The federal judge who refused to define the word âwomanâ in court was wrong, six women claim in their lawsuit appeal against the sorority that inducted a transgender member at its University of Wyoming chapter. Â
Kappa Kappa Gammaâs UW chapter inducted its first transgender member, Artemis Langford, in 2022. The following March, seven sorority sisters (that number is down to six in current litigation) sued the sorority, saying it breached its own governing rules by departing from the true definition of âwoman.â Â
U.S. District Court Judge Alan B. Johnson dismissed their lawsuit in August, saying itâs the policy of Ohio courts, where Kappa is incorporated, not to interfere with private organizations and that Kappa has a First Amendment right to interpret its governing documents however it wishes. Â
The women are challenging Johnsonâs dismissal in the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals.
They argue that Johnson got it wrong: that courts will interfere with Ohio organizations if the organizations betray their own contracts; and that Kappa only has a First Amendment right to be free from state interference with its known purpose â not from its own betrayal of that purpose. Â
âThe question at the heart of this case is the definition of âwoman,â a term that Kappa has used since 1870 to prescribe membership, in Kappaâs governing documents,â reads the appeal argument, filed Monday in the 10th Circuit. âUsing any conceivable tool of contractual interpretation, the term refers to biological females. And yet, the district court avoided this inevitable conclusion by applying the wrong law and ignoring the factual assertions in the complaint.â Â
The argument points to case law directing courts to read language as "plain" and as it would have been interpreted at the time of a contract's composition.Â
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The For-Your-Own-Good ClaimÂ
Among his other dismissals in August, Johnson dismissed the womenâs derivative claim against the sorority. Thatâs a civil claim by which members of an organization can sue their own group on allegations that the group is hurting itself. Itâs an attempt to save an organization from itself. Â
The womenâs argument points to their original allegations that Kappa leaders broke from normal anonymous-voting practices, excluded some sisters from the vote, and threatened people with the label of âbigotâ when it came time to vote on whether to admit Langford. Â
When the women or their parents objected, Kappa allegedly met their qualms âwith hostility and retaliation,â says Mondayâs filing. Â
âKappa disregarded its bylaws and other governing documents to admit Langford, a biological male, into the sorority,â the argument adds. Â
But In 2015 âŚÂ
In prior court filings before Johnson, Kappa argued back that it had a right to interpret its own rules, while the women didnât have a right to be in a sorority. The sorority also pointed to 2015 and later public statements in which Kappa vowed to start accepting people âwho identify as women.âÂ
The suing sisters countered again, saying âoff-the-cuffâ mission statements donât alter an organizationâs governing documents. They call the governing documents âcontractsâ between the group and its members. Â
âOhio law is clear that organizations that choose to avail themselves of the corporate form must accept the responsibilities that accompany that form, including the duty to abide by the terms of their articles of incorporation, bylaws and other governing documents,â says the womenâs appeal argument. Â
The argument points to cases in which Ohio courts interfered with organizations that broke their own rules. Â
A Survivor In ThereÂ
In his August ruling, Johnson also dismissed the womenâs direct claims against Kappa, saying that while they were able to show that sorority President Mary Pat Rooneyâs actions caused injury in Wyoming, they didnât allege personal injuries unique to themselves.Â
Johnson rebuked the women for devoting much of their complaint to Langfordâs allegedly unsettling behaviors within the sorority house, rather than listing more direct claims against the sorority. Â
The judge wrote that any injury from Langfordâs admission into the sorority âinured to all KKG members alike, whether in Laramie or beyond.âÂ
The women protest this in their Monday argument, saying their complaint does demonstrate that the sororityâs actions harmed them. Â
âPlaintiffs allege personal injuries stemming from the strange and sexualized behavior of the biological male â Langford â that Kappa admitted into the sorority house that were different from the injuries to the sorority as a whole,â says the argument. âSpecifically, Langfordâs unwanted staring, photographing, and videotaping of the Plaintiffs, as well as his asking questions about sex and displaying a visible erection while in the house, invaded Plaintiffsâ privacy and caused emotional distress in a personalized and unique way.â Â
One of the plaintiffs is a sexual assault survivor, the argument adds. Â
First Amendment RightsÂ
Johnson had ruled that the landmark case Boy Scouts of America v. Dale was controlling in the Kappa case. Â
In Boy Scouts, the private organization fought against appointing a gay scoutmaster, despite a New Jersey anti-discrimination law requiring them to. Â
The U.S. Supreme Court ultimately ruled that the Boy Scouts of America was free of the state lawâs requirement, because private organizations have a First Amendment right to dictate the terms of their own membership. Â
From this and a similar case, Johnson concluded that Kappa can define the word âwomanâ however it wants to as part of its expressive association right. Â
The women are claiming Johnson was wrong to apply these two cases to insulate Kappa, since they both used the First Amendment to protect groups from meddlesome state laws, not from their own internal deviations. Â
âThere is no state actor here, and no authority supports the courtâs novel conclusion that the First Amendment protects a private organization from a private lawsuit when it contravenes its own voluntarily chosen and private obligations as provided in its corporate bylaws,â reads the argument. Â
The women say their lawsuit attempts to correct Kappaâs betrayal of its own governing rules, not Kappaâs resistance to any state law that would impose membership requirements.Â
âSheâ Vs. âHeâÂ
Like the lawsuit complaint by attorneys Cassie Craven and John Knepper, this appeal argument by Sylvia May Mailman, Gene Schaerr, Craven and Knepper uses the pronoun âheâ for Langford. Â
Johnson had used âsheâ for Langford in his order dismissing the lawsuit.Â
The Kappa attorneys and Langfordâs attorney called the inductee âsheâ in legal documents. Â
Langfordâs attorney in a June 21 filing accused the plaintiffs of âfling(ing) dehumanizing mudâ at Langford with the male pronouns, and rebuked the plaintiffsâ verbiage as outside courtroom decorum. Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.




