Brown v. Scott

120 A. 759, 142 Md. 260, 1923 Md. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 A. 759 (Brown v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Scott, 120 A. 759, 142 Md. 260, 1923 Md. LEXIS 27 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Thomas, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the second appeal in this case. The first appeal (138 Md. 237) was from an order of the court below overruling a demurrer to the amended bill of complaint, while the present appeal is from the decree of that court granting the relief prayed therein.

*261 The bill was filed, against Benjamin F. Brown and others, individually and as trustees of the Tyson African Methodist Episcopal Church, a body corporate, and the Tyson African Methodist Episcopal Church of Baltimore City, and after the case wa& remanded the defendants answered the bill and evidence was produced by the plaintiffs and defendants before, the court below. While the testimony is somewhat confusing, and some of it, perhaps, strictly speaking;, not entirely free from objection, the evidence, in connection with, the admissions in the answers and the admissions of counsel, sufficiently establishes the essential facts indicated in the opinion of the court in the former appeal.

It appears that the Tyson Colored, Methodist Protestant Church of Baltimore County, which, with certain persons alleged to be the trustees of said church and the Baltimore Annual Conference of the Colored Methodist Protestant Church, a body corporate, was made a, plaintiff in the ease, was incorporated in January, 1899, and thereafter there was conveyed to it, by deed dated the loth of June, 1899, the church property in controversy in this case, on Falls Road, now in Baltimore City, subject, to the annual rent of fifty dollars, and on the 2nd of June, 1906, Thomas M. Lanahan, by deed of that date, conveyed to said plaintiff the fee simple title to said property, which, it is admitted, was at the time of the trial in the court below worth $5,000; that the Tyson Colored Methodist Protestant Church of Baltimore County, hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff church, continued in possession and enjoyment of its said property until about May, 1918, when five of the trustees of the plaintiff church either resigned or refused to act with the remaining trustees, and took possession of said church property, and on May 24th, 1918, the said five trustees (hereinafter' referred to* for the sake of brevity as the seceding trustees,), and others, in sympathy with them, passed a resolution, entered on the minutes as a resolution of the “Leader’s Board,” directing “a letter with the church seal” to be sent to the Annual Conference of the Colored Methodist Protestant Church, asking them not to *262 send any minister to the church for that year; that in July, 1918, the seceding trustees and others acting' in sympathy with them employed a minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Ohurch to take charge of and conduct the services of the plaintiff ehijrch, and on July 26th, 1918, passed a resolution confirming said minister as the pastor of said church “until the Annual Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Ohurch”; that on September 20th, 1918, a resolution was passed by said trustees and those in sympathy with them promising said minister or pastor to come into the African Methodist Episcopal Church; that on November 1st, 1918, the minutes of a meeting of said seceding trustees and those in sympathy with them were recorded as the minutes of a meeting of the leaders of “Tyson A. M. E. Church”; that on February 2nd, 1919, persons were admitted by said seceding trustees and others in sympathy with them as- members of the Tyson- African Methodist Episcopal Ohurch, and that on February 14th, 1939, a resolution was passed by them to “Bank $25.00' in the Providence Savings Bank in the name of Tyson A. M. E. Ohurch”; that on April 14th, 1919, at a meeting of said seceding trustees and others in sympathy with them, twenty-^seven of them, claiming to be members of the plaintiff church, and to be four-fifths of the congregation thereof, passed a resolution to sell said church property to the Tyson African Episcopal Church for the sum- of $5.00; that on the following day, April 15th, said seceding; trustees and four other’s, including the minister of the African Methodist Episcopal Church who had conducted the services in the plaintiffs’ church property since July, 1918, incorporated “The Tyson African Methodist Episcopal Church of Baltimore City,” and on the same day a paper purporting to he the deed of the plaintiff church was signed by one of the said seceding, trustees as its president and acknowledged by another of said trustees as the attorney named therein, attempting to convey the said property of the plaintiff church to the said The Tyson African Methodist Episcopal Ohurch of Baltimore City for the consideration of $5.00; that even the *263 nominal consideration mentioned in said deed was never paid; that the said seceding trustees and others in sympathy with them and the said The Tyson, African Methodist Episcopal Church of Baltimore City have been in possession of the property of the plaintiff church ever since M;ay, 1918, to the exclusion of the remaining trustees of the plaintiff church, and the trustees elected in, the place of the seceding trustees, and other members of the plaintiff church in sympathy with said remaining trustees,; that in May, 1918, there was a mortgage for $500 on the property of the plaintiff church, and there Was, in hank to the credit of the plaintiff church the sum of $200; and that in November, 1918, said mortgage was paid by the seceding trustees, and others acting in sympathy with them, who used the said $200 for that purpose, and the mortgage was released.

It further appears from the evidence that the vacancies caused by the resignation or refusal of the seceding trustees to act with the remaining: trustees of the plaintiff church were filled by the election of other1 trustees, by the remaining truss tees in January, 1918; that, ever since the seceding trustees and others acting in sympathy with them took possession of the property of the plaintiff church, said church has held its services in other church, buildings; that notwithstanding the notice sent to the Annual Oonference of the Colored Methodist Protestant Church by the seceding trustees and others not to appoint a pastor for the plaintiff church, a pastor was appointed, and that at the time of the trial of the case in the court below the plaintiff church was still a member in good standing in the Baltimore Annual Conference of the Colored Methodist Protestant Church.

Fpon the evidence referred to the court below passed the decree from which the present appeal was, taken, enjoining the defendant trustees from acting and representing themselves as the trustees, of the plaintiff church, and enjoining them, from interfering with the trustees, of the' plaintiff church in the performance of their duties as trustees of said church; requiring the defendants to surrender to the plaintiff *264 church, its pastor or any one of its trustees, possession of the church property and the keys of the church building, and to refrain from interfering with the control and custody of said property by the plaintiff church, its officers or agents; requiring the defendants to turn over and deliver to the plaintiff church the furniture, papers, records and hooks of said church; requiring the defendants (or their successors in office) to deliver to the plaintiff church the release of the mortgage from Mary W.

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69 A.2d 265 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
120 A. 759, 142 Md. 260, 1923 Md. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-scott-md-1923.