big entry here, which is section 119,
excluding the value of housing provided by an employer to an employee, if (a)
it is provided for the convenience of the employer, (b) the employee is
required to accept it as a condition of employment, and (c) it is on the
employer’s business premises (although this can be satisfied where the employee’s
off-site house is sufficiently used in the business, e.g., as a site for
business meetings).
Although I
question section 119 – it over-responds to valuation problems that arise when
the home serves business as well as consumption purposes, hence I believe that
a value greater than zero ought to be includable – I’m perfectly fine with “ministers
of the gospel” (in the broader sense) seeking to qualify under it. Indeed,
there would be Free Exercise problems with not allowing them to do so. But
section 107 is far broader, especially (although not solely) given section
107(2)’s exclusion for cash allowances. The difference is great enough that section
107 has been scored (I believe, in official tax expenditure budgets) as costing
nearly $1 billion a year.
Boris Bittker, a rightly towering figure but one who liked to argue absurd things sometimes, apparently claimed that section 107
should be viewed as merely an evidentiary rule establishing a presumption –
albeit, an irrebuttable one even when demonstrably false – that one qualifies
under section 119. Or perhaps the argument is better put as: section 107(1)
might be reasonable as an evidentiary presumption re. section 119, then once we’ve
gone that far why not vastly broaden it (on the claim that this increases
neutral effects between religions) by adding section 107(2).
This line of
argument strikes me as rather a triumph of bootstrapping. But the rationale for
the initial evidentiary presumption is that testing “ministers of the gospel”
for qualification under section 119, potentially subject to audit, would raise undue “entanglement”
concerns under the Establishment Clause. But to my mind, these concerns are
small not only absolutely, but also relative to the entanglement concerns raised by
needing to define “ministers” who can claim the benefit of section 107.
So I regard the
Establishment Clause case against section 107 as extremely powerful, although
(as Reinhold’s article helps to show) not everyone agrees about this.
2. Standing – The standing issues in Gaylor are clearly significant, and I won’t address them here. But I agree that standing
is not just some sort of arcane technical requirement (although it is that, too). Rather, it serves substantial purposes
in limiting courts to resolving the sorts of disputes that they are best equipped to handle. It would
presumably be a big mistake to offer “taxpayer standing” whenever a taxpayer
happened to dislike a particular appropriation or tax preference, and thus wanted to raise all conceivable challenges.
Still, if section 107 is unconstitutional, yet
no one has standing to challenge it (or at least section 107(1), even if the taxpayer
in Gaylor succeeds in establishing standing
to challenge section 107(2)), then we have a potential problem of under-enforced
constitutional norms. This is especially troubling if one believes that a key
reason for having constitutional limitations, such as those in the First
Amendment, is to allow the courts to address violative behavior by the
executive and legislative branches, in circumstances where our supposedly (whether or not actually) majoritarian politics may fall short of offering adequate protection.
3. Role of the courts and of constitutional
litigation – While the paper mainly makes specific legal arguments, it’s
also about what one might call sound social practice: Is constitutional
litigation really a good way to handle the sort of issue that section 107
raises? Does it overly politicize the courts, and/or overly judicialize politics?
Rather than providing a way to reach consensus in a diverse and pluralistic
society, does it instead end up intensifying social discord?
These are serious
questions, and hard to answer confidently. With respect to institutional choice,
I am not confident that Congress and the executive branch can be trusted to
adhere sufficiently to Establishment Clause norms, without judicial oversight. But
then again, my confidence in the Supreme Court as a good faith arbiter has been
higher at times in the past than it is now.
In terms of
consensus versus discord, I admittedly identify with the plaintiffs in Gaylor. As one whose own descent and set of
personal beliefs about what one might call cosmological questions places him outside of the U.S. majority, I would like to be able
to invoke the protection of the courts when Establishment-type issues arise. I remember, as a child in public school, being offended by the public assemblies in
which I was expected to recite the “under God” language from the Pledge of
Allegiance. To this day, I am affronted when ignorant Supreme Court justices falsely
(although, I presume, sincerely) assert that a crรจche,
or even crosses in a public graveyard, are not religious symbols and are not
rightly perceived by minorities / outsiders as such.
But even granting
that I (and “we”) are rightly affronted, do we help ourselves by bringing these
cases? Are we better off just swallowing
the ill feeling than creating larger controversies that may inspire pushback?
Maybe yes, maybe no.
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