Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Cathy Miller, the owner of Tastries Bakery in Bakersfield, California, in 2018.
Cathy Miller, the owner of Tastries Bakery in Bakersfield, California, in 2018. Photograph: Henry A Barrios/AP
Cathy Miller, the owner of Tastries Bakery in Bakersfield, California, in 2018. Photograph: Henry A Barrios/AP

California bakery wins case over refusal to make cake for same-sex wedding

This article is more than 1 year old

Owner of Tastries Bakery in Bakersfield argued right to free speech and expression of religion trumps anti-discrimination law

A California judge has ruled in favor of a bakery owner who refused to make wedding cakes for a same-sex couple because it violated her Christian beliefs.

California’s department of fair housing and employment had sued Tastries Bakery in Bakersfield, arguing that the owner, Cathy Miller, intentionally discriminated against the couple in violation of California’s Unruh Civil Rights Act.

Miller’s attorneys argued her right to free speech and free expression of religion trumped the argument that she violated the anti-discrimination law. Kern county superior court judge Eric Bradshaw ruled Friday that Miller acted lawfully while upholding her beliefs about what the Bible teaches regarding marriage.

The decision was welcomed as a first amendment victory by Miller and her pro bono attorneys with the conservative Thomas More Society.

“I’m hoping that in our community we can grow together,” Miller told the Bakersfield Californian after the ruling. “And we should understand that we shouldn’t push any agenda against anyone else.”

A spokesperson for the fair housing department said it was aware of the ruling but had not determined what to do next. The couple who ordered the cake from the bakery, Eileen and Mireya Rodriguez-Del Rio, said they expect an appeal.

“Of course we’re disappointed, but not surprised,” Eileen told the newspaper. “We anticipate that our appeal will have a different result.”

An earlier decision in the Kern county superior court also went Miller’s way, but it was later vacated by the fifth district court of appeal, which sent the lawsuit back to the county.

The decision comes as a Colorado baker is challenging a ruling he violated that state’s anti-discrimination law by refusing to make a cake celebrating a gender transition.

That baker, Jack Phillips, separately won a partial US supreme court victory after refusing on religious grounds to make a gay couple’s wedding cake a decade ago.

Most viewed

Most viewed