In this appeal, Raymond Fiedler and his daughters, Melissa (Lisa) and Charlotte, all of whom are members of the white race, challenge the district court’s dismissal of their civil rights suit brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1981
Upon commencement of the district court proceedings, counsel for Marumsco advised the court that Marumsco had filed petitions under the Bankruptcy Act earlier that morning,
After discharging the jury venire, the district court tried the issue of Marumsco’s liability under § 1981, and dismissed the ease on the merits, finding that Marumsco and Bledsoe had a valid defense to the § 1981 claim by virtue of the free exercise of religion clause in the Constitution
The Fiedlers now assert error in the district court’s discharge of the jury on the issue of liability and in its dismissal of their claim on its merits. Because we find that the Fiedlers waived their right to a jury trial on the issue of liability, we dismiss that portion of their appeal. Finding, however, that the district court committed reversible error in its dismissal of the Fied-lers’ § 1981 claim, we accordingly reverse that portion of the judgment.
I.
Situated in Woodbridge, Virginia, Ma-rumsco Baptist Church is an independent, unincorporated association of persons who profess a fundamentalist Christian faith and belief in the Bible. It is open to all fundamentalist Christians without regard to formal denomination or race. Marumsco Christian School is a private school established by the church for inculcating and transmitting the religious beliefs of the members of the church. The school does,
Since it was founded in 1972, the school has admitted students without regard to race and has sought to encourage interracial harmony and friendship. Bledsoe, however, opposes interracial romantic relationships, claiming to base his opposition on religious beliefs derived from the Bible and upon the conviction that such relationships are problematic socially. He does not as a general rule oppose romantic relationships between the sexes. His feelings concerning interracial relationships, however, are evidently quite strong: he advised one of the teachers in the school that he thought the sex drive was stronger in black men than in white men; he also admonished his school children that in the event of a takeover of the United States by a group similar to the Khmer Rouge, interracial couples would probably be liquidated. Neither the enrollment contract of the school nor the constitution and bylaws of the church expressly prohibit or allude to interracial dating.
Fiedler enrolled Lisa, age fourteen, and Charlotte, age eleven, in the school for the 1978-1979 academic year. He testified at trial that he wanted to give them a Christian education and that it was unavailable in public school, and that he had no problem accepting the principles of faith, the Bible teaching policy and the disciplinary procedure set out in Marumsco’s application. He also testified that he was unaware of a school policy against interracial dating.
During the course of the school year, Lisa reestablished a friendship with Rufus Bostic, a fourteen year-old black student whom she had known while attending public school. Although Lisa testified that Rufus was not her “boyfriend,” it was stipulated that Bledsoe believed in good faith that a romantic relationship existed between the two students. Bledsoe warned Lisa not to continue her association with Rufus, advising her that “the church had a position against it,” and that he “personally had a position against it as pastor and principal”; he also referred to the “problems” Moses and Abraham had. It was stipulated that Bledsoe ultimately warned Lisa that if she were caught speaking to Rufus again on school premises or at school functions, she would be expelled. It was also stipulated that because he later observed her talking to Rufus and a third student in the school hallway, he did expel her.
In a telephone conversation with Fiedler following Lisa’s expulsion, Bledsoe agreed to readmit Lisa to school after a two day suspension if Fiedler accepted the condition that Lisa would not speak to or associate with Rufus upon her readmission. The following day, Bledsoe heard that Fiedler had earlier contacted the NAACP regarding Lisa’s initial expulsion; he then had a church deacon advise Fiedler that if Fiedler had indeed contacted the NAACP, then Lisa’s expulsion would remain in effect and Charlotte would also be expelled. Fiedler told the deacon that he had been prepared to drop the matter, but that in light of Bledsoe’s ultimatum he had now decided to proceed with legal action; the deacon then advised Fiedler that the girls would be expelled.
Following the girls’ expulsion, Rufus Bostic’s parents withdrew him from the school and his family resigned its membership in the church. Bledsoe testified that after the expulsion church attendance dropped from around two hundred forty persons to seventy or seventy-five persons; membership in the church also dropped by nine families.
II.
The district court found that, as a ministry of the church, the school bases its conduct and spiritual standards on the religious tenets, doctrines, beliefs and convictions of the fundamentalist Christianity of the church. It found that, based on their interpretation of the Bible, Marumsco and Bled-soe believe that, although salvation is of
The district court’s dismissal of the Fied-lers’ § 1981 claim was predicated on its ruling that the church has a bona fide religious belief that the Bible forbids interracial romance, dating and marriage, and that actions based on that belief are insulated by the First Amendment from attack, absent a finding of compelling state interest.
The 'Fiedlers’ contentions on appeal, that the district court erred in denying them a jury trial on the issue of Marumsco’s liability and in dismissing their § 1981 claim due to improper imputation of Bledsoe’s religious beliefs to Marumsco, will be considered separately.
III.
The Fiedlers first contend that the district court erred in denying them a jury trial. Assuming without deciding that they were in the first instance entitled to a jury trial on the issue of liability, it is clear that the Fiedlers’ conduct here constituted a waiver of that right. See, e. g., Country (Social) Club of Savannah, Inc. v. Sutherland,
The following colloquy took place prior to trial:
THE COURT: ... I am going to excuse the jury. I did not know they were in there.
(Whereupon, the jury was brought into the courtroom for instructions from the Court.)
THE COURT: ... No one told me you were in there for the case that you were apparently called for and I have ruled it*1149 is not a jury matter. It is an equitable matter involving first of all, a constitutional claim. The facts have been stipu-. lated too [sic], and whether or not it is a constitutional issue, is for the Court to determine. At some date later, there might be a damage issue. If it is conceivably a jury matter, it is between a church and school which have declared and filed a petition for bankruptcy which would stay a damage claim pending the outcome of that. So we have no need for you . . .
(Whereupon, the jury was dismissed.)
MR. GLASBERG: We are prepared to go forward with the remaining factual contentions.
(Transcript at 18-19.)
The tenor of the entire pretrial conference with respect to the effect of the pending bankruptcy petition indicates that the Fiedlers wanted to proceed with the scheduled trial on the merits and were willing to do so before the court and without benefit of a jury.
Because of their acquiescence in the discharge of the jury, the Fiedlers have waived their right to assert on appeal that they were denied a jury trial.
IV.
It is because we agree with the Fiedlers’ contention that the district court erred in dismissing its § 1981 claim on the merits that we reverse with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the Fiedlers on the question of Marumsco’s liability. We do so because we find that § 1981 does apply, and, as applied here, is not unconstitutional: the district court was clearly erroneous in finding that Marumsco holds a bona fide religious belief concerning the prohibition of interracial relationships and that its practices based on that belief are therefore insulated by the Free Exercise Clause of the Constitution.
A. Applicability of § 1981
The first issue we are called upon to address is whether § 1981 prohibits a commercially operated, private, sectarian school from discriminating on the basis of race, specifically, by terminating a contractual relationship with a white student at the school because of her association with a black student at the same school.
As a preliminary matter, we point out that the Fiedlers, though white, have standing to sue under § 1981, albeit prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transportation Co.,
The substance of the Fiedlers’ claim is also properly treated within the scope of § 1981: Runyon v. McCrary,
Were it not for Marumsco’s sectarian character (hence, its assertion of a free exercise right to discriminate on the basis of race), this case would be virtually indistinguishable from Runyon v. McCrary, supra. Runyon held that a private, nonsectarian school that holds itself out to the public is open to suit under § 1981, and that the statute prohibited such a school from denying admission to prospective students on the basis of race. The Court pointed out that “[¡]t is worth noting at the outset some of the questions that these cases do not present. .. . They do not even present the application of § 1981 to private sectarian schools that practice racial exclusion on religious grounds."
It is clear, however, that Runyon offers the starting point for analyzing such a claim: the sectarian nature of the school is important only insofar as it may give rise to a constitutional defense to the claim. Merely because the school’s defense is based on religious beliefs, as in this case, rather than on associational rights, as in Runyon, does not alter the applicability of § 1981 in the first instance; the constitutionality of the statute as applied is a separate question.
The Fifth Circuit has reached the same conclusion in Brown v. Dade Christian Schools, Inc.,
B. Constitutionality of § 1981 as Applied
Marumsco asserts, however, that § 1981 as applied to its actions in this case is unconstitutional because those actions were based on bona fide religious beliefs and hence are protected by the Free Exercise Clause. We disagree.
The threshold question in determining the validity of a free exercise defense is whether the belief called into question is in fact bona fide; if it is not, then the question whether the law as applied is unconstitutional need not be reached.
In Wisconsin v. Yoder,
In the recent case Sequoyah v. TVA,
A plurality of the Fifth Circuit sitting en banc in Brown v. Dade Christian Schools, Inc., supra, was also able to avoid balancing “potentially conflicting interests” in that case.
We believe that the Brown plurality adopted the appropriate analysis of the free exercise defense at issue in that case and in the instant one. The district court here, however, throughout trial and in its opinion, treated Bledsoe and Marumsco as one for purposes of determining the religious beliefs of the church: it assumed that which, under the Brown analysis, it should have been deciding, whether the views of Bledsoe were indeed the views of the church.
Examination of the record in this case establishes that the evidence is overwhelmingly against the district court's findings that Bledsoe’s personal beliefs are the church’s beliefs.
Evidence further showed that Fiedler, Lisa, Deacon Bostic and Gail Bostic were unaware until this incident of any church or school policy at all concerning interracial dating. Unanimous testimony in fact showed that prior to the expulsion there was never any corporate consideration at all of an alleged doctrinal opposition to interracial romantic relationships.
Bledsoe himself testified that his position was the position of the church and was based on the Bible; that he had preached about it from the pulpit though he could not remember how many times; that he had had no negative feedback from the sermons he had preached. He said that he believed “socially [interracial romantic relationships] would be a real problem,” and when asked whether he distinguished the social problems and religious beliefs based on the Bible, he responded, “I tie the two together on a religious basis as being wrong and the various repercussions in - society.” (Transcript at 77-78).
The record in this case shows that Ma-rumsco failed to prove its free exercise defense. Nothing other than Bledsoe’s own conclusions indicates that his conviction regarding interracial romantic relationships is shared by the institution or that it is, in any event, more than a “personal preference.” The institutional belief indeed is apparently one of racial equality and Bledsoe’s belief is in no way reflective of that stance. The district court’s contrary finding, offered without benefit of factual analysis, is not
As no valid religious belief has been called into question and as Marumsco asserts no other constitutional defense, we need not balance interests to determine whether § 1981 as applied in this case is unconstitutional.
IV.
The judgment of the district court is hereby reversed. We remand with instructions to enter judgment in favor of the Fiedlers on the issue of Marumsco’s and Bledsoe’s liability.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
.42 U.S.C. § 1981 provides in pertinent part that “[a]ll persons within the jurisdiction of the United States shall have the same right in every State. and Territory to make and enforce contracts ... as is enjoyed by white citizens,
. At oral argument, counsel for Marumsco advised this court that the school is presently operating in spite of the bankruptcy filing. The claim for injunctive relief is therefore not mooted.
. The First Amendment to the Constitution in part provides that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; . . ..” U.S.Const. Amend. I.
. The court also found, somewhat contradictorily, that the expulsions took place “[w]hen the Pastor learned that Mr. Fiedler had apparently changed his mind and was not going to send Melissa back to school on the conditions agreed upon.” This is clearly erroneous as the record reflects Fiedler had every intention of abiding by the agreement.
And, as still a third alternative reason for the expulsion, the district court ruled that
Plaintiffs [the Fiedlers] made representations to defendants [Marumsco and Bledsoe] of their pursuit of action not in accord with the conditions of the suspension and the underlying enrollment contract and were in breach thereof, whereupon defendants dismissed the aforementioned children of plaintiff Raymond Fiedler from Marumsco Baptist Church’s school.
Although it is impossible to surmise from the opinion or record exactly what this vague holding refers to, the suggestion that the Fiedlers breached any contractual obligation to Marum-sco is completely lacking foundation in the record.
. Although the district court did not set forth in its opinion a clear reason for finding no such interest here, it implied that, in a case involving a private sectarian school, the state could never have an interest compelling enough to justify interference with the school’s actions based on religious beliefs. In apparent support of this theory, the district court paraphrased Judge Coleman’s dissenting opinion in Brown v. Dade County Christian Schools, Inc.,
1 do not understand that the Marumsco Baptist Church is operating the Marumsco Christian school as a commercial enterprise. It is a direct, intimate adjunct of church activities, conducted in the house of worship. From the earliest days, when governments were doing absolutely nothing about it, nearly all religious denominations have conducted schools, including colleges, as an integral part of their activities. If the church is to remain absolutely separate and apart from the state, then no court should have the power to compel any church to readmit any student who had been expelled from its church school for religious reasons. This case may turn out to be the first step to a long, intrusive interference with the exercise of religion. I hope this does not prove to be so.
.The district court rejected what it perceived to be a suggestion by the Fiedlers that the religious belief in question is not a sincere one. The Fiedlers do not in fact ever challenge the sincerity of the alleged belief, only imputation of Bledsoe’s belief (sincere though it might be) to Marumsco.
. We recognize that, because of the sequence of events with respect to Lisa’s initial expulsion, the conversion of that expulsion into a suspension and the final expulsion subsequent to the contact with the NAACP, the issue is not so clear-cut in this case as it could be. We find, however, that it is immaterial to the outcome of this case whether the contractual termination took place because of Lisa’s association with Rufus or because of the Fiedlers’ attempts to vindicate their constitutional and statutory rights: § 1981 affords a remedy for both the initial expulsion and the retaliatory expulsions. See DeMatteis v. Eastman Kodak Co.,
. The district court’s refusal to recognize that private schools, if commercially operated, come within the scope of § 1981, is evident throughout its opinion. This was precisely the holding in Runyon, however: that private schools, if actually open to the public, are not exempt from coverage. See
. The district court’s test was “whether there was a generally held, recognized, fundamental religious tenet of the school through its leadership.” See
. Judge Goldberg, in a special concurrence, felt that consideration of the free exercise claim on its merits was unavoidable; his resolution was against the free exercise defense in the face of the compelling government interest in securing the rights of blacks to contract with private schools. He also disagreed with the plurality’s focus on the institutional belief, thinking that the proper guide is the beliefs of the “people behind the institutions.”
. The court’s comment that “I cannot conceive if the preacher does not espouse the cause of his church, then who does” (Transcript at 234) is indicative of its approach to the issue.
. Even the pertinent beliefs of individuals within the church, including Bledsoe to some extent, appear to be based on social and political rather than religious grounds.
. Bledsoe furnished numerous Biblical references he claimed supported his opposition to interracial romantic relationships. Because the bona fides of Bledsoe’s beliefs is not per se in issue (we need investigate it only to determine whether it is reflective of the institutional belief), these references are important only insofar as the church has adopted his interpretation of them. There is no evidence in the record to suggest that the church has done so.
. Fiedler testified as follows:
MR. GLASBERG: To your knowledge, was interracial friendship encouraged at the church?
MR. FIEDLER: Yes, it was.
MR. GLASBERG: Did you have any inkling that that might not be so or the case in the church or school personnel other than the incident giving rise to this lawsuit?
MR. FIEDLER: None.
(Transcript at 40).
Deacon Tolman said that “[s]ince this particular event, we [the deacons] have thought along the lines of incorporating it in the ByLaws.” (Transcript at 137). He also said that he had suggested the church take an officiál stand on the question of interracial relationships, and the following testimony then ensued:
MR. GLASBERG: I take it an official church stand does not presently exist.
MR. TOLMAN: No, I would not say that.
MR. GLASBERG: Why would you have to take it up if one exists?
MR. TOLMAN: It is not a question of taking a stand, but one. of spelling out an existing stand on paper, so others can read it.
MR. GLASBERG: There is a present stand?
MR. TOLMAN: Yes.
MR. GLASBERG: And it is based on what?
MR. TOLMAN: This suit, for one thing.
(Transcript at 143).
