Albuquerque Journal

Settlement near in fight over ‘sacred’ site

Parcel may include unmarked graves

- BY MEGAN BENNETT

Asmall piece of land adjacent to where a church once stood in Mora County, considered by some to be a possible cemetery site, has been the object of litigation for months. Parties in the suit are now working on an agreement to split the disputed property in the tiny village of Guadalupit­a.

The legal fight has pitted the Catholic Church and a group of Guadalupit­a residents on one side against some members of a well-known northern New Mexico family on the other.

Quinn Scott Simons, attorney for four residents with land near the 0.3-acre tract, said that a settlement was reached, but details could change and a judge still has to sign off. A conference hearing is scheduled for April 11.

The dispute has been heated enough that a deputy asked a Journal reporter-photograph­er team to stay off the small plot of land during a December visit, in order to avoid any trespassin­g issues.

Last summer, Guadalupit­a residents Jacob and his son Jacob Jude Regensberg sued the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe, the Mora Board of County Commission­ers and several residents who claim ownership of the parcel near where the historic village’s Our Lady of Guadalupe Church stood from 1861 until the 1960s.

The residents involved in the case

fought the Regensberg’s claim in part because they say the “sacred” spot, described as a community space, could be the site of unmarked graves.

In December, Jacob Regensberg told the Journal a 2013 land survey proved the land was part of his property. He maintained that the archdioces­e’s deed to the land, dating from the 19th century, wasn’t accompanie­d with a survey and that there is no proof of any burials in the disputed area.

An unofficial settlement agreement from January, which was obtained by the Journal, says that the archdioces­e will issue a “quiet claim deed” to the Regensberg­s for half of the contested area.

“The archdioces­e just didn’t want to spend any more money on legal fees” said Clarence Garcia, a Guadalupit­a resident who sided with the church in the court proceeding­s on behalf of his cousin Benjamin Martinez.

Martinez lives in Colorado but had a claim to a small piece of land near the land in dispute. Garcia said legal costs were also rising for the residents.

Tom Macken, the archdioces­e’s chancellor, property manager and attorney, did not return messages seeking comment.

Jude Regensberg declined to comment on specifics of the agreement, but he said he did not want to settle and wished to tell his side of the story in court. He said he agreed to settle out of respect for his father. “He wanted this to go away,” he said.

Garcia said the possibilit­y of unmarked burial sites didn’t have much impact on the mediation. He said the archdioces­e told him about archival documents listing about 40 people buried in the contested area, adding that residents hope to research those names and contact potential descendant­s.

An idea to use groundpene­trating radar to look for graves is not being pursued because of costs and complicati­on from the litigation and the fact that Guadalupit­a is part of a large rural historic district, Garcia said.

Mora County Commission Chair Paula Garcia said of the agreement that she hopes that the small tract remains “open and accessible” if there are indeed gravesites there.

The land includes part of a dirt road that leads to the homes of some of the nearby residents involved in the court case. The draft agreement states the Regensberg­s will grant easement to those owners and to the archdioces­e, and the Regensberg­s might install cattle guards so it remains “open and unrestrict­ed.”

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 ?? EDDIE MOORE/ ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL ?? Joe Chavez, left, and Donald Laran talk to a Journal crew in December after a sheriff’s deputy, in background, asked them to get off a small tract that has been part of a property dispute involving the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe in the Mora County village...
EDDIE MOORE/ ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL Joe Chavez, left, and Donald Laran talk to a Journal crew in December after a sheriff’s deputy, in background, asked them to get off a small tract that has been part of a property dispute involving the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe in the Mora County village...

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