The Works of Religion
A powerful Vatican agency is poised to let parishioners from seven closed Catholic churches take millions of dollars of assets to their new parishes – a step that would derail a plan by archdiocesan leaders to use the money for broad church needs.This is messy, and puzzling -- the case was ruled by the Congregation for the Clergy on a recourse from seven parishes which appealed closings. It's certainly a massive slap in the face to O'Malley's reconfiguration plan, and it's the last thing the archdiocese of Boston needs when it's already on the today's front pages for seeming control-freaky and out of touch on issues of finance.To head off a final ruling to that effect, the archdiocese is trying to persuade pastors of parishes receiving members from closed neighboring churches to voluntarily give up the money.
Whatever the case, it is a vindication of Rome's role in checking the excesses of local bishops, and of the process of canonical appeal. But, stipulations on alienation aside, it presents a conflict between the canons and civil law.
Like most American dioceses, Boston has the juridic personality of "corporation sole," i.e. that, for legal purposes, all its entities are bound up in a single entity. I might be wrong, but it was always my understanding that when entities of a corporation sole are suppressed, that the residual assets remain within that corporation and can be re-allocated any way the corporation sole (the archbishop) sees fit. If a "corporate aggregate" were employed (where each parish is, legally speaking, independent -- an arrangement which greatly reduces liability damages), it would be different. But I've got calls out to my stable of canonists and will have a better answer later in the day.
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3 Comments:
It depends on how the corporation sole is structured. If somewhere in the incorporation documents of the corporation sole, there is language that states that it must abide by the laws of the Roman Catholic Church, then there is clearly no conflict. Still, an interesting question.
"Under State law, canon law is voluntary rules for the relationships between Rome, American dioceses and other Church entities which are uneforceable under civil law."
Not true. You may want to check out the recent case of Dixon v. Edwards. Civil courts can enforce canons.
http://www.ecclawsoc.org.uk/case_dix.html
Again, wrong.
Check out the case of Parish of the Advent vs. The Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Mass. The Supreme Judicial Court of Mass stated thus
"It is entirely appropriate, therefore, to recognize that a hierarchical religious corporation, organized under Massachusetts law, has the power to subordinate itself to a higher tribunal, at least for the purposes at issue here. (34) The Parish did just that, in all likelihood at its inception, but at the very least by 1960 when its constitution was amended to make explicit its accession to the authority of the Diocese and PECUSA."
In other words, if the founding documents of the Archdiocese makes explicit its accession to the authority of the Roman Catholic Church, Rome's determination is legally binding on the Archdiocese of Boston. In theory, if the Archdiocese of Boston, ignored Rome, and absconded with the funds from a "merged" parish contrary to Rome's explicit determination to the contrary, a Mass. court could enforce Rome's judgment as to the disposition of the assets of the parish because the Archdiocese voluntarily . The real question is who has standing to sue the diocese, such as a pastor or a member of the parish.
http://anglicansonline.org/archive/news/articles/1997/970107a.html
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