Current:Home > NewsSignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:Jewish family can have anti-hate yard signs after neighbor used slur, court says -Capitatum
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center:Jewish family can have anti-hate yard signs after neighbor used slur, court says
Will Sage Astor View
Date:2025-04-09 06:42:05
A Jewish family had the free-speech right to blanket their yard with signs decrying hate and SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Centerracism after their next-door neighbor hurled an antisemitic slur at them during a property dispute 10 years ago, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has ruled.
The court decided Simon and Toby Galapo were exercising their rights under the Pennsylvania Constitution when they erected protest signs on their property and pointed them squarely at the neighbor’s house in the Philadelphia suburbs — a total of 23 signs over a span of years — with messages such as “Hitler Eichmann Racists,” “No Place 4 Racism” and “Woe to the Racists. Woe to the Neighbors.”
“All homeowners at one point or another are forced to gaze upon signs they may not like on their neighbors’ property — be it ones that champion a political candidate, advocate for a cause, or simply express support or disagreement with some issue,” Justice Kevin Dougherty wrote for the court’s 4-2 majority. He said suppressing such speech would “mark the end to residential expression.”
In a dissent, Justice Kevin Brobson said judges have the authority to “enjoin residential speech ... that rises to the level of a private nuisance and disrupts the quiet enjoyment of a neighbor’s home.”
The neighbors’ ongoing feud over a property boundary and “landscaping issues” came to a head in November 2014 when a member of the Oberholtzer family directed an antisemitic slur at Simon Galapo, according to court documents. By the following June, the Galapo family had put up what would be the first of numerous signs directed at the Oberholtzer property.
The Oberholtzers filed suit, seeking an order to prohibit their neighbors from erecting signs “containing false, incendiary words, content, innuendo and slander.” They alleged the protest signs were defamatory, placed the family in a false light and constituted a nuisance. One member of the family, Frederick Oberholzer Jr., testified that all he could see were signs out his back windows.
Simon Galapo testified that he wanted to make a statement about antisemitism and racism, teach his children to fight it, and change his neighbors’ behavior.
The case went through appeals after a Montgomery County judge decided the Galapo family could keep their signs, but ordered them to be turned away from the Oberholzer home.
The high court’s majority said that was an impermissible suppression of free speech. The decision noted the state constitution’s expansive characterization of free speech as an “invaluable right” to speak freely on any subject. While “we do not take lightly the concerns ... about the right to quiet enjoyment of one’s property,” Dougherty wrote, the Galapo family’s right to free speech was paramount.
veryGood! (49545)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Biden pushes party unity as he resists calls to step aside, says he’ll return to campaign next week
- Missouri Supreme Court clears way for release of woman imprisoned for library worker's 1980 murder
- FACT FOCUS: A look at claims made at the Republican National Convention as Trump accepts nomination
- Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament
- Tiger Woods misses cut, finishes disastrous British Open at 14-over
- Federal appeals court dismisses lawsuit over Tennessee’s anti-drag show ban
- Kate Hudson Admits She and Costar Matthew McConaughey Don't Wear Deodorant in TMI Confession
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Montana attorney general didn’t violate campaign finance rules, elections enforcer says
Ranking
- British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
- Rapper Sean Kingston and his mother indicted on federal charges in $1M fraud scheme
- Trump says he'll end the inflation nightmare. Economists say Trumponomics could drive up prices.
- RHOBH's Kyle Richards Seemingly Reacts to Mauricio Umansky Kissing New Woman
- Clay Aiken's son Parker, 15, makes his TV debut, looks like his father's twin
- Clint Eastwood Mourns Death of Longtime Partner Christina Sandera
- Montana attorney general didn’t violate campaign finance rules, elections enforcer says
- Federal appeals court dismisses lawsuit over Tennessee’s anti-drag show ban
Recommendation
USA men's volleyball mourns chance at gold after losing 5-set thriller, will go for bronze
Man gets 3 years in death of fiancée after victim's father reads emotional letter in court
What Usha Vance’s rise to prominence means to other South Asian and Hindu Americans
'Brat summer' is upon us. What does that even mean?
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Pregnant Brittany Mahomes and Patrick Mahomes Reveal Sex of Baby No. 3
Some convictions overturned in terrorism case against Muslim scholar from Virginia
I won't depend on Social Security alone in retirement. Here's how I plan to get by.