In 1971, a Maryland statute was enacted that authorizes the
payment of state funds to any private institution of higher
learning within the State that meets certain minimum criteria, and
refrains from awarding "only seminarian or theological degrees."
The aid is in the form of an annual fiscal year subsidy to
qualifying colleges and universities, based upon the number of
students, excluding those in seminarian or theological academic
programs. The grants are noncategorical, but may not, under a
provision added in 1972, "be utilized by the institutions for
sectarian purposes." The assistance program is primarily
administered by the Maryland Council for Higher Education, which,
in order to insure compliance with statutory restrictions, (1)
determines whether an applicant institution is eligible at all, or
is one "awarding primarily theological or seminary degrees," and
(2) requires that eligible institutions not use funds for sectarian
purposes. At the end of the fiscal year, the recipient institution
must make a report and separately identify the aided nonsectarian
expenditures, subject to the Council's verification if necessary.
This suit was brought by appellants, four individual Maryland
citizens and taxpayers, who challenged the statutory scheme as
violative of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment and
claimed that appellees, four colleges affiliated with the Roman
Catholic Church, were constitutionally ineligible for the state
aid. The District Court, applying the three-part requirement of
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U. S. 602
(
viz., state aid such as this must have a secular purpose,
a primary effect other than the advancement of religion, and no
tendency to entangle the State excessively in church affairs),
upheld the statute and denied appellants relief. The court found
that, despite their formal affiliation with the Roman Catholic
Church, appellee colleges are not "pervasively sectarian." The
court also found that aid was, in fact, extended only to "the
secular side," having taken cognizance of the statutory prohibition
against sectarian use, and the Council's administrative
Page 426 U. S. 737
enforcement of that prohibition. The court also found that
"there is no necessity for state officials to investigate the
conduct of particular classes of educational programs to determine
whether a school is attempting to indoctrinate its students under
the guise of secular education,"
and that "excessive entanglement" does not necessarily result
from the fact that the subsidy is on an annual basis. Though
occasional audits are possible to verify the sectarian purposes of
expenditures, the District Court found that they would be "quick
and nonjudgmental."
Held: The judgment is affirmed. Pp.
426 U. S.
745-767;
426 U. S.
767-770.
387
F. Supp. 1282, affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, joined by THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR.
JUSTICE POWELL, concluded that the Maryland Act does not, under the
standards set by
Lemon v. Kurtzman, supra, at
403 U. S.
612-613, violate the Establishment Clause. Pp.
403 U. S.
745-767.
(a) The first part of
Lemon's three-pronged test is not
at issue here, since appellants do not challenge the District
Court's finding that the Maryland aid program is the secular one of
supporting private higher education generally, as an economic
alternative to a wholly public system. P.
426 U. S.
754.
(b) The aid provided under the Maryland statute does not have a
primary effect of advancing religion under the refinement of the
test added by
Hunt v. McNair, 413 U.
S. 734,
413 U. S. 743,
that aid has such an effect
"when it flows to an institution in which religion is so
pervasive that a substantial portion of its functions are subsumed
in the religious mission or when it funds a specifically religious
activity in an otherwise substantially secular setting."
Here, the District Court's finding that appellee colleges are
not "pervasively sectarian" was supported by a number of subsidiary
findings concerning the role of religion on the college campuses.
Such findings are not clearly erroneous, and the general picture
that the District Court has painted of the appellee institutions is
similar in almost all respects to that of the church-affiliated
colleges considered in
Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U.
S. 672, and
Hunt v. McNair, supra. Pp.
426 U. S.
755-759.
(c) The District Court also correctly concluded that the other
aspect of the "primary effect" test was satisfied,
i.e.,
that aid, in fact, is extended only to "the secular side."
Hunt, supra, requires only that state funds not be used to
support "specifically religious activity," and it is clear that the
funding program here meets this requirement. The statute forbids
use of funds for "sectarian
Page 426 U. S. 738
purposes," and the prohibition appears to be at least as broad
as the constitutional prohibition announced in
Hunt. Pp.
426 U. S.
759-761.
(d) When account is taken of the relevant factors considered by
the District Court, its conclusion that the Maryland scheme does
not foster an excessive entanglement with religion must be upheld.
The colleges, as the court found, perform "essentially secular
educational functions." The fact that the subsidy is an annual one
does not necessarily implicate "excessive entanglement," the aid
program here more closely resembling that found constitutionally
acceptable in
Tilton v. Richardson, supra, than that found
unacceptable in
Lemon, supra. Though occasional audits are
possible here, they and other contacts between the Council and the
colleges are not likely to be more entangling than inspections and
audits involved in the course of normal college accreditations. And
here, unlike the situation in
Lemon, the State can
identify and subsidize separate secular school functions without
on-site inspections. Finally, with respect to political
divisiveness, the District Court correctly found that the Maryland
program did not create a substantial danger of political
entanglement, the court having properly stressed the facts that the
aided institutions are colleges, not elementary or secondary
schools; that aid is extended to colleges generally, more than
two-thirds of which have no religious affiliation; and that the
four colleges are substantially autonomous. Pp.
426 U. S.
761-767.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, joined by MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, concluded
that there is no violation of the Establishment Clause where, as in
this case, there is a secular legislative purpose and the primary
effect of the legislation is neither to advance nor inhibit
religion. There is no reason to pursue the constitutional inquiry
further.
See Lemon v. Kurtzman, supra, at
403 U. S. 661
(opinion of WHITE, J.);
Committee for Public Education v.
Nyquist, 413 U. S. 756,
413 U. S. 813
(WHITE, J., dissenting). Pp.
426 U. S.
767-770.
BLACKMUN, J., announced the judgment of the Court and delivered
an opinion, in which BURGER, C.J., and POWELL, J., joined. WHITE,
J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which
REHNQUIST, J., joined,
post, p.
426 U. S. 767.
BRENNAN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which MARSHALL, J.,
joined,
post, p.
426 U. S. 770.
STEWART, J.,
post, p.
426 U. S. 773,
and STEVENS, J.,
post, p.
426 U. S. 775,
filed dissenting opinions.
Page 426 U. S. 739
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN announced the judgment of the Court and
delivered an opinion in which THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE
POWELL joined .
We are asked once again to police the constitutional boundary
between church and state. Maryland, this time, is the alleged
trespasser. It has enacted a statute which, as amended, provides
for annual noncategorical grants to private colleges, among them
religiously affiliated institutions, subject only to the
restrictions that the funds not be used for "sectarian purposes." A
three-judge District Court, by a divided vote, refused to enjoin
the operation of the statute,
387 F.
Supp. 1282 (Md.1974), and a direct appeal has been taken to
this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1253.
Page 426 U. S. 740
I
The challenged grant program was instituted by Laws of 1971, c.
626, and is now embodied in Md.Ann.Code, Art. 77A, §§
65-69 (1975). It provides funding for "any private institution of
higher learning within the State of Maryland," provided the
institution is accredited by the State Department of Education, was
established in Maryland prior to July 1, 1970, maintains one or
more "associate of arts or baccalaureate degree" programs, and
refrains from awarding "only seminarian or theological degrees."
§§ 65-66. [
Footnote
1] The aid is in the form of an annual fiscal year subsidy to
qualifying colleges and universities. The formula by which each
institution's entitlement is computed has been changed several
times, and is not independently at issue here. It now provides for
a qualifying institution to receive, for each full-time student
(excluding students enrolled in seminarian or theological academic
programs), an amount equal to 15% of the State's
per-full-time-pupil appropriation for a student in the state
college system. § 67. As first enacted, the grants were
completely unrestricted. They remain noncategorical in nature, and
a recipient institution may put them to whatever use it prefers,
with but one exception. In 1972, following this Court's decisions
in
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U. S. 602
(1971) (
Lemon I), and
Tilton v. Richardson,
403 U. S. 672
(1971), § 68A was added to the statute by Laws of 1972, c. 34.
It provides:
"None of the moneys payable under this subtitle
Page 426 U. S. 741
shall be utilized by the institutions for sectarian
purposes."
The administration of the grant program is entrusted to the
State's Board of Public Works "assisted by the Maryland Council for
Higher Education." These bodies are to adopt "criteria and
procedures . . . for the implementation and administration of the
aid program." They are specifically authorized to adopt "criteria
and procedures" governing the method of application for grants and
of their disbursement, the verification of degrees conferred, and
the "submission of reports or data concerning the utilization of
these moneys by [the aided] institutions." § 68. [
Footnote 2] Primary responsibility for
the program rests with the Council for Higher Education, an
appointed commission which antedates the aid program, which has
numerous other responsibilities in the educational field, and which
has derived from these a "considerable expertise as to the
character and functions of the various private colleges and
universities in the State." 387 F. Supp. at 1285.
The Council performs what the District Court described as a
"two-step screening process" to insure compliance with the
statutory restrictions on the grants. First, it determines whether
an institution applying for aid is eligible at all, or is one
"awarding primarily theological
Page 426 U. S. 742
or seminary degrees." [
Footnote
3] Several applicants have been disqualified at this stage of
the process.
Id. at 1289, 129. Second, the Council
requires that those institutions that are eligible for funds not
put them to any sectarian use. An application must be accompanied
by an affidavit of the institution's chief executive officer
stating that the funds will not be used for sectarian purposes, and
by a description of the specific nonsectarian uses that are
planned. [
Footnote 4] These may
be changed only after written notice to the Council. By the end of
the fiscal year, the institution must file a "Utilization of Funds
Report" describing and itemizing the use of the funds. The chief
executive officer must certify the report and also file his own
"Post expenditure Affidavit," stating that the funds have not been
put to sectarian uses. The recipient institution is further
required to segregate state funds in a "special revenue account"
and to identify aided nonsectarian expenditures separately in its
budget. It must retain "sufficient documentation of the State funds
expended to permit verification by the Council that funds were not
spent for sectarian purposes." Any question of sectarian
Page 426 U. S. 743
use that may arise is to be resolved by the Council, if
possible, on the basis of information submitted to it by the
institution and without actual examination of its books. Failing
that, a "verification or audit" may be undertaken. The District
Court found that the audit would be "quick and non-judgmental,"
taking one day or less.
Id. at 1296. [
Footnote 5]
In 1971, $1.7 million was disbursed to 17 private institutions
in Maryland. The disbursements were under the statute as originally
enacted, and were therefore not subject to § 68A's specific
prohibition on sectarian use. Of the 17 institutions, five were
church-related, and these received $520,000 of the $1.7 million. A
total of $1.8 million was to be awarded to 18 institutions in 1972,
the second year of the grant program; of this amount, $603,000 was
to go to church-related institutions. Before disbursement, however,
this suit, challenging the grants as in violation of the
Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, was filed. [
Footnote 6] The $603,000 was placed in
escrow and was so held until after the entry of the District
Court's judgment on October 21, 1974. [
Footnote 7] These and subsequent awards, therefore,
are
Page 426 U. S. 744
subject to § 68A and to the Council's procedures for
insuring compliance therewith.
Plaintiffs in this suit, appellants here, are four individual
Maryland citizens and taxpayers. [
Footnote 8] Their complaint sought a declaration of the
statute's invalidity, an order enjoining payments under it to
church-affiliated institutions, and a declaration that the State
was entitled to recover from such institutions any amounts already
disbursed. App 10. In addition to the responsible state officials,
[
Footnote 9] plaintiff
appellants joined as defendants the five institutions they claimed
were constitutionally ineligible for this form of aid: Western
Maryland College, College of Notre Dame, Mount Saint Mary's
College, Saint Joseph College, and Loyola College. Of these, the
last four are affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church; Western
Maryland, was a Methodist affiliate. The District Court ruled with
respect to all five. Western Maryland, however, has since been
dismissed as a defendant-appellee. We are concerned, therefore,
only with the four Roman Catholic affiliates. [
Footnote 10]
After carefully assessing the role that the Catholic Church
plays in the lives of these institutions, a matter to which we
return in greater detail below, and applying
Page 426 U. S. 745
the three-part requirement of
Lemon I, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
612-613, that state aid such as this have a secular
purpose, a primary effect other than the advancement of religion,
and no tendency to entangle the State excessively in church
affairs, the District Court ruled that the amended statute was
constitutional and was not to be enjoined. The court considered the
original, unamended statute to have been unconstitutional under
Lemon I, but it refused to order a refund of amounts
theretofore paid out, reasoning that any refund was barred by the
decision in
Lemon v. Kurtzman, 411 U.
S. 192 (1973) (
Lemon II). [
Footnote 11] The District Court therefore denied
all relief. This appeal followed. We noted probable jurisdiction.
420 U.S. 922 (1975).
II
A system of government that makes itself felt as pervasively as
ours could hardly be expected never to cross paths with the church.
In fact, our State and Federal Governments impose certain burdens
upon, and impart certain benefits to, virtually all our activities,
and religious activity is not an exception. The Court has enforced
a scrupulous neutrality by the State, as
Page 426 U. S. 746
among religions, and also as between religious and other
activities, [
Footnote 12]
but a hermetic separation of the two is an impossibility it has
never required. It long has been established, for example, that the
State may send a cleric, indeed even a clerical order, to perform a
wholly secular task. In
Bradfield v. Roberts, 175 U.
S. 291 (1899), the Court upheld the extension of public
aid to a corporation which, although composed entirely of members
of a Roman Catholic sisterhood acting "under the auspices of said
church,"
id. at
175 U. S. 297,
was limited by its corporate charter to the secular purpose of
operating a charitable hospital.
And religious institutions need no be quarantined from public
benefits that are neutrally available to all. The Court has
permitted the State to supply transportation for children to and
from church-related, as well as public, schools.
Everson v.
Board of Education, 330 U. S. 1 (1947).
It has done the same with respect to secular textbooks loaned by
the State on equal terms to students attending both public and
church-related elementary schools.
Board of Education v.
Allen, 392 U. S. 236
(1968). Since it had not been shown in
Allen that the
secular textbooks would be put to other than secular purposes, the
Court concluded that, as in
Everson, the State was merely
"extending the benefits of state laws to all citizens."
Id. at
392 U. S. 242.
Just as
Bradfield dispels any notion that a religious
person can never be in the State's pay for a secular purpose,
[
Footnote 13]
Page 426 U. S. 747
Everson and
Allen put to rest any argument
that the State may never act in such a way that has the incidental
effect of facilitating religious activity. The Court has not been
blind to the fact that, in aiding a religious institution to
perform a secular task, the State frees the institution's resources
to be put to sectarian ends. [
Footnote 14] If this were impermissible, however, a
church could not be protected by the police and fire departments,
or have its public sidewalk kept in repair. The Court never has
held that religious activities must be discriminated against in
this way.
Neutrality is what is required. The State must confine itself to
secular objectives, and neither advance nor impede religious
activity. Of course, that principle is more easily stated than
applied. The Court has taken the view that a secular purpose and a
facial neutrality may not be enough, if, in fact, the State is
lending direct support to a religious activity. The State may not,
for example, pay for what is actually a religious education, even
though it purports to be paying for a secular one, and even though
it makes its aid available to secular and religious institutions
alike. The Court also has taken the view that the State's efforts
to perform a secular task, and at the same time avoid aiding in the
performance of a religious one, may not lead it into such an
intimate relationship with religious authority that it appears
either to be sponsoring or to be excessively
Page 426 U. S. 748
interfering with that authority. [
Footnote 15] In
Lemon I, as noted above, the
Court distilled these concerns into a three-prong test, resting in
part on prior case law, for the constitutionality of statutes
affording state aid to church-related schools:
"First, the statute must have a secular legislative purpose;
second, its principal or primary effect must be one that neither
advances nor inhibits religion . . . ; finally, the statute must
not foster 'an excessive government entanglement with
religion.'"
403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
612-613. At issue in
Lemon I were two state-aid
plans, a Rhode Island program to grant a 15% supplement to the
salaries of private, church-related school teachers teaching
secular courses, and a Pennsylvania program to reimburse private
church-related schools for the entire cost of secular courses also
offered in public schools. Both failed the third part of the test,
that of "excessive government entanglement." This part the Court
held, in turn, required a consideration of three factors: (1) the
character and purposes of the benefited institutions, (2) the
nature of the aid provided, and (3) the resulting relationship
between the State and the religious authority.
Id. at
403 U. S. 615.
As to the first of these, in reviewing the Rhode Island program,
the Court found that the aided schools, elementary and secondary,
were characterized by "substantial religious activity and purpose."
Id. at
403 U. S. 616.
They were located near parish churches. Religious instruction was
considered "part of the total
Page 426 U. S. 749
educational process."
Id. at
403 U. S. 615.
Religious symbols and religious activities abounded. Two-thirds of
the teachers were nuns, and their operation of the schools was
regarded as an "
integral part of the religious mission of the
Catholic Church.'" Id. at 403 U. S. 616.
The schooling came at an impressionable age. The form of aid also
cut against the programs. Unlike the textbooks in Allen
and the bus transportation in Everson, the services of the
state-supported teachers could not be counted on to be purely
secular. They were bound to mix religious teachings with secular
ones, not by conscious design, perhaps, but because the mixture was
inevitable when teachers (themselves usually Catholics)
were
"employed by a religious organization, subject to the direction
and discipline of religious authorities, and work[ed] in a system
dedicated to rearing children in a particular faith."
Id. at
403 U. S. 618.
The State's efforts to supervise and control the teaching of
religion in supposedly secular classes would therefore inevitably
entangle it excessively in religious affairs. The Pennsylvania
program similarly foundered.
The Court also pointed to another kind of church-state
entanglement threatened by the Rhode Island and Pennsylvania
programs, namely, their "divisive political potential."
Id. at
403 U. S. 622.
They represented "successive and, very likely, permanent annual
appropriations that benefit relatively few religious groups."
Id. at
403 U. S. 623.
Political factions, supporting and opposing the programs, were
bound to divide along religious lines. This was "one of the
principal evils against which the First Amendment was intended to
protect."
Id. at
403 U. S. 622.
It was stressed that the political divisiveness of the programs was
"aggravated . . . by the need for continuing annual
appropriations."
Id. at
403 U. S. 623.
[
Footnote 16]
Page 426 U. S. 750
In
Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U.
S. 672 (1971), a companion case to
Lemon I, the
Court reached the contrary result. The aid challenged in
Tilton was in the form of federal grants for the
construction of academic facilities at private colleges, some of
them church-related, with the restriction that the facilities not
be used for any sectarian purpose. [
Footnote 17] Applying
Lemon I's three-part test,
the Court found the purpose of the federal aid program there under
consideration to be secular. Its primary effect was not the
advancement of religion, for sectarian use of the facilities was
prohibited. Enforcement of this prohibition was made possible by
the fact that religion did not so permeate the defendant colleges
that their religious and secular functions were inseparable. On the
contrary, there was no evidence that religious activities took
place in the funded facilities. Courses at the colleges were
"taught according to the academic requirements intrinsic to the
subject matter," and "an atmosphere of academic freedom, rather
than religious indoctrination," was maintained. 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
680-682 (plurality opinion).
Turning to the problem of excessive entanglement, the Court
first stressed the character of the aided institutions. It pointed
to several general differences between college and pre-college
education: college students are less susceptible to religious
indoctrination; college courses tend to entail an internal
discipline that inherently limits the opportunities for sectarian
influence; and a high degree of academic freedom tends to prevail
at the college level. It found no evidence that the colleges
Page 426 U. S. 751
in
Tilton varied from this pattern. Though controlled
and largely populated by Roman Catholics, the colleges were not
restricted to adherents of that faith. No religious services were
required to be attended. Theology courses were mandatory, but they
were taught in an academic fashion, and with treatment of beliefs
other than Roman Catholicism. There were no attempts to proselytize
among students, and principles of academic freedom prevailed. With
colleges of this character, there was little risk that religion
would seep into the teaching of secular subjects, and the state
surveillance necessary to separate the two, therefore, was
diminished. The Court next looked to the type of aid provided, and
found it to be neutral or nonideological in nature. Like the
textbooks and bus transportation in
Allen and
Everson, but unlike the teachers' services in
Lemon
I, physical facilities were capable of being restricted to
secular purposes. Moreover, the construction grant was a one-shot
affair, not involving annual audits and appropriations.
As for political divisiveness, no "continuing religious
aggravation" over the program had been shown, and the Court
reasoned that this might be because of the lack of continuity in
the church-state relationship, the character and diversity of the
colleges, and the fact that they served a dispersed student
constituency, rather than a local one. "[C]umulatively," all these
considerations persuaded the Court that church-state entanglement
was not excessive. 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
684-689.
In
Hunt v. McNair, 413 U. S. 734
(1973), the challenged aid was also for the construction of secular
college facilities, the state plan being one to finance the
construction by revenue bonds issued through the medium of a state
authority. In effect, the college serviced and repaid the bonds,
but at the lower cost resulting from the tax-free status of the
interest payments. The Court upheld the program on reasoning
analogous to that in
Page 426 U. S. 752
Tilton. In applying the second of the
Lemon
I's three-part test, that concerning "primary effect," the
following refinement was added:
"Aid normally may be thought to have a primary effect of
advancing religion when it flows to an institution in which
religion is so pervasive that a substantial portion of its
functions are subsumed in the religious mission or when it funds a
specifically religious activity in an otherwise substantially
secular setting."
413 U.S. at
413 U. S. 743.
Although the college which
Hunt concerned was subject to
substantial control by its sponsoring Baptist Church, it was found
to be similar to the colleges in
Tilton, and not
"pervasively sectarian." As in
Tilton, state aid went to
secular facilities only, and thus not to any "specifically
religious activity." 413 U.S. at
413 U. S.
743-745.
Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist, 413 U.
S. 756 (1973), followed in
Lemon I's wake much
as
Hunt followed in
Tilton's. The aid in
Nyquist was to elementary and secondary schools which, the
District Court found, generally conformed to a "profile" of a
sectarian or substantially religious school. [
Footnote 18] The state aid took three forms:
direct subsidies for the maintenance and repair of buildings;
reimbursement of parents for a percentage of tuition paid; and
certain tax benefits for parents. All three forms of aid were found
to have an impermissible primary effect. The maintenance
Page 426 U. S. 753
and repair subsidies, being unrestricted, could be used for the
upkeep of a chapel or classrooms used for religious instruction.
The reimbursements and tax benefits to parents could likewise be
used to support wholly religious activities.
In
Levitt v. Committee for Public Education,
413 U. S. 472
(1973), the Court also invalidated a program for public aid to
church-affiliated schools. The grants, which were to elementary and
secondary schools in New York, were in the form of reimbursements
for the schools' testing and recordkeeping expenses. The schools
met the same sectarian profile as did those in
Nyquist, at
least in some cases. There was therefore "substantial risk" that
the state-funded tests would be "drafted with an eye, unconsciously
or otherwise, to inculcate students in the religious precepts of
the sponsoring church." 413 U.S. at
413 U. S.
480.
Last Term, in
Meek v. Pittenger, 421 U.
S. 349 (1975), the Court ruled yet again on a state-aid
program for church-related elementary and secondary schools. On the
authority of
Allen, it upheld a Pennsylvania program for
lending textbooks to private school students. It found, however,
that
Lemon I required the invalidation of two other forms
of aid to the private schools. The first was the loan of
instructional materials and equipment. Like the textbooks, these
were secular and nonideological in nature. Unlike the textbooks,
however, they were loaned directly to the schools. The schools,
similar to those in
Lemon I, were ones in which "the
teaching process is, to a large extent, devoted to the inculcation
of religious values and belief." 421 U.S. at
421 U. S. 366.
Aid flowing directly to such "religion-pervasive institutions,"
ibid., had the primary effect of advancing religion.
See Hunt v. McNair, supra. The other form of aid was the
provision of "auxiliary" educational services:
Page 426 U. S. 754
remedial instruction, counseling and testing, and speech and
hearing therapy. These also were intended to be neutral and
nonideological, and, in fact, were to be provided by public school
teachers. Still, there was danger that the teachers, in such a
sectarian setting, would allow religion to seep into their
instruction. To attempt to prevent this from happening would
excessively entangle the State in church affairs. The Court
referred again to the danger of political divisiveness, heightened,
as it had been in
Lemon I and
Nyquist, by the
necessity of annual legislative reconsideration of the aid
appropriation. 421 U.S. at
421 U. S. 372.
So the slate we write on is anything but clean. Instead, there
is little room for further refinement of the principles governing
public aid to church-affiliated private schools. Our purpose is not
to unsettle those principles, so recently reaffirmed,
see Meek
v. Pittenger, supra, or to expand upon them substantially, but
merely to insure that they are faithfully applied in this case.
III
The first part of
Lemon I's three-part test is not in
issue; appellants do not challenge the District Court's finding
that the purpose of Maryland's aid program is the secular one of
supporting private higher education generally, as an economic
alternative to a wholly public system. [
Footnote 19] The focus of the debate is on the second
and third parts, those concerning the primary effect of
advancing
Page 426 U. S. 755
religion, and excessive church-state entanglement. We consider
them in the same order.
A
While entanglement is essentially a procedural problem, the
primary-effect question is the substantive one of what private
educational activities, by whatever procedure, may be supported by
state funds.
Hunt requires (1) that no state aid at all go
to institutions that are so "pervasively sectarian" that secular
activities cannot be separated from sectarian ones, and (2) that,
if secular activities can be separated out, they alone may be
funded.
(1) The District Court's finding in this case was that the
appellee colleges are not "pervasively sectarian." 387 F. Supp. at
1293. This conclusion it supported with a number of subsidiary
findings concerning the role of religion on these campuses:
(a) Despite their formal affiliation with the Roman Catholic
Church, the colleges are "characterized by a high degree of
institutional autonomy."
Id. at 1287 n. 7. None of the
four receives funds from, or makes reports to, the Catholic Church.
The Church is represented on their governing boards, but, as with
Mount Saint Mary's, "no instance of entry of Church considerations
into college decisions was shown."
Id. at 1295.
(b) The colleges employ Roman Catholic chaplains and hold Roman
Catholic religious exercises on campus. Attendance at such is not
required; the encouragement of spiritual development is only "one
secondary objective" of each college; and "at none of these
institutions does this encouragement go beyond providing the
opportunities or occasions for religious experience."
Ibid. It was the District Court's general finding that
"religious indoctrination is not a substantial purpose or activity
of any of these defendants."
Id. at 1296.
Page 426 U. S. 756
(c) Mandatory religion or theology courses are taught at each of
the colleges, primarily by Roman Catholic clerics, but these only
supplement a curriculum covering "the spectrum of a liberal arts
program." Nontheology courses are taught in an "atmosphere of
intellectual freedom," and without "religious pressures." [
Footnote 20] Each college subscribes
to, and abides by, the 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic
Freedom of the American Association of University Professors.
Id. at 1288, 1293, and n. 3, 1295.
(d) Some classes are begun with prayer. The percentage of
classes in which this is done varies with the college, from a
"minuscule" percentage at Loyola and Mount Saint Mary's, to a
majority at Saint Joseph.
Id. at 1293. There is no "actual
college policy" of encouraging the practice. "It is treated as a
facet of the instructor's academic freedom."
Ibid.
Classroom prayers were therefore regarded by the District Court as
"peripheral to the subject of religious permeation," as were the
facts that some instructors wear clerical garb and some classrooms
have religious symbols.
Ibid. The court concluded:
"None of these facts impairs the clear and convincing
Page 426 U. S. 757
evidence that courses at each defendant are taught 'according to
the academic requirements intrinsic to the subject matter and the
individual teacher's concept of professional standards.' [citing
Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
681]."
Id. at 1293-1294. In support of this finding, the court
relied on the fact that a Maryland education department group had
monitored the teacher education program at Saint Joseph College,
where classroom prayer is most prevalent, and had seen "no evidence
of religion entering into any elements of that program."
Id. at 1293.
(e) The District Court found that, apart from the theology
departments,
see n
20,
supra, faculty hiring decisions are not made on a
religious basis. At two of the colleges, Notre Dame and Mount Saint
Mary's, no inquiry at all is made into an applicant's religion.
Religious preference is to be noted on Loyola's application form,
but the purpose is to allow full appreciation of the applicant's
background. Loyola also attempts to employ each year two members of
a particular religious order which once staffed a college recently
merged into Loyola. Budgetary considerations lead the colleges
generally to favor members of religious orders, who often receive
less than full salary. Still, the District Court found that
"academic quality" was the principal hiring criterion, and that any
"hiring bias," or "effort by any defendant to stack its faculty
with members of a particular religious group," would have been
noticed by other faculty members, who had never been heard to
complain.
Id. at 1294.
(f) The great majority of students at each of the colleges are
Roman Catholic, but the District Court concluded from a "thorough
analysis of the student admission
Page 426 U. S. 758
and recruiting criteria" that the student bodies "are chosen
without regard to religion."
Id. at 1295.
We cannot say that the foregoing findings as to the role of
religion in particular aspects of the colleges are clearly
erroneous. Appellants ask us to set those findings aside in certain
respects. Not surprisingly, they have gleaned from this record of
thousands of pages, compiled during several weeks of trial,
occasional evidence of a more sectarian character than the District
Court ascribes to the colleges. It is not our place, however, to
reappraise the evidence, unless it plainly fails to support the
findings of the trier of facts. That is certainly not the case
here, and it would make no difference even if we were to
second-guess the District Court in certain particulars. To answer
the question whether an institution is so "pervasively sectarian"
that it may receive no direct state aid of any kind, it is
necessary to paint a general picture of the institution, composed
of many elements. The general picture that the District Court has
painted of the appellee institutions is similar in almost all
respects to that of the church-affiliated colleges considered in
Tilton and
Hunt. [
Footnote 21] We
Page 426 U. S. 759
find no constitutionally significant distinction between them,
at least for purposes of the "pervasive sectarianism" test.
(2) Having found that the appellee institutions are not "so
permeated by religion that the secular side cannot be separated
from the sectarian," 387 F. Supp. at 1293, the District Court
proceeded to the next question posed by
Hunt: whether aid,
in fact, was extended only to "the secular side." This requirement
the court regarded as satisfied by the statutory prohibition
against sectarian use, and by the administrative enforcement of
that prohibition through the Council for Higher Education. We
agree.
Hunt requires only that state funds not be used to
support "specifically religious activity." It is clear that fund
uses exist that meet this requirement.
Page 426 U. S. 760
See Tilton v. Richardson, supra; Hunt v. McNair, supra.
We have no occasion to elaborate further on what is and is not a
"specifically religious activity," for no particular use of the
state funds is set out in this statute. Funds are put to the use of
the college's choice, provided it is not a sectarian use, of which
the college must satisfy the Council. If the question is whether
the statute sought to be enjoined authorizes state funds for
"specifically religious activity," that question fairly answers
itself. The statute, in terms, forbids the use of funds for
"sectarian purposes," and this prohibition appears to be at least
as broad as
Hunt's prohibition of the public funding of
"specifically religious activity." We must assume that the
colleges, and the Council, will exercise their delegated control
over use of the funds in compliance with the statutory, and
therefore the constitutional, mandate. It is to be expected that
they will give a wide berth to "specifically religious activity,"
and thus minimize constitutional questions. [
Footnote 22]
Page 426 U. S. 761
Should such questions arise, the courts will consider them. It
has not been the Court's practice, in considering facial challenges
to statutes of this kind, to strike them down in anticipation that
particular applications may result in unconstitutional use of
funds.
See, e.g., Hunt v. McNair, 413 U.S. at
413 U. S. 744;
Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 682
(plurality opinion).
B
If the foregoing answer to the "primary effect" question
Page 426 U. S. 762
seems easy, it serves to make the "excessive entanglement"
problem more difficult. The statute itself clearly denies the use
of public funds for "sectarian purposes." It seeks to avert such
use, however, through a process of annual interchange -- proposal
and approval, expenditure and review -- between the colleges and
the Council. In answering the question whether this will be an
"excessively entangling" relationship, we must consider the several
relevant factors identified in prior decisions:
(1) First is the character of the aided institutions. This has
been fully described above. As the District Court found, the
colleges perform "essentially secular educational functions," 387
F. Supp. at 1288, that are distinct and separable from religious
activity. This finding, which is a prerequisite under the
"pervasive sectarianism" test to any state aid at all, is also
important for purposes of the entanglement test, because it means
that secular activities, for the most part, can be taken at face
value. There is no danger, or at least only a substantially reduced
danger, that an ostensibly secular activity -- the study of
biology, the learning of a foreign language, an athletic event --
will actually be infused with religious content or significance.
The need for close surveillance of purportedly secular activities
is correspondingly reduced. Thus the District Court found that, in
this case
"there is no necessity for state officials to investigate the
conduct of particular classes of educational programs to determine
whether a school is attempting to indoctrinate its students under
the guise of secular education."
Id. at 1289. We cannot say the District Court erred in
this judgment or gave it undue significance. The Court took
precisely the same view with respect to the aid extended to the
very similar institutions in
Tilton. 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 687
(plurality opinion).
See also Hunt v. McNair, supra at
413 U. S.
746.
Page 426 U. S. 763
(2) As for the form of aid, we have already noted that no
particular use of state funds is before us in this case. The
process by which aid is disbursed, and a use for it
chosen, is before us. We address this as a matter of the "resulting
relationship" of secular and religious authority.
(3) As noted, the funding process is an annual one. The
subsidies are paid out each year, and they can be put to annually
varying uses. The colleges propose particular uses for the
Council's approval, and, following expenditure, they report to the
Council on the use to which the funds have been put.
The District Court's view was that, in light of the character of
the aided institutions, and the resulting absence of any need "to
investigate the conduct of particular classes," 387 F. Supp. at
1289, the annual nature of the subsidy was not fatal. In fact, an
annual, ongoing relationship had existed in
Tilton, where
the Government retained the right to inspect subsidized buildings
for sectarian use, and the ongoing church-state involvement had
been even greater in
Hunt, where the State was actually
the lessor of the subsidized facilities, retaining extensive powers
to regulate their use.
See 387 F. Supp. at 1290.
We agree with the District Court that "excessive entanglement"
does not necessarily result from the fact that the subsidy is an
annual one. It is true that the Court favored the "one-time,
single-purpose" construction grants in
Tilton because they
entailed "no continuing financial relationships or dependencies, no
annual audits, and no government analysis of an institution's
expenditures." 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 688 (plurality opinion). The present aid
program cannot claim these aspects. But if the question is whether
this case is more like
Lemon I or more like
Tilton -- and surely that is the
Page 426 U. S. 764
fundamental question before us -- the answer must be that it is
more like Tilton.
Tilton is distinguishable only by the form of aid. We
cannot discount the distinction entirely, but neither can we regard
it as decisive. As the District Court pointed out, ongoing, annual
supervision of college facilities was explicitly foreseen in
Tilton, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 675;
see also Lemon I, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 669
(opinion of WHITE, J.), and even more so in
Hunt, 413 U.S.
at
413 U. S.
739-740,
413 U. S.
745-749.
Tilton and
Hunt would be
totally indistinguishable, at least in terms of annual supervision,
if funds were used under the present statute to build or maintain
physical facilities devoted to secular use. The present statute
contemplates annual decisions by the Council as to what is a
"sectarian purpose," but, as we have noted, the secular and
sectarian activities of the colleges are easily separated.
Occasional audits are possible here, but we must accept the
District Court's finding that they would be "quick and
nonjudgmental." 387 F. Supp. at 1296. They and the other contacts
between the Council and the colleges are not likely to be any more
entangling than the inspections and audits incident to the normal
process of the colleges' accreditations by the State.
While the form-of-aid distinctions of
Tilton are thus
of questionable importance, the "character of institution"
distinctions of
Lemon I are most impressive. To reiterate
a few of the relevant points: the elementary and secondary
schooling in
Lemon I came at an impressionable age; the
aided schools were "under the general supervision" of the Roman
Catholic diocese; each school had a local Catholic parish that
assumed "ultimate financial responsibility" for it; the principals
of the schools were usually appointed by church authorities;
religion "pervade[d] the school system"; teachers were specifically
instructed by the "Handbook of School Regulations"
Page 426 U. S. 765
that "
[r]eligious formation is not confined to formal
courses; nor is it restricted to a single subject area.'" 403 U.S.
at 403 U. S.
617-618. These things made impossible what is crucial to
a nonentangling aid program: the ability of the State to identify
and subsidize separate secular functions carried out at the school,
without on-the-site inspections being necessary to prevent
diversion of the funds to sectarian purposes. The District Court
gave primary importance to this consideration, and we cannot say it
erred.
(4) As for political divisiveness, the District Court recognized
that the annual nature of the subsidy, along with its promise of an
increasing demand for state funds as the colleges' dependency grew,
aggravated the danger of "[p]olitical fragmentation . . . on
religious lines."
Lemon I, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 623.
Nonetheless, the District Court found that the program "does not
create a substantial danger of political entanglement." 387 F.
Supp. at 1291. Several reasons were given. As was stated in
Tilton, the danger of political divisiveness is
"substantially less" when the aided institution is not an
elementary or secondary school, but a college, "whose student
constituency is not local, but diverse and widely dispersed." 403
U.S. at
403 U. S.
688-689. Furthermore, political divisiveness is
diminished by the fact that the aid is extended to private colleges
generally, more than two-thirds of which have no religious
affiliation; this is in sharp contrast to
Nyquist, for
example, where 95% of the aided schools were Roman Catholic
parochial schools. Finally, the substantial autonomy of the
colleges was thought to mitigate political divisiveness, in that
controversies surrounding the aid program are not likely to involve
the Catholic Church itself, or even the religious character of the
schools, but only their "fiscal responsibility
Page 426 U. S. 766
and educational requirements." 387 F. Supp. at 1290-1291.
The District Court's reasoning seems to us entirely sound. Once
again, appellants urge that this case is controlled by previous
cases in which the form of aid was similar (
Lemon I, Nyquist,
Levitt), rather than those in which the character of the aided
institution was the same (
Tilton, Hunt). We disagree.
Though indisputably relevant,
see Lemon I, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
623-624, the annual nature of the aid cannot be
dispositive. On the one hand, the Court has struck down a
"permanent," nonannual tax exemption, reasoning that "the pressure
for frequent enlargement of the relief is predictable," as it
always is.
Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist, 413
U.S. at
413 U. S. 797.
On the other hand, in
Tilton, it has upheld a program for
"one-time, single-purpose" construction grants, despite the fact
that such grants would, in fact, be "annual," at least insofar as
new grants would be annually applied for. 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 688.
See Lemon I, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 669
(opinion of WHITE, J.). Our holdings are better reconciled in terms
of the character of the aided institutions, found to be so
dissimilar as between those considered in
Tilton and
Hunt, on the one hand, and those considered in
Lemon
I, Nyquist, and
Levitt, on the other.
There is no exact science in gauging the entanglement of church
and state. The wording of the test, which speaks of "excessive
entanglement," itself makes that clear. The relevant factors we
have identified are to be considered "cumulatively" in judging the
degree of entanglement.
Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 688.
They may cut different ways, as certainly they do here. In reaching
the conclusion that it did, the District Court gave dominant
importance to the character of the aided institutions and to its
finding that they are capable of separating secular and religious
functions. For the reasons
Page 426 U. S. 767
stated above, we cannot say that the emphasis was misplaced or
the finding erroneous. [
Footnote
23]
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
A 1974 amendment to the statute, Laws of 1974, c. 585, further
requires that an aided institution
"shall submit all new programs and major alterations of programs
to the Maryland Council for Higher Education for its review and
recommendation regarding their initiation."
Md.Ann.Code, Art. 77A, § 66(e) (1975).
[
Footnote 2]
Section 68 provides in full:
"The Board of Public Works assisted by the Maryland Council for
Higher Education shall adopt criteria and procedures, not
inconsistent with this subtitle, for the implementation and
administration of the aid program provided for by this subtitle,
including but not limited to criteria and procedures for the
submission of applications for aid under this subtitle, for the
verification of degrees conferred by the applicant private
institutions of higher education, for the submission of reports or
data concerning the utilization of these moneys by such
institutions, and for the method and times during the fiscal year
for paying the aid provided for by this subtitle."
[
Footnote 3]
The requirement, as found by the District Court, that an aided
institution not award "primarily" theological or seminary degrees
is apparently an expansion, made by the Council in the exercise of
its administrative powers,
see n 2,
supra, of the statutory requirement that the
institution not award "only" such degrees.
[
Footnote 4]
The District Court, in its opinion, described the procedures
that the Council to that point had evolved for administering the
statute. These have since been set out and expanded upon in formal
rules and regulations adopted by the Board of Public Works on
January 7, 1976. They are entitled "Criteria and Procedures for Aid
to Nonpublic Institutions of Higher Education," and they appear in
full in 2 Maryland Register 1484-1486 (Oct. 29, 1975). The
description of the funding procedure given in the text, as well as
the quoted phrasings, are drawn from these regulations. We take
judicial notice of them.
[
Footnote 5]
Regulation 01.03.05 I. provides in part:
"Any verification or audit shall be conducted with the greatest
possible speed and the least possible disruption of the
institution's activities and shall be strictly limited to such
information and data as is necessary to determine whether or not
the sectarian usage prohibition has been violated."
[
Footnote 6]
The command of the First Amendment that "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment of religion," is applicable to the
States through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U. S.
1,
330 U. S. 8
(1947);
Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U.
S. 296,
310 U. S. 303
(1940).
[
Footnote 7]
Some of the escrow funds have been paid out since the entry of
the District Court's judgment. Appellants sought an order enjoining
these payments pending appeal, but this was denied, first by the
District Court and then by this Court. 419 U.S. 1030 (1974).
[
Footnote 8]
Two organizations, American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland
and Protestants and Other Americans United for Separation of Church
and State, were also plaintiffs in this suit at its outset. They
were dismissed, however, for lack of standing.
387
F. Supp. 1282, 1284 n. 1 (1974).
[
Footnote 9]
The Governor, Comptroller, and Treasurer of the State of
Maryland were named as defendants, as well as the Board of Public
Works.
[
Footnote 10]
One of the four institutions, Saint Joseph College, has become
defunct since the filing of the suit. It remains a party only
insofar as the plaintiff-appellants seek to compel it to repay to
the State the funds it received in 1971.
[
Footnote 11]
Lemon II posed the question of the appropriate relief
to be ordered in light of
Lemon I's invalidation of the
Pennsylvania private school aid statute. Future payments under that
statute were enjoined, and there was no claim that the Constitution
required the refunding to the State of amounts already paid out.
The statute's challengers, however, did seek to enjoin the payment
of funds intended to reimburse aided schools for expenses incurred
in reliance on the statute prior to its invalidation in
Lemon
I. This Court affirmed the denial of the injunction, reasoning
that the payments would not substantially undermine constitutional
interests, and that there had been reasonable reliance by the
schools on receipt of the funds, especially since the challengers,
although they had filed suit before the expenses were incurred, had
dropped an attempt to enjoin payments pending the outcome of the
litigation.
[
Footnote 12]
See, e.g., Epperson v. Arkansas, 393 U. S.
97,
393 U. S. 104
(1968);
McCollum v. Board of Education, 333 U.
S. 203,
333 U. S.
209-212 (1948);
Everson v. Board of Education,
330 U.S. at
330 U. S.
116.
[
Footnote 13]
It could scarcely be otherwise, or individuals would be
discriminated against for their religion, and the Nation would have
to abandon its accepted practice of allowing members of religious
orders to serve in the Congress and in other public offices.
[
Footnote 14]
See Hunt v. McNair, 413 U. S. 734,
413 U. S. 743
(1973) ("the Court has not accepted the recurrent argument that all
aid is forbidden because aid to one aspect of an institution frees
it to spend its other resources on religious ends").
See also
Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist, 413 U.
S. 756,
413 U. S. 775
(1973);
Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U.
S. 672,
403 U. S. 679
(1971) (plurality opinion);
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
403 U. S. 602,
403 U. S. 664
(1971) (opinion of WHITE, J.);
Board of Education v.
Allen, 392 U. S. 236,
392 U. S. 244
(1968);
Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U.S. at
330 U. S. 17.
[
Footnote 15]
The importance of avoiding persistent and potentially frictional
contact between governmental and religious authorities is such that
it has been held to justify the
extension, rather than the
withholding, of certain benefits to religious organizations. The
Court upheld the exemption of such organizations from property
taxation partly on this ground.
Walz v. Tax Commission,
397 U. S. 664,
397 U. S.
674-075 (1970).
[
Footnote 16]
The danger of political divisiveness had been noted by Members
of the Court in previous cases.
See Walz v. Tax
Commission, 397 U.S. at
397 U. S. 695
(opinion of Harlan, J.);
Board of Education v. Allen, 392
U.S. at
392 U. S. 249
(Harlan, J., concurring);
Abington School Dist. v.
Schempp, 374 U. S. 203,
374 U. S. 307
(1963) (Goldberg, J., concurring).
[
Footnote 17]
The restriction, as imposed, was to remain in effect for 20
years following construction. Since the Court could not approve the
facilities' sectarian use even after a 20-year period, it excised
that time limitation from the statute. 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
682-684 (plurality opinion).
[
Footnote 18]
The elements of the "profile" were that the schools placed
religious restrictions on admission and also faculty appointments;
that they enforced obedience to religious dogma; that they required
attendance at religious services and the study of particular
religious doctrine; that they were an "
integral part'" of the
religious mission of the sponsoring church; that they had religious
indoctrination as a "`substantial purpose'"; and that they imposed
religious restrictions on how and what the faculty could teach. 413
U.S. at 413 U. S.
767-768.
[
Footnote 19]
The program grew out of a study conducted by the Council of the
tenuous financial condition of Maryland's private colleges. All
such colleges are eligible for aid, the church-related ones
constituting less than one-third of those benefited. As noted
above, five church-related colleges were made original defendants
in this action, yet a total of 17 institutions were aided in 1971,
and 18 were eligible in 1972.
[
Footnote 20]
The District Court did not make the same finding with respect to
theology and religion courses taught at the appellee colleges. It
made no contrary finding, but simply was "unable to characterize
the course offerings in these subjects." There was a "possibility"
that
"these courses could be devoted to deepening religious
experiences in the particular faith, rather than to teaching
theology as an academic discipline."
The court considered this possibility sufficient to require that
the Council for Higher Education take steps to insure that no
public funds would be used to support religion and theology
programs. 387 F. Supp. at 1287-1288, 1295-1296. The Council has
complied.
See n 22,
infra. There being no cross-appeal from the District Court
judgment, this aspect of its ruling is not before us, and we
express no opinion as to it.
[
Footnote 21]
The plurality opinion described the colleges under consideration
in
Tilton in this manner:
"All four schools are governed by Catholic religious
organizations, and the faculties and student bodies at each are
predominantly Catholic. Nevertheless, the evidence shows that
non-Catholics were admitted as students and given faculty
appointments. Not one of these four institutions requires its
students to attend religious services. Although all four schools
require their students to take theology courses, the parties
stipulated that these courses are taught according to the academic
requirements of the subject matter and the teacher's concept of
professional standards. The parties also stipulated that the
courses covered a range of human religious experiences, and are not
limited to courses about the Roman Catholic religion. The schools
introduced evidence that they made no attempt to indoctrinate
students or to proselytize. Indeed, some of the required theology
courses at Albertus Magnus and Sacred Heart are taught by rabbis.
Finally, as we have noted, these four schools subscribe to a well
established set of principles of academic freedom, and nothing in
this record shows that these principles are not, in fact, followed.
In short, the evidence shows institutions with admittedly religious
functions but whose predominant higher education mission is to
provide their students with a secular education."
403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
686-687. To be sure, in this case the District Court was
unable to find, as was stipulated in
Tilton, that
mandatory theology or religion courses are taught without taint of
religious indoctrination.
See n 20,
supra. This is not inconsistent,
however, with the District Court's finding of a lack of pervasive
sectarianism. The latter condition would exist only if, because of
the institution's general character, courses other than religion or
theology courses could not be funded without fear of religious
indoctrination.
The role of the affiliated church appears, if anything, to have
been stronger in
Hunt than in this case. The Baptist
College at Charleston, before us in
Hunt, was controlled
by the South Carolina Baptist Convention to the extent that the
Convention elected all members of the Board of Trustees, and
retained the power to approve certain financial transactions, as
well as any amendment of the College's charter. 413 U.S. at
413 U. S.
743.
[
Footnote 22]
The Council, at least, thus far has shown every sign of doing
so. For example, appellants have pointed during this litigation to
three assertedly sectarian uses in which state funds either have
been or could be employed under this statute: the salaries of
teachers teaching religion or theology courses, scholarships for
students in religious studies, and maintenance of buildings used
for religious activity. Brief for Appellants 555. (The alleged
instances of actual use in these ways related to the 1971 funds.)
However, the Council has now adopted regulations specifically
prohibiting the use of state funds in these and other ways:
"A. Art. 77A, § 68A, Annotated Code of Maryland, prohibits
recipient institutions from using State funds for 'sectarian
purposes.' That provision generally proscribes the use of State
funds to support religious instruction, religious worship, or other
activities of a religious nature. Listed below are several
potential uses of State funds which would violate the sectarian use
prohibition. The list is not intended to be all-inclusive and, if
an institution is in doubt whether any other possible use of the
funds might violate the sectarian use prohibition, it should
consult with and seek the advice of the Council in advance."
"(1) Student Aid: State funds may not be used for student aid if
the institution imposes religious restrictions or qualifications on
eligibility for student aid, nor may they be paid to students then
enrolled in a religious, seminarian, or theological academic
program."
"(2) Salaries: State funds may not be used to pay in whole or in
part the salary of any person who is engaged in the teaching of
religion or theology who serves as chaplain or director of the
campus ministry, or who administers or supervises any program of
religious activities."
"(3) Maintenance and Repair: State funds may not be used to pay
any portion of the cost of maintenance or repair of any building or
facility used for the teaching of religion or theology or for
religious worship or for any religious activity."
"(4) Utilities: If an institution has any building or facility
that is used in whole or in part for the teaching of religion or
theology or for religious worship or for any religious activity,
State funds may not be used to pay utilities bills unless those
buildings or facilities are separately metered. If buildings or
facilities used for any religious purpose described in the
preceding sentence are separately metered, the cost of providing
heat, electricity, and water to those buildings or facilities
cannot be paid with State funds."
"(5) Capital Construction and Improvements: If State funds are
used to construct a new building or facility or to renovate an
existing one, the building or facility may not be used for the
teaching of religion or theology or for religious worship or for
any religious activity at any time in the future."
Regulation 01.03.06A.
See n 4,
supra.
[
Footnote 23]
We have discussed in the text only the constitutionality of the
amended statute. Our approval of that statute does not dispose of
the claim, made in the District Court, that the colleges must
refund amounts paid in 1971 under the unamended statute. As noted,
the District Court rejected this claim on the authority of
Lemon II. See n 11,
supra. While their position is not
entirely clear to us, appellants do not appear to challenge this
aspect of the District Court ruling. They assert in this Court that
"the appellee institutions should be required to refund all
payments
not enjoined upon timely filed motions or
application." Brief for Appellants 76 (emphasis added). There
were no "motions or applications," indeed no suit at all, until
well after the 1971 payments had been made. Appellants also speak
of repayments being necessary in order that there be some remedy
"as to public funds paid to the appellee institutions during at
least three fiscal years (1972-73, 1973-74, 1974-75)."
Id.
at 79-80. From these statements, and from the fact that appellants
premise their argument for repayment upon their "vigorous efforts
to enjoin payment and preserve the
status quo pending
litigation,"
id. at 80, we take it that they seek
repayment only of funds paid out after the commencement of this
suit, and despite their efforts to enjoin such payments.
See n 7,
supra.
In any event, the District Court's ruling with respect to the
1971 payments was clearly in keeping with
Lemon II. In
that case, this Court identified two considerations primarily
relevant to the question of retroactive remedy: (1) the
reasonableness and degree of reliance by the institutions on the
payments, and (2) the necessity of refunds to protect the
substantive constitutional rights involved. Reliance was, if
anything, less reasonable in
Lemon II, where at least a
suit had been filed prior to the time the reliance occurred. The
degree of reliance was also, if anything, less in
Lemon
II. There, the colleges had not yet received the funds in
question, but had simply incurred expenses in expectation of
receiving them. The funds in question here long since have been
paid out to, and spent by, the colleges. As for the protection of
substantive constitutional rights, the separation of church and
state may well be better served by not putting the State of
Maryland in the position of a judgment creditor of the appellee
colleges.
Cf. Walz v. Tax Comm'n, 397 U.S. at
397 U. S.
674.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST joins,
concurring in the judgment.
While I join in the judgment of the Court, I am unable to concur
in the plurality opinion substantially for the reasons set forth in
my opinions in
Lemon v.
Page 426 U. S. 768
Kurtzman, 403 U. S. 602
(1971) (
Lemon I), and
Committee for Public Education
v. Nyquist, 413 U. S. 756
(1973). I am no more reconciled now to
Lemon I than I was
when it was decided.
See Nyquist, supra at
413 U. S. 820
(WHITE, J., dissenting). The threefold test of
Lemon I
imposes unnecessary, and, as I believe today's plurality opinion
demonstrates, superfluous tests for establishing "when the State's
involvement with religion passes the peril point" for First
Amendment purposes.
Id. at
413 U. S.
822.
"It is enough for me that the [State is] financing a separable
secular function of overriding importance in order to sustain the
legislation here challenged."
Lemon I, supra at
403 U. S. 664
(opinion of WHITE, J.). As long as there is a secular legislative
purpose, and as long as the primary effect of the legislation is
neither to advance nor inhibit religion, I see no reason --
particularly in light of the "sparse language of the Establishment
Clause,"
Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist, supra
at
413 U. S. 820
-- to take the constitutional inquiry further.
See Lemon I,
supra at
403 U. S. 661
(opinion of WHITE, J.);
Nyquist, supra, at
413 U. S. 813
(WHITE, J., dissenting). However, since 1970, the Court has added a
third element to the inquiry: whether there is "an excessive
government entanglement with religion."
Walz v. Tax
Comm'n, 397 U. S. 664,
397 U. S. 674
(1970). I have never understood the constitutional foundation for
this added element; it is at once both insolubly paradoxical,
see Lemon I, supra at
Page 426 U. S. 769
426 U. S. 668, and
-- as the Court has conceded from the outset -- a "blurred,
indistinct, and variable barrier."
Lemon I, supra, at
403 U. S. 614.
It is not clear that the "weight and contours of entanglement as a
separate constitutional criterion,"
Nyquist, supra at
413 U. S. 822,
are any more settled now than when they first surfaced. Today's
plurality opinion leaves the impression that the criterion really
may not be "separate" at all. In affirming the District Court's
conclusion that the legislation here does not create an "excessive
entanglement" of church and state, the plurality emphasizes with
approval that "the District Court gave dominant importance to the
character of the aided institutions and to its finding that they
are capable of separating secular and religious functions."
Ante at
426 U. S. 766. Yet
these are the same factors upon which the plurality focuses in
concluding that the Maryland legislation satisfies the second part
of the
Lemon I test: that, on the record, the "appellee
colleges are not
pervasively sectarian,'" ante at
426 U. S. 755,
and that the aid at issue was capable of, and is in fact, extended
only to "`the secular side'" of the appellee colleges' operations.
Ante at 426 U. S. 759.
It is unclear to me how the first and third parts of the Lemon
I test are substantially different. * The "excessive
entanglement" test appears no less "curious and mystifying" than
when it was first announced. Lemon I, supra at
403 U. S.
666.
I see no reason to indulge in the redundant exercise of
evaluating the same facts and findings under a different label. No
one in this case challenges the District
Page 426 U. S. 770
Courts finding that the purpose of the legislation here is
secular.
Ante at
426 U. S. 754.
And I do not disagree with the plurality that the primary effect of
the aid program is not advancement of religion. That is enough, in
my view, to sustain the aid programs against constitutional
challenge, and I would say no more.
* Our prior cases demonstrate that the question of whether aid
programs satisfy the "excessive entanglement" test depends at least
to some extent on the degree to which the Court accepts lower
courts' findings of fact.
Cf., e.g., Lemon I, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
665-667 (opinion of WHITE, J.);
Meek v.
Pittenger, 421 U. S. 349,
421 U. S. 392
(1975) (opinion of REHNQUIST, J.).
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL joins,
dissenting.
I agree with Judge Bryan, dissenting from the judgment under
review, that the Maryland Act,
"
in these instances, does, in truth, offend the
Constitution by its provisions of funds, in that it exposes State
money for use in advancing religion, no matter the vigilance to
avoid it."
387
F. Supp. 1282, 1298 (1974) (emphasis in original). Each of the
institutions is a church-affiliated or church-related body. The
subsidiary findings concerning the role of religion on each of the
campuses, summarized by the plurality opinion,
ante at
426 U. S.
755-758, conclusively establish that fact. In that
circumstance, I agree with Judge Bryan that
"[o]f telling decisiveness here is the payment of the grants
directly to the colleges unmarked in purpose. . . . Presently, the
Act is simply a blunderbuss discharge of public funds to a
church-affiliated or church-related college."
387 F. Supp. at 1298-1299. In other words, the Act provides for
payment of general subsidies to religious institutions from public
funds, and I have heretofore expressed my view that "[g]eneral
subsidies of religious activities would, of course, constitute
impermissible state involvement with religion."
Walz v. Tax
Comm'n, 397 U. S. 664,
397 U. S. 690
(1970) (concurring opinion). This is because general subsidies
"tend to promote that type of interdependence between religion and
state which the First Amendment was designed to prevent."
Abington School Dist.
v.
Page 426 U. S. 771
Schempp, 374 U. S. 203,
374 U. S. 236
(1963) (BRENNAN, J., concurring).
"What the Framers meant to foreclose, and what our decisions
under the Establishment Clause have forbidden, are those
involvements of religious with secular institutions which . . .
serve the essentially religious activities of religious
institutions."
Id. at
374 U. S.
294-295.
The history of the bitter controversies over public subsidy of
sectarian educational institutions that began soon after the Nation
was formed is recited in my separate opinion in
Lemon v.
Kurtzman, 403 U. S. 602,
403 U. S. 642
(1971) (
Lemon I). My reasons for concluding in
Lemon
I that all three statutes there before us impermissibly
provided a direct subsidy from public funds for activities carried
on by sectarian educational institutions also support my agreement
with Judge Bryan in this case that "an injunction should issue as
prayed in the complaint stopping future payments under the Maryland
Act to the [appellee] colleges."
387 F.
Supp. at 1300. I said in
Lemon I, supra, at
403 U. S.
659-660:
"I believe that the Establishment Clause forbids . . .
Government to provide funds to sectarian universities in which the
propagation and advancement of a particular religion are a function
or purpose of the institution. . . ."
"I reach this conclusion for [these] reasons . . . : the
necessarily deep involvement of government in the religious
activities of such an institution through the policing of
restrictions, and the fact that subsidies of tax monies directly to
a sectarian institution necessarily aid the proselytizing function
of the institution. . . ."
". . . I do not believe that [direct] grants to such a sectarian
institution are permissible. The reason is not that religion
'permeates' the secular education that is provided. Rather, it is
that the secular education
Page 426 U. S. 772
is provided within the environment of religion; the institution
is dedicated to two goals, secular education
and religious
instruction. When aid flows directly to the institution, both
functions benefit."
(Emphasis in original.)
The discrete interests of government and religion are mutually
best served when each avoids too close a proximity to the
other.
"It is not only the nonbeliever who fears the injection of
sectarian doctrines and controversies into the civil polity, but,
in as high degree, it is the devout believer who fears the
secularization of a creed which becomes too deeply involved with,
and dependent upon, the government."
Abington School Dist. v. Schempp, supra at
374 U. S. 259
(BRENNAN, J., concurring). The Maryland Act requires "too close a
proximity" of government to the subsidized sectarian institutions,
and, in my view, creates real dangers of the "secularization of a
creed."
Ibid.; Lemon I, supra at
403 U. S. 649
(opinion of BRENNAN, J.).
Unlike Judge Bryan,
387 F.
Supp. at 1300, I would also reverse the District Court's denial
of appellants' motion that the appellee institutions be required to
refund all payments made to them. I adhere to the views expressed
in Mr. Justice Douglas' dissent, which I joined, in
Lemon v.
Kurtzman, 411 U. S. 192,
411 U. S. 209
(1973) (
Lemon II):
"There is as much a violation of the Establishment Clause of the
First Amendment whether the payment from public funds to sectarian
schools involves last year, the current year, or next year. . .
."
"Whether the grant is for . . . last year or at the present
time, taxpayers are forced to contribute to sectarian schools a
part of their tax dollars."
I would reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand
with directions to enter a new judgment permanently
Page 426 U. S. 773
enjoining the Board of Public Works of the State of Maryland
from implementing the Maryland Act, and requiring the appellee
institutions to refund all payments made to them pursuant to the
Act.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, dissenting.
In my view, the decisive differences between this case and
Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U. S. 672, lie
in the nature of the theology courses that are a compulsory part of
the curriculum at each of the appellee institutions and the type of
governmental assistance provided to these church-affiliated
colleges. In
Tilton, the Court emphasized that the
theology courses were taught as academic subjects.
"Although all four schools require their students to take
theology courses, the parties stipulated that these courses are
taught according to the academic requirements of the subject matter
and the teacher's concept of professional standards. The parties
also stipulated that the courses covered a range of human religious
experiences, and are not limited to courses about the Roman
Catholic religion. The schools introduced evidence that they made
no attempt to indoctrinate students or to proselytize. Indeed, some
of the required theology courses at Albertus Magnus and Sacred
Heart are taught by rabbis."
Id. at
403 U. S.
686-687. Here, by contrast, the District Court was
unable to find that the compulsory religion courses were taught as
an academic discipline.
"[T]he hiring patterns for religion or theology departments are
a special case. and present a unique problem. All five defendants
staff their religion or theology departments chiefly with clerics
of the affiliated church. At two defendants, Western
Page 426 U. S. 774
Maryland and Mt. St. Mary's,
all members of the
religion or theology faculty are clerics. The problem presented by
the make-up of these departments is obvious. Recognition of the
academic freedom of these instructors does not necessarily lead to
a conclusion that courses in the religion or theology departments
at the five defendants have no overtones of indoctrination."
"
* * * *"
"The theology and religion courses of each defendant must be
viewed in the light of that shared objective [of encouraging
spiritual development of the students]. While most of the
defendants do not offer majors in religion or theology, each
maintains a vigorous religion or theology department. The primary
concern of these departments, either admittedly or by the obvious
thrust of the courses, is Christianity. As already noted, the
departments are staffed almost entirely with clergy of the
affiliated church. At each of the defendants, certain of these
courses are required."
". . . [A] department staffed mainly by clerics of the
affiliated church and geared toward a limited array of the possible
theology or religion courses affords a congenial means of
furthering the secondary objective of fostering religious
experience."
387
F. Supp. 1282, 1291296 (emphasis in original). In light of
these findings, I cannot agree with the plurality's assertion that
there is "no constitutionally significant distinction" between the
colleges in
Tilton and those in the present case.
Ante at
426 U. S. 759.
The findings in
Tilton clearly established that the
federal building construction grants benefited academic
institutions that made no attempt to inculcate the religious
beliefs of the affiliated church. In the present case, by
contrast,
Page 426 U. S. 775
the compulsory theology courses may be "devoted to deepening
religious experiences in the particular faith, rather than to
teaching theology as an academic discipline." 387 F. Supp. at 1288.
In view of this salient characteristic of the appellee institutions
and the noncategorical grants provided to them by the State of
Maryland, I agree with the conclusion of the dissenting member of
the three-judge court that the challenged Act,
"
in these instances, does, in truth, offend the
Constitution by its provisions of funds, in that it exposes State
money for use in advancing religion, no matter the vigilance to
avoid it."
Id. at 1298 (emphasis in original).
For the reasons stated, and those expressed by MR. JUSTICE
BRENNAN and MR. JUSTICE STEVENS, I dissent from the judgment of the
Court and the plurality's opinion.
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS, dissenting.
My views are substantially those expressed by MR. JUSTICE
BRENNAN. However, I would add emphasis to the pernicious tendency
of a state subsidy to tempt religious schools to compromise their
religious mission without wholly abandoning it. The disease of
entanglement may infect a law discouraging wholesome religious
activity as well as a law encouraging the propagation of a given
faith.