Bell v. Presbyterian Church , 126 F.3d 328 ( 1997 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    JAMES M. BELL,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (U.S.A.);
    BOARD OF CHURCH AND SOCIETY OF
    THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH;
    WOMEN'S DIVISION OF THE GENERAL
    BOARD OF GLOBAL MINISTRIES OF THE
    UNITED METHODIST CHURCH;
    AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCHES IN THE                                   No. 96-1297
    U.S.A.,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    ELENORA GIDDINGS IVORY; JANE HULL
    HARVEY; ANNA RHEE; JAY LINTNER;
    ROBERT TILLER; LIONEL
    DERENONCOURT; OTIS TURNER;
    VERNON BROYLES,
    Defendants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria.
    Leonie M. Brinkema, District Judge.
    (CA-95-1507-A)
    Argued: April 10, 1997
    Decided: October 1, 1997
    Before HALL and NIEMEYER, Circuit Judges, and DUFFY,
    United States District Judge for the District of South Carolina,
    sitting by designation.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion,
    in which Judge Hall and Judge Duffy joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: James Wright Crabtree, SMATHERS & THOMPSON,
    Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellant. Alissa Aaronson Horvitz,
    MORGAN, LEWIS & BOCKIUS, L.L.P., Washington, D.C., for
    Appellees. ON BRIEF: Katharine B. Houlihan, MORGAN, LEWIS
    & BOCKIUS, L.L.P., Washington, D.C., for Appellees.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
    The Reverend James M. Bell, an ordained minister, served as exec-
    utive director of Interfaith Impact, a multi-denominational outreach
    program. In June 1995, his employment was terminated as part of
    Interfaith Impact's "complete reduction in force." Interfaith Impact's
    board of directors advised Bell that the termination was "based solely
    upon the financial condition" of the program and was "absolutely no
    reflection on the quality of your work." Bell sued Interfaith Impact's
    four principal constituent religious organizations, as well as others,
    for breach of contract and various torts arising from the termination.
    The district court dismissed the complaint against the constituent reli-
    gious organizations because of a lack of subject matter jurisdiction,
    concluding that, by reason of the First Amendment, a civil court has
    no jurisdiction over ecclesiastical decisions by churches "as to how
    they are going to expend their funds." For the reasons that follow, we
    affirm the judgment of the district court.
    I
    More than twenty religious groups, including as principal contribu-
    tors four national religious organizations,1 created and funded Inter-
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 The four religious organizations, all named as defendants in this case,
    are the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A., the Board of Church and Society of
    2
    faith Impact, a nonprofit corporation in Washington, D.C., "to
    advance the jointly shared religious purposes of its members, namely,
    to carry out their theological imperative to increase the possibilities
    for peace, economic and social justice." Interfaith Impact's charter
    states as its mission:
    (1) promoting a public policy that reflects prophetic Jewish-
    Christian values, (2) advocating to the United States govern-
    ment the enactment of public policies that are just, promote
    peace and protect the environment (reflecting Jewish-
    Christian values), (3) developing and nurturing people of
    faith . . . to be effective advocates for public policies that are
    just, promote peace and protect the environment, (4) maxi-
    mizing the voice, visibility, and ability of member agencies
    and denominations or faith groups to advocate for[such pol-
    icies], (5) educating . . . the general public on the public pol-
    icy issues of major concern to the inter-religious
    community.
    In the fall of 1991, Interfaith Impact "called" Bell, an ordained
    minister, to serve as its executive director. In the engagement letter,
    Interfaith Impact recognized that Bell's service would be an extension
    of his ministry with the United Church of Christ, in which he was an
    ordained minister. It stated:
    We are happy that the four entities required by the United
    Church of Christ to recognize your ordained ministry in this
    position will do so. Those entities are you and your sense of
    call; the recognition of this being a place of ministry by your
    local church; the Potomac Association of the United Church
    of Christ; and Interfaith Impact for Justice and Peace.
    The letter confirmed a financial arrangement that designated $25,000
    of Bell's salary as "housing allowance" to enable him to claim a par-
    sonage exemption from income taxes and a contribution that Inter-
    _________________________________________________________________
    the United Methodist Church, the Women's Division of the General
    Board of Global Ministries of the United Methodist Church, and the
    American Baptist Churches in the U.S.A.
    3
    faith Impact would make to the United Church of Christ's pension
    program so that Bell would continue to receive pension and health
    benefits from that church. The letter concluded,"We hope this will
    be a rewarding ministry for you."
    Because of diminished support from constituent faith groups in the
    spring of 1995, the full explanation for which does not appear in the
    record, Interfaith Impact began to experience serious financial diffi-
    culties. In May 1995, the Presbyterian Church, one of Interfaith
    Impact's main financial contributors, decided that because of the
    financial crisis it would not allocate further funds for Interfaith Impact
    for the year 1996. It also conditioned fulfillment of its 1995 commit-
    ment on a complete reduction of force and vacation of the premises
    rented by Interfaith Impact. The Presbyterian Church explained, "The
    current situation is not to be seen as the fault of the current staff who
    are in many ways victims of the circumstances the faith groups find
    themselves in due to diminished resources."
    In response to the Presbyterian Church's withdrawal of support, the
    board of directors of Interfaith Impact promptly effected a complete
    reduction of force, intending to continue the program's ministry with
    a volunteer staff. In its letter of termination to Bell, dated June 23,
    1995, the board stated:
    Your termination is based solely upon the financial condi-
    tion of Interfaith IMPACT which has [led] the Board of
    Directors to enact a complete "reduction in force." In this
    termination, there is absolutely no reflection on the quality
    of your work.
    The letter concluded, "I would again express to you my admiration
    and appreciation of your work, my regret for the situation that makes
    this reduction necessary, and my gratitude for the helpfulness which
    you are continuing to give to Interfaith IMPACT."
    Several months later, Bell filed this action against the board of
    directors and against the four principal contributing religious organi-
    zations, challenging their expressed reason for ending the program
    and terminating his employment. He complained, in six counts, that
    the defendants (1) interfered with his contract, (2) intentionally
    4
    inflicted on him emotional distress, (3) breached a covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing, (4) interfered with his prospective advantage,
    (5) wrongfully terminated him, and (6) that the religious organization
    defendants breached their pledge to contribute to Interfaith Impact on
    a yearly basis. The district court dismissed the complaint against the
    individual board members for lack of personal jurisdiction and against
    the religious organizations because of a lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction.2 He appeals only on the ground that the district court
    erred in determining that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction.
    II
    In keeping with the First Amendment's proscription against the
    "establishment of religion" or prohibiting the"free exercise thereof,"
    civil courts have long taken care not to intermeddle in internal eccle-
    siastical disputes. As early as Watson v. Jones , 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) 679
    (1871) (decided on general common law and not constitutional law),
    the Supreme Court disavowed the ability to resolve a dispute between
    a national religious organization and one of its local churches based
    on differing interpretations of church law, reasoning that
    All who unite themselves to . . . a [religious] body do so
    with an implied consent to [its] government, and are bound
    to submit to it. But it would be a vain consent and would
    lead to the total subversion of such religious bodies, if any
    one aggrieved by one of their decisions could appeal to the
    secular courts and have them reversed. It is of the essence
    of these religious unions, and of their right to establish tribu-
    nals for the decision of questions arising among themselves,
    that those decisions should be binding in all cases of ecclesi-
    astical cognizance, subject only to such appeals as the
    organism itself provides for.
    Id. at 729. And later in Gonzalez v. Roman Catholic Archbishop, 
    280 U.S. 1
     (1929), the Court similarly refused, on constitutional grounds,
    _________________________________________________________________
    2 Bell thereafter sued the individuals, as well as Interfaith Impact, in the
    District of Columbia, where the district court entered summary judgment
    against him. See Bell v. Ivory, ___ F. Supp. ___, 
    1997 WL 329589
     (D.
    D.C. June 11, 1997).
    5
    to force a Roman Catholic Archbishop to appoint the plaintiff to a
    chaplaincy which was denied to him based on an interpretation of
    Roman Catholic canon law. Justice Brandeis there formulated the rule
    that "[i]n the absence of fraud, collusion, or arbitrariness, the deci-
    sions of the proper church tribunals on matters purely ecclesiastical,
    although affecting civil rights, are accepted in litigation before the
    secular courts as conclusive, because the parties in interest made them
    so by contract or otherwise." Id. at 16. These principles were applied
    more recently in Kedroff v. St. Nicholas Cathedral, 
    344 U.S. 94
    (1952), where the Court refused, again on constitutional grounds, to
    intervene into a schism between the Russian Church in America and
    the Soviet-era Russian Orthodox Church over church lands, holding
    that churches must have the "power to decide for themselves, free
    from state interference, matters of church government as well as those
    of faith and doctrine." 
    Id. at 116
    .
    Although Gonzalez and other cases allowed the possibility of
    "`marginal civil court review' under the narrow rubrics of `fraud' or
    `collusion' when church tribunals act in bad faith for secular pur-
    poses," the Court in Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese v.
    Milivojevich, 
    426 U.S. 696
     (1976), abandoned any"arbitrariness"
    exception, moving yet further from any role for civil courts in ecclesi-
    astical disputes. 
    Id. at 713
    . It has thus become established that the
    decisions of religious entities about the appointment and removal of
    ministers and persons in other positions of similar theological signifi-
    cance are beyond the ken of civil courts. Rather, such courts must
    defer to the decisions of religious organizations"on matters of disci-
    pline, faith, internal organization, or ecclesiastical rule, custom or
    law." 
    Id.
     The Supreme Court explained,"[I]t is the essence of reli-
    gious faith that ecclesiastical decisions are reached and are to be
    accepted as matters of faith whether or not rational or measurable by
    objective criteria." 
    Id. at 714-15
    .
    The question that we must resolve in the case before us, therefore,
    is whether the dispute between Bell and the four national churches is
    an ecclesiastical one about "discipline, faith, internal organization, or
    ecclesiastical rule, custom or law," 
    id. at 713
    , or whether it is a case
    in which we should hold religious organizations liable in civil courts
    for "purely secular disputes between third parties and a particular
    defendant, albeit a religiously affiliated organization." General Coun-
    6
    cil on Finance Administration of the United Methodist Church v. Cal-
    ifornia Superior Court, 
    439 U.S. 1369
    , 1373 (1978) (Rehnquist,
    Circuit Justice). We conclude that the dispute in this case is ecclesias-
    tical.
    Bell's complaint against the four national churches centers on the
    Presbyterian Church's withholding of funding and its consultation
    with the other constituent churches in effecting a complete reduction
    of force of Interfaith Impact. Bell argues that the motives of these
    churches were not as benign as simply withdrawing financial support.
    He has alleged that board members were improperly focusing on tak-
    ing over the Interfaith Impact ministry, or on his personal life, or on
    unjustified claims of financial misconduct. At bottom, however,
    Bell's challenge focuses on how the constituent churches spend their
    religious outreach funds. While it is possible that the Presbyterian
    Church may have harbored hostility against Bell personally, it is also
    possible that the church may have been acting in good faith to fulfill
    its discernment of the divine will for its ministry. Resolution of such
    an accusation would interpose the judiciary into the Presbyterian
    Church's decisions, as well as the decisions of the other constituent
    churches, relating to how and by whom they spread their message and
    specifically their decision to select their outreach ministry through the
    granting or withholding of funds.
    Bell argues that he is not challenging the internal decisions of the
    national churches but their external conduct in interfering with his
    relationship with Interfaith Impact. He characterizes this as a secular
    dispute between the churches and a third party. This argument, how-
    ever, overlooks Interfaith Impact's role as the joint ministry of its
    constituent churches and Bell's role as executive director of Interfaith
    Impact.
    Interfaith Impact is not a secular organization with which the
    national constituent churches had a secular relationship. On the con-
    trary, Interfaith Impact constituted a ministry of those constituent
    churches, and this was understood by all persons involved. The
    national churches maintain that they were engaging in ministry as
    directed by scripture, relying on Deuteronomy 15:11; Proverbs 21:3;
    Isaiah 49:6, 58:10; Amos 5:22-24; and Matthew 5:14-16, which they
    read to describe spreading light in the world and pursuing social jus-
    7
    tice as core Judeo-Christian values. Their claim is borne out by the
    charter of Interfaith Impact which provides that it is organized "to
    advance the jointly shared religious purposes of its members, namely,
    to carry out their theological imperative to increase the possibilities
    for peace, economic and social justice." Interfaith Impact's religious
    purpose is also borne out by Interfaith Impact's engagement of Bell
    in its "ministry." Indeed, their engagement letter to Bell concluded,
    "We hope this will be a rewarding ministry for you." Finally, Bell
    himself treated his position as a ministry. He obtained approval from
    his church to engage as executive director of Interfaith Impact as part
    of his ministry, and he agreed to the designation of part of his salary
    as a parsonage allowance for tax purposes. In summary, in carrying
    out his duties, Bell worked to spread the shared religious beliefs of
    Interfaith Impact's constituent members and to promote their Judeo-
    Christian values.
    As this court has previously noted, a person is a member of a reli-
    gion's clergy "if the employee's primary duties consist of teaching,
    spreading the faith, church governance, supervision of a religious
    order, or supervision or participation in religious ritual and worship."
    Rayburn v. General Conference of Seventh-Day Adventists, 
    772 F.2d 1164
    , 1169 (4th Cir. 1985); see also Corporation of Presiding Bishop
    of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints v. Amos, 
    483 U.S. 327
    , 337 (1987) (recognizing the importance to the religion's mission
    of activities run by closely-associated corporations); E.E.O.C. v.
    Catholic Univ., 
    83 F.3d 455
    , 461-63 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (citing Rayburn
    in case applying "ministerial exception" to a professor of canon law);
    Scharon v. St. Luke's Episcopal Presbyterian Hosp. , 
    929 F.2d 360
    ,
    362-63 (8th Cir. 1991) (finding a chaplain in a religiously-affiliated
    hospital to be a minister); E.E.O.C. v. Southwestern Baptist Theologi-
    cal Seminary, 
    651 F.2d 277
    , 283 (5th Cir. Unit A July 1981) (consid-
    ering even non-ordained Baptist seminary faculty to be ministers for
    Title VII purposes). In light of this precedent, it follows that Bell too
    was serving in a religious ministry while acting as executive director
    of Interfaith Impact.
    When the Presbyterian Church decided to withhold its funds from
    Interfaith Impact, causing the end of Bell's work at Interfaith Impact,
    the Presbyterian Church, as well as the other churches, made a deci-
    sion on how it would expend funds raised by the church for religious
    8
    purposes, which directly related to its outreach ministry and Bell's
    status as a minister. Such a decision about the nature, extent, adminis-
    tration, and termination of a religious ministry falls within the ecclesi-
    astical sphere that the First Amendment protects from civil court
    intervention.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district
    court.
    AFFIRMED
    9