Kidane Beyene, Apps. v. Tesfaldet Tekle, Res.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 20, 2019
Docket78215-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kidane Beyene, Apps. v. Tesfaldet Tekle, Res. (Kidane Beyene, Apps. v. Tesfaldet Tekle, Res.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kidane Beyene, Apps. v. Tesfaldet Tekle, Res., (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

KIDANE BEYENE, GEBAR OGBE, No. 78215-1-1 TAAME BEYENE, and TEMESGHEN SAHLU, DIVISION ONE

Appellants, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

V.

TESFALDET TEKLE, ASEFASH GHIRMAY, GHIRMAY SEQUAR, ISSAC MEDIN, OGBAMICHAEL GOITOM, GAIM DESTA, DEACON SHISHAY MEBRAHTU, and DEBRE GENET KIDISTI SELLASSIE ERITREAN ORTHODOX CHURCH, a Washington nonprofit corporation (as nominal defendant for derivative purposes only),

Respondents. FILED: May 20, 2019

ANDRUS, J. — Four members of the Debre Genet Kid isti Sellassie Eritrean

Orthodox Churchl appeal the trial court's dismissal of their claims against former

elected members of the Church Administration. Beyene claims, among other

things, that these individuals embezzled Church funds, misused Church assets,

and failed to adhere to the Church's charter in conducting financial audits, holding

meetings, and conducting elections.

1 We will refer to the appellants collectively as "Beyene" for purposes of clarity. We will refer to the respondents collectively as "the Church." No. 78215-1-1/2

The trial court dismissed all of Beyene's claims, concluding the court lacked

subject matter jurisdiction. Because there are disputed issues of fact that must be

resolved before we can determine the applicability of the ecclesiastical abstention

doctrine, the ministerial exception, and the doctrine of deference to ecclesiastical

tribunals, we reverse and remand to the trial court to resolve these disputes of fact.

FACTS

Debre Genet Kidisti Sellassie Eritrean Orthodox Church, originally formed

in 1995, is a registered nonprofit corporation under the Washington Nonprofit

Corporation Act, chapter 24 RCW. It has between 100 and 120 active members

and another 100 to 150 inactive members. It is a part of the Eritrean Orthodox

Tweahdo Church Diocese of North America. The word "Tweahdo" is a Ge'ez2

word meaning "being made one" and refers to the belief in the one single unique

"Nature of Christ."

In January 2015, the church members adopted a charter outlining the

Church's mission, structure, and leadership, the responsibilities of its priests and

deacons, and a dispute resolution process.3 Under the charter, the Church is

managed by a Church Administration, made up of a chairman, vice chairman,

secretary, treasurer, cashier, property manager, and head of Sunday school. The

Church Administration is elected every two years at what it calls a "Congress,"

2 Ge'ez is an ancient language of Ethiopia from the South Semitic language family. Its modern descendants are Tigre and Tigrinya. Heron, Cyril A., "A Christian Oasis: The Role of Christianity and Custom in the Law of Ethiopia," 51 Cornell Intl L. J., no. 3, 753, 758 n. 43(2018). 3 Beyene characterized the charter as the equivalent of a set of articles and bylaws of a corporation. The Church, however, characterized the document as a "religious" document that specifies how members will resolve their disputes internally.

- 2- No. 78215-1-1/3

identified as the highest authority of the Church. The Congress, composed of at

least 51 percent of the Church's members, also elects an internal audit committee.

Haile Woldelibanos, the current chairman of the Church, testified that the

Church has a hierarchical organizational structure led by the Congress. However,

Father Tesfamariam Weldeslassie, an ordained priest with the Church for over 25

years, testified that the Church is not hierarchical but is instead a congregational

church owing no duty or allegiance to any higher religious body.

Beyene brought this lawsuit as a derivative action on behalf of the Church

against certain members who served as the Church Administration between 2015

and 2017. Beyene alleged that (1) the former Church Administration members

failed to conduct regular meetings in violation of article 23 of the charter; (2) the

March 25, 2017 election was not conducted per the charter;(3)the charter articles

governing the contractual responsibilities of the Church's priests were violated; and

(4)the former chairman distributed Church funds to his family members and others

in violation of the charter. Beyene sought a court order requiring a third-party audit

of the Church's property; requiring the Church to operate "in accordance with its

Articles of Incorporation and its Bylaws;" awarding damages against individual

respondents; and enjoining the individual respondents from involvement with the

Church as members of any future Church Administration.

The Church moved to dismiss the complaint, contending that under the First

Amendment, the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate claims

involving the Church. The Church presented evidence that the Church

Administrators named in the lawsuit were tasked with ensuring that the spiritual

3 No. 78215-1-1/4

mission of the Church was fulfilled, guided by the spiritual principles of the Church.

These Church Administrators—all volunteers—were elected during a 2017

Congress, and were responsible for overseeing general meetings, strengthening

the relationship of the Church to its members, overseeing religious programs,

monitoring religious education programs, overseeing financial matters, and

employing priests. Woldelibanos testified that Beyene himself had become

dissatisfied with Church Administration only after he was not elected to the Church

Administration during the 2017 Congress. He testified that Beyene began to raise

concerns about the way in which the prior Church Administration had interpreted

religious doctrine and managed the Church's relationship with priests hired by the

Church.

Father Weldeslassie, however, testified that nothing in the Church's charter

precluded the court from intervening to resolve the members'disputes. He testified

that the Church Administration does not have any authority or responsibility for the

spiritual or religious aspects of the Church. He stated that responsibility for

spiritual or religious aspects is the sole responsibility of the priests and deacons of

the Church.

Father Weldeslassie also testified that one of the primary issues in the

lawsuit is a request for an audit of Church property, including finances. He stated

that the request for financial audits "do not in any way involve Church doctrine or

beliefs." He denied that the dispute involved any Church spiritual matters. A

former Church Treasurer, Habte Micheal Ogba Micheal, and another founding

member of the Church, Alem G. Andemariam, similarly testified that the financial

-4 No. 78215-1-1/5

concerns raised by Beyene do not involve questions of Church doctrine or spiritual

matters.

Furthermore, a former Secretary of the Church, Ghirmai Haile Sequar, and

a former Treasurer, Issac Medin, both named defendants in the lawsuit, testified

that when they were in office, they were concerned that certain Church

Administration officials were not following the Church's bylaws and failed to hold

regular meetings, to respond to questions about the management of Church

property and cash, to produce useable financial statements, to report all expenses

and income, and to conduct accurate audits. They also testified that these

concerns did not involve any tenants of the Eritrean Orthodox Church.

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