WORLDWIDE CHURCH OF GOD, a California nonprofit corporation;
Raymond McNair, and Roderick G. Meredith,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Leona McNAIR, and Superior Court of the State of California,
Defendants- Appellees.
No. 85-5979.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted April 9, 1986.
Decided Dec. 5, 1986.
Ralph K. Helge, Ralph K. Helge & Assoc., Pasadena, Cal., Allan Browne, Browne & Woods, Beverly Hills, Cal., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Antony Stuart, DeWitt Clinton, Cty. Counsel, Los Angeles, Cal., for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California.
Before SCHROEDER and FLETCHER, Circuit Judges, and VOORHEES,* District Judge.
FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
The Worldwide Church of God, Raymond McNair, and Roderick Meredith (the plaintiffs) bring this action under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983 against Leona McNair and the Superior Court of the State of California, contending that a state court jury verdict against them for defamation, infliction of emotional distress, and conspiracy is unconstitutional. The plaintiffs assert that the allegedly defamatory statements constitute expressions of religious belief made in the context of an ecclesiastical debate and therefore that the statements are protected under the first amendment. We conclude that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the action, and that it should have dismissed on that basis.
I. BACKGROUND
Raymond McNair is an Evangelist in the ministry of the Worldwide Church of God (the Church). According to the plaintiffs, Raymond and his former wife Leona McNair began having marital difficulties in 1973. Raymond sought the Church's counsel, but the marriage did not improve. Raymond obtained an "ecclesiastical determination" that the marriage was no longer "Scripturally bound," thus enabling him to proceed with a Church-sanctioned divorce in 1976 and remarriage in 1977. Raymond was the first high-ranking Church minister who had been permitted to do so. The plaintiffs state that the Church condemns divorce, except in limited, scripturally-defined circumstances, when one spouse has failed to fulfill basic marital responsibilities and has left the Church, or habitually has violated Church doctrine.
The plaintiffs contend that many Church officials felt that Raymond had received special treatment, because of his status in the Church hierarchy and his close friendship with Church leaders. Thus, the McNair divorce and remarriage sparked controversy among the Church ministers, requiring further clarification and explanation. The plaintiffs assert that full explanation was critical, in view of existing serious internal disputes over fundamental Church doctrines at the time.
At a Ministerial Conference in January 1979, and later in a Church publication titled the Pastor's Report, Roderick Meredith, the Church's Director of Pastoral Administration and Raymond McNair's close friend and relative, made statements concerning the McNair divorce. In an address given at the conference, Meredith justified the divorce on the basis of Leona's conduct. He said that she "was literally cursing him [Raymond] and cursing Mr. Armstrong [the Church's leader] ... spitting in people's faces and as hateful as a human being could be;" that she was "one of the major enemies of God's Church in Southern California;" that Raymond lived "without a wife in a virtual hell on earth" and Leona "just wanted to keep him on a string and get a free ride."
In the Pastor's Report, Meredith stated in part that Leona had "turn[ed] his children against him," "refused to be a wife to him for over two years--to sleep with him, to cook for him, or even civilly communicate with him in a decent manner ... she had deserted him." (emphasis in original).
Leona McNair sued the Church, Meredith, Raymond McNair, and other Church officials and entities in the California Superior Court. In August, 1984 the jury returned a verdict in Leona's favor against Raymond McNair, Meredith, and the Church for libel, slander, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and conspiracy. The jury awarded $260,000 in compensatory damages, and $1,000,000 in punitive damages. The plaintiffs' appeal from that judgment currently is pending in the California Court of Appeal. Enforcement of the judgment has been stayed by posting a bond.
In March 1985, the plaintiffs sued Leona McNair and the California Superior Court in federal district court under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983. The plaintiffs contend that the allegedly defamatory statements were made to summarize the factual basis for the Church's ecclesiastical determination regarding the McNair divorce, and that the statements were part of a doctrinal pronouncement to ministers made in a private ecclesiastical forum. As such, the statements constitutionally are protected, because they constitute expressions of religious belief, the truth of which cannot be questioned in a defamation suit. Alternatively, the plaintiffs argue that the state trial court should have required the jury to find actual malice, based on the New York Times v. Sullivan standard.
The plaintiffs requested the district court to declare the state trial court verdict unconstitutional and to enjoin state court enforcement of the judgment. The district court granted Leona McNair's motion to dismiss, on Younger abstention grounds. The district court reasoned that the state appellate court would consider the federal constitutional issues on appeal, and that the state had a vital interest in fashioning a law of defamation. The plaintiffs timely appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
As a preliminary matter, we must address the federal court's jurisdiction. See Solano v. Beilby,
This doctrine applies even when the challenge to the state court decision involves federal constitutional issues. Feldman,
Although the federal district court may not exercise appellate jurisdiction over the judgment of a state court, a district court does have jurisdiction over a "general" constitutional challenge that does not require review of a final state court decision in a particular case. See Feldman,
In Feldman,
The United States Supreme Court held that the federal district court had jurisdiction to determine the constitutionality of the district's bar rule, because such a determination did not require a review of "a state-court judgment in a particular case." Id.1 However, the district court had no jurisdiction to review Feldman's constitutional challenge to the application of the bar rule in his particular case. See Feldman,
As the Tenth Circuit noted in Razatos,
Robinson,
Faced with the task of deciding our power to review constitutional issues which arise from a state court proceeding, we view the res judicata requirement of full and fair opportunity to litigate, and the Feldman "inextricably intertwined" barrier as two sides of the same coin. Under the rubric of either "jurisdiction" or "res judicata," the crux of the question is whether there has already been actual consideration of and a decision on the issue presented. If consideration and decision have been accomplished, action in federal court is an impermissible appeal from the state court decision. If no consideration has been given, or any decision on the matter is ambiguous, it is unlikely that the issues presented to the state high court and to the federal court are so "inextricably intertwined" that the federal court cannot take jurisdiction. (citations omitted).
See also Randolph v. Lipscher,
In the case before us, the California Superior Court considered and rejected the plaintiff's argument that the allegedly defamatory statements constitutionally were protected. It would be impossible for the federal court to review in the abstract the plaintiffs' constitutional challenge to the defamation verdict. The essence of the plaintiffs' constitutional claim is that the statements made at the Ministerial Conference and in the Pastor's Report were necessary to clarify Church divorce doctrines and to explain the McNair ecclesiastical determination, and that as a result the statements were privileged.
The plaintiffs argue that the allegedly defamatory remarks about Leona McNair constituted part of their religious beliefs. The district court could not evaluate the plaintiffs' constitutional claims without conducting a review of the state court's legal determinations and the jury's verdict.3 The district court would be required to review the state court's decision regarding application of the plaintiffs' federal constitutional theories to the particular factual circumstances of this case. The district court may not do so. See Feldman,
We hold that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over this case.4 For this reason, we AFFIRM the district court's dismissal of the action.5
Notes
Hon. Donald S. Voorhees, United States District Judge for the Western District of Washington, sitting by designation
The courts of the District of Columbia, for this analysis, are the equivalent of state courts
The Supreme Court held that subject matter jurisdiction existed to consider claims that the rule created an irrebuttable presumption that only law school graduates are competent to practice law; that the rule discriminated against persons with equivalent legal training; and that it impermissibly delegated judicial power to the American Bar Association. The Court did not reach the issue of whether the doctrine of res judicata foreclosed litigation on these claims, leaving the determination to the district court. Feldman,
We agree with the Second and Fifth Circuits that the Feldman doctrine should apply to state judgments even though state court appeals are not final. See Hale v. Harney,
Although on appeal, the parties did not raise this jurisdictional issue, we note tangential references to it in conjunction with Younger abstention arguments made in moving papers filed in the district court. This concern over the propriety of federal court review of state judgments is also apparent in Leona McNair's abstention arguments made on appeal, although not couched in jurisdictional terms
In their Response to Defendant Superior Court's Motion to Dismiss, the plaintiffs relied upon Miofsky v. Superior Court,
We therefore need not decide whether the district court erred in dismissing this action on abstention grounds, whether the issuance of and pending enforcement of the state court's judgment constitutes state action, or whether the California Superior Court is entitled to eleventh amendment immunity
