439 U.S. 1369 | SCOTUS | 1978
The General Council on Finance and Administration of the United Methodist Church requests that proceedings in the Superior Court of the State of California for the County of San Diego, in which it is a defendant, be stayed as to it pending this Court’s consideration of its petition for a writ of certiorari. Applicant, an Illinois not-for-profit corporation, is one of six defendants in a class action seeking, inter alia, damages for breach of contract, fraud, and violations of state securities laws arising out of the financial collapse of the Pacific Homes Corp., a California nonprofit corporation that operated 14 retirement homes and convalescent hospitals on the west coast. Barr v. United Methodist Church, No. 404611 (Cal. Super. Ct., San Diego County, Mar. 20, 1978). Respondent real parties in interest (hereafter respondents), some 1,950 present and former residents of the homes, allege that Pacific Homes was the alter ego, agency, or instrumentality of the United Methodist Church (Methodist Church), applicant, and certain other defendants affiliated with the Methodist Church. The judgment at issue is the Superior
Applicant challenges the Superior Court’s order on three grounds. First, citing this Court’s decision in Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese v. Milivojevich, 426 U. S. 696 (1976), applicant maintains that the Superior Court violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments in basing its assertion of jurisdiction on respondents’ characterization of applicant’s role in the structure of the Methodist Church and rejecting contrary testimony of church officials and experts and statements set forth in the Book of Discipline, which contains the constitution and bylaws of the Methodist Church. Applicant’s next contention is that use of the “minimum contacts” standard of International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U. S. 310 (1945), in determining jurisdiction over a nonresident religious organization violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Finally, applicant argues that even under the traditional minimum-contacts mode of analysis, its connection with the State of California is too attenuated, under the standards implicit in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, to justify imposing upon it the burden of a defense in California.
Because the Superior Court’s order denied a pretrial motion,
If the views of the respective parties are each to be credited, California law may not be clear on this issue, and it certainly is not within my province to resolve their differences with respect to it.
Any intrusion into state-court proceedings at an interlocutory stage must be carefully considered and will be granted only upon a showing of compelling necessity. Bateman v. Arizona, 429 U. S. 1302, 1305 (1976) (Rehnquist, J., in chambers). Those proceedings are presumptively valid. See Whalen v. Roe, 423 U. S. 1313, 1316 (1975) (Marshall, J., in chambers). A party seeking a stay of a state-court judgment or proceeding must first demonstrate that there is a reasonable probability that four Justices will consider the issues sufficiently meritorious to vote to grant certiorari or note probable jurisdiction. Bateman v. Arizona, supra, at 1305. Applicant has failed to clear this first hurdle.
In my view, applicant plainly is wrong when it asserts that the First and Fourteenth Amendments prevent a civil court from independently examining, and making the ultimate decision regarding, the structure and actual operation of a hierarchical church and its constituent units in an action such as this. There are constitutional limitations on the extent to which a civil court may inquire into and determine matters of ecclesiastical cognizance and polity in adjudicating intra-church disputes. See Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese v. Milivojevich. But this Court never has suggested that those constraints similarly apply outside the context of such intra-organization disputes. Thus, Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese and the other cases cited by applicant are not in point.
Likewise untenable, in my view, is applicant’s claim that the First and Fourteenth Amendments somehow forbid resort to traditional minimum-contacts analysis in determining the existence of in personam jurisdiction over a defendant that is affiliated with an organized religion. Not surprisingly, applicant has failed to cite any authority in support of this novel proposition.
The only remaining issue presented by applicant is whether the quality and nature of its contacts with the State of California are such that “maintenance of the suit [in the forum state] does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ” International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326 U. S., at 316, quoting, Milliken v. Meyer, 311 U. S. 457, 463 (1940). Such questions generally tend to depend on the particular facts of each case, Kulko v. California Superior Court, 436 U. S. 84 (1978), and I believe that only a marked departure by a lower court in the application of established law would persuade four Justices to grant certiorari. While
Accordingly, the application for a stay pending review on certiorari is denied. The temporary stay I previously entered is hereby terminated.
1 recognize that in determining whether to grant a stay, Members of this Court may hold differing views on the weight to be accorded any doubt as to the finality of a state-court judgment. See New York Times Co. v. Jascalevich, ante, p. 1331 (Marshall, J., in chambers); New York Times