St. James church files counter suit
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Marisa O’Neil
A breakaway Newport Beach church being sued by the Episcopal Diocese
of Los Angeles filed a counter suit this week, alleging breach of
contract in its current property dispute, attorneys disclosed Friday.
Attorneys for St. James Anglican Church filed the cross-complaint
Wednesday in Orange County Superior Court. It claims the diocese put
in writing a promise not to try to seize property from St. James.
The diocese filed a lawsuit last year against St. James, All
Saints’ in Long Beach and St. David’s in North Hollywood, claiming
rights to their property. The three churches last year broke away
from the diocese to align themselves with more conservative Anglican
views.
All parties were ordered back to court in April after unsuccessful
attempts at mediation.
“St. James had hoped the lawsuit would be over by now,” St. James
attorney Eric Sohlgren, said.
Attorneys for the diocese could not be reached Friday.
The countersuit hinges on a letter Sohlgren said the diocese sent
to St. James in 1991.
Then, the church undertook a large-scale fundraising campaign to
buy more property and add new buildings, he said. But before doing
so, they sought assurance from the diocese that it would not stake a
claim to the property as part of a trust agreement, he said.
“[St. James] wanted to make sure the diocese of Los Angeles would
not use it to take St. James’ property,” Sohlgren said. “They asked
for written assurance that they would not. [The diocese] did issue
such a letter.”
St. James seceded from the diocese last year because church
leaders disagreed with the Episcopal Church’s more liberal views. It
placed itself under the Diocese of Luwero in the Anglican Church of
Uganda, Africa, and removed the word “Episcopal” from its name.
The other two churches named in the suit soon followed.
The diocese filed suit against the three churches in December,
claiming rights to their property. The three suits were combined into
one Orange County case earlier this year.
In its countersuit, St. James is seeking to at least recover legal
fees it has incurred as a result of the diocese’s suit against it,
Sohlgren said.
The first motions in the lawsuit will likely be heard sometime
this summer, he said.
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