Thursday, January 27, 2011

Courts Decide Claims For Return of Contributions To Religious Groups

Court decisions on two continents have recently struggled with attempts to recover transfers made by individuals to religious organizations. In Canada, a Windsor, Ontario Superior Court judge overturned a small claims court decision in a dispute over whether $35,000 transfered to the Society of the Madonna di Canneto was a loan or a contribution.  Yesterday's Windsor Star reports that the small claims court held that $30,000 of the $35,000 transfered by Luigi Tosti and three others to the organization which built a $1.5 million shrine to the Virgin Mary was a donation. The small claims trial was so contentious that the judge had to shout over the feuding parties in order to be heard.

Meanwhile, in Britain, today's London Express and the Daily Mail report that the Cardiff Civil Court of Justice ruled that former RAF officer Richard Curtis was unduly influenced by the Self Realization Meditation Healing Centre when he, along with his wife, transfered their home to the religious group. The Centre-- described by some as a cult-- is led by 79-year old Rena Denton. The group has since spent substantial amounts renovating the house for use as an alternative centre. The court nevertheless ordered the property returned to the donors. Curtis will sell it and split the proceeds with his estranged wife who is still a member of the Healing Centre.