Protestant Episcopal Church v. TRURO CHURCH

694 S.E.2d 555, 280 Va. 6, 2010 Va. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 10, 2010
Docket090682
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 694 S.E.2d 555 (Protestant Episcopal Church v. TRURO CHURCH) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Protestant Episcopal Church v. TRURO CHURCH, 694 S.E.2d 555, 280 Va. 6, 2010 Va. LEXIS 62 (Va. 2010).

Opinion

694 S.E.2d 555 (2010)

The PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN the DIOCESE OF VIRGINIA
v.
TRURO CHURCH, et al.
The Episcopal Church
v.
Truro Church, et al.

Record Nos. 090682, 090683.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

June 10, 2010.

*557 George A. Somerville (Bradfute W. Davenport, Jr., Richmond; Mary C. Zinsner, McLean; Joshua D. Heslinga, Richmond; A.E. Dick Howard, Charlottesville; Troutman Sanders, on briefs), for appellant The Protestant Episcopal Church.

Heather H. Anderson (Soyong Cho, Washington, DC; Goodwin Proctor, on briefs), for appellant The Episcopal Church.

Steffen N. Johnson; E. Duncan Getchall, Jr., State Solicitor General (Gordon A. Coffee; Gene C. Schaerr; Andrew C. Nichols; Scott J. Ward; George O. Peterson; Tania M.L. Saylor; Mary A. McReynolds; James A. Johnson; Paul N. Farquharson; Scott H. Phillips; James E. Carr; E. Andrew Burcher; R. Hunter Manson; Kenneth T. Cuccinelli II, Attorney General; Charles E. James, Jr., Chief Deputy Attorney General; Stephen R. McCullough, Senior Appellate Counsel; William E. Thro, Special Counsel; Winston & Strawn; Gammon & Grange; Sands Anderson Marks & Miller; Semmes, Bowen & Semmes; Carr & Carr; Walsh, Collucci, Lubeley, Emerick & Walsh, on briefs), for appellees.

Amici Curiae: The American Anglican Council; Presbyterian Lay Committee; Association for Church Renewal (Forrest A. Norman III; Kenneth W. Starr, Los Angeles, CA; C. Kevin Marshall; Christopher J. Smith, Washington, DC; Gallagher Sharp; Jones Day, on brief), in support of appellees.

Amici Curiae; Episcopal Diocese of Southwestern Virginia; Episcopal Diocese of Southern Virginia (Mark D. Loftis; Frank K. Friedman, Roanoke; Gordon B. Tayloe, Jr., Virginia Beach: Samuel J. Webster, Norfolk; Woods Rogers; Kellam, Pickrell, Cox & Tayloe; Wilcox & Savage, on briefs), in support of appellants.

Amici Curiae: General Council on Finance and Administration of the United Methodist Church; Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty; Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; Gradye Parsons; General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists; African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church; African Methodist Episcopal Church; The Right Reverend Charlene Kammerer; W. Clark Williams; Virginia Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; Metropolitan Washington, D.C. Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America; The Reverend Dr. G. Wilson Gunn, Jr.; Elder Donald F. Bickhart; Virlina District Board—Church of the Brethren, Inc.; Mid-Atlantic II Episcopal District of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church (Michael McManus; Thomas E. Starnes, Washington, DC; Drinker Biddle & Reath, on briefs), in support of appellants.

Amici Curiae: Beckett Fund for Religious Liberty (Lori H. Windham; Kevin J. Hasson; Eric C. Rassbach; Luke W. Goodrich; Michael W. McConnell, on brief), in support of appellees.

Present: HASSELL, C.J., KOONTZ, KINSER, and MILLETTE, JJ., and LACY, S.J.

OPINION BY Justice LAWRENCE L. KOONTZ, JR.

These appeals arise from a dispute concerning church property between a hierarchical church and one of its dioceses in Virginia and a number of the diocese's constituent congregations. The principal issue we must decide is whether under the specific facts of these cases Code § 57-9(A) authorized the congregations to file petitions in the appropriate circuit courts for entry of orders permitting them to continue to occupy and *558 control real property held in trust for the congregations after voting to disaffiliate from the church and affiliate with another polity.[1]

BACKGROUND

While the consolidated record in these cases is voluminous, we need recite only those facts necessary to our resolution of the dispositive issue of whether the circuit court correctly ruled that Code § 57-9(A) is applicable to the specific facts in these cases.[2]See, e.g., Asplundh Tree Expert Co. v. Pacific Employers Ins. Co., 269 Va. 399, 402, 611 S.E.2d 531, 532 (2005). Because the resolution of these appeals requires us to construe the language of Code § 57-9(A), we will set out that language here so that the relationship of the recited facts to the issues to be resolved will be clear:[3]

If a division has heretofore occurred or shall hereafter occur in a church or religious society, to which any such congregation whose property is held by trustees is attached, the members of such congregation over 18 years of age may, by a vote of a majority of the whole number, determine to which branch of the church or society such congregation shall thereafter belong. Such determination shall be reported to the circuit court of the county or city, wherein the property held in trust for such congregation or the greater part thereof is; and if the determination be approved by the court, it shall be so entered in the court's civil order book, and shall be conclusive as to the title to and control of any property held in trust for such congregation, and be respected and enforced accordingly in all of the courts of the Commonwealth.

The Ecclesiastical Relationships Among the Parties

We have previously held that Code § 57-9(A) applies to congregations of "hierarchical churches," that is "churches, such as Episcopal and Presbyterian churches, that are subject to control by super-congregational bodies."[4]Baber v. Caldwell, 207 Va. 694, 698, 152 S.E.2d 23, 26 (1967). The dispute that resulted in the litigation from which these appeals arise involves a complex interplay between various entities within a faith community that has local, national, and international ties. It is not disputed that the entities involved in this litigation are part of a hierarchical church, although the parties differ on which entities compose that church. In order to better understand the context in which the dispute arose, we will first identify the entities involved and their relationship to one another.

The Anglican Communion is an international body that consists of 38 "provinces," which are "regional and national churches that share a common history of their understanding of the Church catholic through the See of Canterbury" in England. The Archbishop of Canterbury is the head of the Church of England, one of the national churches within the Anglican Communion, and is considered the "chief pastor," "first *559 among equals in the wider Anglican Communion," and the "focus of the unity" within the leadership in the Anglican Communion.

The Anglican Communion functions through three "instruments of unity": the decennial Lambeth Conference; the Anglican Consultative Council, which meets every two or three years; and the biennial Primates' Meeting. The Lambeth Conference is the oldest of these institutions, dating from 1867. Participation in the Lambeth Conference is by "invitation only" from the Archbishop of Canterbury, with invitations being directed to individual church bishops and other leaders among the clergy, not to regional or national churches as a unit. Although the Lambeth Conference issues resolutions and reports, these are not binding on the regional and national churches.

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694 S.E.2d 555, 280 Va. 6, 2010 Va. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/protestant-episcopal-church-v-truro-church-va-2010.