When Supreme Court Precedent Has Direct Application To A Case, It Is Not The Province Of The Appellate Court To Decide Otherwise, Even If It Appears Likely That The Precedent Will Be Overruled

NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA v. CITY OF CHICAGO (June 2, 2009)
 

The City of Chicago and the Village of Oak Park, Illinois both ban the possession of most handguns. The Supreme Court decided District of Columbia v. Heller in 2008, holding that the Second Amendment prohibited the District of Columbia from banning the possession of handguns for self protection. The National Rifle Association then sued the municipalities. The district court dismissed the suits against Chicago and Oak Park because Heller dealt with the authority of the District of Columbia. In other, older cases the Supreme Court has refused to apply the Second Amendment to the states. The NRA appeals.

In their opinion, Chief Judge Easterbrook and Judges Bauer and Posner affirmed. The Court conceded that the Supreme Court, in Cruikshank, Presser and Miller, was presented with arguments based on the privileges and immunities clause. The NRA argues that the Second Amendment should be applied to the states under the "selective incorporation" approach that was not argued in those cases. The Court rejected that argument, stating that it is bound to follow the Supreme Court precedent if it has "direct application" to the case, even if a different argument is presented and even if the original reasoning has been brought into question over time. The Second Amendment precedent does have direct application as is evident from the Supreme Court's footnote 23 in Heller itself. There, the Supreme Court specifically commented that the continuing vitality of that precedent was not before it. The Court concluded that it is up to the Supreme Court to revisit the issue, even if the current legal theory is not the one addressed by the precedent. The Court added its own view that it is not convinced, as some others are, that the Supreme Court will change its approach to the Second Amendment when afforded the opportunity.