Sharma Tadepalli v. the Sri Meenakshi Temple Society

430 S.W.3d 589, 2014 WL 1711224, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 4654
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2014
Docket14-13-00132-CV, 14-13-00133-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 430 S.W.3d 589 (Sharma Tadepalli v. the Sri Meenakshi Temple Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharma Tadepalli v. the Sri Meenakshi Temple Society, 430 S.W.3d 589, 2014 WL 1711224, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 4654 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinions

MAJORITY OPINION

WILLIAM J. BOYCE, Justice.

These consolidated appeals arise from litigation involving leaders of The Sri Mee-nakshi Temple Society (“MTS”), a nonprofit corporation that owns and operates a temple in Pearland, Texas. MTS’s purposes include building and maintaining “a Temple complex in the Houston, Texas and surrounding metropolitan area with Goddess Sri Meenakshi as the main Deity in accordance with the Hindu Religion.”

The trial court signed an order dismissing the underlying case in its entirety for lack of subject matter jurisdiction after determining that “the ecclesiastical exemption applies to all claims and parties .... ”

In Cause No. 14-13-132-CV, appellant K.R. Thiagarajan challenges the trial court’s dismissal of his defamation claim against Sharma Tadepalli. In Cause No. 14-13-133-CV, appellant Tadepalli challenges the trial court’s dismissal of his third-party claim against MTS seeking indemnification for liability and attorney’s fees under the charter, bylaws, and written policies of MTS in connection with his defense of Thiagarajan’s defamation claim.

[591]*591We affirm the trial court’s dismissal order.

Facts

Thiagarajan worshipped at the temple and served as a member of MTS’s board of directors. Acting in this capacity, Thiaga-rajan oversaw operation of the temple’s library; its contents included a selection of DVDs available for purchase or rental. Tadepalli also worshipped at the temple and served as the secretary of MTS’s board of directors.

On November 23, 2010, Tadepalli sent an email with the subject line “Re: X-Rated and non-religious D*V*D*s* ”. The email was sent to at least a dozen recipients; it appears below in its entirety and without correction of typographical or grammatical errors.

Dear Fellow Devotees,
I am writing this note as Life member of MTS and not as a secretary.
I am appalled that we continue to sell dvd’s in our temple that have nothing to do with Hindu religion. Some of the Indian movies are not rated properly nor content labels of ratings are reflected accurately and consistently. I am opposed to selling movie dvd’s in our temple.
I brought up the issue many times in the board — it is all about indirect revenue and bringing people to temple hoping they will fill our donation boxes. I have proposed an outlandish idea to get the point across “Why not hire a barber and we can get more traffic and why stop at DVD’s”. There is a vested interest of keeping the dvd’s. Ask for scientific basis — correlation between dvd purchase and people visiting temple and donating, ‘No answer’. The discussion suddenly changes to vegetables. Use some excuse or the other to continue the dvd club in a public space subsidized by MTS devotees. Are there any rules “distance between churches or schools and x-rated dvd rental places”. Why should not they apply for MTS.
There are two people who are behind keeping these DVD’s tradition going in MTS — “KR Thiagarajan” and “Ram Reddy” and perhaps some more who don’t want to be vocal.
KRT is on record in GB meetings saying that there are three people who bitterly complained about dvd’s 1) Dr. Sharma Tadepalli; 2) Dr. Nalinakshi; 3) Sri Na-gan Srinivas. So why worry about three people; versus two veterans. I had several people complained including Hema Chandrasekar. Let us start a signature campaign against selling and renting non-religious dvd’s in MTS campus. There are more than three people who are opposed to this x-rated movies. '
We can do the following:
Short term solution—
1) Buy all the dvd’s out from MTS and recycle them electronically. I have bought dvd’s for this purpose and doing this over a year. We need more people to do this. Purge the bad dvd’s and all dvd’s at some point of time that have no connection to Hindu religion.
2) Please sign up in the library committee and stop purchase of new DVD’s every month
Long term Solution—
1) Bring a resolution into GB and stop selling non-religious dvd’s of all kinds
2) Scrutinize the expenditure of all library purchases over years and stop the practice of various vendors dumping their unwanted dvd’s in the name of discounts. We don’t know what we are buying (Telugu person like Ram Reddy does not [know] what Tamil movies he is buying; KRT [592]*592does not know what Telugu movies they are buying in the name of library). They don’t watch all these dirty movies (at least not all) and they want devotees to find out and let them know so they can remove them from shelves. Why the ratings are all messed up. This is not acceptable. Let us question how much revenue is generated and how much is the expenditure? Is this movie club run for the pleasure of couple of veterans who enjoy movies, a few devotees and staff who watch these movies at the expense of temple getting a bad name and bad image. What about our children saying it was borrowed from temple so it should be OK?
Let us collectively put a stop to nonreligious rental or selling dvd’s. No traditional temples or any temple for that matter in entire north america has a dvd parlour within the temple. Why should we?
Sharma Tadepalli
A MTS Devotee and Life member of MTS

Additional emails followed.

In a second email sent two days later to more than three dozen recipients, Tadepal-li stated: “Whoever bought these DVD’s for the temple library have the full responsibility to go through the DVD’s and CD’s and trash them. Knowingly or unknowingly these board members responsible for library, made the decision to buy these dirty movies.” A third email from Tade-palli sent on November 28 to dozens of recipients stated: “Walk into the library and evidence is all over the place — sexually explicit materials decorated all over the place.” This third email continues: “Why did the directors in-charge of library buy all these dirty movies?” It concludes: “Devotees — please forward the evidence to your friends who are MTS devotees as some board members live in denial.” 1

Tadepalli’s November 2010 emails about the library’s contents provoked considerable discussion, controversy, and email traffic among MTS’s leaders and members. On December 19, 2010, Tadepalli sent an email to the MTS board of directors with the subject line “Our Temple Issue-Regrets.” The December 19 email stated as follows:

Dear MTS Board of Directors,
I understand that my e-mails regarding our temple DVD issue have caused anxiety and resentment in many of you. As the MTS Secretary, I felt it was my responsibility to address the devotee complaints and I tried to address them through proper channels. Unfortunately, my emotions got better of me and I vented my personal feelings through channels outside the board and I realize it was a mis-judgment on my part.
As a Secretary whose commitment is first to the institution, I feel remorse for airing my personal feelings on this issue.

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Bluebook (online)
430 S.W.3d 589, 2014 WL 1711224, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 4654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharma-tadepalli-v-the-sri-meenakshi-temple-society-texapp-2014.