NEWARK WEATHER

The 10-Year Fight of a Courageous Baker: Jack Phillips and Masterpiece Cakeshop – The


In 1950, Eileen Barton’s rendition of “If I Knew You Were Comin’ I’d’ve Baked a Cake” hit No. 1 on the Billboard charts. Until 2012, that song might well have been Colorado baker Jack Phillips’ favorite. But that year, his three-decade love of making cakes and other baked goods for those who patronized his Masterpiece Cakeshop in Lakewood, Colorado, turned into a decade-long nightmare of legal and cultural battles.

Today, Phillips would like nothing better than to return to the quiet hum of his baking establishment’s kitchen. Why isn’t that possible? Why can’t he resume preparing confections for customers without members of sexual minority groups demanding that he adopt and help celebrate their own peculiar view of human sexuality? Why is the state of Colorado menacing an upright citizen like Phillips with criminal complaints and fines?

Let’s briefly trace Jack Phillips’ unhappy legal trek.

In the 1970s, Phillips became a Christian and was convicted that his faith put limits on the types of customized cakes he would bake in his own private business. For example, he refused to portray “witches or ghosts for Halloween” or “sexually suggestive images.” In keeping with his Christian belief that marriage is between one man and one woman, he concluded that he could not take part in the celebration of same-sex unions by designing custom wedding cakes for such occasions.

Schutz must concede that the law cannot compel citizens to engage in speech that is contrary to their convictions.

Phillips’ faith commitments did not pose problems for him until 2012, when he respectfully declined a request from two gay men to bake them a custom wedding cake. That got him in trouble with the Colorado Civil Rights Commission after the pair filed a claim alleging that Phillips had discriminated against them because of their sexual orientation. Phillips defended his refusal, asserting that his religious liberty and his freedom of speech, including the right not to be compelled to express a certain message, were being violated. To his chagrin, the administrative law judge hearing the case ruled that Phillips had to bake cakes either for all weddings or for none. Furthermore, the judge’s order required that Phillips “retrain his staff” to accept gay-wedding-cake requests and “report,” over a two-year period, all cake orders he refused.

To make matters worse, when Phillips appealed, the Colorado Court of Appeals supported the commission and the judge’s order, and the case went to the U.S. Supreme Court. There, in 2018, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Phillips, but only on the weakest possible grounds. During the proceedings, some members of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission made outlandish public statements about Phillips’ religious beliefs, referring to them, in one example, as “despicable pieces of rhetoric” that allowed him “to use [his] religion to hurt others.” All of this was too much for the Supreme Court. Then–Justice Anthony Kennedy, along with six other justices who joined in or concurred with his opinion, wrote that “the Commission’s treatment of Phillips’ case violated the State’s duty under the First Amendment not to base laws or regulations on hostility to a religion or religious viewpoint.” (Keep in mind that Kennedy wrote the Obergefell v. Hodges decision, which made same-sex marriage the law of the land.)

The Kennedy opinion, though a temporary victory for Phillips, was based on flagrant and foolish public misconduct by the Colorado governmental body hearing his case, conduct that was not likely to be repeated. Unfortunately, Kennedy’s opinion failed to address the central issue: whether the recently devised use of “public accommodation laws” — like the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (CADA) — to advance the claims of sexual minorities for equal treatment should override the long-standing constitutional rights of free speech and free exercise of religion. The court’s failure to face head-on that set of issues opened up providers like Phillips to further legal challenges.

And that is precisely what has happened. Autumn Scardina, an attorney who identifies as a transgender woman, is doggedly pursuing Phillips and Masterpiece by every legal means available.

Literally on the same day in 2017 when the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Phillips’ original case involving the two gay men, Scardina placed an order with Masterpiece Cakeshop for a cake intended to celebrate Scardina’s birthday and transition. Scardina first placed the order without mentioning the cake’s purpose, noting only that the cake was to be blue on the outside and pink on the inside. But during a second call on that same day, Scardina made clear the cake’s intended use for a trans celebration. At that point, Lisa Eldfrick, Phillips’ daughter, said that the business could not bake such a cake. Phillips explained the reason why in testimony: He “believes that God designed people male and female, that a person’s gender is biologically determined.” Making such a cake to celebrate a gender transition would force him to express views contrary to his religious beliefs.

Scardina filed a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Commission. Before that case could be heard, however, Phillips and Masterpiece brought an action in federal court against Colorado. Eventually, Phillips and Colorado settled by each withdrawing their respective suits. But the dispute was not ended.

Scardina then filed a civil suit against Phillips in a state court, the current case being litigated. Phillips lost there at the trial court level, and again when he appealed that unfavorable decision to an intermediate appellate court in the Colorado system — the Colorado Court of Appeals.

The latest legal ruling was penned by Judge Timothy J. Schutz, writing for a three-judge panel of that court. The opinion first dealt with several technical procedural issues, then turned to the substantive issues. His opinion supported the trial judge’s conclusion that Masterpiece’s refusal to bake a gender-transition cake for Scardina violated CADA. CADA’s language makes it unlawful “to refuse, withhold from, or deny an individual” — on the basis of “sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, [or] gender expression” — “the full and equal enjoyment of the goods [or] services … of a place of public accommodation.” Schutz endorsed the reasoning of the trial court judge, who emphasized the initial “willingness” of Masterpiece to bake the cake, which was followed by its retraction only once the cake’s purpose became clear. He also pointed to Phillips’ statement that “a pink cake with blue icing” does not necessarily have any “intrinsic meaning.”

Schutz neglected to mention, however, that the order was placed on a day when the Masterpiece Cakeshop employees were distracted by the unexpected good news that the Supreme Court would take up their case involving the gay men. That very same day, once Jack Phillips knew that the order would involve his artistry in a gender-transition celebration, he unequivocally said he would not bake the cake.

Schutz also rejected the argument by Masterpiece and Phillips that the Civil Rights Commission had applied an unfair double standard by refusing the complaints of religious customers who were denied service on orders they placed with Colorado bakeries for cakes containing a strong biblical message against homosexuality.

The Colorado Appeals Court still had to deal with the obvious problems of free speech and religious exercise. Concerning speech, Schutz recognized that Colorado had no right to compel a citizen to speak a message to which he objected. However, the opinion questioned whether requiring Phillips to bake a pink cake with blue icing was really “speech” at all. Schutz had to acknowledge that the courts have long recognized that conduct intended to express a position on an issue or advocate a point of view, even if not accompanied by actual words, still falls in the category of speech. The U.S. Supreme Court, for example, has protected the “speech rights” of students who protested the Vietnam War by silently wearing black arm bands to school and of laborers who were picketing, even though no words were spoken.

This long line of precedent forces Schutz to concede that a conduct that conveys a certain message that is understood by those who view it must be regarded as speech — and the law cannot compel citizens to engage in speech contrary to their convictions.

From here on, however, the opinion loses its credibility. It claims that the baking of the blue/pink cake itself conveys no message, even when the cake is part of a gender-transition party — one extolling a man now identifying as a woman. In fact, inexplicably, Schutz refers to the very testimony of a witness who stated that if he attended such a party…



Read More: The 10-Year Fight of a Courageous Baker: Jack Phillips and Masterpiece Cakeshop – The