Opinion
This рetition for a writ of prohibition challenges the propriety of a discovery order directing petitioners to disclose the names *387 and addresses of all members of the Church of Hakеem. Petitioner Dr. Hakeem Abdul Rasheed was found in contempt and sentenced to five days in jail for failure to comply with the court’s discovery order. We conclude that the discovery order was improper; therefore, the finding of contempt and sentence therefor must be set aside.
Real parties in interest are plaintiffs in a suit against the petitioners. The individual plаintiffs allege that they paid certain sums of money to petitioners, thus becoming members of the Church of Hakeem. By virtue of such membership they also became “ministers” of the church. Real parties allege that petitioners committed acts of securities fraud, fraud, intentional and negligent misrepresentations, breach of fiduciary duties, breach of contract, consрiracy, and conversion. Petitioners seek damages on behalf of themselves and all other member-“ministers” of the church, in an amount equal to the sums they had donated to the church. Additionаlly, real parties seek exemplary damages. Real parties sought, and have obtained, extensive discovery regarding financial records of the church and its assets. Petitioners, hоwever, have refused and failed to release the names, addresses, and telephone numbers of other church member-“ministers,” asserting those members’ constitutional right to associational privacy as guaranteed to them by the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States of America.
The right of associational privacy was articulated in
N. A. A. C. P.
v.
Alabama
(1958)
In
City of Carmel-by-the-Sea
v.
Young
(1970)
However, the right of associational privacy is not absolute, and under some circumstances disclosure may be permissibly compelled. The California Supreme Court in
Britt
v.
Superior Court
(1978)
First, real parties contend that a showing of compelling state interest should not be required. They argue thаt since the individual plaintiffs are members of the Church of Hakeem, they have waived their constitutional rights in their request for their own membership list. However, all of the members of petitioner churсh have not joined as parties to the action. Indeed, one of the principal reasons for obtaining the membership list, according to real parties, is to lay a foundation for the proper certification of the members as a class in furtherance of real parties’ class action. Neither petitioners nor real parties may waive the right of аssociational privacy, which is personal to each nonlitigant member. (See N.
A. A. C. P.
v.
Alabama, supra,
*389 Real parties next urge that a compelling state interest is not required in a lawsuit between an assоciation and its members. Real parties cite Corporations Code sections 3002 and 3003, which provide for the maintenance and inspection of shareholder records, and authorize inspection of such records by the shareholders. These sections, however, are inapplicable to the instant case, which involves members of a church and not sharehоlders of a corporation.
Finally, real parties contend that no showing of compelling state interest is required because petitioners are operating in an unlawful and illegitimаte manner. They claim that there was substantial and uncontroverted evidence presented of illegal securities offerings made by petitioners and fraud attendant to these offerings. Hоwever, in
Gibson
v.
Florida Legislative Comm., supra,
the court held that groups which themselves are neither engaged in subversive or other illegal or improper activities nor demonstrated to have any substantial connection with such activities are to be protected in their rights of free and private association. (
Real parties contend that in any event they have made an adequаte showing of compelling state interest for disclosure of the membership list. They assert that they need the membership list so they can determine the extent of petitioners’ illegal activitiеs, and to provide restitution to the ministers of the church. They claim the only sure *390 method of determining the identity of all the ministers who may have donated and the true amount of the donations is to compare the donation receipts produced by the church with the .receipts or other records in the possession of the ministers whose names appear on the minister list. This so-called need, however, is associated with the alleged need of real parties to obtain the membership list in aid of certification of the class. Such would, of course, be a сonvenient way of finding out who the other potential plaintiffs are. There are many other methods by which all, or substantially all, of the members who wish to be identified can in fact be contaсted. Advertisements in newspapers and by word of mouth in the community would probably make the class action known to most, if not all, of the ministers of the church.
Real parties also urge that a compelling state interest is demonstrated by the uncontroverted evidence of violations of federal and state securities laws. This rationale was used by real parties in support оf their contention that no compelling state interest need be demonstrated. Again, however, the argument fails to assist real parties because innocent, nonlitigant members are еntitled to First Amendment protection no matter what illegitimate/activities may have been engaged in by the church, its founder, or some few of its member-ministers.
In summary, real parties have not demоnstrated a compelling state interest to obtain disclosure of petitioners’ nonlitigant rank-and-file members. The anonymity of that membership remains protected by their right of associational privacy.
Let a peremptory writ issue, directing the trial court to nullify its contempt order and its discovery order insofar as it requires disclosure of membership lists of the Church of Hakeem.
White, P. J., and Feinberg, J., concurred.
Notes
The Nonprofit Religious Corporation Law, made effective January 1, 1980, specifies that members of a religious organization have a right to inspect and copy *389 membership lists of such organizations. (Corp. Code, §§ 9510-9514.) The discovery order and contempt finding in the instant case occurred in 1979, and therefore are unaffected by these statutes. We do not address their constitutionality.
