Harfst v. Hoegen

163 S.W.2d 609, 349 Mo. 808, 141 A.L.R. 1136, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 13, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 609 (Harfst v. Hoegen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harfst v. Hoegen, 163 S.W.2d 609, 349 Mo. 808, 141 A.L.R. 1136, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 413 (Mo. 1942).

Opinion

DOUGLAS, J.

This is a suit by parents of public school children, against members of a school board, seeking an injunction against the use of school funds for purposes alleged to be sectarian and religious. From a decree granting part of the relief sought, and refusing to grant more, plaintiffs have appealed. The suit involves the Missouri constitutional guaranties of religious liberty and pre *811 sents questions which have never before been considered or decided by our appellate courts.

Some years ago in the town of Meta, in Osage County, the Catholic Parish of St. Cecelia established its usual parish or parochial school, which was conducted under the direction of the parish priest. The teachers were members of the Sisters of the Most Precious Blood, a Catholic teaching order, who came from St. Mary’s Institute of 0’Fallon at O’Fallon, Missouri, the motkerhouse and novitiate for the training of teachers for parochial schools. The school building adjoined the parish church and had two school. rooms on the first floor and a school room and a chapel on the second. After some time, and about ten years ago, this parish school was taken into the State public school system by the school board of the Meta school district as a public grade school. From then on it has been and is now supported by public funds. At that time the textbooks and the course of study 'prescribed by the State Superintendent of Schools were adopted, but otherwise the school seems to have been conducted as a parochial school in the same manner as before its inclusion in the public school system. It was continued under the same name, the St. Cecelia School, and in the same building, the three school rooms being rented from the parish priest by the school board. The same teachers or other Sisters of the same religious order were engaged and are paid by the school board and now constitute the teaching staff of the school. It is still referred to as the ‘ ‘ Catholic school. ’ ’

Harmony prevailed among the people of the school district about the conduct of this school until 1939 at which time there was a consolidation of another school district with the Meta district and the abandonment of the school in the other district. This action seems to have culminated in some bitterness between the peoples of the two districts and led to the filing of this suit. Almost all of the persons engaged in this controversy are of the same religion, Catholic. The questions involved do not arise from a strike between persons of opposing religious beliefs, but come from a dispute between those of the same faith.

We find the usual school day commencing with prayer in the morning. After prayer the pupils are marched, one room at a time, to the Catholic church next door for Holy Mass. After Mass the pupils are marched back to their school rooms where they receive religious instruction. In this they study the Catholic catechism and the child’s Catholic Bible. On one or two days of each week the parish priest gives religious instruction to the pupils in the mid-morning, either at the church or in the schoolhouse chapel. On Friday afternoons the pupils are again marched to the church for confession. In the quarterly “Teacher’s Report to the Parents” the subject “Religion” is included under “Branches Pursued” and a grade in this subject is given to each pupil.

*812 Sister M. Berchmans, one of the present teachers, testified that the Sisters of the Most Precious Blood dedicate their lives to teaching the young which includes the teaching of the Catholic faith as well as the teaching of the usual secular educational subjects. She had been previously and was then teaching the Catholic faith to her pupils in the St. Cecelia public school. As accessories to the religious instruction, the school rooms have in them pictures and symbols of the Catholic faith, and there are holy water fonts for the benefit of the pupils at the doors of the school rooms. The one hundred or more pupils at this school are usually all of the Catholic faith, but in some years there have been one or two Protestant children enrolled there.

The school board maintains a second grade school in Meta which is attended entirely by Protestant children. The enrollment there is about one-half the number in the St. Cecelia school. The manner in which this school is conducted is not here in controversy, but the evidence shows that its facilities are not equal to those of the St. Cecelia school, and that Catholic children have been ordered by the school board to leave it and attend the St. Cecelia school.

Plaintiffs, who are parents of school children, taxpayers and residents of the school district, after stating the facts set out above allege that the members of the school board, the defendants, are maintaining a parochial school at public expense, contrary to our Constitution. They ask that the board be enjoined from using public funds: in support of a parochial school; in employing as teachers persons garbed in the habiliments of a religious order; in employing sectarian teachers. The answer of the school board is a general denial.

The chancellor found that sectarian religion was being taught in the school by the Sisters and also by the parish priest with the knowledge of the board members. However, in his decree he fails to give the broad relief asked for but confines himself to enjoining what appellants contend are mere side issues. He enjoined the use of religious textbooks and accessories such as pictures and symbols and the holy water fonts, but he did not enjoin the teaching of sectarian religion. He did not enjoin the maintenance of a sectarian school by public officials at public expense. He did enjoin the parish priest from teaching within the school building, but he did not enjoin the payment of public funds to the teachers of religion. Under the decree as it now stands it is argued that defendants may continue to ignore the constitutional provision insuring the freedom of worship.

Plaintiffs have appealed. They have first assigned as error the failure of the chancellor to enjoin the school board from paying public funds to the teachers of what the chancellor found to be a sectarian school. In passing on this particular assignment we are compelled to review briefly our constitutional guaranties of religious freedom which are necessarily involved in deciding this case, and which are *813 alleged to have been openly violated, for the reason wé hear this case de novo and determine what decree should have been entered.

With the adoption of the Federal Bill of Rights 1 the whole power over the subject of religion, at that time, was left exclusively to the State governments. 2

Previously there had been controversies in the various colonies over the governmental support of the church, and the complete separation of the church from the state did not really come until the formation of our federal system of government, 3 although-the Virginia Bill of Rights had earlier guaranteed freedom of worship. At that time there was declared the principle which is of the warp and woof of democracy, namely the people must enjoy religious freedom and (religious equality.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W.2d 609, 349 Mo. 808, 141 A.L.R. 1136, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harfst-v-hoegen-mo-1942.