In re Multi-Circuit Episcopal Church Property Litigation

84 Va. Cir. 105, 2012 WL 8696168, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 4
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 2012
DocketCase Nos. (Civil) CL 2007-248724, CL 2006-15793, CL 2006-15792, CL 2007-556, CL 2007-1625, CL 2007-1235, CL 2007-1236, CL 2007-1237, CL 2007-1238, CL 2007-5249, CL 2007-5250, CL 2007-5364, CL 2007-5686, CL 2007-5685, CL 2007-5683, CL 2007-5682, CL 2007-5684, CL 2007-5902, and CL 2007-5903
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 Va. Cir. 105 (In re Multi-Circuit Episcopal Church Property Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Multi-Circuit Episcopal Church Property Litigation, 84 Va. Cir. 105, 2012 WL 8696168, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 4 (Va. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

By Judge Randy I. Bellows

I. Introduction

On June 10, 2010, the Virginia Supreme Court remanded Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Virginia v. Truro Church, 280 Va. 6 (2010), to the Circuit Court, as follows:

Accordingly, we hold that the circuit court erred in ruling that the CANA Congregations’ petitions were properly before the court under Code § 57-9(A).
By granting the CANA Congregations’ Code § 57-9(A) petitions, the circuit court ruled that this “obviate[d] the need to address the merits of the Declaratory Judgment Actions filed by the Episcopal Church and the Diocese and thus render[s] them legally moot.” In light of our holding that the circuit court erred in granting the Code § 57-9(A) petitions, the control and ownership of the property held in trust and used by the CANA Congregations remains unresolved. Accordingly, the declaratory judgment actions filed by TEC and the Diocese and the counterclaims of the CANA Congregations in response to those suits must be revived in order to resolve this dispute under principles of real property and contract law.
[106]*106For these reasons, we will reverse the judgment of the circuit court and remand with directions to dismiss the CANA Congregations’ Code § 57-9(A) petitions. We will further direct the circuit court to reinstate the declaratory judgment actions filed by TEC and the Diocese and the counterclaims of the CANA Congregations to those actions and conduct further proceedings thereon consistent with the views expressed in this opinion.

Id. at 29-30 (footnotes and citations omitted).

Pursuant to this remand, the Court conducted the trial of the declaratory judgment actions over the course of twenty-two days during April, May, and June 2011 and took testimony from over sixty witnesses. On June 2, 2011, the Court set a post-trial briefing schedule, permitting each side to file up to 600 pages of argument in three rounds of briefings. Both sides filed comprehensive and thorough post-trial briefings, with each side using up approximately 500 of its allotted 600 pages. A total of nine principal post-trial briefs have been filed by the parties. For clarity and simplicity sake, the briefs will be referred to in this opinion as follows: CANA Congregations’ Corrected Opening Post-Trial Brief (CANA Brief # 1A); CANA Congregations’ (Corrected) Proposed Findings of Fact for Their Opening Post-Trial Brief (CANA Brief # IB); CANA Congregations’ Post-Trial Opposition Brief (CANA Brief# 2); CANA Congregations’ Corrected Post-Trial Reply Brief (CANA Brief # 3); The Episcopal Church’s First Post-Trial Brief (TEC Brief #1); Post-Trial Opening Brief for the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia (Diocese Brief# 1); Post-Trial Response Brief for the Episcopal Church and the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia (TEC/DOV Brief # 2); The Episcopal Church’s Third Post-Trial Brief (TEC Brief # 3); Post-Trial Reply Brief for the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia (Diocese Brief # 3).

The Court, having thoroughly reviewed the thousand pages of post-trial briefings and the record of this matter and the applicable case law, is now prepared to rule. This Letter Opinion sets out the Court’s rulings and the basis for these rulings. As further described below, the parties are to prepare a Final Order in accordance with this Letter Opinion.

II. Background of Litigation and Procedural History

A. Background of Litigation

The genesis of this litigation has already been set out in detail in the Court’s Letter Opinion on the Applicability of Virginia Code § 57-9(A) dated April 3, 2008, see In re Multi-Circuit Episcopal Church Prop. Litig., 16 Va. Cir. 785 (2008), as well as in the Virginia Supreme Court’s opinion in this case. The Virginia Supreme Court, in its opinion on the applicability of § 57-9(A), described the background of the litigation as follows:

[107]*107At the 2003 General Convention of TEC, three major points of controversy arose: the Convention’s confirmation of the election of Gene Robinson, a homosexual priest, as a bishop of one of the dioceses of TEC; the adoption of a resolution permitting the blessing of same-sex unions; and the rejection of a resolution concerning the “historic formularies of the Christian faith.” Following the 2003 General Convention, Peter James Lee, the bishop of the Diocese, who had supported the confirmation of Robinson as a bishop, received “hundreds of letters” opposing these actions taken by the General Convention. Additionally, several congregations opposed to the actions of the General Convention stopped paying pledges owed to the Diocese and TEC, placing the funds in escrow. As a result, Bishop Lee became concerned that the dissident congregations would “attempt to create a parallel province.”
In response to the discord within the Diocese, in 2004, a “Reconciliation Commission” was formed “to find ways to bring about some peaceful conflict resolution.” Despite this effort, dissent concerning the actions of the 2003 General Convention continued, and, in 2005, Bishop Lee created a new commission “to give attention to this rising threat of division in the Diocese.” The following year, the commission promulgated a “Protocol for Departing Congregations.” Under this protocol, the Diocese initiated procedures for congregations to conduct votes “regarding possible departure from the Diocese,” and several congregations initiated procedures under the protocol to separate from the Diocese. However, Bishop Lee subsequently advised leaders of the dissident congregations that, due to a change in leadership in TEC, separation of congregations had become a matter of concern to the national church and that a vote to separate would not be binding on the Diocese or TEC.
Nonetheless, between December 2006 and November 2007, 15 congregations voted to separate from the Diocese. As a result, 22 members of the clergy associated with these congregations were deposed, or removed, from their pastoral duties in the Diocese by Bishop Lee. Congregations in other dioceses of TEC also took similar action to separate from their dioceses over the controversies arising from the 2003 General Convention. These congregations, as well as newly formed congregations of former members of TEC, began seeking to affiliate with other polities within the Anglican Communion in order “to be a part of the worldwide church.”
The Church of Nigeria is a province of the Anglican Communion and governs the Anglican churches in the Federal Republic of Nigeria, a former British colony. In 2005, the Convocation of Anglican Nigerians in America was established as a mission of the Church of Nigeria to provide oversight for expatriate Nigerian congregations in [108]*108the United States. In 2006, the Church of Nigeria changed the name of this mission to the Convocation of Anglicans in North America (“CANA”) and began accepting former TEC congregations. In 2006, the Anglican District of Virginia (“ADV”) was formed as a district of CANA. By 2007, CANA included 60 congregations in eighteen states and 12,000 members, of which 10,000 were in congregations previously affiliated with dioceses of TEC.

280 Va. at 15-16 (footnotes and citations omitted).

To the above, the Court would add the following facts.

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84 Va. Cir. 105, 2012 WL 8696168, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-multi-circuit-episcopal-church-property-litigation-vaccfairfax-2012.