Supreme Court declines hearing Catholic donations case
The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday denied hearing a case challenging the handling of donations in the Catholic church.
The case, Conference of Catholic Bishops v. O’Connell, focuses on David O’Connell, a Rhode Island man who filed a lawsuit alleging he was misled about how the Catholic church would use his offerings.
The church collected offerings in Sunday services for Peter’s Pence, a program used to aid marginalized groups around the world.
O’Connell said the funds were used for investments instead of emergency assistance. He said he would not have donated if he knew the true use of the funds.
The conference of bishops appealed the lawsuit, citing church autonomy doctrines that could have prevented it from moving forward. Lower courts ruled that the church autonomy doctrine does not prevent a lawsuit from moving forward.
Lawyers for the Catholic bishops argued that church autonomy and the First Amendment are meant to protect it from lawsuits like O’Connell’s. They said requests for information as part of the lawsuit go beyond the scope of constitutional protections.
“The state interference required to adjudicate this lawsuit – which involves demands for lists of papal donors, accounting for the Pope’s use of Peter’s Pence, and disclosure of the Bishops’ internal communications with the Holy See about Peter’s Pence – would violate the church autonomy doctrine,” lawyers for the Catholic bishops wrote.
Lawyers for O’Connell argued church autonomy doctrines only come into effect as a liability defense, instead of automatic lawsuit protections.
“A ‘merits defense’ is not an ‘immunity from suit’ and is not collaterally appealable,” lawyers fro O’Connell wrote.
Justices on the high court denied hearing the church autonomy case. Justice Kentanji Brown Jackson did not take part in considering the case, because she served on the DC Circuit Court of Appeals in the cases prior consideration.
The high court’s denial means church’s cannot automatically appeal based on autonomy claims when an individual brings a lawsuit.
Latest News Stories
Lincoln-Way West Claims WJOL Tournament Championship with 11-1 Win Over Lockport
Will County Kicks Off Comprehensive Land Resource Management Plan Update with Focus on Proactive Zoning and Environmental Justice
Infighting and Calls for Resignation Disrupt Will County Board Meeting
Lincoln-Way West Outlasts Marysville 6-5 in Eight-Inning Thriller
Lincoln-Way 210 Awards $1.98 Million Contract for Network Cabling Upgrades
Will County Land Use Committee Splits Votes on Massive Earthrise Solar Projects Amid Intense Public Opposition
Report: Coordinated resilience infrastructure is needed in age of AI
Will County P&Z Recommends Denial of 6,000-Acre “Pride of the Prairie” Solar Project After Contentious Hearing
U.S., NATO alliance on the line as Trump set to meet with Rutte
BREAKING: Trump fires Bondi, Blanche to lead DOJ
States sue Trump administration over rollback of some air pollution regulations
Energy affordability report ranks Illinois 31st, warns of ‘burdensome’ mandates