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bgwilkinson said:praise_yeshua said:subllibrm said:praise_yeshua said:subllibrm said:praise_yeshua said:What do you mean by "personal liability"?
I can't speak for Tom but in our case, as an independent church that is "owned" by the congregation, corporate status separates the personal from the corporeal. So if the church were to get sued, the only assets available to the plaintiff would be those held in the name of the corporation. They may be able to bankrupt the church corporately but not all the of the members individually.
Why would someone sue the church? and do you have any legal reference where a "by law" or "covenant" prevented an individual from being "sued" in such a case?
I'm looking or real examples. Not something "hypothetical" that might apply regardless of "by law" and "covenant".
Off the top of my head I would say that the lawsuit against John MacArthur would be an example. If the church were not incorporated the plaintiff could have named every member of the church as a defendant.
Which lawsuit. Be specific.
One lawsuit was targeted specifically at the staff and would have never been targeted at the "members".
Either way, you can't sue members if there are no "members". Even then, the actions of one person aren't applicable to all regardless of "incorporation".
They always go for the deepest pocket.
Okay. How does that change anything. If the "deep pocket" wasn't involved.... how can they go after the "deep pocket"? "By laws" and "covenants" change nothing. They don't prevent lawsuits and they aren't the legal justification for the dismissal of either civil or criminal lawsuits.