Imagine
yourself enjoying a nice leisurely day of shopping when all of a sudden you
walk past a man who approaches you asking “will you go to heaven when you die?”
You politely ignore him and keep walking, uninterested in his view of religion,
but feel slightly annoyed that he is trying to impose his views on you. Maybe
you make a comment while walking past a security officer, hoping that the
situation will be taken care of. After all, why should you be subjected to someone
else’s view point, you came to the mall to shop, not to listen to someone
preach. The mall cops kindly ask the man to leave the premises, and to go
through the proper procedure in order to be allowed to solicit on the property.
When he refuses, they arrest him on a defiant trespassing charge.
David
Wells, of Oakhurst, NJ was the man arrested in the Monmouth Mall. He is a born-again
Christian, and a retired cop. A large part of his faith is to evangelize and
spread the word of the Lord. While this may seem inconvenient to the passerby
who holds a different religious view and is uninterested in hearing what he has
to say, for Wells he would not be acting on his faith if he did not try to
convert others. The best place to do this is in a public setting such as a
shopping mall. However, the fact that this is a privately owned mall allows
some restrictions on the assumed freedom of speech.
Wells
himself cited the New Jersey Supreme Court ruling “New Jersey Coalition Against War in the Middle East v.
J.M.B. Realty Corporation” as evidence that he should be allowed to distribute
pamphlets in the mall. This case concerned a group of Persian Gulf War
protestors who had requested permission to hand out pamphlets in a mall and
were denied. In this case the Court ruled that their freedom of speech was being
inhibited. However, what Wells failed to recognize was that even in this case
the Court recognized that the privately owned mall could impose reasonable
time, place, and manner restrictions. The Monmouth mall did in fact allow
solicitation and offered to make a reasonable accommodation had Wells simply sought
a permit. Wells admittedly did not take this extra step. He did not see reason
to; in his own words, “I was just talking to people. I wasn’t amplified, I wasn’t
street preaching on top of a soapbox. I was just approaching people one on one.”
What makes this case even more
interesting is that not only is free speech a concern, but also Wells’ right to
freely exercise his religion. Regardless of whether or not the mall owners have
the right to censor his speech by requiring Wells to apply for a permit in
order to “solicit” in the space, should they be able to hinder his free
exercise of religion? This seems to resemble the 1940 Supreme Court case Cantwell v. Connecticut, in which
Jehovah’s Witnesses were given an exemption from an anti-solicitation law
because their evangelical practices were central to their religion and they
were not harming anyone in a public sphere. There has not been a more recent
case that would overturn this if the exact conditions occurred; in fact the
Court has become even more sympathetic to religious freedom that overlaps with
the freedom of speech. However, at what point is evangelizing not considered a
central part of the religion and
would protecting the right therefore be less important? Does the fact that a
mall is technically a private sphere change the implications?
I do not think that the courts
should be able to decide which religion evangelizing is important in, because
that leaves the minority religions in a very vulnerable place to be judged
harshly by the majority. However, I also think that even if the courts held the
centrality of evangelizing in a religion to high importance in determining a
case like this, born-again Christians would probably be recognized as valuing
the evangelical ideals almost as much as Jehovah’s Witnesses. Therefore, I
think that if this case makes it to a trial, the Court should go off of
precedent in the Cantwell decision
and rule that David Wells was wrongly arrested and that prohibiting him from
spreading his evangelical message in a mall is violating his right to freely
exercise his religion. I do not find the argument that a mall is a private
setting compelling, because although that may technically be true, the
atmosphere is one of a public space.
Although I do acknowledge the fact
many shoppers may find the solicitation inconvenient, it is important to
remember that even if they are the majority, the minority has a constitutional
right to freely exercise his religion. The majority does not have a
constitutional right to avoid any inconveniences. What do you think?