OPINION OF THE COURT
This is аn application for approval of a certificate of incorporation. (Not-For-Profit Corporation Law, § 404, subd [a].) The certificate proposes the incorporation of an organization generally intending to carry out "religious purposes” and is thus proрerly designated a type B not-for-profit corporation. (Not-For-Profit Corporation Law, § 201, subd [b].)
Pursuant to a memorandum decision of this court dated September 26, 1978, this application was held in abeyance to provide notice to other potential interested persons. Thе court has received papers from St. Robert Bellarmine Roman Catholic Church and from the community groups in the area of
According to the papers on file in this court in the action for an injunction, Ms. Lueken claimed to be in communication with the Virgin Mary who she claimed to see in apparitions and who gаve her instructions to hold prayer vigils on the site of St. Robert Bellarmine Roman Catholic Church. Rumors of miracles and visions began to spread throughout the country and Canada and large groups of worshipers, numbering in the hundreds and more, some of whom wore a type of uniform, congregated at the site where Ms. Lueken conducted the prayer vigils. This cult, which called itself "Our Lady Of The Roses”, did not receive the sanction of the Roman Cathоlic ecclesiastical authorities and in fact, the Chancery of the Diocese of Brooklyn in an official notice, directed that all Catholics refrain from participating in the services, declaring them to be unauthorized and forbidden.
The adherents of the cult and the local residents came into conflict resulting in a number of disturbances and near riots culminating in the injunction action. One of the contentions of those оpposing this application is that Ms. Lueken may intend to circumvent the order of this court by the device of incorporation.
The sole bаsis for review and approval of a certificate of incorporation by a Justice of this court is to determine whether the purpоses of the corporation are in conformity with law. The court may not interject its own opinion as to the social desirability of those purposes. (Matter of Association for Preservation of Freedom of Choice v Shapiro,
Under the Membership Corporation Law, the predecessor to the Not-For-Profit Corporation Law, an organization could not incorporate for religious purposes. Such purposes could only be provided for in an incorporation under the Rеligious Corporations Law. (Matter of Basilio Scientific Spiritist Cult Assn.,
As part of its purposes, the proposed corporation defines itself as Roman Catholic, at least to the extent that it so specifies the information which it intends to disseminate. Indeed, its very name, "Our Lady Of The Roses”, suggests a Roman Catholic church or mission. Under these circumstances, I believe that the incorporator must conform to the specific provisions of the Religious Corporations Law which govern the incorporation of groups associated with the Roman Catholic Churсh. Such incorporation requires an execution and acknowledgment by certain specific officials of that church. (Religious Corporations Law, § 90.) Such is not present here, and accordingly, the petitioners’ application for approval by me must be denied.
It is not my determination that Ms. Lueken may not seek to incorporate as a religious corporation or may not seek to incorporate as a not-for-profit corporation where their purposes may not involve worship. This determination is limited simply to a review of the presеntly stated purposes in which it appears that Ms. Lueken is seeking to incorporate as a "Roman Catholic Religious Corporation.”
