Fifteen Republican members of Congress filed an
amicus brief in support of the plaintiff, on September 26, 2022, arguing that the standard set in
Hardison for "undue hardship" was irreconcilable with the text and congressional purpose of Title VII, asking the court to grant
certiorari and overturn its precedent. The Supreme Court granted
certiorari on January 13, 2023, and heard oral argument on April 18, 2023. On June 29, 2023, the Supreme Court ruled 9–0 for Groff, remanding the case back to the Third Circuit. Justice Alito wrote the opinion, Justice Sotomayor filed a concurring opinion which Justice Jackson joined.
Opinion of the Court The opinion clarified Title VII's standard of "
undue hardship" does not mean
de minimis. The ruling states that "undue hardship is very different from
de minimis" and that an employer even "showing more than
de minimis cost" in providing religious accommodation "does not suffice to establish undue hardship." This ruling places additional onus on the employer to prove that the burden placed on them to accommodate an employee's religious needs is "substantial in the overall context of an employer's business" to deny that employee's religious needs. Both parties' elaborations of their test, where Groff argued that lower courts should follow the jurisprudence under the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) to compel companies to accommodate an employee's religious exemption from work, and conversely, the United States argued that
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's (EEOC) construction of
Hardison was "basically correct", were found by the court to be "too far" and were squarely rejected.
Concurring opinion In her 3-page
concurring opinion, Justice Sotomayor wrote that for many years the EEOC had already been interpreting the "undue hardship" to be on the conduct of the company's business. She also added that the court's decision to not overrule the
Hardison test for a "significant difficulty or expense standard" test, similar to the one in the ADA, to be the right decision and signalled to Congress to make that decision themselves. Lastly, she clarified that burdens on co-workers may be undue hardship. She explained that animus towards co-workers and things like coordinating voluntary shift swaps are not undue hardship, but clarified that effects on co-workers can still be "undue hardship" to the employer. == See also ==