Students Expelled from Religious School Over Lesbian Relationship
Written by Arthur S. Leonard Wednesday, 28 January 2009 18:51
A California appellate court has ruled that a religious high school was free to dismiss two students for having a lesbian affair, because the school is not a "place of public accommodation" covered by the state law banning sexual orientation discrimination.
The ruling in Jane Doe v. California Lutheran High School Association, 2009 Westlaw 161869 (Cal.App., 4th Dist.), was announced on January 26 in an opinion by Justice Betty Richli.
Students applying to the Catholic Lutheran High School in Wildomar, California, a private religious school affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Synod and the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod, are required to signify their acceptance of the rules governing the institution, which includes an agreement to conduct themselves according to rules of "Christian Conduct." According to Justice Richli, the school presented evidence about the view of non-marital sex and homosexuality embraced by the religious bodies that sponsor this school. "Lutherans believe that homosexuality is a sin," she wrote. "The School has a policy of refusing admission to homosexual students. Its ‘Christian Conduct’ rule provided that a student could be expelled for engaging in immoral or scandalous conduct, whether on or off campus. This would include homosexual conduct."
In this case, a student reported to a teacher that a female classmate had said that she loved another female classmate, without naming any names. The student told the teacher that he would be able to figure out who was involved by looking at the female students’ MySpace pages. The teacher reviewed the MySpace pages of his female students and discovered the two students who were subsequently expelled, each of whom had referred to being in love with the other. One of the students identified herself as "bi" and the other as "not sure" under the category of sexual orientation.
The teacher reported to the principal, Pastor Bork, who convened a meeting of the school’s Disciplinary Committee, which advised confronting the students and suspending them if they confirmed the truth of this information. Bork questioned each of the girls, they admitted that they loved each other, had hugged and kissed each other, and had told other students that they were lesbians. This earned them a suspension, letters to their parents explaining why they were being suspended – that they had a "bond of intimacy characteristic of a lesbian relationship" – and ultimately their expulsion by vote of the school’s board of directors.
The girls sued under California’s Unruh Civil Rights Act, which forbids sexual orientation discrimination by places of public accommodation. They also claimed damages for invasion of privacy and false imprisonment – referring to their sequestration in closed rooms for questioning until they were sent home, as well as "outing" them to their parents.
Judge Gloria Trask of Riverside Superior Court granted the school’s motion for summary judgment, concluding that it was not a "business enterprise" covered by the Unruh Act, and the plaintiffs appealed.
The Court of Appeal agreed with Judge Trask, finding that private, non-profit schools were generally not considered to be businesses. There was no need to get into the school’s alternative freedom of religion argument under the circumstances. Ironically, the main California precedent that the court invoked was a 1998 decision by the California Supreme Court, Curran v. Mt. Diablo Council of the Boy Scouts of America, 17 Cal.4th 670 (1998), holding that the Boy Scouts organization in California was not a place of public accommodation, thus rejecting a suit by a gay man who had been excluded under the Scout’s anti-gay membership policies.
"Curran is controlling here," wrote Justice Richli. "Just like the Boy Scouts, the School ‘is an expressive social organization whose primary function is the inculcation of values in its youth members.’ According to its mission statement, as set for in its student handbook, ‘CLHS exists to glorify God by using his inerrant Word to nurture discipleship in Christ, serving primarily the youth of our WELS and ELS congregations, equipping them for a lifetime of service to their Savior, their homes, churches, vocations and communities.’"
Justice Richli stressed the selective nature of the school’s admissions process, which was up-front in informing applicants about the "Christian Conduct" code. Even though the school engaged in some commercial transactions to support its activities, such as selling concessions and t-shirts at athletic events, the court did not consider this a basic activity of the organization.
The court also rejected the privacy and false imprisonment claims, finding them to be very much bound up with the unsuccessful Unruh Act claim. Justice Richli noted that the school had not publicized the reason for expelling the girls, and found that informing their parents was not a violation of the students’ privacy.
Read the original story at Leonard Link
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