TniS~J?Inlon was flied for record
f ILE at t;-(2!} % em '&ble~~f
IN CLERKS OFFICE·
llJPMME COURT, STATE Of WASHIIG10II
~
ROnakf ,·carpnt
DATE FEB 0 6 2014 Supreme Court Clerk
·f1J.c J~~PREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
CERTIFICATION FROM THE UNITED )
STATES DISTRJCT COURT FOR ) No. 88218-5
THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF )
WASHINGTON )
)
IN ) EnBanc
)
LARRY C. OCKLETREE, individually, )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. )
)
FRANCISCAN HEALTH SYSTEM, a )
Washington Corporation, d/b/a )
ST. JOSEPH HOSPITAL, and JOHN and )
JANE DOE(S) 1-10, )
)
Defendants. )
________________________) Filed FEB 0 6 2014
C. JOHNSON, J.-The certified questions in this case ask us to decide
whether, the exemption of nonprofit religious organizations from the definition of
"employer'j under Washington's Law Against Discrimination (WLAD), chapter
49.60 RCW, violates article I, section 11 or article I, section 12 of the Washington
Consti~ut.ion. Larry Ockletree brought suit in state court against Franciscan Health
System (PHS), challenging the termination of his employment following a stroke.
Ockletree, who is African-American, claimed that his termination was the result of
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
illegal discrimination on the basis of race and disability. FHS removed the suit to
federal court and moved to dismiss Ockletree's claims. FHS argued that it was
exempt from ·wLAD as a nonprofit religious organization. Ockletree challenged
the validity of the religious employer exemption under the state and federal
constitutions. The district court certified questions to this court asking whether the
religious employer exemption violates Washington's article I, section 11
establishment clause or its article I, section 12 privileges and immunities clause.
We answer both questions in the negative.
CERTIFIED QUESTIONS
1. The Washington Law Against Discrimination excludes religious
non-profit organizations from its definition of "employer" (Wash.
Rev. Code § 49.60.040(11)). Such entities are therefore facially
exenipt from WLAD's prohibition of discrimination in the
workplace. Does this exemption violate Wash. Canst. Article I, § 11
or§ 12?
2. If not, is Wash. Rev. Code § 49.60.040(11)'s exemption
unconstitutional as applied to an employee claiming that the
religious non-profit organization discriminated against him for
reasons wholly unrelated to any religious purpose, practice, or
activity?
Order Certifying Question to the Wash. Supreme Ct. (Certification) at 4.
FACTS
Plaintiff Larry C. Ockletree was employed as a security guard by FHS in
2010. He staffed a de$k in the emergency department at St. Joseph Hospital, where
2
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
he check~d visitors' identification and issued name tags. While employed by FHS,
Ocld etree suffered a stroke that impaired his nondominant arm. FHS determined he
could not perform the essential functions of his job with or without
accommodation, refused his requested accommodation, and terminated his
employment.
Ockletree brought multiple causes of action in state court, including
employment discrimination on the basis of race and disability in violation of
federal law and WLAD. FHS removed the case to federal court and moved to
dismiss four of Ockletree's claims, including his WLAD claim. Jurisdiction for
Ocldetree's federal employment discrimination claim under the Civil Rights Act of
1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5, depends upon whether he timely exhausted
administrative remedies. The filing period in question depends upon whether he
has a valid state law discrimination claim. If Ockletree' s WLAD claim fails, his
federal claim is time barred.
FHS asserts that as a nonprofit religious organization, it is exempt from
WLAD' s definition of "employer" and therefore exempt from WLAD' s private
cause of actio~. RCW 49.60.040(11); Certification at 2-3. Ockletree challenges the
exemption's validity under the state and federal constitutions. The United States
District Court certified questions to this court asking whether the religious
3
Ockletree v. franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
employer exemption violates article I, section 11 or article I, section 12 of the
Washington Constitution. 1
ANALYSIS
The certified questions ask us to determine the constitutionality of the
exemption of religious nonprofit organizations from WLAD. 2 WLAD was enacted
in 1949 with the purpose of ending discrimination by employers "on the basis of
race, creed, color, or national origin." Griffin v. Eller, 130 Wn.2d 58, 63, 922 P.2d
788 (1996). WLAD has expanded over the years to bar discrimination on the basis
of age, sex, sexual orientation, and disability, and to incorporate a private right of
action for employees and persons who use public accommodations. See RCW
49.60.040.
As enacted, the law exempted from the definition of "employer" "any
religious, charitable, educational, social or fraternal association or corporation, not
organized for private profit." LAWS OF 1949, ch. 183, § 3(b). In 1957, the
legislature rewrote the definition of "employer" to its present form, bringing
1
Five amicus briefs were filed in this case by (1) Washington State Association for
Justice Foundation, (2) Washington Employment Lawyers Association and Legal Voice, (3)
American Civil Liberties Union of Washington and Anti-Defamation League, (4) Pacific
Northwest Conference of the United Methodist Church, Olympia Diocese of the Episcopal
Church, and Presbytery of Seattle of the Presbyterian Church USA, and (5) Religious
Organizations.
2
WLAD is a regulatory law enacted under the legislature's police power to promote the
health, peace, safety, and general welfare ofthe people of Washington. See RCW 49.60.010.
4
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
s~cular nonprofit organizations within the statute's ambit and exempting only
small employers mid religious nonprofits. See LAWS OF 1957, ch. 37. The
definition of "employer" for purposes of WLAD is currently found in RCW
49.60.040(11), which provides, "'Employer' includes any person acting in the
interest of an employer, directly or indirectly, who employs eight or more persons,
and does not include any religious or sectarian organization not organized for
private profit."
The WLAD religious employer exemption has been examined in two earlier
cases raising arguments under the state constitution, but in neither case did we
expressly reach the state constitutional issue. The first came in 1991, when Nancy
Farnam, an employee of a religious nursing home, challenged her dismissal for
reporting the removal of a patient's gastric tube. Farnam v. CRISTA Ministries,
116 Wn.2d 659, 662-66, 807 P.2d 830 (1991). Farnam argued that the WLAD
exemption was invalid under article I, section 11 and article I, section 12 of the
Washington Constitution. We noted that the arguments were presented to us
without sufficient briefing analyzing the state constitutional claims, and we
declined to address their merits. However, we noted that we rejected a similar
ch~llenge to the federa.l exemption under the equal protection clause, in American
5
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
Network, Inc. v. Utilities & Transportation Commission, 113 Wn.2d 59, 77, 776
P.2d 950 (1989). Farnam, 116 Wn.2d at 681.
A second state constitutional challenge to the religious employer exemption
came in 2010, when Angela Erdman, a church elder employed in a secular
'position, was dismissed on the recommendation of the church tribunal. Erdman v.
Chapel flill Presbyterian Church, 156 Wn. App. 827, 234 P.3d 299 (2010)
(Erdman I), rev 'd on other grounds by Erdman, 175 Wn.2d 659, 286 P.3d 357
(20 12) (Erdman· II). Erdman challenged the dismissal, asserting several causes of
action, including a violation of WLAD. Moving for summary judgment dismissal
of Erdman's 'WLAD claim, the church asserted the religious employer exemption.
' '
Erdman countered that the exemption was an unconstitutional privilege or
immunity under article I, section 12 because it interfered with her fundamental
right to pursue an occupation. Just as in Farnam, the Court of Appeals found that
Erdman had cited "no relevant authority" to support her state constitutional claim
?tnd declined to. examine the merits. Erdman I, 156 Wn. App. at 849. We did not
. . ,
take review of Erdman's article I, section 12 claim and resolved the case on other
grounds. See Erdman II, 175 Wn.2d at 683 .
.. . '
6
Ockletree v: Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
Here, we are asked to confront the question of whether the religious
employer exemption violates article I, section 11 or article I, section 12 of the
Washington Constitution.
a. Article I, section 12
Article I, section 12 provides, "No law shall be passed granting to any
citizen, class of citizens, or corporation other than municipal, privileges or
immunities which upon the same terms shall not equally belong to all citizens, or
corporations." Passed during a period of distrust toward laws that served special
interests, the purpose of article I, section 12 is to limit the sort of favoritism that
ran rampant during the territorial period. ROBERT F. UTTER & HUGH D. SPITZER,
TlfE WASHINGTONSTATE CONSTITUTION: A REFERENCE GUIDE 26-27 (G. Alan Tarr
ed., 2002). Although the text of clause was modeled after a similar provision in
Oregon's 1859 Constitution, Washington's framers explicitly broadened the reach
of the clause by including "corporations" in the language of article I, section 12.
See State v. Smith, 117 Wn.2d 263, 285, 814 P.2d 652 (1991) (Utter, J.,
concurring). Our cases have consistently recognized that the text and aims of
article I, section 12 differ from that of the federal equal protection clause. Whereas
the Fourteenth Amendment was generally intended to prevent discrimination
against disfavored individuals or groups, article I, section 12 was intended to
7
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
prevent favoritism and special treatment for a few, to the disadvantage of others.
See Smith, 117 Wn.2d at 283 (Utter, J., concurring).
Despite the historical and textual differences, Washington courts often
construed article I, section 12 consistent with the federal equal protection clause
for most of the latter half of the previous century. In 2002, however, we recognized
some distinctions, and applying the GunwalP factors, concluded that article I,
section 12, can in certain circumstances, support an analysis independent of that of
the Fourteenth Amendment. Grant County Fire Prot. Dist. No. 5 v. City of Moses
Lake, 150 Wn.2d 791, 83 P.3d 419 (2004) (Grant II). Under that approach, we
embraced a two-step analysis. The first step is to analyze whether the law in
question involv:es a privilege or immunity. If there is no privilege or immunity
involved, then article I, section 12 is not implicated. Grant II, 150 Wn.2d at 812. 4
If, on the other hand, the law involves a privilege or immunity, the second step in
the analysis ~sks whether the legislature had a "reasonable ground" for granting the
3 State v. Gunwall, 106 Wn.2d 54, 720 P.2d 808 (1986) .
4
. If there is no privilege or immunity involved, this leaves only the question of whether
the challenged statute violates the equal protection clause of the federal constitution. Am. Legion
Post No. 149 v. Dep 't of Health, 164 Wn.2d 570, 608, 192 P .3d 306 (2008). Whether the
exemption of religious nortprofits from WLAD violates the federal equal protection clause is not
a question of state law certified to this court.
8
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
privilege or immunity. See Grant County Fire Prot. Dist. No. 5 v. City of Moses
Lake, 145 Wn.2d 702, 731, 42 P.3d 394 (2002) (Grant 1). 5
Before beginning this analysis, it is important to recognize the breadth of the
claim presented. Although much of the argument focuses on this claim against this
hospital, the issue is far more significant and broader given the certified questions.
. .
We are asked to declare as unconstitutional the exemption for all religious
nonprofits, which extends to not only this case, but all other employers covered by
the exemption, including universities, elementary schools, Catholic Community
Services, .Jewish Family Services, CRISTA Ministries, YMCA, YWCA, Salvation
. . .
Army, and St. Vincent De Paul. Arguably, churches, synagogues, and mosques
would be exposed as well. We further note that since enacted in 1949, the
legislature has not revised this exemption to limit its scope. With that said, we turn
to whether the definition of "employer" in RCW 49.60.040(11) involves a
privilege or immunity .
5
. When we reconsidered that decision in Grant II, we did not reach the reasonable-
grounds test but vacated Grant I on the sole ground that "no privilege, i.e., fundamental right of
state citizenship, [was] at issue in this case." Grant II, 150 Wn.2d at 814.
9
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
i. Does RCW 49. 60. 040(11) grant a privilege or immunity? 6
Ocldetree argues that under the dictionary definition of "privilege," "the
right to vvork free from discrimination is a privilege of citizenship" and that the
legislature grants this "privilege" on unequal terms. Corrected Pl.'s Reply Br. at
14. He further argues that the legislature grants religious employers '"immunity'
from the antidiscrimination laws applicable to other employers and, thus, grants
them a 'privilege' to discriminate against employees" without civil liability. Pl.'s
Opening Br. at 28. FRS counters that the dictionary definition of "privilege" is not
coextensive with the meaning we give that term in the context of article I, section
12, and that t~e definition of"employer" in RCW 49.60.040(11) does not involve a
privilege or immunity for purposes of that section.
As FHS correctly observes, in a constitutional sense a privilege has been
':.·.
more narrowly construed than the arguments advanced by Ockletree. In defining
the scope of a privilege, we have emphasized that "not every statute authorizing a
particular class to do or obtain something involves a 'privilege' subject to article I,
section 12." Grant II, 150 Wn.2d at 812. 7 Rather, in early cases, we clarified that
-------------
6
As the parties note, we have at times used the terms "privilege" and "immunity"
interchangeably. Because the parties treat them as synonymous in this case, we will do the same.
And to the extent that they are designed to avoid favoritism, they are the same.
In fact, since announcing an independent interpretation of article I, section 12, we have
7
not found a statute to violate the privileges and immunities clause. See Am. Legion, 164 Wn.2d at
10
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
the term "privileges and immunities" refers "alone to those fundamental rights
which belong to the citizens of [Washington] by reason of such citizenship." State
v. Vance, 29 Wash. 435, 458, 70 P. 34 (1902). Accordingly we have held that not
every legislative cl3;ssification constitutes a "privilege" within the meaning of
article I, section 12 but only those where it is, "in its very nature, such a
' ,• .
fundamental right of a citizen that it may be said to come within the prohibition of
the constitution, or to have been had in mind by the framers of that organic law."
Vance, 29 Wn. at 458-59. As we said in Vance,
[a] statute can be declared unconstitutional only where specific
restrictions upon the power of the legislature can be pointed out, and
the case shown to come within them, and not upon any general theory
that ·the statute conflicts with a spirit supposed to pervade the
constitution, but not expressed in words.
Vance, 29 Wn. at 459 (citing Smith v. City of Seattle, 25 Wash. 300, 65 P. 612
(1901)). Generally, rights left to the discretion of the legislature have not been
considered fundamental. Grant II, 150 Wn.2d at 814.
Ockletree asks us to embrace a broader meaning of "privilege or immunity"
for purposes of article I, section 12 to mean any exemption in derogation of
common right. Pl.'s Opening Br. at 28 n.14. However, accepting Ockletree' s broad
definition not only would be inconsistent with our article I, section 12
606-07; Ventenbergs v. City of Seattle, 163 Wn.2d 92, 103, 178 P.3d 960 (2008); Madison v.
State, 161 Wn.2d 85, 96-97, 163 P.3d 757 (2007) (plurality opinion); Andersen v. King County,
158 Wn.2d 1, 16, 138 P.3d 963 (2006) (plurality opinion); Grant II, 150 Wn.2d at 816.
11
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System; No. 88218-5
jurisprudence but could also produce harmful consequences. Accepting Ockletree's
definition means recognizing a privilege anytime a statute grants a right to some
but not others. In other words, many legislative decisions could be claimed as
. .
privileges. As a result, we could be called upon to second-guess the distinctions
draVv'n by the legislature for policy reasons nearly every time it enacts a statute. For
example, the property tax exemptions for citizens "[s]ixty-one years of age or
older" and "veterans with one hundred percent service-connected disabilities"
could be challenged as unconstitutional grants of special privileges to certain
classes of citizens but not others. RCW 84.36.381(3)(a)(i), .379. Similarly,
exemptions from emission control inspections for "[fJarm vehicles," "[s]treet rod
vehicles," "[h]ybrid motor vehicles," and "[c]lasses of motor vehicles exempted by
the director of the department of ecology," among others, would all be subject to
challenge under article I, section 12. RCW 46.16A.060(2)( e), (f), (h), (i). We
therefore reje~t Ockletree's invitation to broaden the meaning of the word
"privilege" for p~rposes of article I, section 12 and reiterate that a privilege in this
context is limited to those fundamental rights of citizenship.
Ockletree' s argument seems to be that a cause of action for discrimination
by a private actor in a private employment setting is a fundamental right of
citizenship. However, Ockletree's assertion has no support in our jurisprudence or
12
Oc!detree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
in any other state or federal court. As amici Religious Organizations notes, absent
state action, courts have uniformly declined to prohibit employment discrimination
on constitutional grounds. See Moran v. GTECH Corp., 989 F. Supp. 84, 93
(D.R.I. 1997); Am. Nat 'llns. Co. v. Fair Emp 't & Hous. Comm 'n, 32 Cal. 3d 603,
619, 651 P.2d 1151, 186 Cal. Rptr. 345 (1982) (Mosk, J., dissenting); Ky. Comm 'n
on .Human Rights v. Fraser, 625 S.W.2d 852, 854 (Ky. 1981). Because
discrimination in private employment cannot "be said to come within the
p1;ohibition of the constitution," it is not a fundamental right. Rather, protection
from discrimination in private employment is a creature of statutory enactment.
Notably, WLAD was not enacted unti11949, over half a century after the adoption
of our constitution. And the private cause of action under the statute was not
created until 1973. LAws OF 1973, ch. 141. Moreover, the exemption for religious
organizations has been part of the antidiscrimination statute from the time it was
enacted and has never been amended. The timing of WLAD' s enactment further
supp()rtS our conclusion that the right at issue here is not fundamental to state
citizenship and is therefore not a privilege within the meaning of article I, section
12.
. Our determ~nation concerning the nature of the right at issue here is also
consistent with our holding in Griffin, 130 Wn.2d 58. In Griffin, we considered and
13
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
rejected a similar challenge involving the exemption in WLAD for employers with
fewer than eight employees. There, we applied a federal equal protection analysis
and held that the small employer exemption does not violate article I, section 12.
Notably, in that case we said that the protections extended by the law against
discrimination involve an "important" right, not a fundamental right. Griffin, 130
Wn.2d at 65. And we evaluated the small employer exemption using rational basis
review, an approach that traditionally does not apply to fundamental rights. See
Amunrud v. Bd. ofAppeals, 158 Wn.2d 208, 222, 143 P.3d 571 (2006) ("When
state action does not affect a fundamental right, the proper standard of review is
rational basis."). If we accepted Ockletree's argument that the right at issue here is
fundamental, we would be implicitly embracing strict scrutiny for analyzing the
exemption under the federal equal protection clause. See Am. Legion Post No. 149
v. Dep't ofllealth, 164 Wn.2d 570, 609, 192 P.3d 306 (2008) (strict scrutiny
applies to laws burdening fundamental rights). As such, our decision would be at
odds with our analysis and conclusion in Griffin. Instead, we adhere to what we
recognized and held in Griffin that a right of action for discrimination in private
employment is an important right, but not a fundamental one. Therefore, it is not a
privilege in the state constitutional sense.
14
Ockletree v. ~Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
Ockletree also contends that RCW 49.60.040(11) implicates the fundamental
right to '"carry on business'" within the state, and that the statute grants an
exemption to religious hospitals that does not belong to secular hospitals carrying
on the same business. Corrected Pl.'s Reply Br. at 15 (quoting Am. Legion, 164
Wn.2d at 607). 8 However, we rejected the notion that the privileges and
immunities clause is violated anytime the legislature treats similarly situated
businesses differently in American Legion. See Am. Legion, 164 Wn.2d at 607.
There, we considered an article I, section 12 challenge to a law that banned
smoking in a public place or in any place of employment. As in this case, the
petitioner argued that the law involved the fundamental right to carry on business,
and that the law treated two similarly situated businesses differently in violation of
the privileges and immunities clause. We disagreed and clarified that "a 'privilege'
normally relates to an exemption from a regulatory law that has the effect of
benefiting certain businesses at the expense of others." Am. Legion, 164 Wn.2d at
607. We held in American Legion that the law did not involve a privilege for
purposes of article I, section 12 because the law did not prevent any entity from
engaging in business. Rather, we said that the law merely prohibited smoking
withit: a place of employment, which is not a fundamental right of citizenship.
8
This argument is not particularly helpful to the certified question because as noted,
Ockletree's challenge is not limited to employment in religious hospitals. Rather, he challenges
the exemption facially, which covers all religious employers, including churches and schools.
15
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
Here, Ockletree fails to establish how RCW 49.60.040(11) confers a benefit
to religious nonprofits at the expense of other organizations that are subject to
WLAD. While Ockletree asserts that religious nonprofits are not subject to
"liability for damages under WLAD or the costs attendant on statutory
compliance," he fails to show how secular employers who are subject to the
antidiscrimination law bear any greater expense or costs because religious
nonpro:fits are exempt, and we find no basis to support that argument. Pl.'s
Opening Br. at 28. 9 Thus, the· exemption does not offend the anticompetitive
concerns underlying article I, section 12. Moreover, nonprofits run by religious
organizations were not the type of powerful business interests that the framers of
article I, section 12 had in mind when drafting that section. As Ockletree
acknowledges, article I, section 12 was historically applied "'in a manner
consistent with its aim of eliminating governmental favoritism toward certain
business interests."' Pl.'s Opening Br. at 24 (quoting Michael Bindas, Seth Cooper,
David K. DeWolf & Michael J. Reitz, The Washington Supreme Court and the
State Constitution: A 2012 Assessment, 46 GONZ. L. REv. 1, 25 (2010/11)).
9
Ockletree also attempts to distinguish American Legion on the grounds that while
smoking is not a fundamental right of citizenship, the legislature "has declared that the right to
work free from discrimination is a privilege of citizenship." Corrected Pl.'s Reply Br. at 14
(citing 49.60.010). But RCW 49.60.010 does not state that the right to be free from
discrimination is a privilege, rather it says that "discrimination threatens ... the rights and proper
privileges of its inhabitants."
16
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
Finally, Ockletree's assertion that WLAD authorizes religious nonprofits to
discriminate is without merit. The statute plainly does not state that religious
nonprofits can discriminate against employees on the bases listed. And religious
nonprofits are arguably subject to federal antidiscrimination laws. It may be that
Ockletre~ could find protection under federal law, but we leave that issue to the
federal court to decide. Here, we conclude only that, under an analysis independent
of the federal equal protection clause, article I, section 12 does not apply to
invalidate the religious nonprofit exemption in WLAD.
n. Is there a "reasonable ground" for the classification?
Even if the exemption in WLAD for religious nonprofits did implicate a
"privilege or immunity," Ockletree's article I, section 12 challenge falls short
because reasonable grounds exist for this distinction. In Grant I, we derived the
"reasonable ground" test for privileges and immunities challenges from our early
20th ce~tury cases. The test comprises two prongs: first, whether the law applies
equally to "all persons within a designated class," and second, whether there is a
"reasonable ground for distinguishing between those who fall within the class and
those who do not." Grant I, 145 Wn.2d at 731. 10 To meet the reasonable ground
10
As previously noted, we did not reach the reasonable grounds test in Grant II. Instead,
we vacated Grant I on the sole ground that "no privilege, i.e., fundamental right of state
citizenship, [was] at issue in this case." Grant II, 150 Wn.2d at 814. Therefore, the reasonable
grounds test, as articulated in Grant I, is still good law and is the applicable test here.
17
Ockletree v. Fl'anciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
reqtJirement,. distinctions must rest on "real and substantial differences bearing a
natural, reasonable, ahd just relation to the subject matter of the act." State ex rel.
Bacich v. !fuse, 187 Wash. 75, 84, 59 P.2d 1101 (1936), overruled on other
grounds by Puget Sound Gillnetters Ass'n v. Moos, 92 Wn.2d 939, 603 P.2d 819
( 1979). Here, no one disputes that the challenged exemption applies equally to all
religious nonprofits. The question, then, is whether there is a "reasonable ground"
for distinguishing between religious nonprofits and other nonprofits.
As arnid Pacific Northwest Conference of the United Methodist Church
(amici United Methodist Church) notes, there are real and substantial differences
between religious nonprofits and secular nonprofits that make it reasonable for the
legislature to treat them. differently und~r WLAD. One of the primary differences
is that religious organizations have a right to religious liberty guaranteed by the
state free exercise clause under article I, section 11. We have recognized that
article I, section 11 provides greater protection for the free exercise of religion than
. .
the First .Amendment. First Covenant Church v. City of Seattle, 120 Wn.2d 203,
226, 840 P.2d 174 (1992). The free exercise clause provides, "Absolute freedom of
conscience in all matters of religious sentiment, belief and worship, shall be
guaranteed to every individual, and no one shall be molested or disturbed in person
or property on account of religion." WASH. CONST. art. I, § 11. Amici United
18
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
Methodist Church notes that this is the reason religious organizations may, and
indeed sometimes rnust, be treated differently than nonreligious organizations.
The TJnited States Supreme Court has recognized that exemptions for
religious organizations from civil discrimination suits protect religious freedom by
a~oiding state interference with religious autonomy and practice. Corp. of
Presiding Bishop of Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Amos, 483 U.S.
327, 336, 107 S. Ct. 2862, 97 L. Ed. 2d 273 (1987). In Amos, the Court considered
a challenge to the exemption of religious organizations from Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act . of 1964's (Title VII), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e, prohibition against
'. .'
discrimination in employment. There, the Court rejected the argument that
applying the exemption to cover the "secular" activities of religious employers
violated the establishment clause of the United States Constitution. The Court
explained that
it is a significant burden on a religious organization to require it, on
pain of substantial liability, to predict which of its activities a secular
court will consider religious. The line is hardly a bright one, and an
organization might understandably be concerned that a judge would
not understand its religious tenets and sense of mission. Fear of
potential liability might affect the way an organization carried out
what it understood to be its religious mission.
Amos, 483 U.S. at 336 (footnote omitted). The Court further rejected the argument
that the exemption violated equal protection principles by giving less protection to
19
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
employees of religious organizations . than employees of secular employers.
Applying rational basis review, the Court upheld the exemption on the basis that it
"is ratiot1aliy · related to the legitimate purpose of alleviating significant
governmental interference with the ability of religious organizations to define and
carry out their religious missions." Amos, 483 U.S. at 339. We agree with this
reasomng.
Here, the religious employer exemption satisfies the reasonable ground test
because it similarly accommodates the broad protections to religious freedoms
afforded by Washington's article I, section 11. The legislature gives effect to these
protections by choosing to avoid potential entanglements between the state and
religion that could occur in enforcing WLAD against religious nonprofits. As
amici Religious Organizations points out, the wide scope of WLAD justifies the
broader exemption under the WLAD for religious employers than under Title VII.
In addition to the classes covered by Title VII, the WLAD extends employment
discrimination protection to classes such as age, sexual orientation, gender identity,
and . marital and veteran status. RCW 49.60.030, .180. Amici Religious
Organizations notes that the legislature made a reasonable policy choice to avoid
the potential pitfalls of attempting to reconcile Washington's growing list of
protected categories (arguably, many of which with a religious aspect) with the
20
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
multitud~ of religious belief syste~s. Moreover, as noted by amici, similarly broad
exernptions for religious employers have been upheld in other states. See Pieszak v.
Glendale Adventist Med. Ctr., 112 F. Supp. 2d 970, 997 (C.D. Cal. 2000) (finding
California's blanket exemption of all religious nonprofit organizations from the
state antidiscrimination statute constitutional). Because of the evidentiary standards
and the nature of the inquiry for discrimination claims, the legislature could
reasonably conclude that religious organizations should be relieved of the burden
of predicting when their religious beliefs would be regarded as sufficient
justification for an employment decision. 11
h. Article I, section 11
The second question presented is whether the exemption of religious
n.onprofit employers from WLAD violates the establishment clause of article I,
section 11. Article I, section 11 provides in part, "No public money or property
shall be appropriated for or applied to any religious worship, exercise or
instruction, or the support of any religious establishment."
Ockletree initially asserts that WLAD's definition of "employer" favors
religious nonprofits and that such favor constitutes "support" for "religious
11
It is worth stressing that we do not hold that the state free exercise clause requires such
a broad exemption for religious organizations under WLAD, rather we hold only that a
reasonable ground exists to distinguish between religious and secular organizations based on the
potential for government interference with religious freedoms in enforcing WLAD against
religious nonprofits.
21
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
establishment[ s]" in violation of article I, section 11. 12 However, Ockletree
misconstrues the. meEming of the phrase "support of any religious establishment."
We previously clarified that "[t]he terms 'appropriated' and 'applied' modify
religious worship, exercise or instruction, and the support of any religious
establishment. Thus, what article I, section 11 prohibits is the 'appropriation' ...
of public money to any of these enumerated purposes." State ex rel. Gallwey v.
Grimm, 146 Wn.2d 445, 466, 48 P.3d 274 (2002); see also Malyon v. Pierce
County, 131 Wn.2d 779, 793, 935 P.2d 1272 (1997) ("The state provision
explicitly prohibits appropriation or application of public money or property for
four explicit purposes, religious worship, religious exercise, religious instruction,
and support of any religious establishment."). Therefore, we have said that an
establishment clause challenge requires us to ask two questions: "(1) Is 'public
money or property' involved? and (2) If so, is it to be 'appropriated for or applied
to any religious worship, exercise or instruction, or the support of any religious
establishment'?" TYash. Health Care Facilities Auth. v. Spellman, 96 Wn.2d 68,
12
Ockletree also argues that the WLAD exemption is invalid for "justify[ing] practices
inconsistent with the peace and safety of the state." WASH. CONST. art. I, § 11. But this language
pertains to the free exercise clause, not the establishment clause, and Ockletree does not
challenge the exemption on free exercise grounds. Thus, the "peace and safety" provision is
irrelevant to our analysis.
22
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
71, 633 P.2d 866 (1981). Where no public money or property is involved, we need
not reach the second question. Wash. Health Care Facilities Auth., 96 Wn.2d 68. 13
Ockletree asserts that "[i]n the event this Court limits article I, section 11 to
circumstances where. public money or property is provided to a religious
organization, the WLAD religious nonprofit exemption is still unconstitutional
because the exemption ... provides a financial benefit." Pl.'s Opening Br. at 44.
Ockletree argues that the challenged exemption provides indirect financial support
to religious nonprofits by relieving them "from the necessary financial costs of
compliance with WLAD and potential damages for violation." Pl.'s Opening Br. at
46. Indirect financial support, Ockletree contends, "violates the state Constitution
just as much as direct payment of funds." Pl.'s Opening Br. at 44.
We find nothing in our case law, however, to support Ockletree's position.
To the contrary, our establishment clause jurisprudence makes clear that an
indirect financial benefit to a religious organization does not violate the state
constitution. For instance, in Washington Health Care Facilities Authority, we held
that allowing.religious hospitals to raise money through tax exempt bonds did not
13
As FHS correctly observes, Ockletree's Gunwall analysis of article I, section 11 is
unnecessary and unhelpful. We have already determined that a different interpretation should
apply under the state establishment clause as compared with the federal establishment clause.
lvfalyon, 131 Wn.2d at 798.
23
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
violate article I, section 11. In determining whether public money or property was
involved, we reasoned:
The only "public" financial assistance given borrower hospitals
here is indirect, not measurable in dollars, and is not state aid: Those
who receive the interest from tax exempt bonds are relieved of the
obligation to pay a tax on this income. This tax relief can hardly be
called an appropriation or application of public money unless the
income which is taxed is claimed to be public money in the first place.
Wash. Health Care Facilities Auth., 96 Wn.2d at 73. Notably, in discussing
Washington f{ealth Care Facilities Authority in a later case, we said that "[b ]y
making this method of financing available to a private religious institution the state
conferred a tremendous financial benefit on a religious establishment but without
violating the state constitution in the slightest." Malyon, 131 Wn.2d at 801
(emphasis added). By contrast, in Visser, which Ockletree cites for support, we
held that providing free transportation to or from religious schools violated article
I, section 11 because it constituted "a direct, substantial, and continuing public
subsidy to the schools." Visser v. Nooksack Valley Sch. Dist. No. 506, 33 Wn.2d
699, 708, 207 P.2d 198 (1949).
As PHS points out, this case IS unlike Visser, where publicly funded
transportation to and from religious schools provided a direct financial benefit by
defraying the costs those schools would have otherwise incurred for student
transportation. Here, on the other hand, no public funding is implicated by
24
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
WLAD's definition of "employer." It is simply a definition. Thus, the exemption
of religious employers from WLAD provides no "direct" financial benefit or
subsidy to religious nonprofit organizations. Rather, any benefit received by the
religious employers as a result of the exemption from discrimination suits is
indirect. Because the challenged exemption from WLAD does not implicate public
funding or property, we find no violation of article I, section 11.
CONCLUSION
We answer the certified questions as follows:
(1) WLAD's definition of "employer" under RCW 49.60.040(11) does not
involve a privilege or immunity, and therefore does not violate article I,
section 12's privileges and immunities clause.
(2)WLAD's definition of "employer" under RCW 49.60.040(11) does not
involve the appropriation of money or application of property, and therefore
does not fall within the prohibition of article I, section 11 's establishment
clause.
25
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, No. 88218-5
WE CONCUR:
26
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al.
No. 88218-5
STEPHENS, J. (dissenting)-The lead opmwn begins with an
uncontroversial proposition: religious institutions hold a special place in our
society and may be granted certain statutory exemptions without offending the
constitution. But it elevates this proposition to unprecedented heights and deprives
Washington's article I, section 12 privileges and immunities clause of its intended
meaning by disclaiming any limits on the ability of religious-affiliated corporations
to engage in discrimination unrelated to their religious beliefs or practices. The
broad exemption of religious nonprofit corporations from Washington's Law
Against Discrimination (WLAD), at RCW 49.60.040(11), cannot constitutionally
be applied to allow race or disability discrimination against a hospital security
guard. Because such discrimination is not protected as part of religious exercise
and indeed violates the federal First Amendment establishment clause, it cannot
satisfy the "reasonable ground" standard under article I, section 12. I would hold
the exemption violates this provision as applied to WLAD claims based on
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
discrimination that is unrelated to an employer's religious purpose, practice, or
activity, and answer yes to certified question number 2, as to article I, section 12. 1
DISCUSSION
I. Article L Section 12 's Privileges and Immunities Clause Protects Rights
Guaranteed to all Washington Citizens
Article I, section 12 of the Washington constitution was adopted against a
backdrop of legislative misconduct that is almost unimaginable today. The framers
lived in a time when the "'wholesale corruption of state legislatures [was] laughed
at by honest men throughout America.'" JAMES LEONARD FITTS, THE
WASHINGTON CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION OF 1889, at 28-29 (1951)
(unpublished MA thesis, University of Washington) (on file with Washington State
Law Library) (alteration in original) (quoting TACOMA DAILY LEDGER (July 19,
1889)). The territorial legislature was no exception, and "spent much of its time
granting special acts or privileges." 1 WILFRED J. AIREY, A HISTORY OF THE
CONSTITUTION AND GOVERNMENT OF WASHINGTON TERRITORY 208 (1945)
(unpublished PhD dissertation, University of Washington) (on file with
Washington State Law Library). Prior to statehood, "[r]ailroads were chartered but
1
The lead opinion never addresses the second certified question, which concerns
Ockletree's as-applied challenge, choosing instead to highlight the dramatic potential for
declaring the exemption unconstitutional "for all religious nonprofits . . . including
universities, elementary schools, Catholic Community Services, Jewish Family Services,
CRISTA Ministries, YMCA, YWCA, Salvation Army, and St. Vincent De Paul," not to
mention "churches, synagogues, and mosques." Lead opinion at 9. In fact, when it offers
answers to the questions posed, the lead opinion considers only the facial challenge and
mistakenly divides the questions into (1) article I, section 12 and (2) article I, section 11.
Lead opinion at 25. It therefore does not explain how RCW 49.60.040(11) can be
applied to allow employment discrimination on grounds wholly unrelated to religious
exercise without violating article I, section 12.
-2-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
never built; the actions of inexperienced Territorial officials were legalized; private
laws authorizing the building of bridges, the establishing of ferries, or the
incorporating of companies often with nearly monopolistic powers, were passed
regularly." !d. (footnote omitted).
Delegates to the Washington constitutional convention were united in their
desire to reign in these abuses. FITTS, supra, at 28-29; Jonathan Thompson, The
Washington Constitution's Prohibition on Special Privileges and Immunities: Real
Bite for "Equal Protection" Review of Regulatory Legislation?, 69 TEMP. L. REv.
1247, 1277-78 (1996); see ROBERT F. UTTER & HUGH D. SPITZER, THE
WASHINGTON STATE CONSTITUTION: A Reference Guide 39 (2d ed. 2013).
Antipathy for unchecked legislative power was so pervasive that one member
remarked, "'If . . . a stranger from a foreign country were to drop into this
convention, he would conclude that we were fighting a great enemy, and that this
enemy is the legislature."' FITTS, supra, at 29 (quoting TACOMA DAILY LEDGER
(Aug. 9, 1889).
Despite striking differences between the text and historical roots of article I,
section 12 and the federal equal protection clause, Washington courts construed the
two provisions in lockstep for many years. See, e.g., State v. Smith, 117 Wn.2d
263, 281, 814 P.2d 652 (1991). In 2002 we reversed course, applying the
Gunwalf2 factors and concluding that article I, section 12 warrants separate
analysis "when the threat is not ofmajoritarian tyranny but of a special benefit to a
2
State v. Gunwall, 106 Wn.2d 54, 720 P.2d 808 (1986).
-3-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
minority and when the issue concerns favoritism rather than discrimination."
Grant County Fire Prot. Dist. No. 5 v. City of Moses Lake, 145 Wn.2d 702, 725-
31, 42 P.3d 394 (2002) (Grant County I), rev'd on reh 'g on other grounds, 150
Wn.2d 791, 83 P.3d 419 (2004) (Grant County II); see Gunwall, 106 Wn.2d at 61-
62 (setting forth six nonexclusive factors for determining whether the Washington
Constitution provides more protection than the United States Constitution). On
rehearing, we reversed results but not direction, upholding the law at issue but
sustaining our Gunwall holding from Grant County I. 150 Wn.2d at 806-11
(holding that "the Washington State provision requires independent analysis from
the federal provision when the issue concerns favoritism"). 3
After Grant County II, some confusion remained over whether article I,
section 12 is more protective only when the challenged law is "a grant of positive
favoritism to a minority class." Andersen v. King County, 158 Wn.2d 1, 16, 138
P.3d 963 (2006). In 2007, a plurality rejected this requirement, holding that article
I, section 12 has more "bite" whenever a law confers a privilege or immunity, not
3
The lead opinion claims we do not conduct equal protection analysis as a matter
of state law. Lead opinion at 8 n.4. The lead opinion is wrong. Unless a statute
implicates a privilege or immunity of state citizenship, Washington courts apply "the
same constitutional analysis under the state constitution's privileges and immunities
clause that is applied under the federal constitution's equal protection clause." Andersen
v. King County, 158 Wn.2d 1, 9, 138 P.3d 963 (2006) (plurality opinion); see Am. Legion
Post No. 149 v. Dep 't of Health, 164 Wn.2d 570, 608, 192 P .3d 306 (2008) (plurality
opinion) (noting that "[e]qual protection under the law is required by both the Fourteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 12 of the Washington
Constitution"); DeYoung v. Providence Med. Ctr., 136 Wn.2d 136, 140-44, 960 P.2d 919
(1998) (applying equal protection analysis as a matter of state constitutional law); Griffin
v. Eller, 130 Wn.2d 58, 64-65, 922 P.2d 788 (1996) (same); see generally UTTER, supra,
at 39 (describing Washington's equal protection doctrine). The lead opinion's disregard
of this long-standing doctrine is unwarranted and unexplained.
-4-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
just when it benefits a "minority class." Madison v. State, 161 Wn.2d 85, 94 n.6,
163 P.3d 757 (2007). And in two cases in 2008, the issue was settled when a
majority of the court applied the Madison plurality approach and declined to
examine whether the laws at issue affected a "minority class." See Am. Legion,
164 Wn.2d at 606-08; Ventenbergs v. City of Seattle, 163 Wn.2d 92, 102-04, 178
P.3d 960 (2008).
The lead opinion concedes that Ockletree's right to hold employment free
from discrimination is important but argues it is not "fundamental" and therefore
not protected by article I, section 12. Lead opinion at 14. The lead opinion
mistakes the privileges and immunities of state citizenship protected by article I,
section 12 for the fundamental rights of all Americans guaranteed by the federal
due process clause.
Due process protects a variety of fundamental rights under the banner of
"liberty," including the rights to marry, to have and raise children, to obtain
contraception and an abortion, and to refuse medical treatment. See generally
Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 719-20, 117 S. Ct. 2258, 138 L. Ed. 2d
772 (1997). Infringements of these fundamental rights are permissible only if
"'narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest."' Id. at 721 (quoting Reno
v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 302, 113 S. Ct. 1439, 123 L. Ed. 2d 1 (1993)).
By contrast, Washington's privileges and immunities clause guarantees
equal protection of the laws, but also protects those "'"fundamental rights which
belong to the citizens of the state by reason of such citizenship.""' Ventenbergs,
-5-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
163 Wn.2d at 103 (quoting Grant County II, 150 Wn.2d at 813 (quoting State v.
Vance, 29 Wash. 435, 458, 70 P. 34 (1902))). This court has never suggested that
these rights are limited to those deserving heightened scrutiny under federal law.
Rather, these rights are more prosaic than the "fundamental rights" guaranteed by
due process, and include "the right to . . . carry on business" in the state, "to
acquire and hold property, and to protect and defend the same in the law/' and "to
enforce other personal rights." Vance, 29 Wash at 458.
By conflating distinct constitutional doctrines, the lead opinion asks us to
believe that the framers of Washington's constitution ratified the privileges and
immunities clause in 1889 to safeguard rights that would not be consolidated under
federal due process for a generation. See Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 399,
43 S. Ct. 625, 67 L. Ed. 1042 (1923) (broadening the scope of"liberty" to include
these personal rights). Even if I were prepared to accept this view, the lead
opinion's sweeping reinterpretation of article I, section 12 would require us to
overturn cases dating back to territorial days in which we upheld laws under a
standard less stringent than strict scrutiny. Indeed, under its reasoning, article I,
section 12 would seem to guarantee Washington citizens the solemn and
fundamental right to sell cigars, animal feed, and eggs. See State v. W. W.
Robinson Co., 84 Wash. 246, 249, 146 P. 628 (1915) (animal feed); City of Seattle
v. Dencker, 58 Wash. 501, 502-03, 108 P. 1086 (1910) (cigars); In re Habeas
Corpus of Camp, 38 Wash. 393, 396, 80 P. 547 (1905) (eggs).
-6-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
The improbability that the framers of the constitution intended to ensconce
such a right strongly suggests that the rights protected by article I, section 12 and
the due process clause are not the same. The WLAD exemption is subject to
heightened scrutiny if it grants a privilege or immunity of state citizenship to
religious nonprofits. Whether the statute also infringes liberty interests protected
by due process is irrelevant to its status under article I, section 12.
II. The Right To Sue for Discriminatory Dismissal Is a Privilege of Washington
Citizenship Protected by Article L Section 12
The lead opinion is correct that not every statute favoring one class of
employers over another grants a "privilege or immunity" under article I, section
12. Lead opinion at 10 (citing Grant County II, 150 Wn.2d at 812). Privileges and
immunities "'pertain alone to those fundamental rights which belong to the citizens
of the state by reason of such citizenship.'" Grant County II, 150 Wn.2d at 812-13
(quoting Vance, 29 Wash. at 458).
In Vance, 29 Wash. at 458, we explained that article I, section 12 protects
"the right, by usual modes, to acquire and hold property, and to protect and defend
the same in the law; the rights to the usual remedies to collect debts, and to enforce
other personal rights." Under long-settled law, article I, section 12 protects the
broad privilege of Washington citizens to bring claims in state court. See id.;
Cotten v. Wilson, 27 Wn.2d 314, 317-20, 178 P .2d 287 (194 7) (holding the right to
sue in negligence is a privilege of state citizenship protected by article I, section
12); see also Corfield v. Coryell, 6 F. Cas. 546, 552 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1823)
-7-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, eta!., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
(Washington, J.) (holding that among the privileges and immunities of all state
citizens is the right "to institute and maintain actions of any kind in the courts of
the state").
In contrast, a right granted only at the discretion of the legislature is not a
"privilege" any citizen can assert. For example, there is no privilege to petition for
annexation because the legislature enjoys plenary authority to adjust municipal
boundaries. Grant County II, 150 Wn.2d at 813-14. Likewise, the legislature has
authority to create or repeal causes of action unrelated to common law claims, and
it does not grant or withhold a privilege when it does so. See Atchison v. Great W
Malting Co., 161 Wn.2d 372, 381, 166 P.3d 662 (2007) (wrongful death).
The lead opinion is simply wrong when it states that the "protection from
discrimination in private employment is a creature of statutory enactment." Lead
opinion at 13. The WLAD itself makes clear that employment free from
discrimination rests at the core of the sort of "personal rights" this court in Vance
identified as fundamental. 29 Wash. at 458. The WLAD was enacted "in
fulfillment of the provisions of the Constitution of this state concerning civil
rights," to protect "the rights and proper privileges" of state citizens, RCW
49.60.010, and resounds with provisions confirming the right to seek redress
beyond its own remedies. Indeed, well before the legislature created a statutory
right of action in 1973, it included the following language in RCW 49.60.020:
"Nor shall anything herein contained be construed to deny the right to any person
to institute any action or pursue any civil or criminal remedy based upon an alleged
-8-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
violation of his or her civil rights." LAWS OF 1957, ch. 37, § 2; see Griffin v. Eller,
130 Wn.2d 58, 84 n.7, 922 P.2d 788 (1996) (Talmadge, J., dissenting) (setting out
legislative history).
Importantly, the WLAD recognizes that freedom from discrimination is a
civil right, not merely a statutory promise. RCW 49.60.030(1) (declaring that the
"civil right" to be free from discrimination includes "[t]he right to obtain and hold
employment without discrimination"); see also RCW 49.60.010 (declaring that
discrimination against any citizen because of, inter alia, race or disability is "a
matter of state concern," and that such discrimination "menaces the institutions and
foundation of a free democratic state"). It is simply incredible for the lead opinion
to suggest that Washington citizens enjoyed no state common-law remedy for
discrimination until 1973-and that even today they must rely on state and federal
legislative grace to vindicate their rights.
The lead opinion relies on Griffin, asserting that the religious employer
exemption and the small business exemption reflect the same rational basis in
lifting the burden of enhanced statutory remedies. Lead opinion at 13. Maybe so,
but this does not answer whether the exemption affects a fundamental right for
purposes of the state privileges and immunities clause. Griffin was resolved solely
under an equal protection analysis. 130 Wn.2d at 65. While we held in Griffin that
the small employer exemption survived the traditional federal rational basis
review, we did not suggest it would survive an independent state privileges and
immunities analysis. 130 Wn.2d at 64-65. Though Griffin is not on point, in
-9-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
considering the privileges and immunities clause in this context, "[w]e do not write
on a clean slate." Madison, 161 Wn.2d at 114 (Madsen, J., concurring). In Cotten,
27 Wn.2d at 317-20, this court struck down a state law that required injured
plaintiffs to prove gross negligence on the part of certain common carriers on
privileges and immunities grounds. We held that injured persons would otherwise
have benefited from the state common-law rule, under which "the carrier is held to
the highest degree of care for the safety of its passengers, and the plaintiff is
required to prove only slight negligence." !d. at 317. Because the law shielded
carriers against a cause of action belonging to every state citizen, deemed a
fundamental right, we held it was an impermissible grant of a privilege or
immunity. !d.; see Thompson, supra, at 1276 (describing Cotten as an "immunity"
case). The case before us is no different. Ockletree persuasively argues that the
right to be free from discriminatory employment practices is easily as fundamental
as the commercial rights that our early article I, section 12 cases addressed. See
Pl.'s Opening Br. at 27 n.l3. I would recognize that exempting nonprofit religious
employers from WLAD claims bestows a "privilege" or "immunity" on them
within the meaning of the article I, section 12 privileges and immunities clause.
Ill There Is No "Reasonable Ground" for Privileging Religious Nonprofits
over Secular Ones
A law that grants a privilege or immunity to any citizen, group of citizens, or
corporation not available to all on the same terms violates article I, section 12
unless there is "reasonable ground for distinguishing between those who fall within
-10-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
the class and those who do not." Grant County I, 145 Wn.2d at 731. A distinction
is reasonable if it has "a natural, reasonable, and just relation to the subject matter
of the act." State ex rel. Bacich v. Huse, 187 Wash. 75, 84, 59 P.2d 1101 (1936),
overruled on other grounds by Puget Sound Gillnetters Ass 'n v. Moos, 92 Wn.2d
939, 947, 603 P.2d 819 (1979).
Although this test resembles certain articulations of rational basis review, the
two are not identical. As Professor Thompson notes, Washington courts refrain
from "hypothesizing facts" to justify a distinction under article I, section 12, and
do not extend the legislature permission to "proceed incrementally," instead taking
a statute as they find it. Thompson, supra, at 1278-79. The legislature is already
forbidden from drawing arbitrary distinctions, both under the federal and state
equal protection clauses and state common-law restraints on the police power. See,
e.g., Ventenbergs, 163 Wn.2d at 104 (citing Weyerhaeuser v. Pierce County, 124
Wn.2d 26, 40, 873 P.2d 498 (1994)). If article I, section 12 demanded no more,
there would be no reason to confine its scope to laws concerning a "fundamental
right of state citizenship." Grant County II, 150 Wn.2d at 814.
A. There Are No Reasonable Economic or Regulatory Grounds for
Distinguishing between Religious and Secular Nonprofits
We need not question whether the legislature had reasonable grounds to
exempt all nonprofit employers from discriminatory employment claims when it
enacted WLAD. See LAWS OF 1949, ch. 183, § 3. Many nonprofits do socially
vital work on a comparative shoestring, most in reliance on erratic government
-11-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
funds, grants, or donations. See Evelyn Brody, Agents Without Principals: The
Economic Convergence of the Nonprofit and For-Profit Organizational Forms, 40
N.Y.L. SCH. L. REv. 457, 470 & n.50 (1996) (quantifying sources of nonprofit
funding). Nonprofits often compete directly with government and for-profit
enterprises for scarce resources, including employees, but lack both the for-profit's
power to sell ownership interests and the taxing power of a government.
In today' s increasingly complex regulatory environment, nonprofits
frequently lack access to the sophisticated financial and legal advice enjoyed by
for-profit competitors. See Carter G. Bishop, The Deontological Significance of
Nonprofit Corporate Governance Standards: A Fiduciary Duty of Care Without a
Remedy, 57 CATH. U. L. REv. 701, 709 (2008). Discrimination suits place a heavy
financial and legal burden on these comparatively fragile employers, and the
legislature could reasonably exempt nonprofits from WLAD on this basis.
But this is not what the legislature did. The WLAD exempts only religious
nonprofits, not secular ones, from employment discrimination claims, and the
question is whether its distinction is justified by some "reasonable and just
difference" between the two types of employers. Grant County I, 145 Wn.2d at
73 7 (Madsen, J., concurring and dissenting) (citing McDaniels v. J.J. Connelly
Shoe Co., 30 Wash. 549, 555, 71 P. 37 (1902)). With respect to the burdens of
state regulation, what makes nonprofits vulnerable to discrimination claims is their
structure and financing, not their particular mission. Amici Religious
Organizations argue that the exemption better enables them to "meet[ ] critical
-12-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
needs of the most vulnerable," that it "lessens the burden on governmental
assistance programs," and that defending discrimination claims requires significant
resources that would be better spent for the public good. Br. of Amici Curiae
Religious Orgs. at 13-14. Amici are undoubtedly correct, but these arguments
apply equally in every respect to secular nonprofits, which are organized for
purposes no less socially beneficial, and whose charitable, benevolent, educational,
cultural, and scientific aims are no less impaired by civil claims. See RCW
24.03.015.
Nor are secular nonprofits any better situated than religious ones to "price
these increased expenses [from discrimination suits] into the cost of the 'goods'
they provide." Br. of Amici Curiae Religious Orgs. at 15-16. Indeed, religious
nonprofits receive the lion's share of private contributions and more volunteer
labor than any other nonprofit segment. See Brody, supra, at 470 n.50 (noting
more than 50 percent of all private contributions go to religious employers, and
that 75 percent of their labor is donated). Religious and secular nonprofits are
similarly situated with regard to civil liability for employment discrimination
claims and should be treated the same under the law. Instead, the exemption
bestows upon religious nonprofits a uniquely valuable asset. Amici point out that
Franciscan Health Services (FHS) and others use the exemption as a bargaining
chip in negotiations with unionized employees, offering to waive the exemption as
to represented employees. See Br. of Amici Curiae Am. Civil Liberties Union,
Am. Civil Liberties Union of Wash., and Anti-Defamation League at 11-12.
-13-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
If there is reasonable ground for the WLAD exemption, it is not based in any
economic or regulatory distinction between religious and secular nonprofits. The
lead opinion subtly recognizes this fact, as its only argument for granting special
privileges to religious nonprofits is based on their religious character. As
discussed below, this argument, rather than justifying the WLAD exemption,
actually confirms its unconstitutionality.
B. The Federal Constitution Prohibits Granting Special Benefits to Religious
Employers That Are Unrelated to Religious Freedom
Although WLAD's grant of immunity to religious nonprofits lacks any
legitimate regulatory basis, the lead opinion asserts it is reasonable because the law
alleviates a burden on these employers' religious free exercise. Lead opinion at
18-20. At the same time, the lead opinion is careful to point out that the free
exercise clause does not require granting the immunity. !d. at 21 n.ll. The lead
opinion misapprehends the import of its argument: the law violates the First
Amendment to the federal constitution. It is therefore per se unreasonable under
article I, section 12.
The free exercise and establishment clauses of the First Amendment stand in
some tension. While the free exercise clause bars the State from showing overt
hostility to religion, the establishment clause addresses the opposite concern,
directing that government "may not place its prestige, coercive authority, or
resources behind a single religious faith or behind religious belief in general."
Texas Monthly, Inc. v. Bullock, 489 U.S. 1, 9, 109 S. Ct. 890, 103 L. Ed. 2d 1
-14-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, eta!., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
(1989). It prohibits government "from abandoning secular purposes in order to put
an imprimatur on one religion, or on religion as such." Gillette v. United States,
401 U.S. 437, 450, 91 S. Ct. 828, 28 L. Ed. 2d 168 (1971); see Bd. of Educ. of
Kiryas Joel Vill. Sch. Dist. v. Grumet, 512 U.S. 687, 703, 114 S. Ct. 2481, 129 L.
Ed. 2d 546 (1994) ("government should not prefer one religion to another, or
religion to irreligion.").
Laws that benefit religion over nonreligion are valid only if they serve a
"secular legislative purpose." Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602, 612, 91 S. Ct.
2105,29 L. Ed. 2d 745 (1971). Because government must honor the free exercise
of religion no less than abstain from promoting it, "the government may (and
sometimes must) accommodate religious practices and ... may do so without
violating the Establishment Clause." Hobbie v. Unemployment Appeals Comm 'n,
480 U.S. 136, 144-45, 107 S. Ct. 1046, 94 L. Ed. 2d 190 (1987).
But while government can relieve a significant and concrete burden on free
exercise, at some point, accommodation of religious freedom crosses the line into
"an unlawful fostering of religion." Id. at 145. A law that grants a special
privilege to religious organizations is unconstitutional if it "is not required by the
Free Exercise Clause and ... either burdens nonbeneficiaries markedly or cannot
reasonably be seen as removing a significant state-imposed deterrent to the free
exercise of religion." Bullock, 489 U.S. at 15 (citing Corp. of Presiding Bishop of
Church of Jesus Christ ofLatter-Day Saints v. Amos, 483 U.S. 327, 348, 107 S. Ct.
2862, 97 L. Ed. 2d 273 (1987) (O'Connor, J., concurring in judgment)).
-15-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
While the lead opinion purports to follow federal law, it concedes that even
the "[a]bsolute freedom of conscience" guaranteed by article I, section 12 does not
demand an exemption for religious employers from the WLAD. 4 Lead opinion at
21 n.11. Consequently, the WLAD exemption violates the First Amendment
establishment clause unless it removes a "significant state-imposed deterrent" to
free exercise. Bullock, 489 U.S. at 15.
The lead opinion insists that it does, citing the United States Supreme
Court's decision in Amos. Lead opinion at 19-20. In its rush to adopt Amos, the
lead opinion fails to consider that the WLAD exemption is not the equivalent of
Title VII of the Civil Right Act of 1964 (Title VII), 42 U.S.C. § 2000e.
Title VII exempts religious employers from federal discrimination law only
"'with respect to the employment of individuals of a particular religion."' Amos,
483 U.S. at 329 n.l (emphasis added) (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-1).
Additionally, an employer may give employment preference to members of its own
religion only if the employer's "purpose and character are primarily religious."
Equal Emp't Opportunity Comm'n v. Townley Eng'g & Mfg. Co., 859 F.2d 610,
618 (9th Cir. 1988). The Title VII exemption does not cover private secular
4
There is no room for disagreement on this question. The free exercise clause
exempts religious employers from employment laws of general applicability only with
regard to the hiring and firing of ministers. See Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran
Church & Sch. v. Equal Emp 't Opportunity Comm 'n, 565 U.S. _ , 132 S. Ct. 694, 705-
06, 181 L. Ed. 2d 650 (2012). Ockletree staffed a desk in the emergency department at a
hospital, where he checked visitors' identification and issued name tags. He was not a
"minister" and his dismissal is not protected by any guarantee of religious expression.
Nor is there any argument that an individual's "[a]bsolute freedom of conscience"
guaranteed by Washington's article I, section 11 protects the defendant corporations.
CONST. art. I, § 11.
-16-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
employers that are merely organized under the auspices of a religious order. !d. at
619.
By contrast, the sweeping WLAD exemption allows any religious employer,
whether operating a church or a coffee shop, to discriminate against employees on
the basis of race, age, sex, or disability status, even if these factors are unrelated in
any way to the employer's faith. See RCW 49.60.040(11). The WLAD and Title
VII exemptions are not comparable, and Amos does not resolve the
constitutionality of our law. Although the lead opinion asserts that other courts
have upheld exemptions as expansive as WLAD's, the only case it cites is
inapposite. Lead opinion at 20 (citing Pieszak v. Glendale Adventist Med. Ctr.,
112 F. Supp. 2d 970, 997 (C.D. Cal. 2000)). 5 I am unable to find any case that
supports the lead opinion's claim.
Amos' rationale also fails to translate to the WLAD exemption. The United
States Supreme Court noted with approval that Congress' 1972 expansion of the
Title VII exemption to nonreligious activities of religious employers relieves them
of the peril of predicting "on pain of substantial liability ... which of its activities
a secular court will consider religious." Amos, 483 U.S. at 336. The lead opinion
gladly builds upon this reasoning, asserting that the legislature can also relieve
5
The California statute pointedly does not exempt "a religious corporation or
association with respect to persons employed by the religious association or corporation
to perform duties, other than religious duties, at a health care facility operated by the
religious association or corporation for the provision of health care." CAL. Gov. CODE§
12926.2(c). Other sections narrow the exemption further, echoing the ministerial
exemption. See CAL. Gov. CODE § 12926.2(b), (d)-(f). Notwithstanding the lead
opinion's claim, California's exemption is far narrower than ours and would not cover
Ockletree's employment with PHS.
-17-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
Washington religious employers of the burden of predicting when their beliefs
justify taking a discriminatory employment action. Lead opinion at 21. But
requiring religious employers to comply with general laws forbidding
discrimination on the basis of race and disability does not require them to draw
impossible lines in the gray area between religious and secular activities. Amos,
483 U.S. at 336 (noting the absence of a bright line for this distinction). It simply
requires them not to discriminate. If there is a brighter bright-line rule, I cannot
imagine it.
The State may grant special benefits to religious affiliated corporations
without violating the establishment clause, but only when necessary to alleviate a
burden on free expression that is substantial and concrete. Bullock, 489 U.S. at 18;
Amos, 483 U.S. at 335. Requiring a religious employer to articulate a sincerely
held religious belief that concerns one of Washington's "growing list of protected
categories," lead opinion at 20, does not itself interfere "with the ability of
religious organizations to define and carry out their religious missions." Amos,
483 U.S. at 339. WLAD already requires religious organizations not to
discriminate against anyone in this "growing list" in places of public
accommodation. See RCW 49.60.215. So long as civil liability is predicated on
secular conduct, such as discrimination on nonreligious grounds, inquiring into the
hiring and firing decisions of religious organizations does not entangle church and
state or impair the free exercise of religion. See C.J. C. v. Corp. of Catholic Bishop
ofYakima, 138 Wn.2d 699, 727-28, 985 P.2d 262 (1999).
-18-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
As applied to Ockletree, the WLAD exemption immunizes FHS from
potential liability for employment discrimination based on grounds unrelated to its
religious beliefs or practice. The exemption is not necessary to satisfy FHS' s free
exercise right and does not alleviate a substantial state-imposed burden on religious
freedom. Bullock, 489 U.S. at 18 n.8. Consequently, it exceeds the limits of an
accommodation of religion and violates the federal establishment clause. Because
it is unconstitutional under the First Amendment, the distinction WLAD draws
between religious and secular nonprofit employers cannot be "natural, reasonable,
or just" under article I, section 12. Bacich, 187 Wash. at 84. I would hold it is
invalid as applied to Ockletree and all similarly situated plaintiffs. 6
CONCLUSION
WLAD grants religious nonprofits immunity from a right of action that
belongs to all Washington citizens by virtue of citizenship. Under the privileges
and immunities clause, the legislature cannot grant such immunity to one class of
corporations unless there are reasonable grounds for excluding others. Because
WLAD grants immunity from discrimination claims that are unrelated to the
employer's religious beliefs, it is not necessary to alleviate a concrete and
6 A remaining question is whether WLAD stands if the religious exemption is
unconstitutional. See State v. Anderson, 81 Wn.2d 234, 236, 501 P.2d 184 (1972). The
legislature included a severability clause when it amended the definition of "employer" to
its present form. LAWS OF 1957, ch. 37, § 27. There is nothing to suggest that the
legislature would have preferred to deprive all Washington workers of protection from
employment discrimination rather than exempt religious nonprofits, and protecting
employees of religious employers from discrimination is consistent with the purpose of
the law. See RCW 49.60.010. I would hold only that portion of RCW 49.60.040(11)
granting a privilege to religious nonprofits invalid, and only as applied to plaintiffs whose
dismissal was unrelated to their employers' religious beliefs or practices.
-19-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al.~ 88218-5 (Stephens~ J. Dissent)
substantial burden on religious exercise. The distinction WLAD draws between
religious and secular nonprofits violates the federal First Amendment
establishment clause and therefore cannot satisfy the "reasonable ground" standard
under article I, section 12. For this reason, I would answer yes to certified question
number 2 and hold that RCW 49.60.040(11) cannot be applied to bar WLAD
claims alleging race or disability discrimination. I respectfully dissent.
-20-
Ockletree v. Franciscan Health System, et al., 88218-5 (Stephens, J. Dissent)
,i~.~9
~~~'~;__ \ez_. / /
~~ . .
4f/JcO~f
-21-
Ockletree (Larry C.) v. Franciscan Health Sys. et a!.
No. 88218-5
WIGGINS, J. (concurring in part in dissent)-1 concur in part in the result
reached by the dissenting opinion.
I agree with the lead opinion's conclusion that Washington's Law Against
Discrimination's (WLAD) 1 definition of "employer" is not facially unconstitutional,
answering "no" to the first certified question. However, WLAD's exclusion of
religious nonprofit organizations from the definition of "employer," under RCW
49.60.040(11 ), is unconstitutional as applied to Larry Ockletree.
As presented to us, the second certified question is:
If not [facially unconstitutional], is Wash. Rev. Code § 49.60.040(11 )'s
exemption unconstitutional as applied to an employee claiming that the
religious non-profit organization discriminated against him for reasons
wholly unrelated to any religious purpose, practice, or activity?
Order Certifying Question to the Wash. Supreme Ct. (Certification) at 4.
I believe the proper inquiry should be:
If not[facially unconstitutional], is Wash. Rev. Code section
49.60.040(11 )'s exemption unconstitutional as applied to an employee
of a religious non-profit organization whose job description and
responsibilities are wholly unrelated to any religious practice or activity?
1 Ch. 49.60 RCW.
No. 88218-5 (Wiggins, J., concurring in part in dissent)
The original second certified question improperly focused on whether the
employer discriminated on religious grounds, which requires courts to engage in
excessive entanglement with religious doctrines and practices. Washington courts
would be asked to determine what constitutes a particular religion's purpose,
practice, and activity and determine whether the reason for the discrimination is
related. This is an intrusive inquiry into religious doctrine.
Instead, I believe the constitutionality of the exemption depends entirely on
whether the employee's job responsibilities relate to the organization's religious
practices. In other words, RCW 49.60.040(11) is constitutionally applied in cases in
which the job description and responsibilities include duties that are religious or
sectarian in nature. This test permits an objective examination of an employee's job
description and responsibilities in the organization.
Regarding the first certified question, I would answer that the statute is not
facially unconstitutional. I agree with the dissent that the exemption of religious and
sectarian organizations in RCW 49.60.040(11) is subject to scrutiny under the
privileges and immunities clause of article I, section 12 of the Washington
Constitution. But I depart from the dissent because I agree in part with the lead
opinion's conclusion that there is a reasonable ground for the exemption for religious
and sectarian organizations. Lead opinion at 18-21. As the lead opinion explains, it
was reasonable for the legislature to exempt religious nonprofit organizations from
the definition of "employer" in order to promote two goals: avoiding excessive
entanglement with religious doctrines and practices and facilitating the free exercise
of religion guaranteed by our Washington Constitution.
2
No. 88218-5 (Wiggins, J., concurring in part in dissent)
But the exemption is reasonable only to the extent that it relates to employees
whose job responsibilities relate to the organization's religious practices. When the
exemption is applied to a person whose job qualifications and responsibilities are
unrelated to religion, there is no reasonable ground for distinguishing between a
religious organization and a purely secular organization. Therefore, I agree with the
dissent that the exemption is invalid when applied to an employee like Ockletree,
assuming that there is no relationship between his duties and religion or religious
practices.
For these reasons, I would answer the first certified question no and the
second revised certified question yes.
3
No. 88218-5 (Wiggins, J., concurring in part in dissent)
4