Our Lady of Guadalupe School and St. James School are private religious schools located in Los Angeles, California. Each is an integral part of and operated by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles and each was specifically established to serve the educational needs of the children of church families within the parishes where they are located. Their mission is to grow a Catholic faith community that reflects both a Catholic philosophy of education and the doctrines of the Catholic Church. To that end, teachers hired by the schools have expressly religious roles, even as they engage in instruction on secular topics such as math and social studies. Thus, the teachers taught daily religious classes, instructed the children in how to attend Catholic Mass, and led the children in daily prayers. Teachers at the schools have a special role of teaching children Catholic values and providing a faith-based education. In 2016, a teacher at Our Lady of Guadalupe filed a lawsuit against the school alleging the school engaged in unlawful age discrimination after it did not renew the teacher’s contract when it was disappointed with her implementation of a program involving religious instruction.
In 2015, a teacher at St. James School sued the school alleging disability discrimination. Each case was thrown out by the district courts, which found that the teachers were involved in conveying the Catholic faith to students and so were “ministers” who could not sue the school or church for their non-retention. On appeals in each case, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the determination that the “ministerial exception” applied to the teachers, ruling that the teachers did not have “religious leadership roles.” The U.S. Supreme Court granted the schools’ request to review the Ninth Circuit’s decisions. In its amicus brief supporting the schools, The Rutherford Institute argues that the First Amendment’s Religion Clauses forbid court interference with a church’s decision on who will teach about its faith, and courts should treat the matter as a limit on their jurisdiction and defer to the church’s decision of who is a “minister.”
Affiliate attorney Nathan A. Adams IV of Holland & Knight assisted The Rutherford Institute in advancing the arguments in the amicus brief in Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Agnes Morrisey-Beru and St. James School v. Darryl Biel,
The Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil liberties organization, provides legal assistance at no charge to individuals whose constitutional rights have been threatened or violated.
Source: https://bit.ly/2SKXz61
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