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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowA federal jury ruled Friday that a northern Indiana Roman Catholic diocese discriminated against a former teacher in one of its schools by firing her after church officials learned she was trying to get pregnant through in vitro fertilization.
The group of five women and seven men announced its decision in favor of Emily Herx late Friday afternoon after beginning deliberations about 10:30 a.m., finding she was the victim of discrimination when the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend declined to renew her contract at St. Vincent de Paul School in 2011. Her attorneys had argued that male teachers accused of violating the moral teachings of the church had been allowed to keep their jobs.
The jury awarded Herx $1.75 million for emotional and physical damages, $125,000 for medical expenses, $75,000 for lost wages and $1 in punitive damages, WANE-TV reported.
The diocese had contended Herx violated the terms of her contract and plans to file an appeal of the decision, according to the station. The diocese argued that, according to church teachings, in vitro fertilization is gravely evil, no circumstance can justify it, and those beliefs apply to men and women who participate in the procedure.
IVF involves mixing egg and sperm in a laboratory dish and transferring a resulting embryo into the womb.
Herx, who is from Hoagland, about 15 miles northeast of Fort Wayne, testified during the trial before U.S. District Judge Robert L. Miller Jr. that a fertility doctor told her IVF was her most likely way to have a second child.
The treatments began in early 2010, and Herx said she kept her principal informed at the woman's request.
Bishop Kevin Rhoades testified Thursday he didn't know that Sandra Guffey, Herx's principal and a fellow Catholic, had known for more than a year that Herx was undergoing the infertility treatment and was unaware of emails between Guffey and Herx about the treatment, The Journal Gazette reported.
Herx's attorney, Kathleen Delaney, asked Rhoades if, after seeing the emails, he could see that Herx might have felt she had the support of her bosses to undergo the treatment.
Rhoades said yes, but also said he's not sure whether it would have changed the decision to terminate her contract.
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