Charles W Ferrel v. Israelite House of David

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 2020
Docket345737
StatusUnpublished

This text of Charles W Ferrel v. Israelite House of David (Charles W Ferrel v. Israelite House of David) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles W Ferrel v. Israelite House of David, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

CHARLES W. FERREL, UNPUBLISHED April 2, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 345737 Oakland Circuit Court ISRAELITE HOUSE OF DAVID, IHOD I, LLC, LC No. 2018-163929-CZ IHOD II, LLC, IHOD III, LLC, IHOD IV, LLC, IHOD V, LLC, IHOD VI, LLC, IHOD VII, LLC, IHOD VIII, LLC, IHOD IX, LLC, IHOD X, LLC, GREGORY EVERSOLE, and BRIAN ZIEBART,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: BECKERING, P.J., and SAWYER and GADOLA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, Charles W. Ferrel, appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition to defendants under the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine and plaintiff’s lack of standing to bring his claims. We affirm.

I. RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. BACKGROUND

Defendant Israelite House of David (“IHOD”) is a voluntary religious association, which was formed in 1903 in Benton Harbor, Michigan, by Benjamin Purnell and his wife, Mary Purnell. Benjamin believed that he was the seventh and final messenger prophesied in the biblical Book of Revelation who would lead the faithful to the “ingathering” of Israel. IHOD was originally organized as a religious corporation to acquire and hold title to community property. After the Michigan Attorney General determined in 1907 that IHOD’s real-estate holdings violated its charter because its holdings exceeded the organization’s requirement for religious purposes, IHOD reorganized in 1908 as a voluntary religious association. In 1922, Benjamin filed “Articles of Faith and By-laws of the Israelite House of David” with the Berrien County Register of Deeds and the Michigan Secretary of State. The Articles of Faith provided for officers called “Pillars” and an advisory board of trustees. The Pillars had “full and complete power to manage, control, and

-1- act in all spiritual and temporal affairs of the association as they deem best” for IHOD and its members. They had the authority to acquire real and personal property and were charged with applying the property or proceeds to the purposes of the organization, particularly for preparing for the ingathering of Israel. The Pillars also had the authority to admit and expel members. Members were expected to give all their possessions to IHOD for the association’s use when they were admitted. Defendants maintain that the Articles of Faith and By-Laws continue to govern IHOD.

Benjamin Purnell also traveled to Australia and established an IHOD colony there in 1904. He acquired a significant amount of land in Australia to accommodate IHOD disciples for the ingathering. Over the years, the membership in the Australian colony dwindled, and by the early 2000s there was only one remaining Australian member, a trustee named Joyce Jones, who died in 2010. However, the Australian assets, managed by lawyers and accountants there, had allegedly greatly appreciated in value. Plaintiff alleges that the Australian property is valued at more than $50 million.

Benjamin Purnell died in December 1927. In 1930, IHOD split into two factions, with Mary Purnell and 215 followers leaving the group and H. T. Dewhirst leading the remaining IHOD members. Pursuant to an agreement between the two factions, the circuit court entered a decree that partitioned IHOD’s property, conveying one portion to Mary Purnell as trustee and the other portion to IHOD and its remaining members. IHOD membership also declined in the United States. By the 2000s, the leader in Benton Harbor was Wilma Estes, who recruited plaintiff Charles Ferrel and his mother Betty Ferrel. The Ferrels, along with plaintiff’s partner, Gregory Furstenwerth, became members of IHOD in January 2010. Plaintiff was made a trustee in March 2010, and a Pillar in December 2012. Furstenwerth became a trustee in April 2013. Estes gave plaintiff the task of re-establishing operations in Australia to further the religious purpose for which the Australian land had been acquired. Plaintiff and Furstenwerth traveled many times to Australia.

Plaintiff, his mother, and Furstenwerth (collectively “the departing members”) later moved to Hawaii. According to plaintiff, the departing members lived in Hawaii with the full approval of Estes to establish a “way station,” a “resting place between Australia, where the faithful would stay, and Benton Harbor, where the faithful would return from Australia via Hawaii and repopulate the earth.” According to defendants, the departing members “resided at a home purchased with IHOD’s funds,” for which “IHOD paid all of the expenses,” “including taxes, insurance, utilities and upkeep and also paid all of the Ferrels’ and Furstenwerth’s living expenses.” Defendants allege that “Ferrel and Furstenwerth lived a lavish lifestyle and expended large sums of IHOD’s money on property and vehicles” while living in Hawaii.

According to plaintiff, the Mary Purnell faction of the former IHOD evolved into various groups throughout the years. By the early 2000s, one offshoot was a corporation named House of David Historeum and Preservation Society, which was located in Benton Harbor. Its then president was Christopher Siriano, who was an acquaintance of defendant Gregory Eversole. Both men, according to plaintiff, were curious about IHOD and came up with a plan whereby Eversole would “infiltrate” IHOD by “ingratiating himself” to Estes. Eversole used his knowledge of accounting to suggest to Estes that he could help IHOD. Plaintiff alleges that Eversole eventually acknowledged to Estes that infiltration had been his original intent, but then claimed that he had

-2- “seen the light” and was now “a true believer in IHOD doctrine.” Eversole was admitted to IHOD membership in or around 2010. Plaintiff asserts that before Eversole became a member, he transferred his own property and business to his family to keep it from IHOD, contrary to IHOD’s tenets.

Plaintiff alleged that Eversole took advantage of the fact that the departing members were in Hawaii and IHOD was paying their expenses to “drive a wedge between them and Ms. Estes so as to prevent [them] from interfering with Mr. Eversole’s plans to use the assets of IHOD for non- religious purposes and to enrich himself at the cost of the religion.” According to plaintiff, he and Furstenwerth became increasingly concerned about IHOD’s potential tax problems, but Eversole dismissed their concerns. Plaintiff eventually convinced Estes to seek outside tax and legal advice, and it was discovered that IHOD had “significant tax problems.” Plaintiff alleges that Eversole abused Estes’s trust, bullied her, threatened her physically, and convinced her that plaintiff and Furstenwerth should be relieved of their duties. IHOD excommunicated plaintiff and Furstenwerth in July 2013. IHOD then sued to evict the departing members from the property in Hawaii.

Defendants maintain that the “lavish lifestyle” plaintiff and Furstenwerth shared in Hawaii and their refusal to transfer title to the Hawaii property to IHOD contributed to problems that IHOD was having with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). IHOD hired an attorney, Eric Nemeth, to address the tax issues. According to defendants, because of the actions of plaintiff and Furstenwerth, the IHOD Pillars and advisory board voted to excommunicate both men and remove them from their leadership positions.

When the departing members did not vacate the Hawaii property, IHOD filed a lawsuit against them in Hawaii in August 2013 to recover the property.

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Charles W Ferrel v. Israelite House of David, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-w-ferrel-v-israelite-house-of-david-michctapp-2020.