In First United Methodist Church of Hobe Sound, Florida v. Board of Trustees of the Florida Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church, Inc., (FL App., April 8, 2026), a group of Methodist churches which are seeking to disaffiliate from their parent body sue seeking to invalidate a portion of the United Methodist Church's Book of Discipline. Under Church rules, property of local congregations is held in trust for the entire denomination. The Church's highest ecclesiastical court held that under a provision in the Book of Discipline, the parent body requires large payments in order for these plaintiff congregations to disaffiliate and keep their real property. Florida courts have traditionally required civil courts to defer to decisions of a denomination's highest ecclesiastical tribunal in the case of hierarchical churches. The court said in part:
Appellants contend that their case is not precluded by the hierarchical deference doctrine. Because they raise state-law claims against the Discipline’s Trust Clause, in Appellants’ view, it is appropriate for a state court to wade into the dispute and resolve the matter on neutral state-law principles. But that view ignores the backdrop of the hotly contested internal church dispute that led to the filing of the complaint. It also disregards the significant implications of a state court considering claims that seek to undo the internal adjudication of the property dispute by the church’s highest judicial council. ...
... We acknowledge that Appellants are dissatisfied that UMC chose one paragraph in the Discipline to resolve their internal dispute, rather than another. But this Court is jurisdictionally incapable of forcing UMC to apply one provision of its governing document over another..... As a way around that conclusion, though, Appellants make the following two arguments.
First, Appellants argue that whether the Trust Clause in the Discipline creates a valid trust is a legal question that can be resolved via the application of neutral principles of law....
In the alternative, Appellants allege that the doctrine violates the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause because it favors hierarchically structured churches over congregational denominations....
Because the hierarchical deference approach remains the applicable standard governing Florida courts’ consideration of property disputes arising from within hierarchical churches, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal of Appellants’ claims....
That said, given the significance of the First Amendment questions presented here, we certify the following question of great public importance to the Florida Supreme Court:
1) When asked to adjudicate state-law claims to resolve intra-church property disputes involving hierarchical churches, are Florida courts still governed by the hierarchical deference approach or may such disputes be resolved under the neutral principles of law approach?