Latter-day Saints lawsuits raise questions over Mormon tithing
(The Conversation) — Three men have filed a lawsuit against the
LDS church doctrine requires its members to tithe – that is, give 10% of their income to the church. Otherwise, members cannot attend or participate in worship in the church's temples.
As a law professor who studies the financial practices of churches and other tax-exempt organizations, I have seen that it is hard for donors to win a lawsuit against their church – or any other charity – when they demand a refund for their donations.
3 kinds of relief
The lawsuit against the LDS church and Ensign Peak, filed on
The men are seeking three forms of relief.
First, they want the court to certify their suit as a class action – meaning that these plaintiffs could pursue the suit on behalf of everybody who had allegedly been defrauded into making donations to the LDS church – which says it has about 6.8 million
Second, they're asking the court to order the LDS church to stop its allegedly deceptive practices, including its purported failure to give the money it has collected and reserved for charitable purposes to charity. The lawsuit also calls on the LDS church to make more of its financial practices known to the public and to appoint an independent special master to oversee the church's collection and use of its revenue.
Third, they ask the court to order the church to refund the donations they have made over the last 10 years, an amount they say totals for the three of them around
The church doesn't disclose details about its finances. It has denied the allegations that it committed fraud with its "sacred funds" or dipped directly into tithed funds or other pools of money received for charitable purposes to make investments.
This financial opacity has hurt the LDS church before. In
Estimates vary regarding the size of the church's portfolio. By a whistleblower's estimate, it may be as high as
Donors generally have no say
Charitable donations, generally of money or property, are often deductible for tax purposes because churches qualify as exempt under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Just as when you give money to a friend or relative, you no longer own or control those dollars after the transaction is completed.
Unless a donation is a restricted gift, making it contingent on the charity using it in a particular way, its use is out of the hands of the donor.
While donors cannot get their money back when they are disappointed by a charity, they will probably stop making donations.
Most donations to religious institutions are unrestricted. That means that even if church members who tithe do not like how their church spends money, unless their church acted illegally in soliciting their donation – by, for example, lying about how they would use the donation – a member's only option is to stop giving.
Fiduciary duty – for the institution
The men who are suing the LDS church and its investment arm don't just say they disapprove of how the church is spending their tithed funds. They argue that the church breached its fiduciary duties to its members – all of whom are also its donors.
Fiduciary duties encompass a special duty to act in the best interests of someone or something, based on certain legal relationships. Churches generally do not owe fiduciary duties to their members.
Allegations of fraud
While donors generally have no say regarding how their charitable donations are used, there is an exception when the charity fraudulently induces the donor to make the donation.
And these plaintiffs allege that this is what the LDS church did: that it claimed donated funds would be used for charitable purposes, but that they were not.
A
This is all moot, at least for the lawsuit filed on
And the Ensign Peak allegations first surfaced in 2019 – four years before the plaintiffs filed this lawsuit. Their lawyers argue that the statute of limitations does not bar the case, because the LDS church hid how it used the money and plaintiffs could not have discovered the alleged fraud until recently.
Seeking relief
If the three men were to win this new court case, they would be entitled to monetary damages, likely including at least the return of the
These orders would go above what
The
A church's internal affairs include not only disputes over doctrine and clergy, but also disputes over church administration. Appointing somebody to oversee how the LDS church raises and spends its money would violate this doctrine.
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