Section 5 7-9(A) of the Code of Virginia is a statute that purports to resolve church property disputes. There is, however, a significant amount of controversy as to whether the statute encroaches on the free exercise rights of hierarchical churches located in Virginia and enmeshes Virginia courts in the ecclesiastical thicket. Given the debate surrounding Section 57-9(A) and the controversial shift of several mainstream denominations in matters of substantive church doctrine, Virginia is a fertile breeding ground for church property disputes. Accordingly, the Commonwealth is in the midst of an ecclesiastical crisis. The impact of the crisis is evidenced by the recent division within the Episcopal Church\u27s Diocese of Virginia and the sub...
In this article for Bench & Bar Magazine (the Kentucky Bar Association\u27s magazine), Professor Pau...
Long-held constitutional principles state that where the factual foundation that underlies a decisio...
This article reviews two approaches to the implementation of neutral principles of law – the constit...
Section 5 7-9(A) of the Code of Virginia is a statute that purports to resolve church property dispu...
Section 57-9(A) of the Code of Virginia is a statute that purports to resolve church property disput...
Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Virginia u. Truro Church ( Truro ) involves a property...
Twenty-five years ago, the late William T. Muse, then Dean of the University of Richmond School of L...
Every year, a number of church property disputes come before the civil courts. These controversies a...
Real property disputes between units or members of the same church are common in the United States. ...
This Article explains how the Supreme Court has dealt with the underlying problems of church-state r...
This is the second of two articles dealing with external church law in Virginia. The first article w...
In this Article, Professor Kent Greenawalt explores how civil courts can constitutionally resolve co...
(Excerpt) Part I describes the varied nature of church organizations and the development of the cons...
This Article reviews two approaches to the implementation of neutral principles of law--the constitu...
Federal and state courts are increasingly confronted with the unenviable task of giving legal defini...
In this article for Bench & Bar Magazine (the Kentucky Bar Association\u27s magazine), Professor Pau...
Long-held constitutional principles state that where the factual foundation that underlies a decisio...
This article reviews two approaches to the implementation of neutral principles of law – the constit...
Section 5 7-9(A) of the Code of Virginia is a statute that purports to resolve church property dispu...
Section 57-9(A) of the Code of Virginia is a statute that purports to resolve church property disput...
Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of Virginia u. Truro Church ( Truro ) involves a property...
Twenty-five years ago, the late William T. Muse, then Dean of the University of Richmond School of L...
Every year, a number of church property disputes come before the civil courts. These controversies a...
Real property disputes between units or members of the same church are common in the United States. ...
This Article explains how the Supreme Court has dealt with the underlying problems of church-state r...
This is the second of two articles dealing with external church law in Virginia. The first article w...
In this Article, Professor Kent Greenawalt explores how civil courts can constitutionally resolve co...
(Excerpt) Part I describes the varied nature of church organizations and the development of the cons...
This Article reviews two approaches to the implementation of neutral principles of law--the constitu...
Federal and state courts are increasingly confronted with the unenviable task of giving legal defini...
In this article for Bench & Bar Magazine (the Kentucky Bar Association\u27s magazine), Professor Pau...
Long-held constitutional principles state that where the factual foundation that underlies a decisio...
This article reviews two approaches to the implementation of neutral principles of law – the constit...