Case No.
B310559
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT, DIVISION FIVE
CHRISSIE CARNELL BIXLER, CEDRIC BIXLER-ZAVALA,
JANE DOE #1 & JANE DOE #2,
Plaintiffs and Petitioners,
v.
SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES
Respondent,
CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL,
RELIGIOUS TECHNOLOGY CENTER & CHURCH OF
SCIENTOLOGY CELEBRITY CENTRE INTERNATIONAL,
Defendants and Real Parties in Interest.
PETITION FOR REHEARING
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Appeal from the Superior Court of Los Angeles County
Case No. 19STCV29458 – Hon. Steven J. Kleifield, Dept. 57
WINSTON & STRAWN LLP JEFFER MANGELS BUTLER &
*WILLIAM H. FORMAN (SBN: 150477) MITCHELL LLP
[email protected] ROBERT E. MANGELS (SBN: 48291)
DAVID C. SCHEPER (SBN: 120174)
[email protected][email protected] *MATTHEW D. HINKS (SBN: 200750)
MARGARET E. DAYTON (SBN: 274353)
[email protected][email protected] 1900 AVENUE OF THE STARS, 7TH
333 SOUTH GRAND AVENUE FLOOR
LOS ANGELES, CA 90071-1543 LOS ANGELES, CA 90067-4308
(213) 615-1700 • FAX: (213) 615-1750 (310) 203-8080 • FAX: (310) 203-0567
ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANTS AND REAL ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANT AND REAL
PARTIES IN INTEREST CHURCH OF PARTY IN INTEREST RELIGIOUS
SCIENTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL & TECHNOLOGY CENTER
CELEBRITY CENTRE
INTERNATIONAL
1
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION ......................................................................... 7
II. ARGUMENT ............................................................................... 8
A. Rehearing Is Warranted Because the Court’s Holding
Construing the Scope of Religious Arbitration
Agreements Constitutes a Mistake of Law ........................ 8
B. Rehearing Must Be Ordered Because the Court’s
Decision Is Based on Unbriefed Issues ............................ 14
1. The Basis of the Opinion Was Not Proposed or
Addressed by Either Party and Encompasses
Several Unbriefed Issues .......................................... 14
2. Whether the Church Can Enforce the Agreements
Against Jane Doe #1 After “Excluding” Her From
Religious Services Was Never Raised or Briefed ..... 27
3. Whether the Agreements Constitute a Clear and
Compelling Relinquishment of Petitioners’ Right
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
to Leave the Church Was Not Raised or Briefed ..... 28
4. Whether Petitioners’ Claims Arise From the
Contractual Relationship Was Not Briefed ............. 29
C. Additional Mistakes of Law Warrant Rehearing ............ 31
1. The Opinion Incorrectly Decides the State Action
Issue Because It Applies Inapposite Law and
Ignores Controlling Authority .................................. 31
2. The Opinion Impermissibly Condemns the
Church’s Terms for Joining the Religion.................. 38
D. Misstatements of Fact Warrant Rehearing ..................... 39
III. CONCLUSION ........................................................................ 42
2
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Page(s)
Cases
Abbo v. Briskin
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1995) 660 So. 2d 1157 ............... 26, 33, 35, 37
Alameda County Mgmt. Employees Assn. v. Superior
Court
(2011) 195 Cal.App.4th 325 ................................................ 13, 39
AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion
(2011) 563 U.S. 333 ....................................................... 10, 13, 35
Bd. of Trustees of City of Delray Beach Police &
Firefighters Ret. Sys. v. Citigroup Glob. Markets,
Inc.
(11th Cir. 2010) 622 F.3d 1335................................................. 10
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Braunfeld v. Brown
(1961) 366 U.S. 599 ................................................................... 12
Buckhorn v. St. Jude Heritage Medical Group,
(2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 1401 .................................................... 30
Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of
Hialeah
(1993) 508 U.S. 520 ................................................................... 11
Church of Scientology v. City of Clearwater
(11th Cir. 1993) 2 F.3d 1514..................................................... 38
Dean Witter Reynolds v. Byrd
(1985) 470 U.S. 213 ................................................................... 13
Dial 800 v. Fesbinder
(2004) 118 Cal.App.4th 32 ........................................................ 37
Elmora Hebrew Center, Inc. v. Fishman
(1991) 125 N.J. 404 ................................................................... 34
3
Encore Prods., Inc. v. Promise Keepers,
(D.Colo. 1999) 53 F.Supp.2d 1101 ...................................... 12, 34
Erickson v. Aetna Health Plans of Calif.
(1999) 71 Cal.App.4th 646 ........................................................ 35
Espinoza v. Montana Dept. of Revenue
(2020) 140 S.Ct. 2246 ................................................................ 11
Farmers Ins. Exchange v. Superior Court
(1992) 2 Cal.4th 377 .................................................................. 16
Garcia v. Church of Scientology Flag Serv. Org., Inc.
(11th Cir. Nov. 2, 2021) No. 18-13452, 2021 WL
5074465 ..................................................................................... 42
Guinn v. Church of Christ of Collinsville
(Okla. 1989) 775 P.2d 766 ........................................................ 25
Litton Fin. Printing Div., a Div. of Litton Bus. Sys.,
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Inc. v. N.L.R.B.
(1991) 501 U.S. 190 ................................................................... 10
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Trans. Auth. v. Yum
Yum Donut Shops, Inc.
(2019) 32 Cal.App.5th 662, 673 ................................................ 33
In re Marriage of Weiss
(1996) 42 Cal.App.4th 106 ................................................. passim
Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd. v. Colorado Civ. Rights
Com.
(2018) 138 S.Ct. 1719 ................................................................ 11
Meshel v. Ohev Sholom Talmud Torah
(D.C.Ct.App. 2005) 869 A.2d 343 ............................................. 35
Mey v. DirecTV, LLC
(4th Cir. 2020) 971 F.3d 284......................................... 10, 17, 29
Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru
(2020) 140 S.Ct. 2049 ................................................................ 38
4
Parm v. Bluestem Brands, Inc.
(8th Cir. 2018) 898 F.3d 869..................................................... 30
People v. Alice
(2007) 41 Cal.4th 668 ................................................................ 14
Presbyterian Church in the U.S. v. Mary Elizabeth
Blue Hull Mem. Church
(1969) 393 U.S. 440 ............................................................. 19, 27
Roberts v. AT&T Mobility LLC
(9th Cir. 2017) 877 F.3d 833..................................................... 33
Sieger v. Sieger
(N.Y.Sup.Ct. June 29, 2005) No. 6975/98, 8
Misc.3d 1029, 2015 WL 2031746.............................................. 36
Sotnick v. Sotnick
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1995) 650 So.2d 157 .................................... 37
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Spivey v. Teen Challenge of Fla., Inc.
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 2013) 122 So.3d 986 .............................. 34, 37
Sweet Dreams Unlimited, Inc. v. Dial-A-Mattress
Intern., Ltd.
(7th Cir. 1993) 1 F.3d 639......................................................... 29
Thomson v. Anderson
(2003) 113 Cal.App.4th 258 ...................................................... 18
Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Inc. v. Comer
(2017) 137 S.Ct. 2012 ................................................................ 12
Watson v. Jones
(1871) 80 U.S. 679 ..................................................................... 38
In re Zeth S.
(2003) 31 Cal.4th 396 ................................................................ 17
Zummo v. Zummo
(Pa.Super 1990) 574 A.2d 1130 .................................... 26, 33, 35
5
Statutes
9 U.S.C. § 2 ............................................................................... 13, 35
Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 1281.2(b) .................................................... 35
Cal. Gov. Code § 68081 ............................................................ 14, 31
Other Authorities
Cal. R. Ct. 8.204(c)(1) ..................................................................... 43
Cal. R. Ct. 8.500(c)(2) ..................................................................... 39
U.S. Const. amend. I ............................................................... passim
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
6
I.
INTRODUCTION
Petitioners came before this Court claiming irreparable
harm on a narrow theory: Litigating any claim in Scientology
arbitration – their forum of choice under contract – violated their
First Amendment rights because such arbitration was a religious
ritual and they were now non-believers. Respondents addressed
that Petition, and showed why it was not supported by the record
or the law.
This Court did not rule on that Petition or the issues
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
briefed within it. It held that Petitioners’ religious ritual
argument – the basis for supposed irreparable harm – was
“immaterial.” Then, this Court embarked on an examination of
when Petitioners’ claims allegedly arose, the Petitioners’ status
within the Church at that time, whether the claims “stemmed
from” the contractual relationship with the Church, and
fashioned a balancing test to weigh free exercise rights – none of
which was addressed in the briefing.
The Order that resulted shows the perils of ruling on
unbriefed issues of fact and law. This Court became the first in
the nation to hold that “freely executed” religious arbitration
7
agreements cannot be enforced over the First Amendment
objections of a party who claims to be a “non-believer.” This
holding adopts a distinct rule concerning the enforcement of
religious arbitration agreements that discriminates against
religions and violates the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”). The
Opinion contains numerous other unbriefed issues, mistakes of
law, and misstatements of fact, all of which require rehearing.
II.
ARGUMENT
A. Rehearing Is Warranted Because the Court’s Holding
Construing the Scope of Religious Arbitration
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Agreements Constitutes a Mistake of Law
The Opinion holds that religious arbitration agreements
cannot be enforced against individuals who “had terminated their
affiliation with the Church” when the claims sought to be
arbitrated are “based on alleged tortious conduct occurring after
their separation from the Church and do not implicate resolution
of ecclesiastical issues.” (Opinion, 3.) The Opinion’s
determination of the scope of the arbitration provisions is
divorced from the agreements’ express language. Instead, the
Opinion adopts a balancing test, weighing Petitioners’ alleged
First Amendment rights and the Church Defendants’ First
8
Amendment rights, and viewing them as in “tension.” (Opinion,
35.) The Opinion states:
This case involves both petitioners’ First Amendment
rights to leave a faith and Scientology’s right to resolve
disputes with its members without court intervention.
When applied to a dispute that arose after petitioners left
the faith, and which can be resolved on neutral principles of
tort law, we find petitioners’ right to leave the faith
must control.
(Opinion, 23 (emphasis added).) The Opinion cites no authority
implementing a balancing test to determine the enforceability
and scope of a freely executed arbitration agreement.
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
The Opinion’s unsupported balancing test approach is a
mistake of law because it singles out religious arbitration for
disfavored treatment just because it is religious. The Opinion
claims that it “does not evince hostility to religion,” but it
announces a distinct rule that facially applies only to the
enforcement of religious – and not to secular – arbitration
agreements. The Opinion suggests that its conclusion that
Petitioners’ claims are not subject to arbitration is no different
than the analysis of the scope of secular arbitration agreements.
(See Opinion, 34-35.) However, the Opinion’s entire analysis is
different from the treatment of secular arbitration agreements.
Indeed, under the FAA, the provisions are enforceable as written.
9
See, e.g., Litton Fin. Printing Div., a Div. of Litton Bus. Sys., Inc.
v. N.L.R.B. (1991) 501 U.S. 190, 201 (if the parties desire
arbitration “to resolve postexpiration disputes, the parties can
consent to that arrangement by explicit agreement”); see also
AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion (2011) 563 U.S. 333, 339
(courts must enforce arbitration agreements “according to their
terms”). Courts also enforce arbitration provisions that apply to
any dispute between the parties regardless of subject matter. See,
e.g., Mey v. DirecTV, LLC (4th Cir. 2020) 971 F.3d 284, 293
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
(reversing order denying arbitration and holding provision
requiring arbitration of “all disputes and claims between us”
explicitly contemplated arbitration of claims beyond those arising
out of the contract); Bd. of Trustees of City of Delray Beach Police
& Firefighters Ret. Sys. v. Citigroup Glob. Markets, Inc. (11th Cir.
2010) 622 F.3d 1335, 1343.
But this Court’s analysis does not even rely on cases
construing the scope of arbitration agreements. Instead it
purports to “resolve the tension” between “two free exercise
rights.” (Opinion, 35.) The Opinion undertakes this analysis with
no reference to the language of the provisions themselves and
citing no applicable case law. Finally, the Opinion’s holding does
10
not purport to apply to secular arbitration agreements. It
advances a rule applicable only to the enforcement of religious
arbitration.
Yet the First Amendment prohibits rules that single out
religions for disfavored treatment just because they are religious.
The Free Exercise Clause “protects religious observers against
unequal treatment” and against “laws that impose special
disabilities on the basis of religious status.” Espinoza v. Montana
Dept. of Revenue (2020) 140 S.Ct. 2246, 2254 (quotes omitted). “At
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
a minimum, the protections of the Free Exercise Clause pertain if
the law at issue discriminates against some or all religious beliefs
or regulates or prohibits conduct because it is undertaken for
religious reasons.” Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City
of Hialeah (1993) 508 U.S. 520, 532.
“[T]he government. . . cannot impose regulations that are
hostile to the religious beliefs of affected citizens and cannot act
in a manner that passes judgment upon or presupposes the
illegitimacy of religious beliefs and practices.” Masterpiece
Cakeshop, Ltd. v. Colorado Civ. Rights Com. (2018) 138 S.Ct.
1719, 1731. “Applying that basic principle,” the Supreme Court
has “repeatedly confirmed that denying a generally available
11
benefit solely on account of religious identity imposes a penalty
on the free exercise of religion that can be justified only by a state
interest of the highest order.” Trinity Lutheran Church of
Columbia, Inc. v. Comer (2017) 137 S.Ct. 2012, 2019 (quotes
omitted).
As was demonstrated by the Church Defendants’ Return,
courts uniformly apply the First Amendment’s non-
discrimination principles to religious arbitration agreements:
where the parties execute an arbitration agreement, courts
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
enforce the terms of that agreement even if they call for
arbitration of secular claims under religious law and before
religiously qualified arbitrators. (See Return, 46.) In addressing a
challenge to a religious arbitration agreement because it was
religious, Encore Prods., Inc. v. Promise Keepers cautioned
against the approach adopted by the Opinion: “[r]efusal to enforce
the parties’ arbitration agreement could itself arguably constitute
an impermissible entanglement [with religion], impedance of the
practice of religion or creation of an unjust bias against religion,
thereby depriving [defendant] of its free exercise rights.” (D.Colo.
1999) 53 F.Supp.2d 1101, 1113 (citing Braunfeld v. Brown (1961)
366 U.S. 599, 607).
12
The Court’s unprecedented holding also violates the FAA.1
The Agreements require arbitration of “any dispute, claim or
controversy.” That language encompasses Petitioners’ claims –
even as mischaracterized by the Opinion.2 The Opinion’s failure
to enforce the arbitration provisions “according to their terms”
violates the FAA. Concepcion, supra, 563 U.S. at p. 339; Dean
Witter Reynolds v. Byrd (1985) 470 U.S. 213, 218 (the FAA
“mandates that [] courts shall direct the parties to proceed to
arbitration on issues to which an arbitration agreement has been
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
signed.”). The Opinion’s rule also announces a defense to
enforcement that applies only to agreements to arbitrate, and not
to other types of contracts, which is prohibited by the FAA. 9
U.S.C. § 2; Concepcion, supra, 563 U.S. at p. 339, 341.
Rehearing is required to correct these mistakes of law. See
Alameda County Mgmt. Employees Assn. v. Superior Court (2011)
195 Cal.App.4th 325, 338, n.10.
1 The FAA applies. (6 EP 1500.)
2As set forth below, there is no factual basis for the unbriefed
and unsupported characterization of Petitioners’ claims as after-
arising, non-ecclesiastical claims. Sections II.B.1. & II.D., infra.
13
B. Rehearing Must Be Ordered Because the Court’s
Decision Is Based on Unbriefed Issues
A timely petition for rehearing must be granted if the
decision was based on an issue not raised or briefed by any party
and the court failed to give the parties an opportunity to present
supplemental briefing on that issue. Cal. Gov. Code § 68081;
People v. Alice (2007) 41 Cal.4th 668, 674-679.
1. The Basis of the Opinion Was Not Proposed or
Addressed by Either Party and Encompasses
Several Unbriefed Issues
The Writ Petition argued that Scientology arbitration is a
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
religious ritual, and therefore, the Trial Court’s Order precluding
Petitioners from proceeding in civil court somehow compelled
Petitioners to participate in a religious ritual. (See generally
Petition, 26-35 & 29; id., 17, 26, 28, 29, 30, 38 (referring to
Scientology arbitration as a “religious ritual” or “ceremony”);
Request for Judicial Notice, Exhibit A (“RJN Ex. A”), 5:9-12
(“they cannot trap believers in being participants in a religious
service of a faith that those believers have now rejected.”); id.,
8:3-6.) The Court understood this was Petitioners’ key contention.
(Id., 13:25-14:6 (“You say that this is going to be a religious
ceremony or a religious ritual.”).)
14
The Opinion rejected Petitioners’ “religious ritual”
argument as “immaterial” and sua sponte crafted and adopted its
own basis for declining to enforce the Agreements:
[P]etitioners spend considerable time on whether
Scientology arbitration constitutes a religious ritual, such
that compelling their participation in the ritual would
violate their First Amendment rights for that reason.
Whether Scientology arbitration is a ritual is
immaterial to our analysis. The issue properly
phrased is: after petitioners have left the faith, can
Scientology still require that all of Scientology’s future
conduct with respect to petitioners – including torts of
whatever kind – be governed by Scientology law, with
disputes to be resolved solely in Scientology tribunals by
Scientology members?”
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
(Opinion, 26-27 (emphasis added).) Based on this articulation, the
Court held that enforcement of the arbitration agreements as to
claims based on alleged tortious conduct supposedly occurring
after Petitioners’ separation from the Church which do not
implicate resolution of ecclesiastical issues would violate
Petitioners’ “right to leave the faith.” (Id., 3, 23, 35.)
This is not a simple “rephrasing” of the issue. This
articulation encompasses several material issues not briefed by
the Parties.
15
Unbriefed Issue 1.A: Whether Petitioners’ claims are
based on alleged tortious conduct occurring only after
they left the faith.
Petitioners’ briefing contradicts the Opinion’s classification
of their claims as arising out of conduct that occurred solely after
they left the Church. The Petition and Petitioners’ Reply both
expressly state: “Petitioners alleged these acts occurred both
while they were in the religion and after they exited the
religion.” (Petition, 7 & Reply, 6 (emphasis added).)
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
The Opinion acknowledges this assertion, but notes that
Petitioners’ supplemental reply brief states the “causes of action
are based on conduct after they left the Church . . .” (Opinion, 36.)
The Opinion adopts Petitioners’ “final representation” in their
supplemental brief and “construe[s] petitioners’ claims for relief
as limited to conduct occurring after they left the faith.” (Id.)
The Opinion “predicat[ing]” its decision on this “final
representation” is inappropriate for four legal reasons. First, the
Court must confine its “analysis to the complaint as written” and
cannot permit Petitioners to recharacterize their pleading
through an unsworn statement by appellate counsel in response
to requested letter briefing. See Farmers Ins. Exchange v.
16
Superior Court (1992) 2 Cal.4th 377, 397; In re Zeth S. (2003) 31
Cal.4th 396, 414 n.11.
Second, the Petition was verified by Petitioners’ counsel,
unlike the unverified supplemental reply brief. (Petition, 25.)
Petitioners’ verified statements should control.
Third, the Church Defendants responded to the position
advanced in the Petition – that Petitioners’ claims arose before
and after departure from the religion and that the timing of the
accrual of the claims was immaterial to the relief sought. By
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
adopting Petitioners’ “final representation” in supplemental
briefing on an unrelated issue, the Court chose the position that
the Church Defendants were not given the opportunity to
respond to on appeal.
And fourth, as noted below, the Court’s focus on when the
conduct underlying the claims allegedly occurred is unbriefed and
immaterial, as agreements to arbitrate can (and in this instance
do) cover claims that accrue after the underlying contract has
ended. See, e.g., Mey, supra, 971 F.3d at p. 293.
The Court’s resolution of this issue is also factually
unsupported. There is no evidence in the record establishing
when Petitioners left the Church. The Opinion appears to rely on
17
Petitioners’ allegations in the First Amended Complaint (“FAC”)
to establish these “facts,” (see Opinion, 7), however, the
allegations of Petitioners’ unverified complaint are not evidence,
Thomson v. Anderson (2003) 113 Cal.App.4th 258, 271. Nor is
there any evidence in the record for what it means, as a matter of
Church governance and doctrine, to have “left” the Scientology
religion. Indeed, the Opinion permits the avoidance of contractual
obligations through the mere suggestion that an individual has
left the faith; as the Court noted at argument, this invites
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
gamesmanship. (RJN Ex. A, 60:22-62:12.)
The Opinion states that “Bixler-Zavala asserts that he
never joined the Church,” (Opinion, 7, n.6 & 6, n.5), and that
Jane Doe #1 “does not allege that she voluntarily left the
Church,” but was instead excluded from practicing the religion by
the Church, (id., 28). It is unclear how the Court’s holding can be
applied in the context of these factual issues. If Bixler-Zavala
“never joined” the Church, when did he “separat[e] from the
church,” (see id., 3) or “le[ave] Scientology,” (id. at 36 & 23 n.19)?
If Jane Doe #1 never “voluntarily left the Church” when did she
“lea[ve] the Church,” (see id. at 36 & 23 n.19) or “impliedly []
18
withdraw [her] consent to be governed by its religious rules,” (see
id. at 36)?
Finally, Petitioners’ claims originate from their
relationship with the Church and from alleged conduct that
began while they were members. The Opinion states “[a]s to
whether the conduct that occurred while petitioners were still
Church members was actionable, or merely background, the
complaint is not entirely clear,” but asserts that the causes of
action are premised on the allegation that “Defendants
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
surveilled, harassed, stalked, and photographed Plaintiffs.”
(Opinion, 7-8.) The Opinion then assumes that these alleged acts
occurred only after Petitioners left the Church.3 (See id.)
3 The assumption that these acts occurred only after Petitioners
left the religion appears to rely upon Petitioners’ imagined
Church doctrine of Fair Game. The finding that the supposed
harassment occurred exclusively after Petitioners left the Church
assumes the following unestablished or refuted facts: (1) being
declared a Suppressive Person defines when a person has left
Scientology; (2) Suppressive Persons are subjected to harassment
under a “Fair Game” doctrine; and (3) only Suppressive Persons
are subjected to any harassment by the Church. There is no
evidence in the record for any of these assumptions, which
implicate numerous doctrinal issues, and are therefore,
nonjusticiable. See Presbyterian Church in the U.S. v. Mary
Elizabeth Blue Hull Mem. Church (1969) 393 U.S. 440, 450.
19
Petitioners’ own statements contradict this assumption.
The verified Petition expressly states that this specific conduct
began while Petitioners were still members: “Petitioners
were relentlessly terrorized, stalked and harassed . . . both while
they were in the religion and after they exited the religion.”
(Petition, 7.) Further, the FAC claims that the alleged
harassment began when Petitioners “came forward to speak
about their assaults and/or report Masterson’s crimes.” (1 EP 10
¶ 15; 1 EP 7 ¶ 1.) Petitioners each allege that they reported or
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
spoke about their assaults for the first time while they were
members of the Church. (1 EP 21-24 ¶¶ 67-77 (Bixler); 1 EP 36-
38 ¶¶ 152-163 (Jane Doe #1); 1 EP 51 ¶ 244 (Jane Doe #2).)
Petitioners even allege that their attempts to resolve their
disputes with the Church over Masterson began while Church
members. Bixler and Jane Doe #1 allege that in response to their
reporting, the Church rejected their allegations and required
them to receive religious services and instruction, (1 EP 21-24 ¶¶
67-77 (Bixler); 1 EP 36-38 ¶¶ 152-163 (Jane Doe #1).) Jane Doe
#2 alleges that she confided in others about the alleged assault
while she was still a member of the Church, (1 EP 51 ¶ 244), and
received solicitations that she return to the Church after she
20
“began withdrawing” – both before and after she reported the
alleged assault to the police, (1 EP 51 ¶¶ 244-45, 1 EP 52 ¶ 251).
Petitioners allege that while they were members of the Church,
the Church attempted to cover up the alleged assaults and
dissuade them from reporting or discussing them. (1 EP 19 ¶ 58;
1 EP 23 ¶ 73.) They allege they were dissatisfied with the
Church’s handling (or anticipated handling) of their reports and
that speaking about the alleged assaults negatively impacted
their status in the Church. (See, e.g., 1 EP 26 ¶ 87, 1 EP 21-24 ¶¶
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
67-77 (Bixler); 1 EP 40 ¶ 170, 1 EP 36-38 ¶¶ 152-163 (Jane Doe
#1); 1 EP 51 ¶¶ 244-45, 247 (Jane Doe #2); Petition, 7.)
Unbriefed Issue 1.B: Whether the timing of the
alleged tortious conduct relative to Petitioners’ exit from
the faith is material to enforcement of the arbitration
agreements.
Neither party proposed or briefed a key distinction of the
holding: that claims arising from conduct that occurred while
Petitioners were members of the faith should be treated
differently from claims arising from conduct that occurred after
Petitioners had exited the faith. Instead, Petitioners argued
21
that the timing of the allegedly actionable conduct was
immaterial to the enforceability of the agreements.
When the Court asked the Church Defendants’ counsel
about “whether the conduct that occurs after they leave the
Church, which seems to be the focus of the complaint, can still be
subject to the arbitration agreement,” the Church Defendants’
counsel specifically alerted the Court that this issue “was not
addressed in the petition itself.” (RJN Ex. A, 38:19-39:17.)
After clarifying the issue had not been briefed, the Church
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Defendants’ counsel stated that arbitration agreements applied
to “any dispute” including disputes that arose after the
termination of the relationship, and clarified that “Petitioners
allege these actions occurred both while they were in the religion
and after they exited the religion.” (Id., 40:9-20, 42:5-9.)
In the Trial Court, Petitioners expressly rejected the
proposal that the timing of the allegedly actionable conduct was
material.
THE COURT: So let’s get back to my -- to my illustration
here or my hypothetical about the person who leaves the
employment where, I believe, that they’re still subject to
the arbitration agreement in the employment contract. Are
you saying that the rule is different for a church member
that if they have an arbitration agreement, even if the
conflict arises while they are a church member, once
22
they say, “I’m leaving the church, I don’t believe anymore,”
that at that point, they’re no longer subject to the
arbitration agreement?
MS. HAMILTON: That’s right, your honor. This Court
could not -- may not, under the First Amendment, enforce
an agreement against someone who has chosen to choose a
different belief.
(5 EP 1393-1394; see also 5 EP 1392-1393.) At the hearing on the
Petition, Petitioners’ counsel continued to advance the position
that the timing of the conduct was immaterial – arguing that
religious arbitration agreements are never enforceable against
individuals who have exited the religion. (RJN Ex. A, 7:4-11.)
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
When the Court asked Petitioners’ counsel, “if there is a dispute
that arises from events that happened while they are still
members of the Church, why cannot that dispute be arbitrated,
even after they have left?” Petitioners’ counsel responded “I think
the question, frankly, of how you can be forced into arbitration
while a member is a different question. It’s just not what we’re
talking about. These are non-members.” (Id., 59:24-60:10; see also
id., 60:22-62:12.) These representations are consistent with
Petitioners’ long-standing position that their status in the
Church – and not when the allegedly actionable conduct occurred
23
– controls whether the Arbitration Order violates the First
Amendment.
Unbriefed Issue 1.C: Whether the nature of the
claims – ecclesiastical or secular -- matters to the
enforceability of the arbitration agreements.
Petitioners asserted that religious arbitration of any claim
– whether secular or implicating religious doctrine – would
violate their First Amendment rights. (See, e.g., Petition, 26.) The
Church Defendants never directly addressed the issue of whether
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
the claims were secular or required resolution of ecclesiastical
issues because Petitioners never challenged the Trial Court’s
finding that their claims fell within the scope of the arbitration
provisions. (See Return, 9, 36 (scope is not at issue).) In any
event, neither party contended that religious and secular claims
should be treated differently for purposes of enforcement of the
arbitration agreement.
Unbriefed Issue 1.D: What is the right to leave a
faith?
Petitioners defined the right to leave a faith as the right to
abstain from believing in it and practicing its rituals. (Petition,
32; see also Opinion, 26.) Petitioners argued Scientology
24
arbitration was a religious ritual, and therefore, their agreement
to that forum violated their right to leave a faith.
Yet the Court decided that the “ritual” argument was
“immaterial,” (Opinion, 26), rejecting Petitioners’ basis for the
First Amendment violation and their definition of the right to
leave a faith.
The Opinion’s proffered definition of the “right to leave a
faith” is sweeping and unbounded. Its controlling articulation is
that individuals have a right to “extricate themselves from the
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
faith” and not be “bound by Scientology dispute resolution.”
(Opinion, 37 & 35 (citing no authority in support of this
definition).) The right to leave the faith, as defined by this Court,
includes the right to narrow the scope of freely executed contracts
containing forum selection clauses that call for resolution of
disputes in Church arbitration. There is no end to this “right.”4
The Opinion’s cited authority defines the right to leave a
faith as: (1) “the right of unhindered and unimpeded withdrawal
from the chosen form of worship,” (Opinion, 25 (quoting Guinn v.
4 Does this right permit modification of other contractual
relationships with religious institutions or just forum selection
clauses?
25
Church of Christ of Collinsville (Okla. 1989) 775 P.2d 766, 777));
(2) “the right to change her religious beliefs and to share those
beliefs with her offspring,” (Opinion, 26 (quoting In re Marriage
of Weiss (1996) 42 Cal.App.4th 106, 118)); and (3) “constitutional
freedom to question, to doubt, and to change one’s convictions,”
Zummo v. Zummo (Pa.Super 1990) 574 A.2d 1130, 1146 (cited at
Opinion, 24-26); Abbo v. Briskin (Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1995) 660 So.
2d 1157, 1159 (cited at Opinion, 28 n.20). None of this authority
encompasses the right to unilaterally revoke a freely executed
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
arbitration agreement and proceed in civil court despite the clear
waiver of the civil forum.
The Petition defined the right to leave a faith as the right
to be free from compelled ritual practice and asserted that
definition as warranting writ relief for irreparable harm. But
that is not the articulation of the right adopted by the Opinion.
The Church Defendants must be afforded the opportunity to brief
the definition and scope of the “right to leave a faith,” which the
Church Defendants represent would not be implicated – much
less violated – by enforcement of a freely-executed forum
selection clause. See Section II.C.1., infra.
26
2. Whether the Church Can Enforce the
Agreements Against Jane Doe #1 After
“Excluding” Her From Religious Services Was
Never Raised or Briefed
The Opinion concludes the arbitration agreements are
unenforceable as to Jane Doe #1 using a different analysis:
“Having excluded Jane Doe #1 from its religious services. . . the
Church cannot now enforce against Jane Doe #1 the arbitration
clause in the agreement she signed in order to obtain the
religious services from which she was excluded.” (Opinion, 28.)
This analysis and the assumptions it rests on were never raised
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
by the Court or briefed by the Parties.5
///
///
5The Opinion’s summary of Jane Doe’s status also contains
misstatements of fact and an impermissible doctrinal conclusion.
The record shows Jane Doe #1 has not been declared a
Suppressive Person. (11 DEO 2569.) Jane Doe #1’s conclusory
declaration statement (4 EP 1099) does not establish the
contrary. Furthermore, the Court assumed, and incorrectly so,
that Jane Doe #1’s supposed exclusion from one form of religious
service meant that she was no longer in the Church or not
eligible for other religious services (such as Ethics courses). This
assumption about Scientology doctrine is both incorrect and an
impermissible interpretation of religious doctrine by a secular
authority. See Presbyterian Church in the U.S., supra, 393 U.S.
440, 450. By analogy, to refuse a Catholic communion for
failure to go to confession does not mean that Catholic has
“left” Catholicism.
27
3. Whether the Agreements Constitute a Clear and
Compelling Relinquishment of Petitioners’
Right to Leave the Church Was Not Raised or
Briefed
The Opinion concludes “[o]n their face these agreements do
not purport to waive petitioners’ right to leave the church,” yet
concedes in the preceding sentence that the Parties did not brief
the issue. (Opinion, 37, n.23 (“The parties did not brief
whether the language of the agreement constitutes a clear and
compelling relinquishment of the right to leave the faith and/or
the concomitant right to withdraw consent to be ruled by the
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
faith.”) (emphasis added).)
This unbriefed issue is a basis of the Court’s decision, and
the Court’s conclusion is plainly incorrect. This controversy is not
about Petitioners’ “right to withdraw consent to be ruled by the
faith” or of the Church compelling any conduct of Petitioners.
Rather, it is about Petitioners’ “clear and compelling
relinquishment of their right” to bring claims against the Church
in civil courts as an express condition for joining the Church. The
Court’s conclusion that there was no waiver of that right is belied
by the enduring agreement to submit disputes to the religious
28
forum and “forever” waive the right to civil recourse (see, e.g.,
Opinion, 10-11).
4. Whether Petitioners’ Claims Arise From the
Contractual Relationship Was Not Briefed
The Opinion incorrectly concludes that Petitioners’ claims
“do not stem from the contractual relationship.” (Opinion, 34.)
Yet, the Parties never briefed whether Petitioners’ claims “stem
from” or arise from the contractual relationship. Indeed, because
the arbitration provisions cover “any dispute” between the
Parties (see, e.g., 6 EP 1501-1503; Return, 26, n.7; Opinion, 10-
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
11), Petitioners did not challenge the finding of the Trial Court
that their claims fell within the scope of the arbitration
provisions. And, in fact, there is no requirement that claims
otherwise subject to an arbitration provision “stem from” some
other part of an agreement.6
In any event, the conclusion is legally and factually
incorrect. Even where the arbitration provision requires the
claims to arise from the agreements, that requirement is met
here. See, e.g., Sweet Dreams Unlimited, Inc. v. Dial-A-Mattress
Intern., Ltd. (7th Cir. 1993) 1 F.3d 639, 642 (“‘Arising out of’
6 (6 EP 1501-03); see Mey, supra, 971 F.3d at p. 293.
29
reaches all disputes having their origin or genesis in the
contract.”).7 If the allegations underlying the claims “touch
matters” covered by the agreement, then those claims must be
arbitrated. Parm v. Bluestem Brands, Inc. (8th Cir. 2018) 898
F.3d 869, 874, 876. Petitioners’ claims, as pled by them, have
their genesis in their relationship with the Church – and that
relationship is created and defined by the Agreements.
Petitioners’ claims include allegations regarding instruction and
religious services they received from the Church while they were
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
members and in response to reporting the alleged assaults. They
also claim that the Church Defendants conspired to cover up the
assaults and dissuade Petitioners from reporting the assaults to
police. (1 EP 10, 19 ¶¶15, 58 & 1 EP 22-27 ¶¶ 70, 72, 73, 92
(Bixler); 1 EP 36-40 ¶¶ 152, 154, 157-58, 163, 171 (Jane Doe #1);
1 EP 51-52 ¶¶ 244, 248 (Jane Doe #2).) Petitioners allege that
Church doctrine forbade them from reporting their assaults, that
7 The Opinion’s only cited authority, Buckhorn v. St. Jude
Heritage Medical Group is in accord. In Buckhorn, the arbitration
provision required the claims “concern[] the enforcement or
interpretation of any provisions of this agreement.” (2004) 121
Cal.App.4th 1401, 1406. The court compelled arbitration because
the plaintiff “failed to demonstrate his tort claims were ‘wholly
independent’” of the agreement. Id. at 1407-08.
30
they were then declared “Suppressive Persons” for making such
reports, and then targeted under the alleged Church doctrine of
“Fair Game” for harassment for the violations of Church doctrine.
(1 EP 10-14, ¶¶ 15, 30, 38, 1 EP 19 ¶ 58; 1 EP 54-55 ¶¶ 264, 270,
273.) Petitioners’ claims unquestionably “touch matters” covered
by the Agreements, which govern enrollment in religious services
and instruction in Church doctrine, and which require that
Petitioners be bound by Church doctrine and law in all dealings
with the Church. (7 DEO 1639-44 ¶¶ 2, 4, 6, 6a.-e., 8, 9.)
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
In short, the Court’s holding relies upon numerous
arguments and issues that the Church Defendants were never
given an opportunity to brief – and that Petitioners in some
instances rejected. Rehearing is required. Cal. Gov. Code § 68081.
C. Additional Mistakes of Law Warrant Rehearing
1. The Opinion Incorrectly Decides the State
Action Issue Because It Applies Inapposite Law
and Ignores Controlling Authority
The Opinion failed to apply controlling authority holding
that the enforcement of contractual agreements between
contracting parties – and specifically the enforcement of
arbitration agreements – does not constitute state action. The
31
state action requirement is dispositive of the issue presented by
the Petition, and the Court did not apply it.
The state action authority is unambiguous that
enforcement of an arbitration agreement or other mutual
contract does not constitute state action, even where a party
relinquishes a constitutional right in the agreement (as is the
case with every arbitration agreement in relinquishing the right
to a jury). Rather than apply this authority, the Opinion cites a
trio of child custody cases instead, In re Marriage of Weiss, Abbo
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
v. Briskin, and Zummo v. Zummo, as “the appropriate
precedent.” (Opinion, 27-28, n.20.) This is a mistake of law for
several reasons.
First, these child custody cases do not address the “state
action” requirement for a constitutional violation, which was the
issue briefed by the Parties and before the Court. (Petition, 26-35;
Return, 49-52; Reply, 18-20.) Weiss, Zummo, and Abbo do not
hold that enforcement of the domestic arrangements at issue
would constitute state action and violate a party’s First
Amendment right to leave a faith. These authorities find that
32
enforcement of premarital agreements to raise children in a
certain religion are unenforceable on public policy grounds.8
The Opinion’s precise resolution of the state action question
is unclear. The Opinion does not expressly state whether the
Court found state action present or not. (Opinion, 27-28, n.20.) If
the Opinion found state action present by relying on Weiss,
Zummo, and Abbo, rehearing is required because this is a
mistake of law.9 Weiss, Zummo, and Abbo are not authority on
the question of state action for constitutional violations because
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
they do not decide the issue. See Los Angeles County Metropolitan
Trans. Auth. v. Yum Yum Donut Shops, Inc. (2019) 32
Cal.App.5th 662, 673 (“cases are not authority for propositions
8Abbo, supra, 660 So.2d at p. 1159 (“the law will enforce any
such bargain so long as it is not against public policy. We have
grave doubts, however, that the law could or should enforce an
unwritten premarriage agreement to raise a child in one faith or
the other.”); Zummo, supra, 394 Pa.Super. at p. 58 (“enforcement
would be contrary to a public policy embodied in the First
Amendment Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses (as well as
their state equivalents) that parents be free to doubt, question,
and change their beliefs, and that they be free to instruct their
children in accordance with those beliefs”); Weiss, supra, 42
Cal.App.4th at p. 118 (finding agreement “not legally enforceable”
applying Zummo’s reasoning).
9If the Opinion found state action was not present, it is a mistake
of law to find a constitutional violation. See Roberts v. AT&T
Mobility LLC (9th Cir. 2017) 877 F.3d 833, 837.
33
not considered”). The Church Defendants’ authority regarding
the state action requirement is the controlling authority on this
issue.10
Second, it was a separate mistake of law to apply Weiss,
Zummo, and Abbo because they have nothing to do with
arbitration. They are child custody cases and are controlled by
judicial assessment of whether exposing a child to alternative
faiths would endanger the child’s welfare. See, e.g., Weiss, supra,
42 Cal.App.4th at p. 111-12. Further, the domestic agreements
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
were vague, and embodied the parents’ “hopeful assurances” –
much like (unenforceable) wedding vows that Weiss cited by
10The Opinion states that the Church Defendants “rel[ied] on
cases which do not involve compelling a party to participate in
religious arbitration.” (Opinion, 27, n.20.) It does not explain why
or how enforcement of a forum selection clause designating a
church as the arbitral forum would constitute state action when
enforcing an AAA forum selection clause does not. (Opinion, 27,
n.20.) Such a rule would constitute a separate mistake of
law because it would discriminate against religions.
Moreover, the Court perhaps was misled by Petitioners’ Reply,
which falsely stated that no court had ordered religious
arbitration over the objections of non-believers or members of
other religious divisions. The Church Defendants cited numerous
cases compelling religious arbitration, including over First
Amendment objections. Spivey v. Teen Challenge of Fla., Inc.
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 2013) 122 So.3d 986, 988; Encore, supra, 53
F.Supp.2d at p. 1111; Elmora Hebrew Center, Inc. v. Fishman
(1991) 125 N.J. 404, 416-17 (cited by Return, 53).
34
analogy. Id., at 109, 114-15. By contrast, the unambiguous
arbitration agreements here enjoy a presumption in favor of
enforceability, and courts are required to enforce them absent
generally applicable contract defenses. See 9 U.S.C. § 2;
Concepcion, supra, 563 U.S. at p. 339; Cal. Civ. Proc. Code §
1281.2(b); Erickson v. Aetna Health Plans of Calif. (1999) 71
Cal.App.4th 646, 655.
Third, Weiss, Zummo, and Abbo do not apply because, to
the extent that they depend upon a First Amendment issue, the
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
controlling First Amendment concern was judicial entanglement
with religious doctrine – not the right to leave a faith. In those
cases, litigants asked the court to compel a parent to
participate in or refrain from religious practice. See Abbo,
supra, 660 So.2d at p. 1159; Weiss, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th at p.
110; Zummo, supra, 394 Pa.Super. at p. 1146. Enforcement
placed the court in the impossible position of evaluating whether
a parent sufficiently complied with a vague, aspirational
commitment of raising a child as “loyal” to a faith. Weiss. supra,
42 Cal.App.4th at p. 109. These concerns are not present here.
Courts do not “entangle” themselves in religious disputes by
enforcing agreements to litigate claims in religious fora. Meshel v.
35
Ohev Sholom Talmud Torah (D.C.Ct.App. 2005) 869 A.2d 343,
354; Sieger v. Sieger (N.Y.Sup.Ct. June 29, 2005, No. 6975/98) 8
Misc.3d 1029, 2015 WL 2031746, at *50-51 (cited by Petition, 11-
12).
Fourth, Weiss, Zummo, and Abbo do not apply because the
right to leave a faith is not implicated. Weiss, Zummo, and Abbo
concern acts of worship and religious practice and define the
right to leave a faith as the ability to change religious beliefs and
practices. (Opinion, 24-25); Section II.B.1., supra. Here, the Court
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
found the question of whether religious rituals are implicated to
be “immaterial.” And to be sure, enforcing Petitioners’
Agreements does not require Petitioners to practice the faith. (9
DEO 2055-2056 ¶ 23 (arbitration participants need not be
practicing Scientologists and arbitration does not require any
religious ceremony or service).) None of the Opinion’s cited
authority supports the determination that the right to leave a
faith encompasses the right to revoke a contractually-agreed-
upon forum for disputes. The “right to leave a faith” cannot serve
as a trump card to void express and unambiguous contractual
provisions.
36
Consistent with this analysis that the Opinion’s application
of Weiss, Zummo, and Abbo was error, prior to the Opinion no
court had ever cited Weiss, Zummo, or Abbo in support of a
decision rejecting arbitration on religious grounds. Furthermore,
Weiss and Abbo are from jurisdictions where later decisions
explicitly rejected challenges to religious arbitration. Compare
Weiss, supra, 42 Cal.App.4th at p. 111 with Dial 800 v. Fesbinder
(2004) 118 Cal.App.4th 32, 41, 50 (this Court rejecting argument
that “confirmation of an award by a religious court according to
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
religious law would violate the fundamental notion of separation
of church and state”); compare Abbo, supra, 660 So.2d at p. 1158
with Spivey, supra, 122 So.3d at pp. 991-95 (Florida court
enforcing religious arbitration). Still other cases have made clear
that the analysis in Zummo is inapplicable to enforcement of
arbitration agreements. See, e.g., Sotnick v. Sotnick
(Fla.Dist.Ct.App. 1995) 650 So.2d 157, 160 (quoting Zummo and
noting that although courts will not force parents to raise
children in a particular faith, religious arbitration agreements
remain enforceable).
///
///
37
2. The Opinion Impermissibly Condemns the
Church’s Terms for Joining the Religion
Churches have a constitutional right to impose conditions
upon membership free from government intrusion. See Watson v.
Jones (1871) 80 U.S. 679, 729-31 (“We cannot decide who ought to
be members of the church. . . . [W]hen they became members they
did so upon the condition of continuing or not as they and their
churches might determine, and they thereby submit to the
ecclesiastical power and cannot now invoke the supervisory
power of the civil tribunals”); Our Lady of Guadalupe School v.
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Morrissey-Berru (2020) 140 S.Ct. 2049, 2060 (“State interference
in that sphere [of faith and doctrine] would obviously violate the
free exercise of religion, and any attempt by government to
dictate or even to influence such matters would constitute one of
the central attributes of an establishment of religion. The First
Amendment outlaws such intrusion”); Church of Scientology v.
City of Clearwater (11th Cir. 1993) 2 F.3d 1514, 1544.
The Opinion accepts that “[a]n ‘irrevocable’ agreement to
‘forever’ waive civil proceedings and submit to Scientology Ethics
and Justice Codes in ‘any dispute’ with the Churches of
Scientology is a condition for participation in the religion” and
38
that “this is one of the prices of joining [the Scientology] religion.”
(Opinion, 36-37.) Yet, the Opinion states that the “Constitution
forbids a price that high.” (Id.) In other words, the Opinion
proclaims that the Church cannot condition membership in its
faith on an agreement to submit to religious arbitration. Under
Watson and its progeny, the Court cannot sit in judgment of the
terms or “price” for initiation into a religion – be it a baptism, a
bar mitzvah, or an agreement for religious services – any more
than it can amend any other doctrine.
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
D. Misstatements of Fact Warrant Rehearing
Rehearing is appropriate to correct misstatements of fact.
See Alameda County Management Employees Assn, supra, 195
Cal.App.4th at p. 338 n.10.11
In addition to the misstatements of fact identified above,
the Opinion incorrectly concludes that Petitioners’ claims “do not
implicate resolution of ecclesiastical issues.” (Opinion, 3; see also,
e.g., id., 32.) This is a mistake of fact and law.
11Even if the Court concludes that correcting the identified
misstatements of fact would not affect the decision, rehearing
should be granted to correct them because the Church
Defendants may seek Supreme Court review. See Cal. Rule of
Court 8.500(c)(2).
39
Petitioners’ FAC devotes dozens of paragraphs and
multiple pages to describing what Petitioners allege are doctrines
of the Church, including untrue allegations that they are
“enemies” in the eyes of the Church and can be targeted for
retribution and harassment. (1 EP 14-18.) Petitioners have relied
on these untrue and defamatory allegations of an imagined
Church doctrine of “Fair Game” as the “evidence” to support their
claims. (4 EP 1079-1082.)
The Opinion recognizes the centrality of Petitioners’
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
doctrine-based allegations: The first paragraph of the Opinion’s
summary of the allegations is a recitation of Petitioners’ false
characterization of Church doctrine – centered on the untrue and
refuted12 assertion that the Church has a doctrine called “Fair
Game.” (Opinion, 5.) The Opinion proceeds to use this false
doctrine of “Fair Game” as a shorthand for the alleged
harassment of Petitioners. (See, e.g., id., 5, 7, 8, 32, 35.) The
Opinion asserts that Petitioners’ claims “stem from the alleged
‘Fair Game’ campaign Scientology engaged in.” (Id., 34-35.)
12The Church has no doctrine called Fair Game. (5 EP 1317-18
¶ 5; see also Opinion, 19.)
40
Petitioners intend to “prove” that doctrine in Court. The
Opinion recognizes this, asserting that “[i]n an apparent attempt
to pursue vicarious liability for the harassment campaign
allegedly waged against them, plaintiffs alleged that Fair Game
was, in fact, part of Scientology’s practices.” (Id., 32, n.21.) This
acknowledgment that a highly-disputed issue of alleged Church
doctrine forms the predicate of the vicarious liability theory
shows that ecclesiastical issues run throughout the claims as
pled.
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Similarly, the Opinion states that Petitioners allege “in
retaliation for their reports, the Church encouraged its members
to engage in a vicious campaign of harassment against them.”
(Id., 2.) That is not what Petitioners allege. They allege that the
Church’s doctrine and scripture command the campaign. Indeed,
Petitioners paper over the complete absence of evidence of
“encouragement” or any conduct by the Church by claiming the
supposed existence of “Fair Game” to substantiate their claims.
This difference matters because it puts at issue the existence of
Church doctrine and what it requires.
The Eleventh Circuit recently held that this exact dispute,
the existence or nonexistence of a doctrine of the Church of
41
Scientology regarding the treatment of Suppressive Persons, is
non-justiciable and requires judicial abstention. Garcia v. Church
of Scientology Flag Serv. Org., Inc. (11th Cir. Nov. 2, 2021) No.
18-13452, 2021 WL 5074465, at *8-*9 (conflicting presentations of
Scientology doctrine regarding the treatment of suppressive
persons cannot be resolved without violating the First
Amendment). This Court’s finding that religious abstention does
not apply and the Parties’ dispute does not implicate
ecclesiastical issues, is incorrect as a matter of law and fact.
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
III. CONCLUSION
Rehearing should be ordered.
Dated: February 3, 2022 WINSTON & STRAWN LLP
By:
William H. Forman
Attorneys for Defendants and
Real Parties in Interest
Church of Scientology
International & Celebrity
Centre International
Dated: February 3, 2022 JEFFER MANGELS
BUTLER & MITCHELL LLP
By:
Matthew D. Hinks
Attorneys for Defendant and
Real Party in Interest
Religious Technology Center
42
CERTIFICATE OF WORD COUNT
Pursuant to Rule 8.204(c)(1) of the California Rules of
Court and in reliance on the word count of the computer program
used to prepare this Petition for Rehearing, counsel certifies that
the text of this brief was produced using 13 point font and
contains 6,981 words.
Dated: February 3, 2022 WINSTON & STRAWN LLP
By:
William H. Forman
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Attorneys for Defendants and
Real Parties in Interest
Church of Scientology
International & Celebrity
Centre International
Dated: February 3, 2022 JEFFER MANGELS
BUTLER & MITCHELL LLP
By:
Matthew D. Hinks
Attorneys for Defendant and
Real Party in Interest
Religious Technology Center
43
PROOF OF SERVICE
C.C.P. §1013(a), 2015.5
I, the undersigned, hereby declare under penalty of perjury
as follows: I am a citizen of the United States, and over the age of
eighteen years, and not a party to the within action; my business
address is 333 South Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90071-
1543. On this date, I served the interested parties in this action
the within documents: PETITION FOR REHEARING via the
Court’s online True Filing system as follows:
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Robert W. Thompson
Thompson Law Offices
700 Airport Boulevard, Suite 160
Burlingame, CA 94019
Email:
[email protected]Marci A. Hamilton
36 Timber Knoll Drive
Washington Crossing, PA 18977
Email: [email protected]
Andrew Brad Brettler
Lavely & Singer
2049 Century Park East
Suite 2400
Los Angeles, CA 90067
Email:
[email protected] I, the undersigned, also hereby declare under penalty of
perjury as follows: I am a citizen of the United States, and over
the age of eighteen years, and not a party to the within action;
44
my business address is 333 South Grand Avenue, Los Angeles,
CA 90071-1543. On this date, I forwarded the within documents:
PETITION FOR REHEARING
by U.S. Mail to:
Los Angeles County Superior Court (via USPS)
Central District, Stanley Mosk Courthouse, Dept. 37
111 North Hill Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Executed at Los Angeles, California on February 3, 2022.
Document received by the CA 2nd District Court of Appeal.
Pamela Tanigawa
45