A man with schizophrenia who believes he is a prophet should be free to donate thousands of pounds to the Mormon church, a Court of Protection judge has ruled.
The man, known only as MS, wants to donate almost £7,000 of inheritance to the Church of Latter Day Saints. The 40-year-old lives with his mother, who strongly opposes the donation.
Setting out his arguments in a 14-page letter to the court, MS described his belief that he was a prophet whose religious significance was second only to the Holy Trinity. He admitted that these claims meant he had "a Mount Everest of a credibility problem".
MS inherited almost £70,000 from his late father several years ago and decided that he wanted to pay 10 per cent of this to the Mormons as a tithe. Mrs S said her son's wish to pay such large sums to the church sprung from his delusions and would mean either his family or the state would soon have to pay for his care.
An unnamed county council acting as his deputy approached the court to rule on the issue because MS and his mothers views on the matter were so opposed. The local authority also pointed out that the substantial donation would mean that MS would need to claim state benefits 56 weeks sooner than he would otherwise have required.