OPINION
Opinion by
Jon Turner (Turner) and his wife, Nicole Turner, sued the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, the Corporation of the Bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and the Corporation of the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (collectively “the Church”) for injuries Turner allegedly suffered as a result of his missionary work for the Church in Guatemala. The Church filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that all of the Turners’ causes of action were barred by the First Amendment and that no evidence supported their intentional tort causes of action. The trial court granted the Church’s motion for summary judgment. The Turners appeal the take-nothing summary judgment the trial court rendered in favor of the Church.
We resolve the issues presented by the Turners against them and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is a world-wide religious institution based in Salt Lake City, Utah. The Church takes literally its responsibility set out in the Gospels of St. Matthew and St. Mark to preach the gospel to all peoples and to baptize them. 1 To this end, the Church has more than 58,000 missionaries in 331 missions in 115 countries and territories around the world introducing people to the Church and spreading the gospel. The missionary program is the Church’s primary means of introducing the public to the Church and of bringing new members into its fold. Spreading the Church’s message of the gospel is an important responsibility of all Church members. The Church encourages members who are nineteen to twenty-six years of age to become missionaries for the Church for a two-year term.
The missionary’s role is to spread the Church’s religious message and to baptize new members. Church members wishing to become missionaries apply to the Church with the recommendation of their bishop. The Church’s highest governing body, the Quorum of Twelve, selects the missionaries, and the President of the Church notifies the chosen members of their calling to be a missionary. The missionaries are part of the clergy of the Church.
New missionaries attend training courses at a missionary training center before beginning their missions. The training courses instruct the missionaries on religious principles, the “missionary discussions,” and the techniques for delivering the Church’s message. The training program for missionaries assigned to areas *883 where the language spoken is not the missionary’s native tongue lasts eight weeks and includes extensive language training, including doctrinal gospel language training. The missionaries receive instruction on the culture of the area they are assigned to. They also receive guidance to help them in the rigorous life they are about to lead, including medical and health care, companion relationships, and developing “a working relationship with their Heavenly Father.” When their training is completed, the missionaries are transported to the area of the world where they will serve their mission. The Church maintains an office in each mission region to assist the missionaries.
Jon Turner is a life-long member of the Church and had wanted to be a missionary since he was eight years old. When he was of age, he applied to the Church to become a missionary and was interviewed by the bishop for his region as well as the regional president concerning his religious beliefs and spiritual preparedness to become a missionary. These authorities approved him and, after passing a physical examination, Turner received a letter from the President of the Church informing him of his calling to be a missionary in Guatemala. After learning he would be living in Guatemala for two years, Turner’s research on the country was limited to examining an article on Guatemala in an encyclopedia.
Turner reported to the missionary training center for the United States and Canada in Provo, Utah, on June 9, 1993 for eight weeks’ training. He came down with infectious mononucleosis while he was there. He visited the medical clinic several times complaining of being constantly tired and having no energy. The medical staff prescribed a form of penicillin, and Turner’s condition improved after a couple of weeks. After Turner completed the training, the Church sent him to its central Guatemala mission on August 9,1993.
Turner was assigned to a rural area, Pomarrosal, which he described as “a more or less marshy jungle area in the Highlands region” about five hours from Guatemala City. Turner’s companion became ill and was returned to the United States, and Turner was reassigned to a larger town, Retalhuleu. For the first few months of his mission, Turner was able to carry out his duties as a missionary with only the usual minor health problems suffered by foreign travelers. Then, in late October 1993, Turner became ill with a fever. Eventually, the fever broke, and Turner’s temperature returned to normal. Turner still felt weak, tired easily, and lacked the energy he had before he became ill at the Training Center.
About November 20, 1993, Turner became ill again. He had a fever of 105.8 degrees and a severe headache. He became delirious, and a rash broke out on his arms, legs, neck, and face. A few days later, another missionary took Turner to Guatemala City, where he stayed at the infirmary for missionaries until December 7, 1993. During this period, he felt weak and fatigued, and he continued to suffer from headaches, fever, and nausea. Although he took “numerous medicines,” Turner’s condition did not improve.
On December 7, 1993, despite his illness, Turner decided to return to his missionary work. As he rode on a bus with his companion, he began to feel sick and dizzy. He stated, “Everything around me seemed distant and dreamlike,” and he had to leave the bus immediately. Turner’s companion later explained to the mission president that Turner suddenly leaped off the bus because he was afraid someone was chasing him. Turner’s illness worsened after a few hours, and he returned to the infirmary where he stayed until December 13. The medicines given to Turner failed to alleviate his symptoms.
On January 1, 1994, the Church flew Turner back to Utah. A Church member *884 took Turner to the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, a hospital in Provo. Turner signed a consent-to-treatment form and was admitted to the hospital. Turner was placed in the “behavioral science unit.” The hospital staff “confiscated” Turner’s belongings and, during his first day there, would not allow him to telephone his parents. A missionary who had been with Turner in Guatemala visited him in the hospital and asked the nurse why he was in “the mental ward.” The nurse told her that all of Turner’s tests were negative, so his symptoms were in his head. The nurse then told Turner he was “not sick, so get out of bed.”
Turner’s grandparents also visited him in the hospital. After leaving the hospital, they inquired at the “missionary department” about Turner’s condition. An employee checked the missionary department’s computer and told them “things like Jon was scared, he hallucinated.”
On January 6, 1994, the Church flew Turner back to his home in Dallas. Bishop Jay Jones promised Turner that the Church would pay his medical expenses. However, when Turner tried to use the medical insurance card the Church provided him as a missionary, it was rejected. Turner has remained ill, subject to fevers, and lacking energy. Although Turner’s symptoms are consistent with malaria, no doctor has been able to clinically diagnose Turner’s health problems.
In its summary judgment evidence, the Church explained that it did not provide malaria prophylaxis to missionaries except to those in areas with a high risk of malaria because the prophylaxis medicine has side effects that result in most people refusing to take it. 2 The central region of Guatemala where Turner was sent was not considered a high-risk area for malaria. The Church did not provide mosquito netting because it made conditions too hot and most missionaries refused to use it. 3 Although the Church did not provide insect repellant in areas where it could be purchased in local stores, the Church did provide an allowance to the missionaries to purchase insect repellant. Turner testified in his deposition that he used insect repellant.
After Turner returned, he married his wife, Nicole. Turner has been unable to work full time due to his medical difficulties. Turner and Nicole testified that Turner’s illness has put a strain on their marriage.
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The Turners sued the Church for negligence, negligent misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, defamation, defamation per se, breach of contract, negligent breach of contract, invasion of privacy, false imprisonment, conspiracy to commit false imprisonment, breach of warranties, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The Turners’ claims under these causes of action include allegations that the Church failed to warn Turner of the risk of contracting malaria or other diseases, failed to educate him on preventing malaria and other diseases, failed to provide him with adequate protection from insects and disease, failed to provide adequate medical care in Guatemala, placed him in the behavioral science unit of the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, terminated his medical insurance, requested copies of *885 his medical records, placed copies of his medical records into his Church record, noted in its records that his mission was terminated due to an emotional or mental problem, published information about his mental condition, and terminated his “Temple Recommend” privileges.
After extensive discovery, the Church moved for summary judgment against the Turners on two grounds: (1) all of their causes of action are barred by the Establishment of Religion and Free Exercise of Religion Clauses of the First Amendment; and (2) no evidence supported the causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty, negligent misrepresentation, fraud, defamation, invasion of privacy, false imprisonment, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and loss of consortium and society. 4 After a hearing, the trial court granted the Church’s motion for summary judgment and rendered a take-nothing judgment against the Turners.
WAIVER FOR FAILURE TO BRIEF
The Turners’ brief argues that certain of their causes of action were not barred by the Religion Clauses of the First Amendment and that they produced some evidence on certain of their causes of action to overcome the Church’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment. However, the Turners’ brief does not discuss their causes of action for negligent misrepresentation, negligent breach of contract, breach of warranties, conspiracy to commit false imprisonment, and defamation per se. Moreover, the Turners do not argue in their brief any of their claims under their breach of contract cause of action except their claim that the Church failed to pay or provide promised medical benefits.
The failure to argue a cause of action on appeal results in its waiver on appeal. Because the Turners provided no explanation why the trial court erred in finding these causes of action and claims barred by the First Amendment or supported by no evidence, they have waived these causes of action and claims on appeal.
See Dennis v. First State Bank,
SUMMARY JUDGMENT: RULE 166a(c)
In their first and second issues, the Turners question whether the trial court erred in granting the Church’s motion for summary judgment brought under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 166a(e). The function of a summary judgment is not to deprive a litigant of its right to a full hearing on the merits of any real issue of fact but is to eliminate patently unmerito-rious claims and untenable defenses.
See Gulbenkian v. Penn,
• The movant for summary judgment has the burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
• In deciding whether there is a disputed material fact issue precluding summary judgment, evidence favorable to the non-movant will be taken as true.
• Every reasonable inference must be indulged in favor of the non-movant and any doubts resolved in its favor.
Nixon v. Mr. Property Management Co.,
A nonmovant need not answer or respond to a motion for summary judgment to contend on appeal that the grounds expressly presented- by the movant’s motion are insufficient as a matter of law to support summary judgment. However, the nonmovant may not raise any other issues as grounds for reversal.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
City of Houston v. Clear Creek Basin Auth.,
When the defendant is the movant, summary judgment is proper only if the plaintiff cannot, as a matter of law, succeed upon any theory pleaded.
See Peirce v. Sheldon Petroleum Co.,
If a trial court’s order granting the motion for summary judgment does not state the specific grounds on which it was based, we affirm the summary judgment if any of the movant’s grounds support the judgment.
See Carr v. Brasher,
RELIGION CLAUSES OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT
The First Amendment provides, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof....” These two clauses are known, respectively, as the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause. Although only sixteen words in length, these two clauses have spawned millions of words interpreting them, to which we add today.
In
Everson v. Board of Education,
Establishment Clause
In
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
Application of this test has proved problematic. The majority of Supreme Court cases interpreting the Establishment Clause have concerned government aid to private religious schools. In
Lemon,
the Court considered the constitutionality of a statute providing state funds to private religious schools for reimbursement of the cost of teachers’ salaries, textbooks, and instructional materials in certain secular subjects.
See id.
at 606-07,
After
Lemon,
the Supreme Court struck down numerous statutes attempting to provide government aid to religious private schools.
See, e.g., Aguilar v. Felton,
*888
1. public employees working on a religious school’s premises are presumed to inculcate religion in their work;
2. the presence of public employees on private school premises creates a symbolic union between church and state;
3. any and all public aid that directly aids the educational function of religious schools impermissibly finances religious indoctrination, even if the aid reaches such schools as a consequence of private decision making;
4. public employees who teach on the premises of religious schools must be closely monitored to ensure that they do not inculcate religion; and
5. monitoring of a religious school’s records to determine the ratio of secular and religious spending.
See Agostini v. Felton,
In
Agostini,
the Court concluded it had rejected grounds 1 and 2 in a previous case.
See Agostini,
*889
481,
Free Exercise Clause
The Free Exercise Clause prohibits “all ‘governmental regulation of religious beliefs as such.’ ”
See Employment Div. v. Smith,
This last prohibition bars government involvement in disputes concerning the structure, leadership, or internal policies of a religious institution.
See Serbian E. Orthodox Diocese v. Milivojevich,
“Congress shall make no law ...”
Originally, the First Amendment prohibited only Congress from “mak[ing a] law” respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise of religion.
See
U.S. CONST. amend. I. After the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, the limitations on Congress in the First Amendment became equally applicable to state governments.
See Everson,
THE TURNERS’ CLAIMS
In their 'first two issues, the Turners question whether the trial court erred in granting the Church’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that the Religion Clauses bar their causes of action. The Turners’ many causes of action rely on similar factual and legal scenarios and may be broken into different groups of claims as follows: claims concerning the Church’s Missionary Program, including its training program; claims concerning events following Turner’s return to the United States; and claims concerning the existence of a confidential or fiduciary relationship between Turner and the Church. If these claims are barred by the First Amendment, then the Turners’ causes of action comprised of these claims are likewise barred.
The Church’s Missionary Program
The majority of the Turners’ claims under their various causes of action concern the activities of training missionaries and conducting a missionary program. The Turners do not contest the Church’s assertion that its program of training missionaries and sending them into the world to preach its message are religious activities subject to the protection of the Religion Clauses. The Turners argue that their claims do not concern the establishment of religion or infringe upon the Church’s right to the free exercise of religion.
1. The Establishment Clause
In the trial court, the Turners argued the Establishment Clause did not bar their suit because the claims under their various causes of action did not require excessive government entanglement with the Church. In their appellate brief, the Turners abandon their argument below and argue only that the Establishment Clause “is irrelevant in this case.” They argue that the Establishment Clause is at issue only when the government provides aid to a religious institution. Although the Turners are correct that government aid to a religious institution may violate the Establishment Clause, government action that hinders a religious institution and unnecessarily entangles the government with the religious institution may also violate the Establishment Clause. In
EEOC v. Catholic University of America,
a nun sued the University for denying her tenure. The University asserted it did so because her teaching and scholarship failed to meet the required standards.
See Catholic Univ. of Am.,
The Turners’ lawsuit challenges the Church’s Missionary Program, including its missionary training program. The Missionary Program’s purpose — its
raison d’etre
— is to spread the Church’s religious message around the world and to bring new members into the Church.
See Lemon,
1. the probability of contracting various diseases in Guatemala;
2. the hazards and perils in Guatemala due to the instability of the Guatemalan government, the people in the area, the working and living conditions, and diseases;
3. the sources, nature, types, prevention, symptoms, availability of medication for and the cure rate of diseases in Guatemala, and the effect of the diseases on one’s physical and emotional states;
4. the inadequacy or limitations of medical personnel available in Guatemala;
5. the inadequacy or limitations of housing facilities provided for its missionaries in Guatemala, including the lack of screens on windows, indoor plumbing, mosquito netting, insect repellent, etc.;
6. the methods of preparing food (and avoiding certain foods) to prevent disease; and
7. that the Church would not immunize missionaries in Guatemala for malaria and yellow fever.
Essentially, the Turners’ claims allege that the Church inadequately trained Turner to be a missionary because it did not disclose the above information to him. If the courts address these alle
*892
gations and find for the Turners, then the courts will be ruling that the curriculum at the missionary training program left Turner unprepared to preach the gospel in Guatemala. If the courts find for the Church, then the courts will be approving the curriculum of the training program and essentially certifying that Turner was prepared to preach the gospel in Guatemala. Either way, the courts’ reaching these claims would constitute active government involvement in the religious activity of training missionaries. As the Turners note in their brief, “The Establishment Clause is to protect against state ‘sponsorship, financial support,
and active involvement
’ in religious activity. [Citing
Walz v. Tax Comm’n,
Unlike the neutral statutes approved in
Agostini,
the judicially imposed governmental controls the Turners seek are aimed solely at a religious institution’s performance of its religious activities.
Cf Agostini,
2. The Free Exercise Clause
The Turners argue that their claims did not violate the Free Exercise Clause because the areas of the training program and the missionary program they seek to regulate are secular. The Turners rely on
Employment Division v. Smith,
The Turners also rely on two other cases,
Sanders v. Casa View Baptist Church,
Sanders and Dausch permit government regulation of the relationship between a *894 professional practitioner and client, regardless of any religious affiliation or sponsorship of the practitioner and client. The claims those plaintiffs brought were not dependent on the clergymen’s religious role. The Turners’ claims concerning the Missionary Program and its missionary training, however, derive entirely from the Church’s publicly expressed religious obligation to preach the gospel in all nations. Unlike the psychotherapy services the clergymen provided, the Turners’ claims concerning the Missionary Program and its training program do not involve provision of a secular service separable from the religious activity.
As .discussed above, the Free Exercise Clause requires civil courts to accept the decisions of religious organizations regarding “discipline, faith, internal organization, or ecclesiastical rule, custom, or law.”
Serbian E. Orthodox Diocese,
We hold the Turners have not shown the trial court erred in determining their claims concerning the Church’s missionary program and missionary training program are barred by the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses. 13
The Turners’ Post-Mission Claims
The Turners’ remaining claims under various causes of action concern events following the termination of Turner’s mission with his return to the United States:
1. the Church’s canceling his health insurance and failing to pay his medical expenses “due to the wrongful or premature termination of his mission”;
2. the Church’s failure to timely restore his “Temple Recommend” privileges; 14
3. the Church’s obtaining his medical records without his consent and in- *895 eluding them in his Church-membership file;
4. the Church’s noting in its membership files that Turner’s mission ended early due to stress caused by an emotional or mental problem or condition and its placing copies of his medical records in its membership files;
5. the Church’s communicating to Turner’s grandparents information in its records that his mission was terminated due to his mental or emotional condition; and
6. the Church’s placing him in the behavioral science unit of the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center.
The first four claims — the termination of Turner’s health insurance due to the wrongful or premature termination of his mission, the Church’s obtaining copies of his medical records without his consent and including them in his Church-membership file, the Church’s notation in its records concerning the reasons for the termination of Turner’s mission, and the revocation of his Temple Recommend privileges — involve internal policies of the Church. The Free Exercise Clause prohibits government interference with matters of internal organization.
See Serbian E. Orthodox Diocese,
Under various causes of action, the Turners allege the Church harmed Turner by terminating his medical insurance “due to the wrongful or premature termination of his mission.” To determine the efficacy of this claim, the courts would have to decide whether the termination of his mission was wrongful or premature. The Free Exercise Clause prohibits the courts from determining employment decisions concerning “ministers.”
See Starkman,
First, the court must determine whether employment decisions on the position at issue “are made ‘largely on religious criteria.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
EEOC v. Southwestern Baptist,
The Turners allege under various causes of action that the Church harmed Turner by revoking his Temple Recommend. A member’s eligibility to this privilege is based on the individual’s history of adherence to Church doctrine, moral worthiness, attendance at Church meetings, fulfilment of Church commitments, support and testimony of the general authorities of the Church, etc. Turner alleged the
*896
Church revoked his Temple Recommend because he filed this lawsuit. However, he testified that his “disfellowship” was originally caused by his and Nicole’s premarital sexual activity. Regardless of the reason, the decision to revoke the Temple Recommend is an internal matter based on the Church’s religious doctrine, and the Turners’ allegations cannot be determined “without an inquiry into and evaluation of the Mormon religion.... Such a determination by a court is prohibited under the First Amendment.”
Davis v. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints,
Under various causes of action, the Turners allege the Church harmed Turner by obtaining copies of his medical records without his consent and including them in its Missionary Program files. They also allege the Church harmed Turner by noting in his Church-membership file that his mission was terminated due to stress caused by an emotional or mental problem or condition. The summary judgment evidence shows the Missionary Program file was one the Church kept for tracking its missionaries. These files are routinely destroyed after the mission is concluded. The Church’s representative testified at his deposition that he searched the Missionary Program’s records before his deposition and could not find any file on Turner. He testified that the destruction of the records on Turner would have been in accordance with the Missionary Program’s record-retention plan. The Church’s record keeping on its missionaries is part of its Missionary Program. As discussed above, government interference with this part of the religious activity of the Missionary Program is barred by the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses.
See Decker v. Tschetter Hutterian Brethren, 594
N.W.2d 357, 363 (S.D.1999) (dis cussing
Drevlow v. Lutheran Church, Mo. Synod,
The Turners alleged in their defamation cause of action that the Church harmed Turner by communicating information in its records regarding his mental condition to persons outside his immediate family. Although the First Amendment prohibits government regulation of the information a religious organization chooses to record concerning its members, the government may regulate the organization’s use of that information if the regulation would not actively involve the government in the organization’s internal affairs, religious practice, or religious doctrine. The Church does not explain, and we do not perceive, how the communication of Turner’s mental condition to his grandparents concerns the internal policies of the Church or matters of faith or ecclesiastical doctrine. Nor does the Church explain how resolution of this claim would actively involve the government in the Church’s religious activities or excessively entangle the government with religion.
See Drevlow,
The Turners alleged under various causes of action that the Church harmed Turner by placing him in the behavioral science unit of the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center. The only causes of action under which they appeal this claim are their false imprisonment and intentional infliction of emotional distress causes of action. Their failure to assert
*897
this claim on appeal under any of the other causes of action alleging this claim waives this claim under those causes of action.
15
See Dennis,
Confidential or Fiduciary Relationship
In their causes of action for fraud and breach of fiduciary duty, the Turners claim a confidential relationship existed between Turner and the Church, creating a fiduciary duty by the Church to Turner, and leaving the Church obligated to disclose information to Turner. Determination of the existence of a confidential or fiduciary relationship requires examination of the relationship between the parties.
See Crim Truck & Tractor Co. v. Navistar Int’l Transp. Corp.,
Turner’s life-long membership in the Church;
his activities in the Church, including tithing, membership in the priesthood, performance of religious ceremonies, and his callings as an officer in different Church organizations;
his moral standing in the Church, including his pledge of allegiance to the Church, its leaders and teachings, and his Temple Recommend;
the Church’s requirement that he confess his transgressions and the fact he did confess his transgressions concerning premarital sex and discord within his family;
the Church’s appointment of him to be its missionary and “an official representative of the ... Church,” as well as the Church’s requirement that he “maintain the highest standards of conduct and appearance by keeping the commandments and following the counsel of [his] mission president”; and
the Church’s promise to transport him to and from his mission, to train him for his mission, and its control over his lifestyle at the Missionary Training Center.
All of these facts involve either religious doctrine and practices or the internal policies of the Church. Thus, determination of whether a confidential or fiduciary relationship exists would require the courts to interpret religious doctrine, practices, and the internal policies of the Church. Making such an examination of the relationship between the Church and its missionaries would necessarily involve excessive entanglement by the -government with the Church in violation of the Establishment Clause.
See Dausch,
Conclusion
We conclude that all of the Turners’ claims alleged under their various causes of action are either waived for failure to brief on appeal or are barred by the First Amendment except: (1) their claim under their false imprisonment and intentional infliction of emotional distress causes of action concerning Turner’s placement in the behavioral science unit of the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center; and (2) their claim under their defamation cause of action concerning the Church’s release of information in Turner’s missionary file to his grandparents. Accordingly, we resolve the Turners’ first two issues in their favor in part and against them in part.
The Church moved for summary judgment on these remaining causes of action on the basis of no evidence.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT: RULE 166a(i)
After adequate time for discovery and without presenting summary judgment evidence, a party is permitted by rule of civil procedure 166a(i) to move for summary judgment on the ground that no evidence supports one or more essential specified elements of an adverse party’s claim or defense on which the adverse party would have the burden of proof at trial. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(i). If the adverse party is unable to produce summary judgment evidence raising a genuine issue of material fact on the challenged elements, the trial court must grant the motion. See id.
A no-evidence motion for summary judgment is essentially a pretrial motion for instructed verdict, and we apply the same standard of review.
See Moore v. K Mart Corp.,
False Imprisonment
In their fifth issue, the Turners question whether the trial court erred in determining no evidence supports their cause of action for false imprisonment. This cause of action is based on their allegation that the Church placed Turner in the behavioral science unit of Utah Valley Regional Medical Center.
The summary judgment evidence shows the Church arranged for Turner’s transportation to the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center. The evidence shows the Church was not affiliated with the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center and that it was not involved in the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center’s decision to place Turner in the behavioral science unit. On arrival at the hospital, Turner signed a form consenting to “medical treatment.” 17 An inference arises from the evidence that the Church reported to the hospital staff the facts leading to the Church’s decision to take Turner to the psychiatric wing of the hospital. Turner’s own affidavit shows he believed he was admitted and consented to treatment for physical symptoms and the “illness(es) causing them” and that no one told him he was being admitted for psychiatric care. Turner does not state in his affidavit or deposition that any person affiliated with the Church assisted him in registering or admitting himself, or persuaded him to admit himself.
Turner stated in his affidavit that he was not allowed to leave the behavioral science unit for an unspecified period of time and that he was forced to take psychiatric tests and to participate in psychiatric therapy. 18 Although Turner stated in his *900 affidavit that he “was not permitted to leave the unit when [he] tried to do so,” 19 the evidence does not show that Turner ever demanded and was refused a transfer from the behavioral science unit to another section of the hospital or that he ever demanded and was refused discharge from the hospital. Although Turner complained of his care, he presented no evidence that he wanted to leave the hospital.
To prove false imprisonment, the Turners had to show: (1) the Church willfully directed, requested, or participated in Turner’s detention; (2) without Turner’s consent; and (3) without authority of law.
See Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Castillo,
The Turners state in their brief, “It was the Church that admitted Jon Turner to Utah Valley Regional Medical Center on an emergency basis, and that determined that he required psychiatric treatment.” The Turners cite to one page of the notes of Dr. Stanley Abbott, a doctor at the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, and to one page of the deposition of Robert Swen-son, a member of the Church.
Dr. Abbott’s notes indicate Turner “was referred here by his mission president.” Evidence that the Church referred Turner to the hospital is not evidence the Church admitted him to the hospital. Dr. Abbott’s notes contain no indication the Church “admitted” Turner to the hospital or that it had any authority to do so. Dr. Abbott’s notes also state the mission “indicated] that the patient actually jumped off the bus and tumbled on the ground after landing, he had been acting strange, that he was afraid of people and that he has anxiety attacks.” The Church’s reporting of Turner’s behavior during his mission to the hospital medical staff is not evidence the Church “determined that he required psychiatric treatment.”
The cited page of Swenson’s deposition indicates that Turner’s transportation to the hospital was arranged by a member of the Church’s Missionary Department, Glen VanWagenen. Swenson testified that VanWagenen drove Turner to the hospital and escorted him to the psychiatric area of the hospital. Swenson testified he had no knowledge of the extent of any contact and communication between VanWagenen and the hospital medical staff. Swenson did not testify, and the Turners did not produce evidence showing, that VanWagenen had any authority to admit Turner to the hospital or that Van-Waganen had determined that Turner required psychiatric treatment. Thus, Swenson’s deposition does not support the Turners’ assertion that the Church admitted Turner to the hospital and determined he required psychiatric treatment. “An appellant bears the burden of discussing its assertion of error and pointing the appellate court to the portions of the record that support a complaint.”
Jensen Constr. Co. v. Dallas County,
Even if this evidence supports a conclusion that “the Church
admitted
Jon Turner to Utah Valley Regional Medical Center on an emergency basis, and ...
*901
determined that he required psychiatric treatment,” (emphasis added) that evidence does not show, and Turner does not argue, that the Church directed, requested, or participated in any
detention
by the hospital of Turner against his will. Instead, the Turners’ evidence shows only that the Church was concerned with Turner’s psychiatric well-being and that it arranged transportation for him to a psychiatric hospital. The Turners’ evidence does not show the Church obtained or sought an involuntary commitment of Turner or instructed the hospital to detain Turner in the hospital against his will. The Turners’ evidence shows the Church reported information to the hospital regarding Turner’s mental health — the bus incident and his reports of depression — but no evidence shows the Church directed, requested, or participated in the hospital’s holding Turner against his will.
20
Cf. Dayton Hudson Corp. v. Eldridge,
The Turners also argue that the Church violated Utah law by holding Turner against his will for psychiatric treatment for more than twenty-four hours. See Utah Code Ann. § 62A-12-222 (1997); 21 see also id. § 62A-12-232 (procedures for involuntary commitment to local mental health authority). This provision is limited to the placing of a person in the custody of a “local mental health authority.” Id. at § 62A-12-222. The Turners’ argument fails for two reasons. First, as discussed above, no evidence shows the Church held Turner for psychiatric treatment against his will. Second, no evidence shows the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center is a “local mental health authority,” which is defined in the Utah Code as meaning, “a county legislative body.” 22 Id. § 62A-12-10K4).
Because no evidence shows the Church directed, requested, or participated in any detention of Turner in the behavioral science unit, the trial court did not err in granting the Church’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment on the Turners’ false imprisonment cause of action. We resolve the Turners’ fifth issue against them.
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
In their sixth issue, the Turners question whether the trial court erred in determining no evidence supports their cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress. To prove intentional infliction of emotional distress, the Turners had to show: “(1) the defendant acted intentionally or recklessly; (2) the conduct was extreme and outrageous; (3) the actions of the defendant caused the plaintiff emotional distress; and (4) the resulting emotional distress was severe.”
GTE Southwest, Inc. v. Bruce,
The Church asserted in its motion for summary judgment that no evidence showed it had placed Turner in the behavioral science unit of the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center or had detained him there against his will. As explained in our discussion of the Turners’ false imprisonment cause of action, the Turners did not present any evidence showing the Church placed Turner, or was responsible for his placement, in the behavioral science unit of the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center or detained him there against his will.
The Church also argued in its motion for summary judgment that the record contains no evidence that its actions were extreme and outrageous. As discussed above, the Church’s actions consisted of transporting Turner to a psychiatric hospital and reporting to the hospital staff the events leading to its decision to take him there. These actions are not extreme or outrageous, absent evidence of abduction of the individual or fabrication of the events reported to the hospital staff. The Turners do not cite evidence of abduction or fabrication. Instead, the record shows Turner’s missionary companion reported his concerns to the mission president, who reported these concerns to the Missionary Program in Utah, which reported them to the treating doctors. Even if the Church’s concerns for Turner’s mental health were unjustified, the act of reporting its concerns to the hospital’s medical staff is not extreme or outrageous conduct. To hold otherwise would leave every individual who seeks to help another having apparent psychiatric problems open to liability for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
We hold the trial court did not err in granting the Church’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment on the Turners’ cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress. We resolve the Turners’ sixth issue against them.
Defamation
In their eighth issue, the Turners question whether the trial court erred in determining no evidence supports their cause of action for defamation. In their brief, the Turners argue that non-relatives “were able to walk in off the street in Salt Lake City and obtain information — false information — from the Church about [his] hallucinations and subsequent hospitalization for psychiatric care.” Turner’s grandfather testified the missionary department checked its computer and told him “things like Jon was scared, he hallucinated.” Turner’s grandmother testified the missionary department checked its computer and told her “Jon had hallucinated, or had been hallucinating and that he was frightened.”
To prove defamation, the Turners had to show the Church published a false statement and was negligent about the truth of the statement.
See
Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 73.001 (Vernon 1997);
WFAA-TV, Inc. v. McLemore,
Having resolved these issues, we hold the trial court did not err in granting the Church’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment against the Turners.
Because the third, fourth, seventh, and ninth issues are not necessary for the disposition of this appeal, we do not reach them. 23 See Tex.R.App. P. 47.1.
We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. See Matthew 28:19; Mark 16:15.
. According to Dr. DeVon Hale, a member of the Church's Missionary Medical Advisory Committee, the side effects include dizziness, headaches, nausea, skin rashes, diarrhea, and visual changes and affect about forty percent of the people who take the medicine.
. Turner testified he knew only one missionary who used mosquito netting, and he caught Dengue fever.
. The Turners’ petition did not allege loss of consortium and society as a cause of action but included it in their list of damages resulting from their causes of action.
. “The values enshrined in the First Amendment plainly rank high 'in the scale of our national values.' "
NLRB v. Catholic Bishop,
. In
Zobrest,
the Court held the school district would not violate the Establishment Clause by providing a sign-language interpreter for a deaf student attending a religious school.
See Zobrest,
. In
Witters,
the Court held the state Commission for the Blind would not violate the Establishment Clause by providing vocational rehabilitation assistance to a student at a religious college seeking to become a pastor, missionary, or youth director.
See Witters,
. To illustrate this point, the Court in
Sherbert
cited cases upholding statutes prohibiting bigamy and the transportation of women across state lines for immoral purposes, which interfered with the defendants' religious practice of polygamy; and a statute prohibiting young children from selling newspapers, which interfered with the defendants' practice of selling religious literature.
See Cleveland v. United States,
. The Turners do not define what they mean by "aid” to a religious organization. If “aid” means financial aid, then their argument must fail. A statute declaring a particular religion to be the official religion of the country but that forbade any government or private financial assistance to the religion would not necessarily aid the religion, but it would violate the Establishment Clause.
. After the Supreme Court issued
Smith,
the United States Congress passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which statutorily mandated the test in
Sherbert
instead of
Smith. See
42 U.S.C.A. § 2000bb-l (West 1994). The Texas Supreme Court relied on the Act and did not consider the applicability of
Smith
in a case involving the constitutionality of causes of action brought against a minister and his church.
See Tilton v. Marshall,
Therefore, (he Texas Supreme Court’s failure to consider the applicability of Smith in Tilton v. Marshall does not limit our consideration of the applicability of Smith in this case.
. The
Smith
Court stated “that a State would be 'prohibiting the free exercise [of religion]’ if -it sought to ban such acts or abstentions only when they are engaged in for religious reasons.... It would doubtless be unconstitutional, for example, to ban the casting of 'statues that are to be used for worship purposes,’ or to prohibit bowing down before a golden calf.”
Smith,
.
Cf. Molko v. Holy Spirit Ass’n for the Unification of World Christianity,
Unlike the prospective converts in Molko, Turner was aware of what was happening to him: he was going to be a missionary in Guatemala. The Turners did not present summary judgment evidence showing the Church had given him any expectation that the living, working, and medical-care conditions would be different than they were. Nor did they present any evidence that the Church *894 had told him the area was disease or malaria free.
. The parties cite only one case involving a missionary suing his religious order for injuries he suffered while a missionary,
Dowd v. Society of St. Columbans,
. According to the deposition of Robert Swenson, only Church members who have the status of "Temple Recommend” are permitted to enter the Church's temples. The achievement of this status is based on the members’ support and testimony of the general authorities of the Church; moral worthiness; history of attendance at meetings and fulfilment of Church commitments; history of tithing; keeping the "word of wisdom” by avoiding certain activities, such as using tobacco, alcohol, or caffeine; and clearance or resolution with the priesthood leaders of any sins or misdeeds.
. The claim was waived for failure to brief in the Turners’ causes of action for conspiracy to commit false imprisonment, breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, negligent breach of contract, breach of contract, and breach of warranties. The Turners discussed the false imprisonment claim in their brief under their cause of action for fraud, but their arguments required the existence of a confidential or fiduciary relationship. As discussed below, the First Amendment bars the courts from determining whether such a relationship exists.
. The Turners argue that
Sanders v. Casa View Baptist Church,
The Turners also argue on appeal that a fiduciary relationship exists from a doctor-patient relationship between the Church and Turner. The Turners argue a doctor-patient relationship exists because one of the doctors and the nurse who treated Turner in Guatemala were also Church missionaries. The Turners did not assert this fact under this' cause of action in their response to the Church’s motion for summary judgment. Accordingly, this issue cannot be considered as grounds for reversal.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c);
Clear Creek Basin Auth.,
. Although the Turners attempt to distinguish between "psychiatry” and "medicine,” they overlook the fact that psychiatry is a branch of medicine. See, e.g., Stedman’s Medical Dictionary 1284 (25th ed.1990) (defining "psychiatry” as "The medical specialty concerned with the diagnosis and treatment of mental illnesses.”); 12 Oxford English Dictionary 758 (2d ed.1989) (defining "psychiatry” as "The medical treatment of diseases of the mind.”); 22 Encyclopedia Americana 717 (1984) ("Psychiatry is a medical specialty concerned with the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of mental illness....”); Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1832 (1981) (defining psychiatry as “A branch of medicine that deals with the science and practice of treating mental, emotional or behavioral disorders....”); 11 Encyclopaedia Britannica 844 (1979) ("The main specialties are ... [i]n medicine ... psychiatry.”). Even the word "psychiatry” is inseparable from medicine. The word contains two Greek roots: ''I'DX'n, which transliterates as and means "psyche,” and larpeia, which transliterates as "iatria” and means healing or medical arts. See 12 Oxford English Dictionary 758. Therefore, even though Turner may not have understood the meaning of the term "medical treatment,” his consent to medical treatment necessarily included psychiatric treatment.
. The only direct testimony from Turner concerning any detention in the hospital was in paragraph 40 of his affidavit:
The hospital staff in the behavioral science unit where I was placed confiscated most of my personal property [including a machete Turner brought back from Guatemala] and placed me in a small room near a nurse’s station. I was not permitted to leave the unit when I tried to do so. I was not permitted to make a telephone call to my parents. It was another day or two before I was permitted to make a telephone call to my parents. I became aware that I was in the mental ward. I was made to take written tests and to attend a group therapy session. I was not cooperative with them and refused to attend any additional group sessions or to take any additional written tests. I was also given a physical examination and some blood was taken from me.
*900 (Emphasis added.)
. Turner's grandfather testified in his deposition that Turner told him he wanted to leave the unit to purchase a "Coke,” but the nurses told him they would get it for him and he was not to leave.
. The issue of whether the hospital and its staff may have falsely imprisoned Turner is not before us.
. The provision states:
Any person who attempts to place another person in the custody of a local mental health authority contrary to the provisions of this part is guilty of a class B misdemeanor, in addition to liability in an action for damages, or subject to other criminal charges.
Utah Code Ann. § 62A-12-222 (1997).
.The summary judgment evidence shows the hospital is "an independent not-for-profit hospital, owned and operated by Intermoun-tain Health Care and under the direction of a Board of Governors.’’ The Turners did not produce evidence showing the hospital is, or is affiliated with, a county legislative body.
. The causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty and fraud required the existence of a confidential or fiduciary relationship. As discussed above, judicial determination of the existence of such a relationship is barred by the First Amendment. Accordingly, we need not reach the Turners’ fourth and ninth issues. In their cause of action for invasion of privacy, the Turners’ only claims concerned the Church’s record keeping. As discussed above, these claims are barred by the First Amendment. Accordingly, we need not reach the Turners' seventh issue. Having determined that the Turners’ intentional tort claims are barred by the First Amendment or are unsupported by evidence, we need not reach the third issue concerning damages.
