Church looks for victory in assets ruling
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St. James Church appeared to be on the verge of a legal victory
Thursday after a judge issued a tentative ruling to dismiss a claim
that the church’s property belongs to the national Episcopal Church.
Because Judge David Velasquez’s ruling is tentative, it can be
reversed when the case goes back to court Monday in Santa Ana,
attorney Eric Sohlgren said. Sohlgren is the lead attorney for St.
James Church.
Diocese spokeswoman Janet Kawamoto had no immediate comment
Thursday. Attorneys representing the diocese could not be reached.
Velasquez is not obligated to issue any ruling Monday, Sohlgren
said. The purpose of a tentative ruling is to help attorneys prepare
legal arguments for future hearings.
“There were many hours of oral argument today, and that will
continue Monday,” he said.
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 the Via Lido congregation.
If Velasquez issues a final ruling consistent with the tentative
one, Sohlgren said St. James will be able to maintain ownership of
the church’s building, hymnals, vestments and all other property.
Sohlgren argued that the diocese’s case was not about property but
actually an attempt to stifle St. James’ free speech after it left
the diocese in protest of the national church’s doctrinal stances.
“Because the steps taken by the defendants to disassociate
themselves from the religious views of the Church constitute acts in
furtherance of the exercise of defendants’ right to free speech on a
matter of public interest, the complaint is subject to a special
motion to strike,” Velasquez wrote in his tentative ruling.
Sohlgren said the church also contended the Newport congregation
would have ultimately prevailed in the lawsuit. In the tentative
ruling, Velasquez wrote the diocese had not shown that it would
probably win the lawsuit on the merits of the case. Velasquez wrote
that the diocese’s argument is not based on California law. Instead,
the diocese argued the court must defer to church law.
If Velasquez’s final ruling favors St. James, the church’s legal
issues will not be over, Sohlgren said. A countersuit filed by St.
James in June would still be 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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