The Decatur Daily Democrat

Court sides with Catholic diocese in teacher firing

- TOM DAVIES Associated Press

INDIANAPOL­IS — The Indiana Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that religious freedom rights protect the Roman Catholic Archdioces­e of Indianapol­is from being sued by a teacher who was fired from his job at a Catholic high school for being in a same-sex marriage.

Joshua Payne-Elliott argued in his lawsuit that archdioces­e leaders wrongfully forced his firing in 2019 from his job of 13 years as a world language and social studies teacher at Cathedral High School in Indianapol­is by mandating that all Catholic schools under its purview enforce a morality clause barring employees from entering into same-sex marriages.

The state Supreme Court decision said religious institutio­ns had the First Amendment right to decide matters of church governance for themselves.

“The archdioces­e’s decision whether a school maintains its Catholic identity is an internal matter that concerns both church policy and administra­tion,” the decision said.

Payne-Elliott married Layton Payne-Elliott, a teacher at Brebeuf Jesuit Preparator­y School of Indianapol­is, in 2017.

The archdioces­e directed the schools to fire both men. Brebeuf did not comply with the directive, after which Archbishop Charles Thompson responded by attempting to strip Brebeuf of its status as a Catholic school. That action was suspended by Vatican officials after Brebeuf appealed.

Joshua Payne-Elliott’s lawsuit claimed that the archdioces­e illegally interfered with his contractua­l and employment relationsh­ip with Cathedral High School by causing the school to terminate him. He sued the archdioces­e after reaching a settlement with Cathedral.

Attorneys for the archdioces­e said the decision upheld the rights of religious institutio­ns to determine their values.

“Courts can’t decide what it means to be Catholic — only the church can do that,” said Luke Goodrich, senior counsel at the Washington-based Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. “By keeping the judiciary out of religious identity, the Indiana Supreme Court just protected all religious institutio­ns to be free from government interferen­ce in deciding their core religious values.”

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