The Judicial Resolution of Church Property Disputes: Canadian and American Models

Authors

  • Alvin J. Esau

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/alr1341

Abstract

This article examines the jurisprudence on church property entitlements in the context of membership disputes at Hutterite colonies. The author explores the approaches that Canadian and American courts have taken in dealing with competing claims to church assets held in trust for the use of the members. When faced with allocation issues, Canadian courts have focused on the terms of the trust to determine which faction of the religious association most closely falls within the scope of the trust. By way of contrast, American courts have been more conscious about the separation of church and stale and have employed the following models for adjudicating church property disputes: (I) polity-deference, (2) neutral-principles, and (3) the abstention model. The author concludes that the gap between the Canadian and American approaches is not as wide as it may initially appear.

Downloads

Published

2003-04-01

Issue

Section

Articles