St. Joseph Catholic Orphan Society v. Hon Brian C. Edwards Judge, Jefferson Circuit Court, Division Eleven (11)

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 2015
Docket2013 SC 000803
StatusUnknown

This text of St. Joseph Catholic Orphan Society v. Hon Brian C. Edwards Judge, Jefferson Circuit Court, Division Eleven (11) (St. Joseph Catholic Orphan Society v. Hon Brian C. Edwards Judge, Jefferson Circuit Court, Division Eleven (11)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Joseph Catholic Orphan Society v. Hon Brian C. Edwards Judge, Jefferson Circuit Court, Division Eleven (11), (Ky. 2015).

Opinion

RENDERED: DECEMBER 18, 2014 TO BE PUBLISHED

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ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC ORPHAN m trims' DATEA-48-= SOCIETY, ET AL.

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. CASE NO. 2013-CA-001391-MR JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT NO. 13-CI-0001781

HONORABLE BRIAN C. EDWARDS, APPELLEE JUDGE, JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT

AND

ST. JOSEPH HOME ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, ET AL. REAL PARTIES IN INTEREST

OPINION OF THE COURT BY CHIEF JUSTICE MINTON

AFFIRMING DENIAL OF WRIT, REVERSING DENIAL OF MOTION TO DISMISS, AND REMANDING WITH INSTRUCTIONS

After being removed from their seats on St. Joseph Catholic Orphan

Society's Board of Trustees, certain individuals who also identify themselves as

members of the St. Joseph Home Alumni Association,' filed suit against St.

Joseph and the newly-elected Board members. 2 The suit challenges the

Robert Beam, Frank Campisano, Milton Hettinger, Jack Fihe, John Straub, Francis Paalz, Billie Satterly, and Charlie Steier along with the St. Joseph Home Alumni Association, are the Appellees, real parties in interest, in this writ proceeding and plaintiffs in the underlying suit. For the sake of brevity, they will be jointly referred to as the "Alumni." 2 The newly-elected Board members were Thurman Senn, Kelly Henry, James Hillebrand, Barbara Carter, Craig Harbsmeier, and Charles Nopper. They, along with St. Joseph, are the appellants in this action. validity of the Board's resolution effectuating their removal and seeks

reappointment of the ousted members to St. Joseph's Board of Trustees.

St. Joseph sought dismissal of the suit, arguing the trial court was

without subject-matter jurisdiction because of the application of the

ecclesiastical-abstention doctrine. The trial court denied St. Joseph's motion

to dismiss because it found the ecclesiastical-abstention doctrine inapplicable.

St. Joseph is now before this Court seeking a writ of mandamus

requiring the trial court to dismiss the underlying action. It again claims the

trial court is without subject-matter jurisdiction to hear the Alumni's cause of

action because of the application of ecclesiastical abstention. The Court of

Appeals, where this writ action originated, declined to issue a writ, concluding

ecclesiastical abstention did not apply because the underlying case could be

adjudicated on the basis of neutral principles of law. St. Joseph appeals the

writ denial to this Court as a matter of right. 3

Before this Court, St. Joseph contends the Court of Appeals erred in

declining to issue a writ because, regardless of the neutrality of the applicable

secular law, the underlying suit is one concerning the internal governance of a

religious entity. As such, St. Joseph argues, the ecclesiastical-abstention

doctrine applies and deprives the circuit court of subject-matter jurisdiction to

hear the suit.

3 Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR) 76.36(7)(a) ("An appeal may be taken to the Supreme Court as a matter of right from a judgment or final order in any proceeding originating in the Court of Appeals."); see also Ky. Const. § 115 ("In all cases, civil and criminal, there shall be allowed as a matter of right at least one appeal to another court . . . .").

2 We affirm the denial of a writ by the Court of Appeals, but we do so on

other grounds. We conclude the ecclesiastical-abstention doctrine does not

divest our courts of subject-matter jurisdiction to hear cases they are otherwise

authorized to adjudicate. So the issuance of a writ is improper. Instead, we

reason that the ecclesiastical-abstention doctrine is to be applied as an

affirmative defense akin to the ministerial exception, including the right to an

interlocutory appeal following a trial court's denial of its application. As such

and in the interests of judicial economy, we treat St. Joseph's petition for a writ

of mandamus as an interlocutory appeal from the trial court's denial of its

motion to dismiss based on the ecclesiastical-abstention doctrine. And on the

merits of St. Joseph's claim, we agree that the underlying action presents a

question of ecclesiastical governance, which means that the ecclesiastical-

abstention doctrine prohibits the underlying action from going forward in the

trial court. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's order denying St. Joseph's

motion to dismiss, and we remand the case to the trial court with instructions

to dismiss the action.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY.

A. We are Constrained to Deny Alumni's Untimely Motion for Enlargement of Time to File a Brief. Without a Brief From the Appellees, we Accept the Appellant's Version of the Facts and Issues.

Before our customary recitation of the circumstances encompassing this

case, we must address a pending motion that bears directly on our view of the

3 relevant facts. Alumni has not filed a timely brief in response to St. Joseph's

brief and has moved this Court for an enlargement of time to do so.

The original deadline for Alumni's appellees' brief was March 3, 2014.

Alumni first moved this Court for an enlargement of time on that date,

requesting the deadline be extended to March 21, 2014. We granted Alumni's

motion with little objection from St. Joseph. But Alumni failed to meet this

extended deadline and did not mail their appellees' brief to the Court until

March 24, 2014, one working day after the deadline. 4 The clerk returned

Alumni's brief, which prompted the pending motion for an enlargement of time

to allow Alumni to file its appellees' brief.

When a party seeks an enlargement of time after the expiration of the

time period to be enlarged, as is the case here, the Court may, in its discretion,

grant the enlargement if it finds "the failure to act was the result of excusable

neglect." 5 Our predecessor court has defined excusable neglect as "the act of a

reasonably prudent person under the same circumstances." 6 Alumni's counsel

attempts to show excusable neglect by citing his transcription of the incorrect

date in his calendar and distraction caused by his mother's impending

surgery.?

4 March 22 and 23 constituted a weekend. 5 CR 6.02(b). 6 Conlon v. Conlon, 293 S.W.2d 710, 712 (Ky. 1956). 7 St. Joseph is quick to point out that Alumni's counsel's mother was not scheduled to have surgery until March 25, 2014, four days after the deadline had already passed.

4 We are unconvinced that Alumni has shown its failure to comply with

this Court's deadline was the result of excusable neglect. We cannot find that

incorrectly transcribing the filing deadline, a date Alumni's counsel specifically

requested when seeking the first enlargement, constitutes excusable neglect. 8

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mother's impending surgery rises to the level of excusable neglect. The surgery

was scheduled to take place four days after the filing deadline for the brief, and

counsel does not disclose the nature of the procedure or the precipitating

condition to allow us to gauge what level of preoccupation might befall "a

reasonably prudent person" in counsel's circumstances. To be sure, family

medical emergencies and ongoing medical treatment may give rise to excusable

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St. Joseph Catholic Orphan Society v. Hon Brian C. Edwards Judge, Jefferson Circuit Court, Division Eleven (11), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-joseph-catholic-orphan-society-v-hon-brian-c-ed-ky-2015.