Plaintiffs File Supplemental Authority in Hughes v. Lee Following U.S. Supreme Court’s Wolford Decision
The appeal in Stephen Hughes, et al. v. Bill Lee, et al.
was argued before the Tennessee Court of Appeals on June 23, 2026. That
appeal concerns the State of Tennessee’s challenge to the decision of
the three-judge trial court declaring Tennessee’s “intent to go armed”
statute and its parks weapons ban unconstitutional.
Just two days after the Hughes oral argument, the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in Wolford v. Lopez. In Wolford,
the Supreme Court struck down a Hawaii criminal statute that prohibited
licensed individuals from carrying firearms on private property open to
the public unless the property owner had given express authorization.
The Supreme Court held that Hawaii’s law violated the Second and
Fourteenth Amendments because it severely burdened the right of
law-abiding citizens to carry firearms for self-defense in the course of
ordinary daily life.
On July 1, 2026, the Plaintiffs in
Hughes filed a
notice of supplemental authority with the Tennessee Court of Appeals. The notice explains that
Wolford
is likely relevant to several issues now before the Court of Appeals,
including the State’s facial-challenge arguments, the burden-shifting
framework under
Bruen, Tennessee’s reliance on state-specific
history and tradition, the use of Reconstruction-era or outlier
historical analogues, and the State’s argument that Tennessee’s broad
statutory definition of “firearm” defeats a facial challenge.
The supplemental filing is significant because the State has argued in Hughes that the Plaintiffs must satisfy the “no set of circumstances” standard associated with United States v. Salerno. The Plaintiffs’ notice points out that Wolford was itself a facial Second Amendment challenge, yet the Supreme Court analyzed the case under Bruen
and held the Hawaii statute facially unconstitutional without applying
Salerno’s “no set of circumstances” formulation. That matters because
the Hughes appeal also presents a facial challenge to criminal
statutes that burden ordinary firearms possession and carry – just like
the flawed Hawaii statutes did.
The filing also addresses the State’s argument in Hughes that a facial challenge fails if a statute might have some constitutional applications. In Wolford,
the Supreme Court did not ask whether Hawaii’s statute might be
constitutional in some hypothetical application. Instead, the Court
examined the real-world burden imposed on law-abiding citizens who seek
to carry firearms for self-defense during ordinary daily activities. The
Plaintiffs contend that this approach is relevant to Tennessee’s
statutes because Tennessee’s “intent to go armed” law and parks weapons
ban likewise burden the ordinary exercise of the right to keep and bear
arms.
Another important point concerns the role of state-specific history and local preferences. In Hughes, the State has relied on Tennessee’s own history and tradition to defend the challenged laws. In Wolford,
however, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that the Second Amendment has the
same meaning throughout the United States and cannot be diminished by
local customs, local preferences, or a state’s particular political
culture. That portion of Wolford may be important because
Tennessee cannot avoid the federal constitutional floor by pointing to
state-specific practices that conflict with the Second Amendment.
The notice also highlights Wolford’s
treatment of historical analogues. The Supreme Court rejected Hawaii’s
reliance on late, isolated, or outlier laws, including laws from the
Reconstruction era that were neither widespread nor widely accepted.
That analysis is relevant to Hughes because the State has
relied on certain post-ratification laws and other historical materials
to defend Tennessee’s restrictions. Under Bruen and now Wolford, the government must identify a relevant historical tradition, not merely isolated or late-enacted restrictions.
Finally, the Plaintiffs’ filing addresses
the State’s argument that Tennessee’s broad statutory definition of
“firearm” includes destructive devices such as bombs and grenades. The
State has argued that this means the challenged statutes could be
constitutionally applied to those items and therefore cannot be facially
invalid. The Plaintiffs’ notice explains that Hawaii’s statutory
definition of “firearm” was also broad and included items such as
mortars, bombs, and cannon, yet the Supreme Court in Wolford
did not treat those theoretical applications as defeating the facial
challenge. That point may be particularly important in responding to
Tennessee’s attempt to preserve broad criminal prohibitions by relying
on extreme hypotheticals rather than the statutes’ burden on ordinary
protected conduct.
The Hughes appeal remains pending
before the Tennessee Court of Appeals. The Plaintiffs’ supplemental
authority filing does not decide the case, but it places before the
Court of Appeals a new and directly relevant decision from the United
States Supreme Court. For Tennesseans who care about the right to keep
and bear arms, Wolford may substantially affect how the Court
of Appeals evaluates Tennessee’s continued defense of statutes that the
three-judge panel has already declared unconstitutional.
TFA will continue monitoring the Hughes appeal and will provide updates as the Court of Appeals considers the case.