So now the courts are writing the rules for
professional sports. Whats next? Will they soon tell us that sometimes two
of a kind beats a full house?
On May 29 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7-2
that the PGA Tour has to let Casey Martin ride in a golf cart despite its walking
rule.
The real issue at hand is not whether the PGA
should voluntarily change its rules so people like Martin, whose degenerative
circulatory disease precludes his walking the golf course, may use a golf cart. As
a nongolfer, I can find such a change reasonable and decent. I might even agree
with Justice John Paul Stevenss statement that a waiver of the walking
rule in such cases would not alter the essence of the game; as
dissenting Justice Antonin Scalia notes, the rules of all games are arbitrary.
Reasonable people may disagree. Reasonable
golfers do disagree. Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus, who know a thing or two
about the game, testified for the PGA at the trial.
But the issue is not whether the PGA is being
stubborn in refusing to permit a waiver of the walking rule in deserving individual
cases. The issue is whether any branch of the government should sit in judgment of
the PGA.
So whose fault is it that a majority of the
Supreme Court has presided over this alteration of the rules of professional
tournament golf? Some blame the seven justices and praise the dissenters,
Justices Scalia and Clarence Thomas.
Thats a mistake. The offending party is
not the court but the U.S. Congress, which wrote the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA), the law applied in the Martin case. The majority said: Congress
intended that an entity like the PGA not only give individualized attention to the
handful of requests that it might receive from talented but disabled athletes for a
modification or waiver of a rule to allow them access to the competition, but also
carefully weigh the purpose, as well as the letter, of the rule before determining
that no accommodation would be tolerable. Scalia dissented on the point of
congressional intent. But who really knows what was in the minds of the
congressmen who voted for the law, which is egalitarianism run amuck and a
trampling of individual rights?
The Court of course has the power to strike
down the ADA as unconstitutional. It should have done so long ago. But the PGA did
not challenge the law per se, only its application in this case. The PGA argued that
the law does not apply to pro golfers (who are subcontractors and entertainers)
but only to customers and employees. The Court replied that golfers are indeed
customers of the PGA Tour and that competition is open to the public, albeit with
rather stringent conditions. (A $3,000 entry fee and appropriate letters of
recommendation get anyone into the qualifying round.) So, Stevens wrote, the ADA
rules about making reasonable accommodations to the disabled apply.
Granted the premises and egalitarian spirit of
the ADA, Stevenss point is arguable. The problem is that the premises of
the ADA should not be granted. Alas, Scalia, despite a dissent overflowing with
verity and humor, grants the premises. His dissent claims that no one in his
right mind would believe that sports competitors are customers of the
sponsoring organization. Thus Martin cannot claim relief under the ADA. Should he
become convinced that professional golfers are in some manner customers, he
might have to concede that Martin qualifies for relief. (Scalias dissent
contains other grounds for rejecting Martins claim. He properly finds it
ludicrous that the court takes it upon itself to determine What Is
Golf.)
Such are the games justices play when
Congress writes bad law.
Why is the ADA bad law? Because it forcibly
interferes with private, peaceful activity. While it may be nice, as well as good
business, to accommodate people with handicaps, it is not a legal obligation under
our traditional Jeffersonian idea of individual rights, including property rights, to
which we owe our freedom and prosperity. When will we learn, as someone once
put it, that a government that can do anything for you can do anything
to you?
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow
at The Future of Freedom Foundation in Fairfax, Va. (www.fff.org), author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of
Ideas on Liberty magazine.