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University of Montana Christian Legal Society Files Suit
Yet another university has impermissibly denied recognition and student fees to the Christian Legal Society (CLS) because of CLS鈥 requirement that its voting members and officers ascribe to a Statement of Faith regulating, among other things, sexual behavior outside of marriage.
On December 14, the CLS chapter at the University of Montana School of Law (CLS-UM) filed a federal lawsuit alleging that the law school鈥檚 denial of recognition to the organization violated the group鈥檚 First Amendment rights to free association, free speech, and the free exercise of religion. The facts of the case are familiar鈥攐ver the last several years, they have been played out at universities around the country that have sought to deny recognition to religious student groups because of those groups鈥 belief-based membership requirements. According to the complaint:
CLS-UM interprets its Statement of Faith to require that voting members and officers adhere to orthodox Christian beliefs, including the belief that sexual conduct outside of marriage between a man and a woman, including adultery, promiscuity, and the sexual conduct between persons of the same sex, is sinful. A person who engages in extramarital sexual conduct or adheres to the viewpoint that such conduct is not sinful is not eligible to become a voting member or serve as an officer of CLS-UM.
However, any and all UM students 鈥渁re free to attend CLS-UM meetings and events.鈥 Initially, the executive board of the Student Bar Association (SBA) granted CLS-UM temporary recognition. However, when the overall proposed student organization budget鈥攊ncluding funding for CLS-UM鈥攚as submitted to the student body for approval, students and faculty members objected to CLS-UM鈥檚 approval 鈥渂ecause of CLS-UM鈥檚 voting and membership requirements.鈥 The student body rejected the proposed budget, and at a subsequent meeting, the SBA voted to rescind its recognition of CLS-UM on the grounds that CLS-UM had violated an SBA bylaw requiring 鈥渁 registered student organization to be 鈥榦pen to all members of the School of Law.鈥欌 According to CLS-UM鈥檚 complaint, however, other recognized student organizations explicitly require their members to adhere to the organization鈥檚 beliefs. The Environmental Law Group, for example, limits membership to 鈥減ersons who have an interest in furthering the purposes鈥 of the group, which are 鈥渢o promote environmental awareness and provide a forum for student participation in projects and action concerning current environmental issues.鈥
This is not the first time this issue has come before a court. In March 2005, a federal district judge in North Carolina enjoined UNC-Chapel Hill from applying its nondiscrimination policy to prohibit a Christian fraternity from choosing its members on the basis of religious belief.
In April 2006, a federal district judge in California held that the University of California-Hastings鈥 law school did not run afoul of the First Amendment when it denied recognition to its CLS chapter; that decision is currently on appeal to the Ninth Circuit, which will hopefully鈥攍ike the Seventh Circuit鈥攃ome down in favor of free expression and association. Montana is also in the Ninth Circuit, so that court鈥檚 decision in the Hastings case will likely have an impact on CLS-UM鈥檚 case.
Most recently, in July 2006, the Seventh Circuit ordered Southern Illinois University鈥檚 law school to recognize its CLS chapter, which had been denied recognition on the same grounds as CLS-UM. In its holding, the court recognized the distinction between membership requirements 鈥渂ased on belief and behavior rather than status,鈥 and held that the law school鈥檚 attempt to interfere with CLS鈥 ability to choose its members based on a shared belief system impermissibly 鈥渂urdens CLS鈥檚 ability to express its ideas.鈥
FIRE will follow this latest case closely, so stay tuned to The Torch for updates.
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