Dispute to return to court
Marisa O’Neil
St. James in Newport Beach, two other breakaway Anglican churches and
the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles are headed back to court after
failing to reach an agreement in mediation regarding a property
dispute.
The diocese, St. James Anglican Church in Newport Beach, All
Saints’ in Long Beach and St. David’s in North Hollywood were ordered
to mediation by a Superior Court judge last month. The diocese is
suing the three churches for return of property, including church
buildings.
“Now we go back to the judge and the case will proceed through the
court as if mediation had not happened,” said Daniel Lula, an
attorney for St. James.
Attorneys will meet with the judge this week to set dates to hear
a series of motions. The churches are asking for the case to be
dismissed.
If the motions are not granted, the attorneys will prepare to go
to trial, Lula said.
The lawsuit came after the three churches seceded from the
Episcopal Church of the United States last year. The churches broke
away because they disagreed with the Episcopal Church’s more liberal
views on homosexuality, the divinity of Jesus Christ and the
supremacy of the Bible.
St. James, on Via Lido in Newport Beach, seceded and placed itself
under the Diocese of Luwero in the Anglican Church of Uganda, Africa.
It removed “Episcopal” in its name, calling itself St. James Anglican
Church.
The other two churches followed.
The diocese filed suit against each of the churches and in
December a judge consolidated the three into one Orange County case.
St. James administrators say the property is not owned by the
diocese, but by a nonprofit organization.
Members of St. James and their pastor, the Rev. Praveen Bunyan,
traveled to Uganda in February to meet with the leaders of their new
diocese, and ordained two ministers on the trip.
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