Current:Home > MyColorado’s Supreme Court dismisses suit against baker who wouldn’t make a cake for transgender woman-InfoLens
Colorado’s Supreme Court dismisses suit against baker who wouldn’t make a cake for transgender woman
View Date:2024-12-23 11:16:09
Colorado’s Supreme Court on Tuesday dismissed on procedural grounds a lawsuit against a Christian baker who refused to bake a cake for a transgender woman. Justices declined to weigh in on the free speech issues that brought the case to national attention.
Baker Jack Phillips was sued by attorney Autumn Scardina in 2017 after his Denver-area bakery refused to make a pink cake with blue frosting to celebrate her gender transition.
Justices said in the 6-3 majority opinion that Scardina had not exhausted her options to seek redress through another court before filing her lawsuit.
The case was among several in Colorado pitting LGBTQ+ civil rights against First Amendment rights. In 2018, Phillips scored a partial victory before the U.S. Supreme Court after refusing to bake a cake for a gay couple’s wedding.
Scardina attempted to order her cake the same day the U.S. Supreme Court announced it would hear Phillips’ appeal in the wedding cake case. Scardina said she wanted to challenge Phillips’ claims that he would serve LGBTQ+ customers and denied her attempt to get the cake was a set up for litigation.
Before filing her lawsuit, Scardina first filed a complaint against Phillips with the state and the Colorado Civil Rights Commission, which found probable cause he discriminated against her.
In March 2019, lawyers for the state and Phillips agreed to drop both cases under a settlement Scardina was not involved in. She pursued the lawsuit against Phillips and Masterpiece Cakeshop on her own.
That’s when the case took a wrong turn, justices said in Tuesday’s ruling. Scardina should have challenged the state’s settlement with Phillips directly to the state’s court of appeals, they said.
Instead, it went to a state judge, who ruled in 2021 that Phillips had violated the state’s anti-discrimination law for refusing to bake the cake for Scardina. The judge said the case was about refusing to sell a product, and not compelled speech.
The Colorado Court of Appeals also sided with Scardina, ruling that the pink-and-blue cake — on which Scardina did not request any writing — was not speech protected by the First Amendment.
Phillips’ attorney had argued before Colorado’s high court that his cakes were protected free speech and that whatever Scardina said she was going to do with the cake mattered for his rights.
Representatives for the two sides said they were reviewing the ruling and did not have an immediate response.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Secret Service Agent Allegedly Took Ex to Barack Obama’s Beach House
- Standoff over: Colts, Jonathan Taylor agree to three-year, $42M extension
- Cory Wharton Details the Gut-Wrenching Trauma of 7-Month-Old Daughter Maya's Open-Heart Surgery
- Liberal Wisconsin Supreme Court justice rejects GOP call to recuse on redistricting cases
- 10 Trendy Bags To Bring to All of Your Holiday Plans
- Precision missile strike on cafe hosting soldier’s wake decimates Ukrainian village
- New York City mayor wraps up Latin America trip with call for ‘right to work’ for migrants in US
- NOT REAL NEWS: A look at what didn’t happen this week
- Get well, Pop. The Spurs are in great hands until your return
- Vermont’s flood-damaged capital is slowly rebuilding. And it’s asking tourists and residents to help
Ranking
- Amazon Black Friday 2024 sales event will start Nov. 21: See some of the deals
- Anti-vaxxer Aaron Rodgers makes a fool of himself mocking Travis Kelce as 'Mr. Pfizer'
- North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper to lead economic development trip to Tokyo
- On ‘Carolyn’s Boy,’ Darius Rucker pays loving tribute to his greatest inspiration: his late mother
- Louisiana House greenlights Gov. Jeff Landry’s tax cuts
- Ex-soldier indicted for trying to pass U.S. defense info to China
- Man indicted for threatening voicemail messages left at ADL offices in New York, 3 other states
- College football Week 6 games to watch: Oklahoma-Texas leads seven must-see contests
Recommendation
-
MVSU football player killed, driver injured in crash after police chase
-
Auto workers stop expanding strikes against Detroit Three after GM makes battery plant concession
-
Man arrested in Christmas Day death of 3-year-old girl in Maine
-
Meet the high school sport that builds robots — and the next generation of engineers
-
Are banks, post offices, UPS and FedEx open on Veterans Day? Here's what to know
-
Max Verstappen captures third consecutive Formula 1 championship
-
4 members of a Florida family are sentenced for selling a fake COVID-19 cure through online church
-
This Is What It’s Really Like to Do Jennifer Aniston's Hard AF Workout