Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

High Court Rules Many Parochial Teachers Aren't Covered By Fair Employment Laws

Wednesday's decision seems to be an extension of a 2012 ruling in which the Supreme Court unanimously found that a fourth-grade teacher at a Lutheran school who was commissioned as a minister could not sue over her firing.
J. Scott Applewhite AP
Wednesday's decision seems to be an extension of a 2012 ruling in which the Supreme Court unanimously found that a fourth-grade teacher at a Lutheran school who was commissioned as a minister could not sue over her firing.

Updated at 12:38 p.m. ET

A 7-2 Supreme Court carved out a giant exception to the nation's fair employment laws, ruling that federal employment discrimination laws do not apply to teachers whose duties include instruction in religion at schools run by religious institutions.

Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg dissented.

Advertisement

The cases before the court involved two fifth-grade teachers at Catholic parochial schools in California who were fired from their jobs. One, a veteran of 16 years at her school contends her firing was a case of age discrimination. The other said she was fired after telling her superior that she had breast cancer and would need some time off — a violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Both schools denied the allegations but maintained that regardless, the federal fair employment laws do not apply to their teachers because they all teach religion from a workbook 40 minutes a day, in addition to other academic subjects.

Dividing along ideological lines, the court's conservative majority agreed with the schools that because of the pervasive nature of religious education, teachers are covered by the"ministerial exception" to laws that generally apply in the workplace.

"The religious education and formation of students is the very reason for the existence of most private religious schools, and therefore the selection and supervision of the teachers upon whom the schools rely to do this work lie at the core of their mission," Justice Samuel Alito, a Catholic who did not attend parochial schools, wrote for the majority. "Judicial review of the way in which religious schools discharge those responsibilities would undermine the independence of religious institutions in a way that the First Amendment does not tolerate."

Of the five justices on the court who were educated at parochial schools, Sotomayor was the only one in dissent.

Advertisement

"This sweeping result is profoundly unfair," Sotomayor wrote in her dissent. "Recently, this Court has lamented a perceived 'discrimination against religion.' Yet here it swings the pendulum in the extreme opposite direction, permitting religious entities to discriminate widely and with impunity for reasons wholly divorced from religious beliefs."

The lower courts have long considered ministers exempt from the nation's employment laws, but the lower courts have not considered lay teachers exempt from generally applicable employment laws.

In 2012 the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that a fourth-grade teacher at a Lutheran school who was commissioned as a minister could not sue over her firing.

Wednesday's decision is an extension of that ruling and would appear to leave lay teachers, and potentially other employees of religious hospitals, universities and charities, unprotected by the nation's fair employment laws.

"Millions of people across the country who never thought or understood themselves to be leaders of the faith now magically have no employment protection," said Stanford Law professor Jeffrey Fisher, who represented the lay teachers in the Supreme Court. He says that in neither of these cases did the schools claim any religious reason for the firing.

The case was brought by Agnes Morrissey-Berru, who alleged age discrimination, and Kristen Biel, who said she was fired because of her cancer diagnosis. Biel's husband, Darryl, remembered the day of the firing vividly.

"She pulled up in the driveway bawling hysterically. She was so hurt that they could be doing this to her," he recalled.

Biel would return to teaching elsewhere; in June 2019, she died.

"She was in the hospital for a couple of days before she had to go on a ventilator, " her husband says. "I promised her I would see this through."

There is one rather rich twist to Biel's case. It turns out that at the time she disclosed her cancer to Sister Mary Margaret Kreuper, who fired her, Kreuper the school principal, was embezzling large amounts of money to finance her gambling sprees to Las Vegas. One article quoted a church accountant as estimating the amount at $500,000.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.