Update on Hughes v. Lee Appeal – the State Appeals the Constitutional Challenge to Intent to Go Armed
Stephen Hughes, et al. v. Bill Lee, et al., W2025-01327-COA-R3-CV (
case link)
is the constitutional challenge brought by three TFA members, together
with Gun Owners of America and Gun Owners Foundation, against two
Tennessee statutes that have long burdened the right to keep and bear
arms.
The challenged statutes are Tenn. Code
Ann. § 39-17-1307(a), commonly known as Tennessee’s “intent to go armed”
statute, and Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-17-1311(a), commonly known as the
“Parks” statute. Plaintiffs contend that these statutes infringed rights
protected by Article I, Section 26 of the Tennessee Constitution, the
Second Amendment, and the Fourteenth Amendment by treating
constitutionally protected carry as criminal conduct unless a person
could later fit within an exception or defense. However, those
exceptions/defenses were only relevant at trial – an arresting officer
could ignore them. Those exceptions actually included fact patterns
such as “I am in my own home,” “I have a handgun permit,” or, even,
“Hey, I am a TN Supreme Court Judge.” Because of this legislatively
invented scheme, an officer can stop, detain, search, question, issue a
citation to or even arrest a citizen for carrying in their own home or
with a state issued permit.
Hughes is a civil action
challenging the constitutionality of this legislatively fabricated
statutory scheme. Under Tennessee law, qualifying civil
actions challenging the constitutionality of a statute must be assigned
to a three-judge trial court panel. The case was filed in Gibson County
Chancery Court. The Tennessee Supreme Court reviewed the complaint,
determined that the case was subject to the three-judge-panel statute,
and appointed two additional trial judges to hear the case with the
Gibson County Chancellor.
In August 2025, the three-judge panel
ruled for the plaintiffs. The panel applied the test required by the
United States Supreme Court in New York State Rifle & Pistol
Association v. Bruen and held that the regulated conduct fell within the
scope of the right to keep and bear arms. The panel further held that
the State defendants failed to carry their burden to demonstrate a
national historical tradition justifying the challenged restrictions.
The panel declared Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 39-17-1307(a) and 39-17-1311(a)
unconstitutional, void, and of no effect.
Governor Bill Lee and Attorney General
Jonathan Skrmetti, in their official capacities, appealed. On appeal,
the State defendants argued principally that the trial court lacked
jurisdiction to issue declaratory relief, that the trial court applied
the wrong facial-challenge standard, and that the panel’s declaration
improperly affected government officials and Tennesseans who were not
parties to the case.
A significant feature of the appeal is
that the State acknowledged constitutional defects in Tennessee’s
current firearms regulatory system. In its opening brief, the State
wrote that “some applications of Tennessee’s regulatory system are
constitutionally problematic,” and gave as an example that law
enforcement and courts “should hesitate to apply the Going Armed Statute
to criminalize the carrying of a rifle on a country road for
self-defense.” App.Br. 13. The State also described the case as
involving “the shortcomings of Tennessee’s firearms laws” revealed by
Bruen and argued that correcting those shortcomings “is a question for
the legislature, and not the courts.” App.Br. 14–15.
The State’s position was that even if the
statutes are unconstitutional in many ordinary applications, they should
survive a facial challenge because, in the State’s view, they might
still be constitutional in some applications. The State pointed to
examples such as grenades, bombs, rockets, missiles, offensive carrying
to terrorize the public, non-permit holders in parks, and other
public-safety hypotheticals. App.Br. 13, 26, 44–46.
Further, the State openly argued that
given the constitutional problems with the statutes that the court
should nonetheless reverse the trial court’s ruling. The State argued
that how to deal with admittedly unconstitutional statutes is an issue
that the court should leave in the hands of the Tennessee Legislature
(of course, that is the entity that created the problems and which has
for more than 200 years failed in repeated opportunities to enacted
legislation to eliminate the constitutional infringements).
The plaintiffs’ response was direct. They
argued that the State was trying to preserve an unconstitutional regime
by relying on fringe hypotheticals rather than addressing what the
statutes actually do to ordinary, law-abiding Tennesseans. Appellees’
Br. 4, 14, 34–36. The appellees emphasized that the statutes criminalize
peaceable, constitutionally protected carry by ordinary citizens and
that the State could not avoid Bruen’s historical burden by pointing to
weapons or scenarios that other laws already address. Appellees’ Br.
34–36, 44–47.
On the facial-challenge issue, appellees
argued that the State misstated the applicable standard. They explained
that facial challenges do not automatically fail whenever a defendant
can imagine one constitutional application. Instead, appellees argued
that courts may consider whether a statute lacks a “plainly legitimate
sweep,” including in constitutional contexts outside the First
Amendment. Appellees’ Br. 38–41. They further argued that the State’s
approach would make facial Second Amendment challenges practically
impossible, because even a sweeping firearms ban could be defended by
pointing to some unprotected or independently regulated circumstance –
such as carrying a missile with the intent to go armed. Appellees’ Br.
41–44.
On the State’s “dangerous and unusual
weapons” argument, appellees responded that the challenged statute is a
firearm regulation and therefore triggers Bruen. They argued that the
State cannot “shirk” its historical burden simply by pointing to
“grenades and bombs.” Appellees’ Br. 45–47. The point, appellees argued,
is not whether Tennessee may regulate grenades or bombs under some
other valid law; the point is whether the State may maintain a broad
criminal statute that burdens the right to bear arms generally and then
force citizens to rely on exceptions and defenses after the fact.
On the Parks statute, appellees argued
that Bruen does not permit the State to designate broad categories of
public spaces as “sensitive places” merely because people, including
children, may be present there. Appellees’ Br. 61–68. Appellees argued
that public parks are not analogous to historically recognized sensitive
places such as legislative assemblies, polling places, courthouses,
schools, or government buildings, and that treating ordinary public
areas as sensitive places would erode the general right to public carry.
On jurisdiction, appellees argued that the
three-judge panel had authority to decide the constitutional challenge
and to issue declaratory relief. They distinguished the State’s
authorities as cases involving injunctions against criminal
prosecutions, criminal judgments, criminal court rules, or other
procedural settings not comparable to a facial civil challenge to a
state statute. Appellees’ Br. 15–31. Appellees also emphasized that the
Tennessee Supreme Court reviewed the pleadings and appointed the
three-judge panel to decide the case. Appellees’ Br. 14.
On remedy, appellees rejected the State’s
claim that the panel issued impermissible “universal relief.” Appellees
argued that the panel granted relief to the plaintiffs by declaring the
challenged statutes facially invalid, and that any benefit to other
Tennesseans is an unavoidable incident of complete relief when a statute
is declared unconstitutional on its face. Appellees’ Br. 69–75.
Appellees further argued that Tennessee law does not require a class
action before a court may declare a statute facially unconstitutional.
Appellees’ Br. 74–75.
A ruling from the Court of Appeals is
expected to take approximately six months, although
the Court is not bound by that estimate. TFA will continue to monitor
the appeal and will provide supporters with further updates when the
Court issues its decision.
TFA’s position remains that
constitutionally protected rights are not privileges dispensed by the
legislature. The Tennessee Constitution and the Second Amendment protect
the right of law-abiding citizens to keep and bear arms. When the
legislature exceeds constitutional limits, courts have both the
authority and the duty to say so.
The fight against our own state when State
officials violate their constitutional constraints is a burden that,
like freedom and liberty, falls squarely on the shoulders of the
citizens. The State uses our tax dollars to fund the Legislature which
creates the constitutional violations. The State uses our tax dollars
to pay the Attorney General to defend unconstitutional statutes. To
bring these actions and appeals against the State, requires people to
volunteer as plaintiffs, attorneys to bring the actions and funding to
help cover litigation expenses and fees. You can help by supporting TFA
as a member and, more importantly, helping the
Tennessee Firearms Foundation (a charity) raise funds that can be used for public interest litigation.