A Kern County baker violated California law when she refused to sell a cake to a lesbian couple for their wedding, a state appeals court in a suit brought by the state鈥檚 Civil Rights Department.
If the scenario sounds familiar, that鈥檚 because it鈥檚 central to a series of cases that have for years been shaping the nation鈥檚 legal debate over free speech and anti-discrimination laws.
In 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court that a baker had violated that state鈥檚 nondiscrimination law when he refused to bake a cake for a same-sex couple鈥檚 wedding. The ruling was based on the court鈥檚 finding that the Colorado civil rights commission handling the case had been prejudiced against the baker鈥檚 religious beliefs.
The court , also in a Colorado case, in favor of a website designer who opposed same-sex marriage on religious grounds and who was afraid the same state statutes could in theory force her to design a wedding website for a gay couple. That would violate the designer鈥檚 First Amendment rights to free expression, the Supreme Court ruled in a decision that LGBTQ rights activists said to more discrimination in public spaces.
The California decision this week draws boundaries on what counts under a business owner鈥檚 right to free expression.
In a statement, California Civil Rights Department director Kevin Kish praised the ruling for upholding 鈥渢he longstanding principle guaranteeing all Californians full and equal access to services and goods in the marketplace.鈥�
The case stemmed from the marriage of Eileen and Mireya Rodriguez-Del Rio, who visited Tastries bakery in to buy a cake for their wedding in August 2017.
The couple spoke with an employee and selected a pre-designed plain, white, three-tiered cake that the bakery often sells for various celebrations including birthdays and baby showers, according to court filings. When the couple returned with friends and family for a tasting the following week, Tastries鈥� owner Catharine Miller refused to sell the cake upon learning it would be served at a same-sex wedding.
Miller is a devout Christian who also refuses to make cakes depicting marijuana use or sexual imagery. She later told the courts she has a bakery policy stating that 鈥渨edding cakes must not contradict God鈥檚 sacrament of marriage between a man and a woman.鈥�
The couple filed a complaint with the state Civil Rights Department, which sued Miller in 2018. Miller, who is represented by the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, argued her policy was based on her religious beliefs about marriage, not animus toward LGBTQ people.
A Kern County judge sided with her, ruling that Miller鈥檚 policy did not violate the state鈥檚 Unruh Civil Rights Act because it applies to all customers, and because Miller referred the couple to another bakery that had previously agreed to sell cakes to same-sex couples (but which the Rodriguez-Del Rios had already ruled out).
The state appealed the decision last year, and a three-judge panel of the 5th Appellate District reversed it in a unanimous ruling.
The judges ruled Miller鈥檚 policy is not neutral because it could only apply to customers on the basis of their sexual orientation. They also ruled that reproducing a plain cake with no writing or decorations that Miller would have sold to anyone else does not count as being forced to express support for a same-sex wedding.
鈥淒rawing the contours of protected speech to include routinely produced, ordinary commercial products as the artistic self-expression of the designer is unworkably overbroad,鈥� the judges wrote.
Miller, through a spokesperson at the Becket Fund, declined to comment. In a statement, her attorney and Becket Fund vice president Eric Rassbach said Miller would continue to run the bakery while they appeal the decision to the state Supreme Court.
鈥淭his case is not just about Cathy Miller 鈥� it鈥檚 about protecting the rights of all Americans to live and work according to their deeply held beliefs,鈥� said another of her attorneys, Charles LiMandri. 鈥淲e will continue to fight in the courts on Cathy鈥檚 behalf to ensure that the freedom to live out her faith through her creative work is upheld and that justice is fully served.鈥�
The case could be primed for more appeals by conservative legal groups that ultimately seek to extend the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in the Colorado web designer case and establish exceptions to anti-discrimination laws allowing businesses to refuse services to gay Americans, said Matt Coles, a law professor at UC Law San Francisco.
But he said the California ruling makes important distinctions between designing a wedding website and making a standard cake.
鈥淭his was not a great case for them,鈥� Coles said. 鈥淭he challenge in this case was, how do you draw a line between stuff that鈥檚 clearly speech or expression, and stuff that鈥檚 clearly not? If what you鈥檙e selling is some kind of generic cake, you don鈥檛 have 1st Amendment claims.鈥�