No. 20-1751

Susan Fischer, et al. v. Phil Murphy, Governor of New Jersey, et al.

Lower Court: Third Circuit
Docketed: 2021-06-16
Status: Denied
Type: Paid
Response RequestedResponse WaivedRelisted (2)
Tags: civil-rights constitutional-rights employee-rights first-amendment government-action public-employee standing union-dues union-speech waiver waiver-doctrine
Key Terms:
FirstAmendment Privacy JusticiabilityDoctri
Latest Conference: 2021-10-29 (distributed 2 times)
Question Presented (AI Summary)

Whether governments and unions need clear and compelling evidence of a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver of First Amendment rights to seize payments for union speech from employees who object

Question Presented (OCR Extract)

QUESTIONS PRESENTED In 2018, the Court in Janus v. AFSCME, Council 31 held that public employees have a First Amendment right not to subsidize union speech. 138 8. Ct. 2448, 2486 (2018). The Court also held that governments and unions violate that right by seizing union dues or fees from employees unless there is clear and compelling evidence the employees waived that constitutional right. Id. New Jersey and many other states are resisting Janus’ holding by prohibiting employees who signed dues deduction forms from exercising their right to stop subsidizing union speech except during short escape periods—generally only ten to thirty days each year. The Third Circuit below, as well as the Seventh, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits, have upheld these restrictions, finding the government does not need proof of a waiver to restrict when employees can exercise their First Amendment rights under Janus, but that proof of employee contractual consent is enough to allow the government to seize union dues from employees over their objections. The questions presented are: 1. Under the First Amendment, to seize payments for union speech from employees who provide notice they are nonmembers and object to supporting the union, do governments and unions need clear and compelling evidence those employees knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived their First Amendment rights and that enforcement of that waiver is not against public policy? 2. Do Petitioners have standing to challenge New Jersey Statutes Annotated Section 52:14-15.9e? @)

Docket Entries

2021-11-01
Petition DENIED.
2021-10-13
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 10/29/2021.
2021-10-13
Reply of petitioners Susan Fischer, et al. filed. (Distributed)
2021-09-27
Brief of respondents New Jersey Education Ass'n, et al. in opposition filed.
2021-09-27
Brief of respondent Phil Murphy, Governor of New Jersey in opposition filed.
2021-08-04
Motion to extend the time to file a response is granted and the time is extended to and including September 27, 2021, for all respondents.
2021-08-03
Motion to extend the time to file a response from August 26, 2021 to September 27, 2021, submitted to The Clerk.
2021-07-27
Response Requested. (Due August 26, 2021)
2021-07-21
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 9/27/2021.
2021-06-30
Waiver of right of respondent New Jersey Education Ass'n; Township of Ocean Education Ass'n to respond filed.
2021-06-30
Waiver of right of respondent Phil Murphy, Governor of New Jersey to respond filed.
2021-06-11
Petition for a writ of certiorari filed. (Response due July 16, 2021)

Attorneys

New Jersey Education Ass'n; Township of Ocean Education Ass'n
Ramya RavindranBredhoff & Kaiser, P.L.L.C., Respondent
Phil Murphy, Governor of New Jersey
Jeremy Michael FeigenbaumOffice of the New Jersey Attorney General, Respondent
Susan Fischer, et al.
William L. MessengerNational Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation, Inc., Petitioner