In Warnick v. All Saints Episcopal Church, (PA Com. Pl., April 15, 2014), a Pennsylvania trial court dismissed a suit brought by Episcopal priest Jeremy Warnick against All Saints Episcopal Church (his former parish), the Episcopal Bishop of Pennsylvania and three All Saints congregants. The suit, alleging contract and defamation claims, challenges Bishop Charles Bennison's revocation of Warnick's license to minister in Pennsylvania, the Bishop's letter to the congregation explaining the decision and statements made by three congregants at a church meeting. The controversy revolved around Warnick's proposal for a radical restructuring of the parish. It also involved complaints that Warnick was living on week ends with a woman (who he then married in a Methodist ceremony) before his divorce from his wife was finalized, and Warnick had posted answers to a "sexual position quiz" on Facebook.
After Warnick unsuccessfully pursued a canonical complaint against Bennison, he filed this civil lawsuit. The court held that both the First Amendment requirement of deference to ecclesiastical courts and the ministerial exception doctrine require dismissal of the complaint. The court added that even if all the claims were not barred by the First Amendment, "Father Warnick’s claims fail as a matter
of law because the undisputed evidence shows that necessary elements have
not been shown for defamation, contract and civil conspiracy claims."