Confessional privilege (United States)

In United States law, confessional privilege is a rule of evidence that forbids the inquiry into the content or even existence of certain communications between clergy and communicants.

It grows out of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, the common law, and statutory enactments which may vary between jurisdictions.

Statute

All fifty states, the District of Columbia, and the federal government have enacted statutory privileges providing that at least some communications between clergyman and parishioners are privileged.[1]

Common law

Prior to the adoption of statutory protections, there was some protection under common law.

There is also Smith's case reported in the "New York City Hall Recorder", vol. II, p. 77, which, apparently, was decided in the same way.

Issues

The privilege is defined in over 50 separate statutes and may therefore vary in important ways:

Footnotes

  1. "The First Amendment Basis for the Clergyman-Communicant Privilege"
  2. "The Catholic Question in America", by Anthony Kohlman and William Sampson, New York, 1813

See also