Professional Documents
Culture Documents
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A.
using state funds pursuant to sections 944.473 and 944.4731, Florida Statutes, to support
Defendant Contractors faith-based substance abuse transitional housing programs. In Count I of
their complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that the states payments to these faith-based organizations
violated the no-aid provision of the Florida Constitution, which prohibits any revenue to be taken
from the public treasury directly or indirectly in aid of any church, sect, or religious
denomination or in aid of any sectarian institution. Art. I, 3, Fla. Const. In Count II,
Plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of sections 944.473 and 944.4731 to the extent they
allowed DOC to enter into these contracts with Defendant Contractors. 1
DOC and Defendant Contractors moved for judgment on the pleadings, asserting that
Plaintiffs lacked standing to bring their claims. They further asserted that the statutes, and the
contracts awarded pursuant to those statutes, did not violate article I, section 3. Regarding Count
I, Defendants asserted that the First Districts decision in Bush v. Holmes, 886 So. 2d 340 (Fla.
1st DCA 2004) which held that article I, section 3 prohibited state funds from being paid to
sectarian schools under the Opportunity Scholarship Program applied only to the school
context. Defendants further asserted that the contracts were constitutional because the statutes
direct DOC to consider faith-based service groups on an equal basis with other private
organizations and were therefore merely expressing nondiscrimination policies. This Court
agreed and granted judgment on the pleadings as to Count I.
Plaintiffs also raised a third count, challenging the states delegation of government authority to
chaplains under section 944.4731(6)(a). The First District held Plaintiffs did not have standing
to raise that issue, and it is consequently irrelevant here.
2
As to Count II of the initial complaint, Defendants contended that Plaintiffs did not have
standing to challenge DOCs authority to enter into contracts with Defendant Contractors. This
Court agreed and granted judgment on the pleadings as to Count II.
Plaintiffs appealed. With respect to Count I, Plaintiffs asserted that Bush v. Holmes was
not limited to the school context and the trial court erred in ruling the payments made under the
contracts constitutional because it applied an Establishment Clause analysis, not an analysis
under the no-aid provision in article I, section 3. The First District agreed and, in doing so,
established important principles relevant to this case on remand. See Council for Secular
Humanism v. McNeil, 44 So. 3d 112 (Fla. 1st DCA 2010) (CSH).
First, the court held that nothing in article I, section 3 limits its application to the school
context. In contrast, it broadly prohibits the use of public funds in aid of any church, sect, or
religious denomination or in aid of any sectarian institution.
The First District also made clear that the no-aid clause is far stricter than the
Establishment Clause and draws a more stringent line regarding the payment of state funds to
sectarian organizations than the United States Constitution. CSH, 44 So. 3d at 119 (citing
Witters v. Wash. Dept of Servs. for the Blind, 474 U.S. 481 (1986)). An inquiry under the noaid clause requires courts to consider matters such as:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
Whether the program encourages the preference of one religion over another.
Id. at 120.
As to Count II, the First District held that to the extent that Count II challenges [DOCs]
authority to enter into the contracts and the performance of those contracts by the ministries, . . .
taxpayer standing is not present. Id. at 122 (emphasis added). The court found taxpayer
standing was established as to Count I. Id.
The First District thus reversed the trial courts order as to Count I and affirmed as to
Count II. The Florida Supreme Court denied Defendants request for review.
B.
appeal, the contracts with DOC at issue in the first proceeding had expired and DOC entered into
new contracts with Defendant Contractors. Those changes were addressed in a Second Amended
Complaint, which is the operative pleading.
DOC and Defendant Contractors challenged the sufficiency of the Second Amended
Complaint through motions to dismiss and strike. Among other things, they argued that the
action should be dismissed for lack of standing and because the terms and language about
which the Plaintiffs complained, and which formed the basis of their claims in this case, are not
present in the current 2012 contracts. Contractors Motion to Dismiss, at 2.
Plaintiffs responded that Count I challenges the payments made to Defendant Contractors
under the new contracts because public funds are still being used in aid of sectarian purposes.
Furthermore, it is the services actually provided by Defendant Contractors that are at issue, not
how those services are described in the new contracts.
Plaintiffs also explained that Count II does not challenge DOCs authority to enter into
contracts under sections 944.473 and 944.4731, which the First District held they did not have
standing to do. Rather, that Count requests ancillary relief necessary to prevent future illegal
payments.
This Court denied the Defendants motions and joined together both Counts of the
Second Amended Complaint [b]ecause Count II of the Amended Complaint seeks injunctive
relief based on the same allegations raised in Count I, and therefore will [be treated] as a request
for additional, ancillary relief to that sought in Count I.
Plaintiffs now move for summary judgment on all claims because the undisputed facts
demonstrate state funds are being given directly in aid of pervasively sectarian institutions in
contravention of article I, section 3.
STATEMENT OF UNDISPUTED FACTS
A.
it exists to proclaim Gods truth, to administer the ordinances, to stimulate growth toward
maturity, and to bring glory to God. See Am. 4 to Art. of Inc. of Lamb of God Ministries
(App:104). 2 A 2006 amendment to the ministrys original Articles of Incorporation affirm[ed]
our confidence in Gods inerrant word, acknowledge[d] the Creator God as our Heavenly
Father, and claim[ed] Jesus Christ as our Lord. Id. Membership in Lamb of God Ministries is
indicated by an individuals attendance of gatherings, devotion to the Ministries work, and
belief in the essentials of our Faith, . . . Id.
The name Lamb of God comes from the Bible, and in Christian circles would be Jesus
Christ. Deposition of James Fugate (Fugate Dep.) 14:2022, Apr. 2, 2014 (App:17). The
ministry provides faith-based recovery programs to men with substance and alcohol abuse
problems, and each participants program is tailored to his specific needs, utilizing the latest
2
The documents contained in the Appendix to this motion are consecutively paginated using
Bates numbers. Citations to the Appendix are thus referred to as (App:Bates number).
5
proven methods of cognitive behavior therapy and 12-step work from a biblical perspective.
About
the
Program,
Lamb
of
God
Recovery
Centers,
Anonymous (AA) process includes the 12-step system and advises recovering persons to,
among other things:
[Make] a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we
understood Him.
[Be] entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character.
[Seek] through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with
God, as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us
and the power to carry that out.
Hav[e] had a spiritual awakening as the result of these Steps, we tried to carry
this message to alcoholics, and to practice these principles in all our affairs.
The
Twelve
Steps
of
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
Alcoholics
Anonymous,
Our AA Legacy to the Faith Community, a Twelve-Step Guide for Those Who
Want to Believe,
Journey to Freedom, which utilizes spiritual principles based on the grace of
God to help clients overcome the bondage of addictions and form a new sense of
identity,
Grace Walk, which helps us to learn to stop living by rules and to allow Gods
grace to rule us, and
Genesis Process, which provides both a Biblically and neuro-chemical
Under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.510(c), a movant may rely on materials as would be
admissible in evidence. (emphasis added). The Defendant Contractors websites and materials
on the websites are maintained by the Defendant Contractors and constitute admissions of party
opponents. Accordingly, they would be admissible in evidence.
6
day.
See
Grace
Walk,
Grace
Walk
Resources,
2015) (App:1121). In his time at Lamb of God, beginning in 2009, the ministrys organizational
approach has remained the same, and there have been no big shifts in philosophy, services, or the
way the program is administered. Fugate Dep. 31:1432:6 (App:34-35).
In addition to his income, Fugate receives a pastoral allowance of $500 per week.
Fugate Dep. 20:921:5 (App:23-24).
gospel, allows Fugate to deduct from his gross income any rental allowance paid to him as
part of his compensation. 26 U.S.C. 107. It is not available to all religious leaders. Rather, it
is given only those whose duties are central to the religious mission of an organization, such as
the performance of sacerdotal functions, the conduct of religious worship . . .
and the
The website
proclaims that Lamb of God is a proven leader in licensed faith-based recovery. About the
Program, supra (App:1120). On the site, a visitor can take a photo tour of the Lamb of God
Pompano Beach campus, which includes an on-site chapel featuring an altar, a cross, and
physical depictions of Jesus Christ. See The Campuses, Lamb of God Recovery Centers
http://journey2freedom.net/the_campuses.html (last visited May 1, 2015) (App:1140-41). The
photo tour also shows a picture of a room in the facility, which includes a painting of Jesus
Christ carrying the cross. Id. (App:1138-39).
Lamb of God is a tax exempt 501(c)(3) organization based on its religious and charitable
purposes. Fugate Dep. 23:415 (App:26). In its application for tax-exempt status, it listed the
organization as a church. (App:1540). The ministry generates all of its revenue from its recovery
programs, and approximately a third of the revenue is generated by payments it receives under its
contracts with the DOC. Fugate Dep. at 53:1254:1 (App:56-57).
Lamb of God maintains a single checking account into which all of its funds are
deposited including the payments received from the DOC and from which all organizational
expenses are paid. Id. at 59:1360:10 (App:62-63). It does not attempt to segregate any funds,
nor does it attempt to identify how DOC funds are spent. Id.
B.
released from prison. Deposition of J. Stephen McCoy (McCoy Dep.) 54:1620, Mar. 7, 2014
(App:423). The self-described ministry provides faith-based re-entry services designed to
assist men coming out of prison through their transition back into civilian life. What We Do,
Prisoners of Christ, http://www.pocministry.org/what-we-do.html (last visited May 1, 2015)
(App:1151).
Prisoners helps its participants develop a strong relationship with God. About Us,
recidivism. McCoy Dep. 25:1827:12 (App:394-96). Indeed, it is this belief that makes
Prisoners of Christ different from other ex-offender re-entry programs.
Prisoners January
Id. at 9:2310:11.
(App:378-79). McCoy has found that a Bible-based foundation helps Prisoners participants
transition back into society. Id. at 27:1328:11 (App:396-97). To that end, Prisoners recently
implemented a 5-day intensive orientation program for each client that will include a
foundational Bible class. Id.; see also Prisoners January 2014 Newsletter, supra (App:1162).
The class will provide instruction from the Bible [on] areas like anger management, financial
management, family, relationships, that kind of thing. Id. at 27:2125 (App:396).
10
Prisoners website features a Bible verse, Ecclesiastes 4:10, at the top of the home page.
Home, Prisoners of Christ, http://www.pocministry.org/home.html (last visited May 1, 2015)
(App:1157).
Prisoners Re-Entry Director, Greg Seymour, says that only Christ can transform a man, and in
which McCoy says Prisoners provides spiritual guidance. Id. (App:1158). A participant notes
in the video that his relationship with Christ has gotten deeper and stronger. Id. Another
thanks Prisoners for providing me with a model of Christianity that I may be able to live out on
the streets that I didnt know before. Id.
Prisoners periodically produces newsletters, which can also be found on its website. In
its December 2013 newsletter, McCoy offers a Christmas devotional featuring Bible verses from
the books of John and Luke. Prisoners December 2013 Newsletter, at News, supra (App:1164).
In that devotional, McCoy describes Prisoners goals:
It is our goal at Prisoners of Christ to help each of our clients to open their hearts
to Jesus in a greater way, to behold Him as their friend that sticks closer than a
brother. . . . We seek to show them Gods nature while they are in our care.
In its January 2014 Newsletter, Prisoners proclaims that it is poised to become the
leading faith-based prisoner re-entry organization in the region. Prisoners January 2014
Newsletter, supra (App:1161). Elsewhere, Prisoners Board of Directors member Michael Hallet
quotes a Bible verse, Ephesians 4:15. Id. In another section of that newsletter titled A Ministry
of Transformation, Prisoners case manager, Frank Monster Pilgrim, states that [t]he men
who join our program are amazing Christians who remain devoted to their relationships with
Jesus Christ despite the challenges they face. Id. (App:1162).
In the July 2014 Newsletter, an intern for Prisoners quotes from the Bible and proclaims
that [Prisoners] is transforming lives and shaping Gods own people into a holy nation.
11
12
way that most AA type programs are practiced. . . . the Higher Power of Jesus Christ. Id. at 1.
(App:535). This program modifies the 12 steps used in AA so that, among other things, the steps
explicitly reference Jesus Christ. See id. at a (App:534). While these materials are no longer
used by Prisoners, McCoy made clear that the major thrust of Prisoners program has not
changed. See McCoy Dep. 69:170:7 (App:438-39).
The majority of Prisoners participants are referred through the DOC program. McCoy
Dep. 50:2251:6. (App:419-20). The vast majority of its revenue comes from DOC payments
and private donations. Id. at 51:1952:17 (App:420-21). According to an audit of its financial
statements, almost half of Prisoners 2010 revenue came from the DOC. (App:848); see also
Prisoners Form 990, 2010 (over half of total revenue from government grants) (App:863).
Prisoners maintains one checking account, into which it deposits all revenues. McCoy
Dep. 56:2159:1 (App:425-28). It does not segregate any funds, except those funds specifically
donated as a designated offering a donation for a specific purpose, like the purchase of a new
van. Id. All other funds, including those received from the DOC, are lumped together and are
available to be spent for any organizational purpose. Id. Prisoners does not track how DOC
funds are spent. Id.
C.
13
August 2002 to provide faith-based substance abuse post-release transitional housing programs.
See contracts C1999 and C2054 (App:1178, 1301). Thereafter, DOC again contracted with the
Defendant Contractors for faith-based substance abuse post-release transitional housing services,
with various contracts running through January of 2011. See contracts C2269, C2271, C2260
(App:1218, 1266, 1339). Collectively, all of these contracts will be referred to as the Early
Contracts.
In July 2011, DOC again contracted with Lamb of God and Prisoners to provide PostRelease Substance Abuse Transitional Housing Program Services.
C2681, and C2666 (App:1390, 1438, 1482). As amended, C2666 and C2680 run through June
2016, while C2681 expired in July 2014.
C1999 and C2054 also stated that Defendant Contractors will provide services that include a
significant faith-based component incorporating elements of moral challenge and spiritual
renewal. See C1999 & C2054, II.B.1.y. (emphasis added). The other Early Contracts removed
significant from otherwise similar provisions. See C2260, C2269, & C2271, in Early
Contracts, supra, at II.B.1.cc.
14
abuse transitional housing programs, but do not explicitly require those programs to be faith
based. Later Contracts, at II.A. The Later Contracts state that Defendant Contractors, if
providing faith-based post-release substance abuse transitional housing, shall ensure that a
program participants faith orientation, or lack thereof, is not considered in determining
admission to the program, . . . Later Contracts, supra, at II.E.7.
Although the contractual language changed, the Defendant Contractors have made few, if
any, substantive changes to their philosophies or the services they provide. See Fugate Dep.
31:1432:6, McCoy Dep. 69:170:7 (App:34-35, 438-39). DOCs local contract coordinator for
Prisoners does not believe there's (sic) a lot of differences in the services offered by Prisoners
under the Early Contracts and the Later Contracts. Deposition of Thomas Britton (Britton
Dep.) 16:22-17:25., Mar. 31, 2014 (App:1053-54). Over her time as local contract coordinator
for Lamb of God, Arnia Perpignand has not seen any significant changes in the program or
services offered. Perpignand Dep. 27:24-29:12 (App:965-67).
The Later Contracts initially included the option of providing a curriculum that uses a
cognitive-behavioral model of addiction recovery that is exclusively religious, spiritual, or
ecclesiastical in nature. Later Contracts, supra, at II.I.2.c.2. However, C2666 and C2680 were
amended in June 2014 to provide that Defendant Contractors shall offer one of the following:
(a)
(b)
(c)
15
Under the contracts, enrollment in the program is voluntary, but all enrolled program
participants shall be required to participate in program activities and abide by program rules.
All of the contracts provide that a participants faith or lack thereof cannot be considered
in determining admission to the program and that the program shall not attempt to convert
participants to particular faiths. Later Contracts, supra, at II.E.7; Early Contracts, supra, at
II.B.1.b. Similarly, all of the contracts provide that State funds be used for the sole purpose of
furthering the secular goals of criminal rehabilitation, the successful reintegration of offenders
into the community, and the reduction of recidivism. Later Contracts, supra, at II.E.3; Early
Contracts, supra, at II.B.1.c.
MEMORANDUM OF LAW
A.
state constitutions that restrict funds given to religious organizations, CSH, 44 So. 3d at 118.
Indeed, it imposes more stringent constraints than the federal Establishment Clause. See Holmes,
886 So. 2d at 351([T]he no-aid language was intended to impose restrictions beyond what is
restricted by the federal Establishment Clause.); CSH, 44 So. 3d at 119 (finding that the no-aid
provision imposes further restrictions on the state's involvement with religious institutions than
[imposed by] the Establishment Clause).
The provision flatly prohibits the State from using tax revenues in aid of any sectarian
institution: No revenue of the state or any political subdivision or agency thereof shall ever be
taken from the public treasury directly or indirectly in aid of any church, sect, or religious
denomination or in aid of any sectarian institution. Art. I, 3, Fla. Const. The constitutional
prohibition in the no-aid provision involves three elements:
16
(1) the prohibited state action must involve the use of state tax revenues; (2) the
prohibited use of state revenues is broadly defined, in that state revenues cannot
be used "directly or indirectly in aid of" the prohibited beneficiaries; and (3) the
prohibited beneficiaries of the use of state revenues are "any church, sect or
religious denomination" or "any sectarian institution."
Holmes, 886 So. 2d at 352.
A government-funded program that provides social services which also advance[s]
religion violates the no-aid provision. CSH, 44 So. 3d at 119-20.
In assessing whether a
Florida Law.
While few Florida courts have construed the no-aid clause, the decisions that do exist are
highly instructive. In Holmes, the First District held that Floridas Opportunity Scholarship
Program (OSP) violated the no-aid clause to the extent that it provided state funds to sectarian
organizations. Holmes, 886 So. 2d at 366. 5 Through the OSP, parents and guardians with
children in failing schools were given tuition vouchers with which the parents and guardians
could send their children to private schools. Id. at 347. Most of the parents and guardians who
received vouchers chose to send their children to private schools operated by religious or church
groups. Id. at 354. Various organizations and parents challenged the program as violating the
no-aid provision, and the trial court granted summary judgment to the challengers. Id. at 34445.
5
The Florida Supreme Court later approved the First Districts decision, but on other grounds
not addressed by the First DCA. Bush v. Holmes, 919 So. 2d 392, 413 (Fla. 2006). The First
Districts majority opinion in Holmes construing the no-aid provision remains controlling law.
See CSH, 44 So. 3d at 117.
17
On appeal, the First District, sitting en banc, upheld the grant of summary judgment
because there was no dispute in this case that state funds are paid to sectarian schools through
the OSP vouchers. Id. at 344. In so holding, the court established the three-prong test described
above. Id. at 352. The court dismissed the appellants argument that no aid was given because
the vouchers did not cover the full cost of tuition, expressly adopting the trial courts reasoning:
While there is no evidence or assertion that any of the schools would cease to
operate without the benefit of the OSP funds, that is not the test. It cannot be
logically, legally, or persuasively argued that the receipt of these funds does not
aid or assist the institution in a meaningful way. The entire educational mission
of these schools, including the religious education component, is advanced and
enhanced by the additional, financial support received through operation of the
Opportunity Scholarship Program.
Id. at 353 (quoting trial court). Finally, the court found that the schools were sectarian
institutions with an intent to teach to their attending students the religious and sectarian values
of the group operating the school. Id. at 354. As evidence of the sectarian nature of the schools,
the court pointed to the Mission Statement of the Pensacola-Tallahassee Diocesan school system
and the Diocese's "Philosophy of Education." Id.
The First District distinguished earlier Florida cases relied upon by the appellants because
none involve the use of state revenues to aid a sectarian institution. Id. (discussing three
Florida Supreme Court cases). For instance, in Koerner v. Borck, 100 So. 2d 398 (Fla. 1958),
real property was given to a Florida county through a testamentary devise that contained a
perpetual easement through which a local church could use the property for baptisms and other
recreational activities. Koerner, 100 So. 2d at 40001. The supreme court found that State funds
to improve the land would not benefit the church. Id. at 402. There was thus no disbursement of
state funds in aid of a sectarian institution. Holmes, 886 So. 2d at 354.
The First District in Holmes similarly distinguished Nohrr v. Brevard County, 247 So. 2d
18
304 (Fla. 1971) (issuance of revenue bonds to support centers of higher education, . . . is not the
payment of money from the revenue of the public treasury), Johnson v. Presbyterian Homes of
Synod of Florida, Inc., 239 So. 2d 256 (Fla. 1970) (tax exemption not a disbursement from the
public treasury), and Southside Estates Baptist Church v. Board of Trustees, 115 So. 2d 697
(Fla. 1959) (no disbursement made from the public treasury). Id. at 35556. In all the cases,
there was simply no disbursement of state funds to a sectarian institution.
Six years after Holmes, the First District considered this Courts order granting
Defendants motion for judgment on the pleadings. CSH, 44 So. 3d at 115. The CSH court held
that the no-aid provision is not limited to the school context and that expenditures outside the
school context are not shielded from the no-aid provision simply because a sectarian
organization is paid to provide social services for the state. Id. at 11819.
Instead, a
government-funded program that provides social services violates the no-aid provision if it also
advances religion. Id. at 120.
Most recently, in 2013, the Eleventh Circuit held that the no-aid provision was not
violated by the Lakeland City Commissions use of City funds to 1) maintain and update a list of
local religious congregations, and 2) mail invitations to leaders of those congregations to give
invocations before Commission meetings. Atheists of Fla., Inc. v. City of Lakeland, Fla., 713
F.3d 577, 596 (11th Cir. 2013). The court emphasized that the speakers were not paid, and that
the evidence did not show any pecuniary benefit, either direct or indirect, conferred by [the City
of Lakeland] upon such groups, nor does it show that any religious organization received
financial assistance from [Lakeland] for the promotion and advancement of its theological
views. Id. (quoting Pelphrey v. Cobb County, 410 F. Supp. 2d 1324, 1348 (N.D. Ga. 2006)). In
short, Atheists of Florida did not involve a disbursement of state funds, nor was there a showing
19
constitutional violations where state funds are given to sectarian institutions. For example, in
Bennett v. City of LaGrange, 112 S.E. 482 (Ga. 1922), the Georgia Supreme Court held that the
provision of city funds to the Salvation Army in exchange for the organization's handling of the
city's charitable cases violated the state's no-aid provision, which was, and still is, nearly
identical to Floridas.
The Bennett court was not persuaded by the fact that under the contract between the city
and the Salvation Army, the Salvation Army is only paid the actual amounts expended by it in
taking care of the poor of La Grange, and then only to an amount not exceeding $75 per month,
and that payments are made to the Army or its local detachment only upon itemized bills for
services so rendered by it. Id. at 485. Neither was the court persuaded by the Salvation Armys
admirable goals:
The fact that the Salvation Army undertakes to reform the working classes, to
reclaim the vicious, criminal, dissolute, and degraded, to visit the poor, lowly, and
sick, which is pure religion and undefiled before God, and the highest form of
benevolence, does not free it from being a sectarian institution.
Id.
As the Bennett court noted, [w]hen the state selects a sectarian institution of learning, and
commits to such institution its wards, for whose maintenance and education it pays, it gives the
most substantial aid to such an institution. Id. at 487.
20
Other courts applying constitutional provisions similar to Floridas have found the
following actions unconstitutionally aided a church, sect, religious denomination, or sectarian
institution:
1)
Loaning or giving books to students who attend religious schools, see e.g., Cal.
Teachers Ass'n v. Riles, 632 P.2d 953 (Cal. 1981); Bloom v. Sch. Comm. of
Springfield, 379 N.E.2d 578 (Mass. 1978);
2)
3)
4)
Payments made outside the school context, see, e.g., Trinity Lutheran Church of
Columbia, Inc. v. Pauley, 976 F. Supp. 2d 1137 (W.D. Mo. 2013) (state grant that
would allow Christian daycare facility to purchase recycled tires to resurface
playground would violate Missouri no-aid provision); Hewitt v. Joyner, 940 F.2d
1561 (9th Cir. 1991) (no-aid provision violated by use of county funds to
maintain, operate, and promote county park that contained immovable religious
statues depicting scenes from New Testament); Richter v. City of Savannah, 127
S.E. 739, 740 (Ga. 1925) (constitutional violation where City of Savannah
appropriated money to the Sisters of Mercy, who operated St. Joseph's Hospital,
to pay for patients).
ARGUMENT
I.
aid provision because those payments are derived from state revenues and are given directly in
aid of pervasively sectarian institutions. Moreover, Defendant Contractors government-funded
programs also advance religion. Sections 944.473 and 944.4731 are thus unconstitutional as
applied here to the extent they authorize the illegal payments. This Court should grant summary
judgment on all counts of Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint.
21
A.
Applying the Holmes Test, The Contracts Violate The No-Aid Clause.
1.
Defendants admit that state revenues are used to make payments to Defendant
Contractors. See DOC Resp. to Pl. Am. Request for Admissions, 3. There is thus no dispute
that the first element of the Holmes test is satisfied.
2.
State revenues are given directly to and indisputably benefit Defendant Contractors.
Indeed, the DOC payments represent significant portions of Defendant Contractors overall
revenues.
It is
immaterial that the ministries might continue to operate without the state funds. As the Holmes
court recognized, money given to an organization benefits that organization even if the
organization would survive without it. 886 So. 2d at 353.
It is also immaterial that the Defendant Contractors may use part of the state revenues
they receive for non-sectarian purposes. The DOC payments advance and enhance the Defendant
Contractors operations including Lamb of Gods mission to proclaim Gods truth and bring
glory to God, and Prisoners goal to help each of our clients to open their hearts to Jesus
just as the funds in Holmes advanced and enhanced the entire educational missions of the
schools. Id. As the Holmes court put it, it cannot be logically, legally, or persuasively argued
that the receipt of these funds does not aid or assist the institution in a meaningful way. Id.
Furthermore, each Defendant Contractor comingles all of its revenues, including the
DOC payments, into a single unsegregated account. Fugate Dep. 59:1360:10; McCoy Dep.
56:21-59:1 (App:62-63, 425-27). Both ministries pay all organizational expenses from that single
account. Id. These expenses not only include rent, utility bills, and salaries all critical to
22
maintaining operations but also things like 1) Prisoners newsletters that exhort the virtues of
Jesus Christ, 2) Defendant Contractors websites featuring Christian passages and testimonials,
3) voluntary Christian prayer sessions at which participants are encouraged to attend, and 4)
paying the salary of pastors who minister to participants, including Fugates pastoral allowance.
Accordingly, the second element of the Holmes test is satisfied because the payments
indisputably directly aid the Defendant Contractors.
3.
The record evidence overwhelmingly shows that Defendant Contractors exist for the
purpose of implementing and promoting their Christian faith. Both organizations are selfdescribed ministries that have stated missions or goals of spreading Christian faith. One ministry
holds events in an on-campus chapel filled with Christian iconography, while the other holds
events at a Lutheran church. Both ministries maintain websites that exude Christian faith and
feature some combination of Bible verses, videos, Christian imagery, or testimonials that
reinforce the idea that the Christian God is a fundamental element of the services they provide.
See pp.6-10 (Lamb of God), 10-13 (Prisoners of Christ), supra.
Furthermore, both ministries are led by Christian pastors. Fugate believes in his heart
that Lamb of God is a church. McCoy acknowledges that the mission of Prisoners is to provide
Christian ministry, and he occasionally delivers Bible messages at the ministrys community
meetings. Additionally, both organizations have used, and continue to use, curriculum that is
faith-based and that specifically urges a belief in God. Both either use or have used curriculum
materials that specifically teach the 12-step program through a Biblical or Christian perspective.
Id. Even the Defendant Contractors names make explicit reference to Jesus Christ.
Because both Defendant Contractors are pervasively sectarian organizations, the third
23
24
Christian pastors that faith is crucial to their healing and that they must give themselves to God
to recover. Participants are then surrounded by Christian imagery and literature, attend meetings
in Christian chapels and churches, and are encouraged to participate in Christian rituals.
Defendant Contractors government-funded programs unquestionably advance religion.
C.
The Revised Language in the Later Contracts Does Not Alter the Analysis.
Although DOC amended the Later Contracts to remove the express requirement to
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provide faith-based transitional housing services, this case is not, and has never been, about the
specific language of the contracts. The inquiry in a no-aid case is simple and straightforward it
asks whether state funds have been directly or indirectly given in aid of a sectarian organization.
See Holmes, 886 So. 2d 352. Furthermore, both Lamb of God and Prisoners have continued to
offer essentially the same services since they entered into their newly scrubbed contracts. Fugate
Dep. 31:1432:6, McCoy Dep. 69:170:7 (App:34-35, 438-39). Thus, while the language of the
contracts has changed, the nature of the Defendant Contractors and the services they provide has
not.
II.
provision, Plaintiffs request that the Court enjoin DOC from continuing such violations in the
future by making the same unconstitutional payments for the same religious services.
Florida courts have upheld preventative injunctions such as this under similar
circumstances, where a defendant has exhibited a pattern of behavior that is unlikely to change.
For example, in Board of Public Instruction Broward County v. Doran, 224 So. 2d 693, 699 (Fla.
1969), the Florida Supreme Court affirmed an injunction prohibiting the Board from holding
informal meetings where the public was excluded, which it had been doing for over a year in
violation of the Sunshine Law. In so holding, the court explained that such preventative relief
was warranted to enjoin violations of a statute where one violation has been found if it appears
that the future violations bear some resemblance to the past violation or that danger of violations
in the future is to be anticipated from the course of conduct in the past. Id. at 700 (citing Natl
Labor Relations Bd. v. Express Publg Co., 312 U.S. 426, 437 (1941)).
Similarly, the First District affirmed an injunction prohibiting a landlord from exercising
26
his right to reject subtenants "based on the [landlord's] pattern of unreasonably rejecting
proposed subtenants." See E. Fed. Corp. v. State Office Supply Co., Inc., 646 So. 2d 737, 741
(Fla. 1st DCA 1994). In Eastern Federal, a lease agreement provided that the landlord could not
unreasonably withhold approval of any proposed assignment of the lease or sublet of the
premises. However, the landlord refused to grant the tenant permission to sublet the premises to
two different proposed subtenants based on his belief that the proposed subtenants would not
create sufficient revenues to trigger a percentage rent clause.
Based on this pattern and practice of unreasonably withholding consent to prospective
subtenants the trial court granted injunctive relief. See id. at 741; see also Daniels v. Bryson,
548 So. 2d 679, 680-81 (Fla. 3d DCA 1989) (recognizing injunctive relief is appropriate where
there is a demonstrated pattern of noncompliance with [the law], together with a showing of
likelihood of future violations.); see also Aznar v. Cooperativa De Seguros Multiples De Puerto
Rico, Inc., 2006 WL 1540340, at *3 (M.D. Fla. June 5, 2006) (An injunction is proper when
there is a demonstrated pattern of non-compliance with the law and there is a reasonably wellgrounded probability that such course of conduct will continue in the future.).
The same relief is warranted here. In the more than ten years that DOC has contracted
with Defendant Contractors, the reason for their existence and the purpose of their programs has
remained the same to inculcate their religious beliefs to participants in their programs. As the
undisputed facts above demonstrate, the funds Defendant Contractors receive from the state are
used to aid them in achieving this purpose.
Absent an injunction, there would be nothing to prevent future payments for Defendant
Contractors religious services, and Plaintiffs would be forced to institute another action to halt
the constitutional violations. This is exactly why a preventative injunction is warranted here.
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CONCLUSION
The undisputed facts prove that the payments from DOC to Defendant Contractors under
the contracts are state funds from the public treasury that are given directly in aid of sectarian
institutions and fund programs that advance religion. Accordingly, Plaintiffs request this Court
grant summary judgment on all of its claims.
Respectfully submitted,
/s/ W. Douglas Hall
W. Douglas Hall (FBN 0347906)
Christine Davis Graves (FBN 569372)
James Parker-Flynn (FBN 106355)
CARLTON FIELDS JORDEN BURT, P.A.
215 S. Monroe St., Suite 500
Tallahassee, FL 32301
Telephone: (850) 224-1585
Email: whall@cfjblaw.com
cgraves@cfjblaw.com
jparker-flynn@cfjblaw.com
sdouglas@cfjblaw.com
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true and correct copy of the foregoing was served via
electronic mail to: Karen Brodeen, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Office of the Attorney
General,
107
West
Gaines
Street,
Collins
Building,
Tallahassee,
FL
32301
Rivers,
Ausley
&
McMullen,
(mharding@ausley.com;
drivers@ausley.com;
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