MS is not actually a member of the Mormon church, because the church will not allow it, though he refused to tell the court why that was.
The court was first asked to intervene in the case last year and examine whether MS had the capacity to make the donation and decide his own financial affairs.
In his letter to the court, MS said: "Giving a 10 per cent tithe is an Old and New Testament principle that is practised in my church... We are commanded to do it! Yes, I am not a member of my church - in this world - nevertheless, I believe it is busybodyism of a gross and outrageous sort... to deny me the sacred privilege of giving to my church as I see fit, and in accordance with my church's understanding of tithing."
On his own religious standing, MS said: "I claim that only the Father, Son and Holy Ghost are greater beings than I am. Parenthetically, I have never claimed to wield as much as, or almost as much power as, they - this is manifestly not so. I do however believe, by revelation and inference, that if I prove faithful, I will after Judgement Day wield as much, or almost as much power as they presently do... In making this claim, I have a Mount Everest of a credibility problem."
In a judgement published yesterday, district judge Anselm Eldergill ruled that MS was free to make the donation and manage his own financial affairs. "Good reasons are required to interfere in matters of conscience and spiritual belief," he said.
Justice Eldergill said there was a risk in the case of "pathologising religious beliefs," adding: "The fact that a person has a grandiose belief with a religious content does not demonstrate that the whole of their religion is delusionally based and caused by mental illness... Contrary to the opinions of the psychiatrists in the case, I have taken the view that he does have capacity to litigate the proceedings before me."
A certificate from a psychiatrist who examined MS in 2006 said the man had suffered from a schizoaffective disorder since around 1991 and as a result lacked the capacity to manage his own property and affairs.
The psychiatrist said: "Mr S has always lived with his mother who has been his main carer. His beliefs include that he is one position below the Holy Trinity and so has special powers to change the world. Although he has never acted upon this belief, he has given considerable amounts of money to his church disregarding his own needs. He has periods when he feels he must starve himself."
- Independent