Rule of Law

National Shooting Sports Foundation, Inc. v. James

In National Shooting Sports Foundation v. James, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit considered whether a New York gun regulation violates the Constitution’s Commerce Clause.

Case Summary

In July 2021, based on legislative findings that the illegal use of firearms contributes to the public health crisis of gun violence in the state, New York enacted a law called Section 898, which requires gun businesses to take certain steps to prevent their products “from being possessed, used, marketed or sold unlawfully in New York state.” Under the law, gun businesses that fail to take these steps are subject to civil prosecution or private suit.

In December of the same year, the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) filed suit against the New York Attorney General, arguing that Section 898 is unconstitutional because, among other reasons, it violates a legal doctrine known as the dormant Commerce Clause. The United States District Court for the Northern District of New York dismissed the case, agreeing with the state that NSSF did not plausibly allege a constitutional violation.

In June 2022, NSSF appealed the lower court’s decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, where CAC filed an amicus brief urging the court to affirm.

Our brief began by explaining that the Commerce Clause was the Framers’ response to state economic protectionism under the Articles of Confederation. After the Revolutionary War, Congress’s inability to regulate commerce left the states unable to adopt a uniform response to the country’s economic depression. As each state developed its own trade policies designed to benefit local commerce, tensions rose, and states began taking retaliatory measures against each other. Recognizing the urgent need to restore harmony among the states, Congress adopted the Commerce Clause unanimously and with essentially no debate at the 1787 Constitutional Convention as a means to end the pattern of economic competition among the states that threatened to unravel the political union.

As our brief further discussed, this history supports a narrow role for courts under the dormant Commerce Clause, limited to striking down protectionist state trade barriers but otherwise giving states wide leeway to legislate in ways that may affect interstate commerce. Longstanding Supreme Court precedent reflects precisely that understanding. Despite a temporary deviation beyond that narrow function in the late nineteenth century, the Court has focused its dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence on economic protectionism consistently for over a century now.  And the Second Circuit has largely followed suit, repeatedly emphasizing that state health and safety laws, with neither the purpose nor effect of economic protectionism, are permissible under the Commerce Clause, even if they result in incidental effects on interstate commerce.

Our brief argued that, in light of this history and precedent, there is no basis for invalidating Section 898. The statute treats gun industry members even-handedly based on their conduct, not their location. It does not put New York in competition with any other state because it does not discriminate against other states’ commerce or favor local economic interests. Section 898’s clear purpose and effect—to ensure gun industry members take steps to mitigate the misuse of firearms in New York—is wholly unrelated to economic protectionism. In sum, our brief explained that there is no basis for striking the law down and urged the Second Circuit Court to affirm the decision of the lower court.

In July 2025, the Second Circuit upheld the district court’s judgment and, as relevant here, ruled that Section 898 does not violate the dormant Commerce Clause. Echoing our brief, the Court emphasized the narrowness of the dormant Commerce Clause doctrine and explained that it is animated by “concern about economic protectionism,” wholly absent in this case. The Court also noted that NSSF’s argument that Section 898 facially discriminated against interstate commerce had been mooted by a subsequent amendment to the statute. Finally, the Court held that Section 898 does not impermissibly burden interstate commerce, nor does it improperly regulate conduct wholly outside of New York’s borders.

Case Timeline

  • January 13, 2023

    CAC files amicus brief in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals

    NSSF Amicus FINAL
  • November 3, 2023

    The Second Circuit hears oral arguments

  • July 10, 2025

    The Second Circuit issues its decision

    NSSF Majority Opinion