A federal judge on Friday dismissed a group of sorority membersâ lawsuit, which they waged against Kappa Kappa Gamma for admitting a transgender member into its Wyoming chapter - again.
U.S. District Court Judge Alan B. Johnson maintained the same stance he had the first time he dismissed this case in August 2023 - that case law prevents courts and governments generally from interfering in the inner associations of a private group like a sorority.
A group of seven (later six) women filed suit against Kappa Kappa Gamma in the spring of 2023, saying sorority leadership violated the groupâs own bylaws to induct a transgender member in fall 2022 at its Wyoming-based chapter.
Johnson dismissed their case that August, citing case law giving private organizations the right to dictate the terms of their own membership.
âWe dismissed that complaint without prejudice on the grounds that the sorority was free, as a private organization, to define the word âwomanâ in its bylaws however it wanted,â wrote Johnson in a Friday order, âand therefore the sorority was not contractually obligated to reject transwomen members.â
The plaintiffs appealed at the time, but the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals said there was a chance Johnsonâs order wasnât final and therefore couldnât be heard on appeal, yet.
Two of the original plaintiffs (and one new plaintiff) re-filed the complaint in June.
Most of the claims were similar, but the women brought âfour slightly different claims,â wrote Johnson.
They brought a set of derivative claims against Kappaâs Fraternity Council â essentially claims that the council breached their duties to harm the organization itself. They also alleged that Kappa breached its contract with the women, and that the Fraternity Council induced members to join the organization on false claims that it was a group for women.
âHaving considered the issues presented â again â we find that the majority of the claims must be dismissed on the grounds that this Court still may not interfere with Kappaâs contractually valid interpretation of its own Bylaws,â wrote Johnson.
Not A Biologist
The women failed to show how inducting a transgender member broke the organizationâs bylaws, Johnson wrote. He added that though the groupâs early and founding documents reference women, nothing in the bylaws requires Kappa to define the word women as including âonly those individuals born with a certain set of reproductive organs.â
The women cited President Donald Trumpâs executive order issued this year, saying adult human females are people âbelonging, at conception, to the sex that produces the large reproductive cell.â
Johnson voiced confusion at this.
âWe are not entirely sure what this definition means, not having a degree in biology,â wrote the judge.
Even so, thatâs just the executive branchâs interpretation of the law â ânot relevant in the world of private contracts, which is where we currently find ourselves.â
And when adopting the plaintiffsâ newer framing of the case and applying Ohio contract law, Johnson reached the same conclusion as he did two years ago: Kappa doesnât have to exclude transgender members to keep faith with other members.
At the time the women joined the sorority, Kappa had already pronounced a âwell-publicized intent ⌠to include transgender women,â wrote Johnson.
Kappa issued a document to members called âbylaws and standing rules revision 2022â three years ago, which is not officially a bylaw, and which announced that the National Panhellenic Conference would define âwomanâ as a person who lives and self-identifies as a woman.
While that document is not a bylaw, Kappaâs bylaws donât reference a âsingle-sexâ requirement. The sorority is under powerful private-group autonomy laws that include interpreting its own bylaw language, so âwe have no authority to review the dispute.â
Courts do grant exceptions to that protection, in the case of fraud and overshooting corporate powers, for example.
Johnson found the womenâs allegations that Kappa falls under those exceptions âconclusory and contradicted by their own evidence,â he wrote.
The sorority leaders didnât commit fraud or exceed their powers as alleged, he added. Johnson also denied the plaintiffsâ claims that sorority leaders didnât act in good faith, since they werenât under a known duty âto publicly clarify every term in every policy before a new member joins.â
Other allegations such as breach of contract, undue influence, false representation, and retaliation also fail, Johnson wrote.
The retaliation claim invoked the Ohio Constitution, which only protects from retaliation victims of state actors, he noted.
Any attempt for the women to amend their claims in Johnsonâs court would be âfutile,â the judge concluded, dismissing the case. The judge dismissed it âwith prejudice,â meaning they canât re-file it in his court.
But doing so gives the women a clear basis for appealing the case to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals. They did so after their initial 2023 court loss, but the 10th Circuit decline to hear the case, over doubtâs that Johnsonâs 2023 dismissal was final.
June Complaint
The June complaint had alleged that the transgender inductee Artemis Langford was not inducted into Kappa during the 2022 inductee-vetting ârush week,â but that chapter leaders, with the approval of headquarters, later conducted an ill-noticed and spontaneous vote about whether to induct Langford.
Though sorority rules call for the use of a voting application that uses secret ballots, this election required the women to post their email addresses with their votes, says the amended complaint.
Leaders at the chapter based on the University of Wyoming campus also urged women against voting down Langfordâs membership, telling them theyâd be considered bigots and they could face expulsion or suspension from the sorority if they didnât have a âpersonalityâ focused reason for not voting Langford into the sorority, the complaint says.
When two of the women asked about the studentâs application, the membership chair âdownplayed any possibility that the student would become a Kappa member, claiming there was a â99.9% chanceâ that he would not be offered membership,â says the complaint.
The lawsuit complaint calls the inductee âheâ while Johnson, in his various orders, has called the inductee âshe,â as have sorority leaders in their filings.
The complaint says the membership chair of that era âintentionally provided limited notice of the only opportunity to meet the student as part of a plan hatched by national (sorority) representatives to ensure that Wyoming chapter members would not have a basis to vote against the studentâs membership.â
Two of the women werenât allowed to vote because they werenât present at the Sept. 19, 2022, chapter meeting where the vote was held, though their complaint says they should have been allowed to vote anyway, under the sororityâs rules.
There were two votes. Some women who felt pressured changed their votes to yes on the second vote, the complaint alleges. When enough votes were secured for âthe studentâs membership,â the voting stops, it adds.
The student was admitted by a narrow margin, the complaint says.
âNothing about this voting process on Sept. 20, 2022, was normal,â says the complaint. âThis irregular process violated Kappaâs Standing Rules and Policies in multiple ways.â
The women allege that Kappa stands in violation of its own bylaws and founding documents, which refer to expectations and induction procedures for Kappa âwomenâ and âladies.â
Kappasâ first, 1871 bylaws said âany lady may become a candidate for membershipâ if she has good moral character and above-average talent, and who goes to a college or seminary.
The groupâs articles of incorporation say the sororityâs purpose is âto unite women,â the complaint adds.
The Guidance
The organization in 2022 dispatched a frequently-asked question guidance document saying the sorority under National Panhellenic Conference rules could define âwomanâ for purposes of recruitment as someone who lives and self-identifies as a woman, and that Kappa was âcomprised of women and individuals who identify as women.â
The guidance was provided to Kappa leaders less than 60 days before the sororityâs convention and didnât alter the bylaws, the complaint alleges, adding that the document was never voted on.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





