CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA – The Sixteenth Judicial Court in Virginia ruled yesterday that the University of Virginia Health System (UVA) wrongfully denied an employee’s religious exemption and unlawfully fired her for not taking the COVID-19 shot. The Court granted the employee injunctive relief by reversing the UVA’s firing decision and awarding monetary damages to the employee.
In
McCoy v. Rector & Visitors UVA/UVA Health System, Virginia attorneys Rick
Boyer, David Browne, Christopher M. Collins, Bret G. Daniel, and Patrick M. McSweeney
represented plaintiff Kaycee McCoy in the case. McCoy had worked as a highly
specialized cytotechnologist at UVA for nearly 10 years. In September 2021, she
requested a religious exemption to the university’s COVID-19 shot mandate since
the university’s vaccination policy allowed for exemptions for medical or
religious reasons. A committee of UVA’s human resources personnel reviewed
McCoy’s exemption request to determine the sincerity of her religious beliefs,
but ultimately denied her exemption without explanation and did not allow her
to appeal the decision. UVA fired McCoy in November 2021 after she did not
comply with the university’s mandate according to her religious beliefs.
In
granting the injunction, District Court Judge Claude V. Worrell, II, explained
that Virigina courts usually leave the hiring and firing decisions of
organizations alone unless a decision is “arbitrary and capricious.” Case law
defines those terms as decisions made “without a determining principle.”
Essentially, Judge Worrell examined whether the university stepped legally out
of bounds by evaluating the sincerity of McCoy’s religious beliefs, and whether
they arbitrarily chose to fire her without a clear underlying principle.
Judge
Worrell wrote in his opinion, “…here, we have essentially a religious test that
is being applied to determine sincerity of belief, and that is violative of the
separation of church and state….”
Judge
Worrell noted the realm of religion is beyond the expertise of any government
body, and that since McCoy had “met all the necessary requirements to show she
had sincerely held religious belief that allowed her to seek an exemption”
under UVA policy, he ruled UVA denied her exemption and fired her “in an
arbitrary and capricious manner.”
The
ruling prevents UVA from discriminating against McCoy for the COVID shot as
long as she continues to be eligible for a religious exemption. The Court
ordered UVA to pay damages in the amount of McCoy’s salary from the date of her
wrongful firing.
In
January 2022, UVA rescinded its COVID shot mandate after Virginia Governor
Glenn Youngkin issued an executive order removing the mandate for state
employees.
Liberty
Counsel Founder and Chairman Mat Staver said, “This is an important victory for
religious liberty and for those who have not caved into these unlawful shot
mandates. Forcing an employee to choose between their sincerely held religious
beliefs and their job is highly unconstitutional. Applying for a religious
exemption is a legal right and cannot be arbitrarily denied.”
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