JUSTICE KENNEDY: Well, the Chief Justice has introduced the question of the Free Exercise Clause in this case. We didn't talk about it earlier. And perhaps you want to get on to speech, but in this case, pages 293 and 294 of -- of the Petitioner appendix, the -* Commissioner Hess says freedom of religion used to justify discrimination is a despicable piece of rhetoric.
Did the Commission ever disavow or disapprove of that statement?
MR. YARGER: There were no further proceedings in which the Commission disavowed or disapproved of that statement.
JUSTICE KENNEDY: Do you disavow or disapprove of that statement?
MR. YARGER: I would not have counseled my client to make that statement.
JUSTICE KENNEDY: Do you now disavow or disapprove of that statement?
MR. YARGER: I -- I do, yes, Your Honor. I think -- I need to make clear that what that commissioner was referring to was the previous decision of the Commission, which is that no matter how strongly held a belief, it is not an exception to a generally applicable anti-discrimination law.
And if -- if the assertion that what is engaging in is speech is enough to overcome that law, you're going to face a situation where a family portrait artist can say I will photograph any family but not when the father... is wearing a yarmulke because I have a sincere objection to the Jewish faith. That would be discrimination.
JUSTICE KENNEDY: Suppose we thought that in significant part at least one member of the Commission based the commissioner's decision on -- on -- on the grounds that -- of hostility to religion. Can -- can your -* could your judgment then stand?
MR. YARGER: Your Honor, I don't think that one statement by the commissioner, assuming it reveals bias -*
JUSTICE KENNEDY: Well, suppose we -* suppose we thought there was a significant aspect of hostility to a religion in this case. Could your judgment stand?
MR. YARGER: Your Honor, if -- if there was evidence that the entire proceeding was begun because of a -- an intent to single
out religious people, absolutely, that would be a problem.
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: How many commissioners -*
MR. YARGER: But this was a complaint filed by a couple -*
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: How many commissioners are there?
MR. YARGER: Excuse me, Justice Sotomayor.
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: I'd like you to answer Justice Kennedy's question. How many commissioners are there?
MR. YARGER: There are seven commissioners, Your Honor.
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: All right. If one -- if there was a belief, not yours -- stop fighting the belief; accept the hypothetical -*
that this person was improperly biased, what happens then? I think that's what Justice Kennedy is asking you.
MR. YARGER: If there is one person that's improperly biased?
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: One of the commissioners is improperly biased.
MR. YARGER: I think you're going to have to ask whether the complaint filed with the division, which was filed by a customer who was referred to a bakery to receive a product, and the ALJ and the commission in the appeal were all biased in the sense that this was a proceeding meant to single out a religious person for his views.
And that is not the fact here.
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS: We've -- we've had this case before -*
JUSTICE GORSUCH: But you agree that would be a problem -*
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS: -- in the context -- the context of courts, I think it's not just where you have a three-judge panel and it turns out one judge was -- should have been disqualified, whether -- for whatever reason, they don't say that, well, the vote, there were two still, so it doesn't change the result because it's a deliberative process, and the idea is, well, the one biased judge might have influenced the views of the other.
MR. YARGER: And, Your Honor, again, I don't think that this -- that particular phrase -- I wouldn't advise my client to make
that statement, but it was referring back to the previous decision -*
JUSTICE GORSUCH: Mr. Yarger, you actually -
*
MR. YARGER: -- where the commission fully debated the issue -*
JUSTICE GORSUCH: Mr. Yarger, you actually have a second commissioner who also said that he's -- if someone has an issue with the laws impacting his personal belief system, he has to look at compromising that belief system presumably, as well, right?
MR. YARGER: And, yes, Your Honor. That's the same principle that this Court recognized in cases -*
JUSTICE GORSUCH: But a second commissioner?
MR. YARGER: -- cases like United States versus Lee -*
JUSTICE GORSUCH: -- so we have two -* two -- two commissioners out of seven who've expressed something along these lines.
MR. YARGER: I don't agree that what was expressed in the record reveals the kind of bias that existed in cases like the Church of
JUSTICE GORSUCH: What if we disagree with -*
MR. YARGER: -- Lukumi Babalu Aye.
JUSTICE GORSUCH: What if we disagree with you; then what follows?
MR. YARGER: I think you have to do that analysis and decide whether this proceeding was engineered in a way to single
out people with a certain faith and they're not. This... law would apply to protect people with religious beliefs.
JUSTICE BREYER: I see that. The reason I want you to continue this is that many of the civil rights laws, not all public accommodations laws, though -- there are exceptions, like, for example, with housing, a person's own room, for example.
And what people are trying to do with exceptions is take the thing you're worried about, where they are genuine, sincere religious views or whatever it is, and minimize the harm it does to the principle of the statute while making some kind of compromise for people of sincere beliefs on the other side.
And we find that in -- in a lot of them, but that's primarily a legislative job. And my impression of this is there wasn't much
effort here in Colorado to do that.
My problem is can we do that in any way, or is there any way to get to a place that without harming the law, and its object, which is fine, you can have narrow kinds of exceptions for sincere, et cetera? Do you see -- do you see what I'm driving at?
MR. YARGER: I do.
JUSTICE BREYER: And I can't think of a way to do it. Maybe you can't think of a way to do it, but I thought it's worth asking.
MR. YARGER: Justice Breyer, I -- I do not agree that this law, which was passed in 2008, after literally a decade in the wake of Romer, was not an attempt sincerely to hear from all sides about a question of whether to grant the same protections to people who are discriminated based on race or faith to people of the LGBT community.
JUSTICE ALITO: One thing that's disturbing about the record here, in addition to the statement made, the statement that Justice Kennedy read, which was not disavowed at the time by any other member of the Commission, is what appears to be a practice of discriminatory treatment based on viewpoint.