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The
modern American family not only is becoming more extended
- with stepparents, grandparents, nonmarital significant others,
and a heretofore unimagined mixture of complex relationships
- but it is also more religiously blended. As a result, child
custody and visitation issues in marital dissolution proceedings,
already complex and emotional, are becoming even more sensitive
as more and more parents bring differing religious backgrounds
and beliefs to their marriages.
Yet this country's religious diversity is one of its distinguishing
banners. Courts are constitutionally forbidden to interfere
with religious freedom or to take judicial action preferring
one religion to another. However, given the well - known rates
of both interfaith marriage and divorce, the issue of whether
courts should consider diverse religious beliefs when making
an award of child custody or visitation has become increasingly
sensitive and important.
It is becoming clear that the decision to give or not give
religious training to a child has important long-term consequences.
These considerations of constitutional limitation and a child's
best interests present courts with a dilemma when faced with
a child custody or visitation dispute involving parents of
different faiths or beliefs. The issue is difficult enough
when the parents follow different religious beliefs; it is
no less easy when the parents practice the same religion but
to differing degrees in a conflicting manner.
In the majority of American jurisdictions that have considered
the question, courts have refused to restrain the noncustodial
parent from exposing a minor child to his or her religious
beliefs or practices absent a clear, affirmative showing that
these religious activities will be harmful to the child. In
analyzing the issue, recognition also must be given to the
wide range of judicial views and law review comments on this
issue. Yet, as evidenced by recent appellate court decisions
and despite the constitutional mandate providing for separation
of church and state, it is not always necessary for courts
to remain blindfolded to religious disputes affecting minor
children.
Recent Case Law
In 1980, In re Marriage of Murga adopted a rule
of nonintervention with respect to a non- custodial parent's
right to express his or her religious beliefs. The question
presented in Murga was "whether, in the absence of a
showing of harm to the child, the custodial parent may enjoin
the noncustodial parent from discussing religious subjects
with the child or from involving the child in the noncustodial
parent's religious activities."
In holding that the noncustodial parent may not be so enjoined,
the Murga opinion looked to the case law of other states
and found that "in the majority of American jurisdictions
that have considered the question, the courts have refused
to restrain the noncustodial parent from exposing the minor
child to his or her religious beliefs and practices absent
a clear, affirmative showing that these religious activities
are harmful to the child."
Examples of conflict that might be harmful to a child include
emotional distress if a child perceives choosing a religion
as choosing between parents, and emotional distress caused
by engaging in certain activities mandated by one religion
that pleases one parent while displeasing or disobeying the
other. Harmful consequences could arise, for example, if accepting
the religious beliefs of one parent causes the children to
view the other parent negatively, resulting in an adverse
relationship or difficulty in accepting guidance and nurturing
from that parent.
In 1983, in In re Marriage of Mentry, the father and
mother of two minor children were observant members of the
Mormon Church. The children were six and seven years old when
their parents divorced and, at the time of separation, the
mother joined a different church. When the father sought to
expand his visitation rights, the mother sought an order enjoining
him from requiring the children to engage in any religious
activities other than those approved by her. The trial court
entered a restraining order that prohibited the father from
engaging the children in any religious activity, discussion,
or attendance during his visitations and from providing the
children with articles, publications, or other religious material
while they were in his presence. The court of appeal reversed
the order due to the absence of evidence of harm to the children
and because the trial court order represented an unwarranted
intrusion into family privacy.
Following Murga, the appellate court emphasized that
when the best interests of children must be adjudicated on
the basis of debatable value judgments, the decision of a
court to intervene must be conditioned upon both a clear affirmative
showing of harm or likely harm to the children and a showing
that such harm presents a graver problem than coercive intervention
into family privacy. The dissenting opinion would have affirmed
the trial court restraining order on the ground that the governing
standard did not require a showing of actual harm but a requirement
of future harm to the children. The dissenting judge believed
that the evidence presented in the trial court concerning
religious differences and their impact upon the children was
sufficient to affirm the trial court's restraining order.
Avitzur
v. Avitzur, a 1983 New York case, addressed the proper
role of civil courts in deciding a matter whose origins lay
in religious observance. This case illustrates the point that
a civil court can, without violating the constitutional prohibition
against excessive intrusion by the state into religious matters,
decide a case involving a contract entered into as part of
a religious marriage ceremony. In Avitzur, the issue
was the enforceability of the terms of a ketubbah, a Jewish
marital contract. The trial court held the ketubbah to be
a religious prenuptial agreement and a religious covenant
beyond the jurisdiction of the civil courts. However, the
New York Court of Appeals found nothing in law or public policy
to prevent judicial recognition and enforcement of the secular
terms of such a religious contract and enforced the agreement.
The appellate court decided the case solely on the application
of neutral principles of contract law, without the necessity
of reference to religious principles.
Zummo
v. Zummo, an impressively researched 1990 Pennsylvania
case, involved a 10-year marriage between a Roman Catholic
father and a Jewish mother. Prior to their marriage, the parties
discussed their religious differences and orally agreed that
their children would be raised as Jews. Following a divorce,
disagreement arose over exposing their three children to their
father's religion during his custodial periods. The trial
court made a custody order requiring the father to arrange
the children's attendance at their synagogue Sunday school
during his weekend visitation. The trial court order also
prohibited the father from taking the children to religious
services "contrary to the Jewish faith" during his
periods of custody or visitation. The father appealed, asserting
that the trial court order violated his constitutional rights
and those of his children regarding the free exercise of religion.
The Zummo appellate majority struck down that restriction,
holding that under Pennsylvania law each parent has parental
authority during lawful periods of custody or visitation to
pursue whatever course of religious indoctrination that parent
sees fit. If the other parent objects and seeks restrictions,
the objecting parent must establish a substantial risk of
harm to the child in absence of the proposed restriction.
The appellate court framed the issue as a constitutional one.
Whether limitations could be placed upon the spiritual well-being
of a child requires a best-interests analysis. The Zummo
Court determined that to justify restrictions upon parents'
rights to inculcate religious beliefs in their children, the
party seeking the restriction must demonstrate both that the
belief or practice of the party to be restricted actually
presents a substantial threat of present or future physical
or emotional harm to the children involved and that the restriction
is the least intrusive means to prevent the specified harm.
The dissenting opinion in Zummo would have upheld the restriction,
framing the issue as one of time sharing and the father's
visitation rights, not one of religious differences or First
Amendment rights.
The California Court of Appeal joined in this train of decisions
in its 1996 opinion in In re Marriage of Weiss, which held
that a Christian mother's written premarital agreement with
her Jewish husband concerning the future religious upbringing
of children born of the marriage was not legally enforceable.
Thus, she could not be enjoined from engaging in religious
activity with her child without an affirmative showing that
her conduct would harm the child. Citing Murga and
Mentry, the Weiss decision observed that California
courts have refused to enjoin a noncustodial parent from discussing
religion with children or from involving the children in a
parent's religious activities absent a clear, affirmative
showing that the children will be harmed by the proposed religious
activity. The Weiss court determined that the wife's
written antenuptial promise to raise her son in the husband's
Jewish faith was unenforceable. Placing great reliance upon
the majority opinion in Zummo, Weiss held that
the father failed to show that the religious activities to
which his former wife was exposing the minor child were harmful
to the child. Thus, the trial court properly refused to enjoin
the mother from involving the child in her chosen religious
activity.
But in Kendall v. Kendall, a 1997 Massachusetts case, a trial
court judge found it substantially damaging to the minor children
to allow each parent to expose the children, as he or she
wished, to his or her own religious beliefs. At the time of
their marriage in 1988, the mother was Jewish and the father
Roman Catholic. Before they were married, the parties discussed
the potential religious upbringing of any children and agreed
that the children would be raised in the Jewish faith. Ultimately,
the father's Christian views conflicted with the mother's
adherence to the principles of Orthodox Judaism and her attempt
to raise the children as Orthodox Jews.
The determinative issue in Kendall was whether the
harm to the children was so substantial as to warrant a limitation
on the father's religious freedom. Acknowledging that other
states have struggled to define what constitutes substantial
harm to minor children in this context, the Kendall opinion
adhered to the line of cases requiring clear evidence of substantial
harm and found that substantial harm did, in fact, exist.
Fully aware of the complexities and nuances involved, the
Kendall court concluded that since the trial judge
found demonstrative evidence of substantial harm to the children
in a comprehensive report from the custody evaluator, the
father's argument that the divorce judgment burdened his rights
to practice religion under the free exercise provisions of
the Massachusetts and U.S. Constitutions could not be sustained.
Because the restrictions upon religious exposure imposed by
the trial court intended a wholly secular purpose-specifically,
to limit the emotional harm to the children caused by the
negative messages presented by the father's religion-and the
finding that the father's behavior toward his children fostered
a distorted image of the Jewish culture and induced guilt
in his son for having the beliefs that he does, the restrictions
did not violate the father's right of free exercise of religion.
An intriguing but as yet undefined issue in these cases is
reconciling the best interests standard generally applied
in custody matters with the "harm to the child"
standard required for enjoining a parent's constitutional
right of free exercise of religion. The effect on a child
of parental religious differences is not measured by a best
interest standard. The requirement of "substantial harm"
to counter a parent's freedom of religion requires a finding
of detriment to the child. While a best interest standard
requires only a preponderance of the evidence, detriment requires
a showing by clear and convincing evidence - a higher, but
reasonable standard, because a constitutional right is being
restricted.
Federal Legislation
This standard might have been given a federal statutory
basis by the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA).
Instead, in City of Boerne v. Flores, Archbishop of St.
Antonio, the U.S. Supreme Court held that RFRA exceeded
Congress's power and was therefore unconstitutional. The exquisite
complexity of this issue and its interpretive nuances is illustrated
by the fact that the 6-3 Supreme Court decision engendered
six separate opinions. The majority opinion found that the
substantive change and constitutional protections of RFRA
were out of proportion to the incidental burdens on religion
imposed by permissible laws of general application and that
1he act's compelling interest/least restrictive means test
was disproportionately stringent when compared to the ends
the act sought to achieve.
New federal legislation was recently introduced in Congress
that would mandate the application of a "compelling state
interest" test to a governmental action if it interferes
with religious expression. Thus the act must be of utmost
importance to the good of society, and further, if it infringes
upon religious expression, it must do so in the least harmful
way. In essence, the Religious Liberty Protection Act of 1998
attempts to protect religious practices from burdensome and
unnecessary governmental interference.
Before the Supreme Court declared it unconstitutional, RFRA
was considered by several state appellate courts deciding
child custody cases. For example, in Hunt v. Hunt, a father
was held in contempt for failure to comply with an order to
pay child support. He appealed, contending that he belonged
to the Northeast Kingdom Community Church, whose members renounce
all personal possessions, work for nonprofit church-run businesses,
and have no access to income or personal funds. The church
provides housing and living expenses for the members and forbids
a member to support an estranged spouse or children who live
outside the community. The Vermont Supreme Court, basing its
holding both on Vermont law and interpreting RFRA, held that
the child support order, though a substantial burden on the
defendant-father's rights to free exercise of religion under
the U.S. and Vermont Constitutions, was the least restrictive
means of furthering the compelling governmental interest obligating
a parent to support minor children. The contempt order, however,
was vacated because the state did not demonstrate that contempt
and incarceration constituted the least restrictive means
to enforce the support order.
RFRA was considered by the California Court of Appeal in the
religious differences custody case of In re Marriage of
Weiss. The Weiss court held that the act, which prohibits
the government from substantially burdening a person's exercise
of religion unless the infringement is essential to the furtherance
of a compelling state interest, is easily reconciled with
case law, which requires a clear, affirmative showing that
the religious activities will be harmful to the child before
a parent will be enjoined. The prevention of harm to the child
is a compelling state interest. Therefore, burdening a parent's
exercise of religion can be consistent with RFRA.
Though RFRA has been declared unconstitutional, its analysis
and impacting case law remains relevant. First, the Religious
Liberty Protection Act is similar in scope and intent to the
Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 and was drafted
to overcome the constitutional infirmities of the 1993 act.
Second, in striking down RFRA, the U.S. Supreme Court did
not preclude states from enacting their own legislation in
this area. A religious liberty bill similar to the federal
legislation, AB 1617, was enacted by the California Legislature
during the past session but was vetoed by Governor Wilson.
Courtroom Strategies
The legal complexities and emotional nuances of the issues
arising from religious differences require attorneys to consider
what type of evidence to present to either prove or defend
competing contentions of this nature. Research discloses little
or no published data in the mental health literature regarding
the effect of religious differences upon minor children. Many
times, in an attempt to circumvent the burden of proof, a
complaining parent will assert his or her personal assumptions
and testimony that dual religious training is confusing and
harmful to the child and will attempt to use such assumptions
as a substitute for probative evidence of actual harm. There
is no psychological or sociological study that indicates that
different religious training is in itself harmful to a child.
Proper analysis and case preparation by an expert witness
should take into consideration the chronological and developmental
age of the child in question. Cognitive concepts and the ability
to understand religious beliefs will have a different effect
upon children of different ages. That is, a child of 3 or
4 may not yet have the capacity to understand different religious
beliefs, whereas a child of 12 or 13 may well be conflicted
by parental tensions in this regard.
Practitioners should note that the testimony of a mental health
expert was not presented in either Zummo or Weiss.
In contrast, in Kendall, the trial judge supported
her conclusion that substantial harm to the children had been
demonstrated in 68 express findings by giving substantial
weight to the report of the guardian ad litem/ investigator/
evaluator with respect to the impact the religious differences
between the parents had on the minor children. That well-supported
trial court order was affirmed on appeal.
Splitting a family through divorce is painfully difficult.
King Solomon's suggestion to "split the baby" is
not a modern-day answer, and judicial precedent often falls
short of providing workable solutions in today's child custody
disputes. The issues raised and addressed in religious differences
cases can be sources of great bitterness and heartbreak. They
demand the wisdom of Solomon and sensitive advocacy precisely
because courts have failed to establish coherent and consistent
standards of reconciling the best interests of children with
the basic constitutional rights of parents in the free exercise
of their religious beliefs. How to achieve workable and meaningful
solutions to the problem of religious differences confronting
so many families is worthy of our best efforts and constant,
creative attention.
1U.S.
CONST. amend. I.
2FAM.
CODE §§3011,3020.
3See
Religion As a Factor in Child Custody and Visitation Cases,
22 A.L.R4th 971-1039.
4Religious
Constraints During Visitation: Under What Circumstances Are
They Constitutional? 24 CREIGTON L. REV. 445, (1991);
"You Get the House. I Get the Car. You Get the Kids.
I Get Their Souls. " The Impact of Spiritual Custody
Awards on the Free Exercise of Custodial Parents, 138
U. PA. L. REV 583 (1989); The Solomonic Paradox Revisited:
Should Custody Proceedings Determine a Childs Religion?
33 SANTA CLARA LAW R. 3 13 (1993); Religion As a Factor
in Best Interest Hearings, in WILEY FAMILY LAW UPDATE
(1997).
5In
re Marriage of Murga, 103 Cal. App. 3d 498,163 Cal. Rptr.79(1980).
6In
re Marriage of Mentry, 142 Cal. App. 3d 260,190 Cal.Rptr.843
(1983).
7Id.,
142 Cal. App. 3d at 270.
8Avitzur
v. Avitzur, 58 N.Y. 2d 108,446 N.E. 2d 136, cert. denied,
464 U.S. 817 (1983).
9Id.,
58 N.Y. 2d at 115.
10Zummo
v. Zummo, 394 Pa. Super. 30, 574 A. 2d 1130 (1990).
11Id.
at 83.
12Id.
at 85.
13In
re Marriage of Weiss, 42 Cal. App. 4th 106,49 Cal. Rptr. 2d.
339 (1996), rev. denied, cert. denied (1996).
14Kendall
v. Kendall, 426 Mass. 238,687 N.E. 2d 1228 (1997), cert.
denied (June 26,1998).
15The
court also rejected the husband-father's argument that the
divorce judgment requiring the guardian ad litem to explain
the court's judgment to the children was an unconstitutional
establishment of religion.
16FAM.
CODE §§3011,3020.
17FAM.
CODE §§3040,3041.
18Guardianship
of Jenna G., 63 Cal. App. 4th 387,74 Cal.Rptr.2d 47(I998).
19In
1993, the U.S. Congress passed and the president signed into
law the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA),
42 U.S.C. §§2000bb et seq. For a full discussion of
the background and enactment of RFRA, see David B.
Cruz, State of Sovereignty, LOS ANGELES LAWYER, M/Aug.
1998, at 32. Upon passage, RFRA immediately became the subject
of law review comment and judicial interpretation. See
Restoring Rites and Rejecting Wrongs: The Religious Freedom
Restoration Act, 18 SETON HALL LEGIS. J. 821 (1994); Hunt
v. Hunt, 648 A. 2d 843 (Vt. Sup. Ct 1994); In re Marriage
of Weiss, 42 Cal. App. 4th 106,49 Cal. Rptr. 2d 339 (1996).
20City
of Boeme v. Flores, Archbishop of St. Antonio, 117 S. Ct.
2157,138 L. Ed. 2d 624 (1997).
21The
Religious Liberty Protection Act of 1998, H.R. 4019/S. 2148,105th
Cong., 2d Sess. (1998).
22Hunt,
648 A 2d 843.
23Weiss,
42 Cal. App. 4th 106.
24Mentry,
142 Cal. App. 3d 260.
25City
of Boeme v. Flores, Archbishop of St. Antonio, 117 S. Ct.
2157,138 L. Ed. 2d 624 (1997).
26AB
1617, Religious Freedom Protection Act (passed the Assembly
by a vote of 76-0 (Jan. 20,1998); amended and passed the Senate
by a vote of 25-3 (Aug. 12,1998); Assembly concurrence in
Senate amendments (Aug. 20, 1998); enrolled and sent to the
governor (Aug. 27, 1998); vetoed by governor (Sept. 28,1998).
Internet tracking of California legislation can be found on
the World Wide Web at <http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/>.
27Religion
As A Factor in Best Interest Hearings, supra note 4, at
130-31.
28In
Zummo v. Zummo, 574 A. 2d 1130,1149 (1990), the trial court
concluded that the three-, four-, and eight-year-old children
had asserted personal religious identities that were entitled
to consideration and protection. The appellate court reversed
that finding, holding that children of that age were too young
to assert a religious identity for themselves and, after establishing
age 12 as a benchmark, ruled that judges should exercise broad
discretion on a case-by-case basis in determining whether
a child has sufficient capacity to assert for himself or herself
a personal religious identity.
29Kings
3:16-28. 
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