Supreme Court to Hear Case Over Orthodox Jewish Prayer Gatherings in a Private Home
by Dion J. Pierre

The US Supreme Court building is seen the morning before justices are expected to issue opinions in pending cases, in Washington, DC, June 14, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
The US Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case arising from an Ohio city’s attempt to enforce its zoning laws against an Orthodox Jewish man who planned to host regular prayer services in his home.
The case does not yet ask the justices to decide whether University Heights violated Daniel Grand’s religious-liberty rights, or whether cities may generally require permits for home prayer gatherings. Instead, the Court will address a threshold question: When officials order someone to stop a religious activity, may he immediately challenge that action in federal court, or must he first complete the government’s permitting and appeals process?
The stakes extend well beyond one Ohio minyan. Local governments have legitimate authority to regulate traffic, noise, fire safety and large institutions operating in residential neighborhoods. But religious observance—particularly Orthodox Jewish observance—often takes place in private homes and depends on worshippers living within walking distance of one another. The Court’s ruling could determine how easily municipalities may characterize such gatherings as regulated institutions and how soon residents may ask a judge to protect them when official warnings cause them to stop worshipping.
The dispute began in January 2021, when Grand invited approximately 12 neighbors to join Sabbath prayers at his home in University Heights, a suburb of Cleveland. Orthodox Jewish prayer ordinarily requires a minyan, a quorum of 10 adult Jewish men. Because observant Jews do not drive on Shabbat, a nearby prayer group may be essential to communal religious life.
Grand’s email announced three services “for the inauguration of the Shomayah Tefilah Beis Hakeneset.” It called the gathering a “shul,” identified a rabbi and encouraged recipients to spread the word.
A neighbor forwarded the invitation to Mayor Michael Dylan Brennan, who sent it to the city’s law director. Two days later, the city issued Grand a cease-and-desist letter.
The letter said Grand appeared to be planning a “place of religious assembly” and warned that operating a shul or synagogue on residential property without zoning approval could result in citations. Grand said he intended only to host a small prayer group. Nevertheless, he cancelled the next gathering and applied for a special-use permit.
At a public hearing, Grand’s lawyer said the group would meet weekly and on certain Jewish holidays. Neighbors raised concerns about attendance, parking and fire safety. Grand responded that worshippers could not drive on Shabbat or major holidays.
Planning commissioners themselves questioned whether the gathering legally constituted a “house of worship” and whether Grand needed a permit at all. Before the commission reached a decision, however, Grand withdrew his application, maintaining that he was not operating a house of worship as defined by the city code.
That withdrawal now lies at the center of the Supreme Court case.
Grand later sued the city and several officials, alleging violations of his rights to religious exercise, free speech and equal protection. But the federal trial court ruled that some of his claims had been brought too soon.
Courts generally require property owners to obtain a final zoning decision before filing a federal lawsuit. The rule is intended to prevent judges from deciding hypothetical disputes when local authorities might still approve the proposed use or determine that no permit is necessary.
The trial court found that no final decision existed because Grand had withdrawn his application before the Planning Commission ruled. He also had not asked the City Council or Board of Zoning Appeals to resolve the dispute. The US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit upheld that ruling in November 2025.
Grand’s lawyers argue that this reasoning elevates bureaucratic form over practical reality. By the time he sued, they say, the city had already ordered him to stop, threatened citations, encouraged neighbors to report him and directed police officers to pass his house looking for possible violations. Those actions caused him to cancel the prayer gathering.
Requiring him to continue seeking official permission, they argue, would allow governments to suppress constitutionally protected conduct while avoiding judicial review by insisting that their threats were not technically final.
University Heights counters that no body with final legal authority ever prohibited Grand’s prayer group. The local process, it argues, might have concluded that he needed no permit or might have granted one with reasonable safety conditions. Grand prevented that process from reaching a conclusion when he withdrew his application.
Alliance Defending Freedom, which represents Grand, has framed the dispute as a defense of prayer in the home.
“Every American has the right to host a prayer gathering in his home, and he certainly doesn’t need a city permit to do so,” ADF senior counsel John Bursch said after the Supreme Court accepted the case. He accused University Heights of treating religious gatherings more harshly than similarly sized book clubs or poker nights.
The Court is unlikely to decide immediately whether the city actually violated Grand’s rights. Its ruling may simply determine whether he can return to federal court and have those claims heard.
But that procedural question has concrete consequences. A constitutional right offers limited protection if officials can cause someone to abandon a religious practice through threats of enforcement, yet prevent him from challenging those threats until he completes a lengthy process of seeking government permission.
Follow Dion J. Pierre @DionJPierre.
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