Judge dismisses St. James lawsuit
A judge on Monday dismissed a lawsuit against St. James Church’s
congregation that claimed the Newport Beach breakaway church’s
property and assets belong to the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles.
Orange County Superior Court Judge David Velasquez issued a
tentative ruling Thursday and confirmed his decision Monday. He ruled
that efforts by the national church to retain the property of the
seceding St. James congregation was an attempt to tread upon the
congregation’s freedom of speech.
In a statement released Monday, the Episcopal Diocese of Los
Angeles said it plans to appeal immediately.
“We believe the court’s order was clearly in error, and indeed
takes the law to a new level not supported by precedent,” John
Shiner, chancellor of the diocese and lead attorney, said in a
prepared statement.
Praveen Bunyan, pastor of St. James, said his congregation is
pleased with the news.
“We are so joyous,” Bunyan said. “We believe that God has relieved
us and delivered us from this legal battle.”
The Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles filed suit against St. James
in September 2004 after the Newport Beach church and two other
Southern California congregations broke away from the diocese and the
Episcopal Church of the United States in protest of the national
church’s liberal positions on Biblical authority, the divinity of
Jesus Christ and homosexual marriage.
After leaving the national church, St. James affiliated with the
Diocese of Luwero in the Anglican province of Uganda, Africa. The Los
Angeles diocese’s lawsuit alleged St. James’ property belongs to the
national church, not to the Via Lido congregation.
The judge’s final ruling means that St. James will be able to
maintain ownership of the church’s building, hymnals, vestments and
all other property.
Eric Sohlgren, lead attorney for St. James, argued that the
diocese’s case was not about property but was rather an attempt to
stifle St. James’ free speech after it left the diocese in protest of
the national church’s doctrinal stances.
Now that the judge has issued a final ruling, the members of St.
James can once again focus their attention on worshipping, Bunyan
said.
“We will continue to worship as we have been in the place that
people have invested in,” Bunyan said.
Although the judge ruled in favor of St. James, the church’s legal
issues are not over, Sohlgren said. A countersuit filed by St. James
in June is still alive. In that suit, the church claimed the diocese
breached a contract in which the diocese issued a written pledge to
not try to take St. James’ property.
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