CROSSOVER: Mandamus Clarifies Ecclesiastical-Abstention Limits for Religious School Disputes, Allowing Neutral-Principles Claims to Proceed
In Re Fort Bend Christian Academy, 14-26-00132-CV, June 23, 2026.
On appeal from 240th District Court, Fort Bend County, Texas
Synopsis
The Fourteenth Court of Appeals held that ecclesiastical abstention deprived the trial court of jurisdiction over parents’ contract, promissory-estoppel, and DTPA claims to the extent those claims required a court to interpret a religious school’s internal policies on academic accommodations, bullying, harassment, and discipline. But the court allowed claims tied to TAPPS concussion-management obligations to proceed if they can be resolved through neutral principles of law without intruding into religious doctrine or internal governance.
Relevance to Family Law
For Texas family lawyers, this opinion matters whenever school choice, educational decision-making, reimbursement claims, or child-related damage theories intersect with religious institutions. In divorce and SAPCR litigation, parties often try to convert disputes over a child’s placement at a private religious school into reimbursement, offset, enforcement, modification, or best-interest arguments; this case draws a sharp line between claims that can be proven through neutral, secular standards and claims that necessarily challenge a religious school’s faith-infused internal governance. That distinction can shape discovery, admissibility, third-party practice, allocation of educational expenses, and the strategic framing of conservatorship disputes involving religious schooling.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
Fort Bend Christian Academy, a private Christian school in Sugar Land, was sued after a student, B.H., allegedly suffered a traumatic brain injury following a football-practice incident in which a teammate head-butted him. According to the parents’ pleadings, coaches witnessed the event, failed to implement concussion protocol, and failed to follow an emergency medical plan allegedly incorporated through the school’s handbook and its athletic association rules. The parents further alleged that after the injury, the school failed to provide academic accommodations and failed to respond appropriately under its policies addressing bullying, harassment, and discipline, forcing them to withdraw B.H. and place him in a school better suited to students with disabilities.
The lawsuit included a negligence claim on behalf of B.H. for personal injuries and individual claims by the parents for breach of contract, promissory estoppel, and DTPA violations. Those individual claims were based on the school’s Enrollment Agreement, the Student and Family Handbook, and incorporated TAPPS rules. The Academy challenged only the parents’ individual claims by plea to the jurisdiction, arguing that because it is a religious institution, ecclesiastical abstention barred adjudication of claims that would require a secular court to interpret its internal policies and governance decisions.
The trial court denied the plea. The Academy then sought mandamus relief, contending that the denial forced it to litigate claims over which the trial court had no subject-matter jurisdiction.
Issues Decided
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Whether ecclesiastical abstention barred the trial court from exercising subject-matter jurisdiction over the parents’ contract, promissory-estoppel, and DTPA claims insofar as those claims depended on the religious school’s internal policies governing academic accommodations, bullying, harassment, and discipline.
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Whether the same doctrine also barred claims premised on concussion-management duties arising from the school’s membership in TAPPS and the incorporation of TAPPS rules into school materials.
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Whether mandamus was the proper vehicle to correct the trial court’s partial exercise of jurisdiction over claims allegedly foreclosed by the First Amendment.
Rules Applied
The court worked from familiar Texas ecclesiastical-abstention principles:
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The First Amendment prohibits civil courts from interfering with religious doctrine, free exercise, and internal church governance.
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In Texas, ecclesiastical abstention is a limit on subject-matter jurisdiction, not merely an affirmative defense. Westbrook v. Penley, 231 S.W.3d 389 (Tex. 2007); Masterson v. Diocese of Nw. Tex., 422 S.W.3d 594 (Tex. 2013).
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A plea to the jurisdiction is the proper procedural vehicle when religious-liberty grounds are said to defeat jurisdiction. Westbrook, 231 S.W.3d at 394.
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Courts must analyze jurisdiction on a claim-by-claim basis. San Jacinto River Auth. v. City of Conroe, 688 S.W.3d 124 (Tex. 2024).
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Civil courts may hear disputes involving religious entities only if neutral principles of law can resolve the controversy without interpreting religious doctrine, interfering with believers’ free-exercise rights, or meddling in church government. In re Lubbock, 624 S.W.3d 506 (Tex. 2021); Masterson, 422 S.W.3d 594.
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Even where neutral principles exist in the abstract, the exception must be narrowly drawn; courts must also ask whether applying those principles would impose civil liability for a religious institution’s compliance with its own internal rules or governance choices. In re Lubbock, 624 S.W.3d at 513.
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Religious schools are not categorically immune from civil adjudication, but Texas courts have recognized that faith-based schools can fall within ecclesiastical protection when the dispute targets their religious mission and internal decision-making. In re St. Thomas High Sch., 495 S.W.3d 500 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2016, orig. proceeding).
Application
The court treated the Academy’s plea the way appellate specialists would expect: not as an all-or-nothing challenge to the lawsuit, but as a claim-specific jurisdictional screening device. That framing mattered. The Academy did not contest every cause of action in the case; rather, it argued that the parents’ individual claims crossed the constitutional line because they would require a court to evaluate whether the school correctly applied internal policies rooted in its Christian educational mission.
The appellate court agreed in substantial part. As to the claims based on academic accommodations, bullying, harassment, and discipline, the court concluded that adjudication would require more than ordinary contract construction. Those policies were not viewed as freestanding secular promises detached from the school’s religious identity. Instead, they were embedded in the Academy’s internal governance and educational mission, which the record reflected was expressly biblical in orientation. A civil court could not decide whether the school properly handled those matters without second-guessing how a religious institution implemented its own standards for student care, discipline, and educational response. In the court’s view, that inquiry would impermissibly entangle the judiciary in religious doctrine and school governance.
The concussion-related allegations were different. The court distinguished duties allegedly arising from TAPPS membership and incorporated concussion-management requirements. Those obligations, as framed by the pleadings, could be assessed through neutral principles of law because they involved external athletic-association standards and operational safety protocols rather than doctrinal judgments or ecclesiastical decision-making. Put differently, a court could potentially ask whether a concussion protocol existed, whether it was triggered, and whether it was followed, without deciding any religious question.
That distinction explains why the mandamus was granted only in part. The court found a jurisdictional defect as to one category of claims but not as to another. The message is strategic and practical: the viability of claims against a religious institution will turn less on the label attached to the cause of action than on the actual decisional work the court would have to perform to resolve it.
Holding
The Fourteenth Court held that the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine barred the trial court from exercising subject-matter jurisdiction over the parents’ individual claims insofar as they were based on the Academy’s internal policies governing academic accommodations, bullying, harassment, and discipline. Because resolving those claims would require judicial interpretation of a religious school’s internal standards and would intrude upon internal governance decisions informed by religious mission, the plea to the jurisdiction should have been granted as to that category of claims.
The court separately held that ecclesiastical abstention did not automatically bar claims premised on concussion-management obligations arising from TAPPS rules incorporated into the school’s governing materials. Those claims could proceed, at least jurisdictionally, if they can be resolved through neutral principles of law without interpreting religious doctrine or imposing civil liability for internal ecclesiastical decision-making.
Finally, the court held that mandamus relief was appropriate because a trial court acts without authority when it exercises subject-matter jurisdiction over claims barred by ecclesiastical abstention. The petition was therefore conditionally granted in part and denied in part.
Practical Application
In family litigation, this case should immediately alter how you frame school-related disputes involving religious institutions. If you represent a parent seeking reimbursement for unilateral private-school tuition, therapy costs, tutoring, transportation, or educational remediation after an alleged school failure, do not assume you can litigate the school’s internal disciplinary or accommodation decisions inside the family case through third-party discovery or collateral fault allocation. If proving your client’s position requires showing that the religious school mishandled bullying, failed to apply internal student-support policies, or wrongly disciplined the child under faith-based standards, expect an ecclesiastical-abstention objection.
By contrast, if the dispute turns on secular, externally verifiable obligations—athletic safety rules, state reporting requirements, written tuition terms, attendance records, or other objectively measurable conduct—the argument for neutral-principles adjudication is much stronger. That matters in modification cases where one parent claims the other exercised poor educational judgment, in reimbursement disputes over school-transfer expenses, and in best-interest presentations where a party tries to blame a religious school for a child’s decline.
Practitioners should also appreciate the procedural significance. Ecclesiastical abstention is jurisdictional. That means it can support a plea to the jurisdiction, limits discovery into protected matters, and creates mandamus risk if a trial court allows the case to proceed too far into religious-governance terrain. In practical terms, family lawyers should treat this as both a sword and a shield: a sword when trying to cabin an opposing party’s school-based blame narrative, and a shield when protecting clients from expansive discovery aimed at faith-based institutional decision-making.
Checklists
Framing School-Related Claims in a Family Case
- Identify whether the alleged misconduct arises from internal religious-school policies or from secular external standards.
- Separate claims involving discipline, accommodations, bullying response, pastoral guidance, or mission-based educational judgments from claims involving objective safety protocols.
- Plead reimbursement, offset, or damages theories using neutral, secular facts wherever possible.
- Avoid framing the issue as whether the religious school “correctly” applied its own handbook if that handbook is intertwined with faith-based governance.
- Ask whether the court can decide the issue without interpreting doctrine, religious mission, or internal school polity.
Preserving an Ecclesiastical-Abstention Defense
- Raise the issue early by plea to the jurisdiction.
- Attack jurisdiction on a claim-by-claim basis rather than with broad, conclusory assertions.
- Develop evidence showing the school’s religious mission and how the challenged policies are embedded in internal governance.
- Emphasize that the objection is jurisdictional, not merely defensive.
- Seek to limit discovery that would force inquiry into doctrinal or governance questions.
- Consider mandamus if the trial court refuses to dismiss protected claims.
Building a Neutral-Principles Theory
- Anchor the claim to external rules, contracts, association bylaws, or safety standards.
- Identify objective benchmarks a secular court can apply without theological interpretation.
- Show that liability can be determined without second-guessing discipline, faith formation, or internal pastoral judgment.
- Distinguish incorporated third-party standards from internally created religious policies.
- Draft the petition so the requested relief does not require judicial supervision of religious governance.
Using the Case in Conservatorship and Education Disputes
- In school-choice disputes, focus on the child’s measurable needs and outcomes rather than inviting the court to grade a religious school’s internal decision-making.
- In reimbursement claims, tie expenses to secular evidence such as neuropsychological recommendations, tuition invoices, transportation, and treatment costs.
- In modification cases, be prepared to argue that allegations against a religious school are either jurisdictionally barred or too entangled with ecclesiastical matters to support the requested relief.
- Use the opinion to resist overbroad subpoenas to religious schools seeking internal disciplinary deliberations or accommodation analyses.
- If representing the parent advocating for a school change, build the case around the child’s current needs and future plan rather than institutional fault.
Avoiding the Non-Prevailing Party’s Problem
- Do not assume that recasting a grievance as contract, promissory estoppel, or DTPA will avoid ecclesiastical abstention.
- Do not rely on a handbook-based theory unless you can show the relevant provisions are secular and objectively enforceable.
- Do not collapse external safety rules and internal religious policies into a single undifferentiated claim.
- Do not ignore the possibility that partial dismissal will leave only the neutral-principles portion of the case intact.
- Do not wait until late-stage discovery to confront the jurisdictional problem.
Citation
In re Fort Bend Christian Academy, No. 14-26-00132-CV, ___ S.W.3d ___, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] June 23, 2026, orig. proceeding).
Full Opinion
Family Law Crossover
This ruling can be weaponized in divorce or custody litigation in at least two ways. First, a parent defending a decision to keep a child in—or remove a child from—a religious school can use Fort Bend Christian Academy to block the other side from litigating the school’s internal handling of discipline, bullying, accommodations, or student conduct as though the family court were a super-school-board. If the opponent’s theory depends on proving that the religious school violated its own faith-shaped internal policies, the response is not merely “irrelevant”; it may be jurisdictionally forbidden.
Second, the case gives the more careful advocate a roadmap for getting useful school-related evidence before the court without triggering abstention. In a conservatorship or reimbursement fight, frame the dispute around secular consequences and neutral benchmarks: attendance, grades, documented injuries, outside medical recommendations, tuition costs, transfer expenses, or objective athletic-safety failures. The lawyer who understands this divide will be able either to suppress an adversary’s institutional-fault narrative or to preserve a viable, non-ecclesiastical evidentiary path to the same practical relief.
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