Court schedules final two argument sessions of 2022-23 term

The final argument session of the Supreme Court’s 2022-23 term will include high-profile disputes over how employers must accommodate their employees’ religious practices and how courts should decide whether threatening statements are protected by the First Amendment. The two cases, Groff v. DeJoy and Counterman v. Colorado, will headline the April argument calendar, which was released – along with the March argument calendar – on Tuesday.

The justices agreed earlier this month to take up Groff and Counterman, as well as several other cases now slated for argument in April. Gerald Groff, an evangelical Christian and U.S. Postal Service employee, was disciplined after he refused to work on Sundays delivering Amazon packages. In the Supreme Court, he is asking the justices to overrule their 1977 decision in Trans World Airlines v. Hardison, holding that employers can show the kind of “undue hardship” needed to overcome the general ban on firing workers for practicing their religion whenever accommodating the religious practice would require more than a trivial or minimal cost.

In Billy Ray Counterman’s case, the justices agreed to decide a question that they left unresolved nine years ago in Elonis v. United States. Counterman was convicted and sentenced to four-and-a-half years in prison after sending a local musician messages that left her “extremely scared.” The question before the court is whether courts should use an objective test (as they did in Counterman’s case) or instead a subjective one to determine whether his statements qualified as a “true threat,” which are not protected by the First Amendment.

Here’s the full list of cases scheduled for oral argument in the March 2023 argument session: 

Here’s the full list of cases scheduled for the April 2023 argument session:

This article was originally published at Howe on the Court.

Posted in: Merits Cases

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