Santa Fe New Mexican

Accusers: Church eyes bankruptcy to protect its assets

Parishes have become individual nonprofits; real estate corporatio­n set up

- By Andrew Oxford aoxford@sfnewmexic­an.com

In a way, the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe has been getting ready for years to file for bankruptcy.

“We’ve [consulted with] a bankruptcy attorney for the last four or five years because we could see where this is all leading,” Archbishop John C. Wester said Thursday during a stunning news conference in which he announced the archdioces­e is seeking bankruptcy protection.

In the wake of one sexual abuse lawsuit after another, the archdioces­e has been taking steps that advocates for survivors say are meant to protect its property and other assets from potential claimants.

In recent years, the archdioces­e has incorporat­ed individual parishes as separate nonprofit organizati­ons and set up a corporatio­n to hold some of its real estate.

After the bankruptcy papers are filed sometime next week, the

church will have to provide an accounting of its finances. But the process is likely to prompt plenty of questions about these moves, precisely what the archdioces­e really owns and what it can use to pay off survivors of sexual abuse.

“Catholic dioceses are not ordinary debtors,” Penn State Law professor Marie T. Reilly wrote in a recent paper on the bankruptci­es of church organizati­ons.

Bankruptcy raises issues not only about who exactly controls the various properties of what are often sprawling, historic institutio­ns but also questions about constituti­onal liberty and the extent to which a court can wade into the affairs of a religious organizati­on.

And the steps the archdioces­e already has taken are familiar to residents of other dioceses that have also faced big financial liabilitie­s and bankruptcy in the fallout of the Roman Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandals.

For example, the archdioces­e announced in 2012 it had started incorporat­ing its more than 90 parishes as separate nonprofit organizati­ons, potentiall­y walling each off from legal liabilitie­s of other parishes and church officials.

The Archdioces­e of Santa Fe has long been structured as what is known as a corporatio­n sole. That is, the archbishop is the only officer of the corporatio­n.

Under this process, parishes were incorporat­ed separately with a small group of officers and the pastor serving as president.

On page 8 of the archdioces­e’s December 2012 newsletter, then-Archbishop Michael J. Sheehan said the move would emphasize in a legal way the “canonical uniqueness” of each parish.

He noted other dioceses have already taken similar steps.

But church officials elsewhere have also been clear that such a move is intended to protect parishes in the face of mounting lawsuits against their dioceses.

The Diocese of Tucson, for example, told parishione­rs that by becoming a separate nonprofit, each parish would gain “protection from liability for the acts of the Diocese or for the acts of the other parishes.”

In 2012, the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe also establishe­d a separate real estate trust to control much of its property. The Santa Fe County Assessor’s Office, for example, lists the Archdioces­e of Santa Fe Real Estate Corporatio­n as owning several churches as well as the land around some parishes.

Lawyers for survivors of sexual abuse by priests have raised concerns about these measures, though.

“The purpose of transferri­ng these substantia­l assets to the newly incorporat­ed parishes and the [archdioces­e] Real Estate Corporatio­n was to shield the assets from possible future creditors, including victims of sexual abuse,” lawyer Brad Hall wrote in a 2016 lawsuit.

In a response to that filing, the archdioces­e’s lawyers said the trust was created to hold title to real estate belonging to its parishes and denied Hall’s allegation­s.

Representi­ng a man who said he was sexually assaulted by a priest at a Catholic school in New Mexico, Hall argued the archdioces­e’s steps at reorganiza­tion were very clearly meant to limit the financial damage the church faces in a state that was long a dumping ground for predatory clergy.

Wester said Thursday the church had resolved hundreds of cases for millions of dollars.

The archdioces­e already has had to undertake large fundraisin­g campaigns and sell off property around Albuquerqu­e after a wave of sexual abuse lawsuits in the 1990s.

Now going to bankruptcy, the question will be how much the archdioces­e will have to pay. Or can.

 ??  ?? Archbishop John C. Wester said Thursday that the archdioces­e is declaring bankruptcy in the face of sexual abuse lawsuits.
Archbishop John C. Wester said Thursday that the archdioces­e is declaring bankruptcy in the face of sexual abuse lawsuits.

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