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Home/Churches and Ministries/The No. 1 Reason Churches End Up in Court Is No Longer Child Abuse

The No. 1 Reason Churches End Up in Court Is No Longer Child Abuse

For the first time in a decade, there’s a new lawsuit leader.

Written by Kate Shellnutt | Saturday, August 12, 2017

“Last year, the top reason for church litigation became a different problem: property disputes. More churches went to court in 2016 due to their building itself rather than any abuse that occurred inside of it.”

 

Child abuse is no longer the most common reason that churches go to court.

For more than a decade, sexual abuse of a minor was the No. 1 legal matter involving US congregations. It made up more than 1 in 9 of all church lawsuits, according to CT sister publication Church Law & Tax (CLT).

But last year, the top reason for church litigation became a different problem: property disputes. More churches went to court in 2016 due to their building itself rather than any abuse that occurred inside of it.

The CLT analysis—a review of state appellate and federal court rulings—found that 8.7 percent of church court cases last year addressed property related-issues, down from 10.2 percent in 2015. However, property cases still ranked as the new No. 1 reason because child sex abuse fell even more, down to 8.3 percent in 2016 from 11.7 percent in 2015.

“There were fewer child abuse cases during 2016 than in prior years,” said CLT senior editor Richard Hammar, an attorney and CPA specializing in legal issues for churches and clergy. “Child abuse claims are dropping, but it is impossible to say if this an anomaly or a consequence of better risk management.”

The drop could be due to courts finally catching up with the backlog of lawsuits filed over past abuse.

“New suits are only likely to be for recent abuse situations—and heightened awareness in churches of the problem has hopefully reduced the number of new cases,” said Howard Friedman, a law professor and church-state expert who runs Religion Clause.

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[Editor’s note: The original URLs (links) referenced in this article have been removed. Those links may still be available at the article source.]

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