Clevenger v. McAfee

170 S.W.2d 424, 237 Mo. App. 1077, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 251
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 S.W.2d 424 (Clevenger v. McAfee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clevenger v. McAfee, 170 S.W.2d 424, 237 Mo. App. 1077, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 251 (Mo. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

*1080 CAVE, J.

This suit is brought by plaintiffs as trustees of the New Garden Baptist Church, in Ray County, to restrain the defendants, their agents and representatives, and all persons claiming by or under them, from entering upon and taking possession of or attempting to take possession of a certain church house and the property on which it is located. On the filing of the petition, a temporary restraining order was issued and in due time the causé was tried on the merits and the court granted permanent injunction against the defendants and the intervenors who duly perfected their appeal.

The petition charged in substance that the plaintiffs are the duly elected, qualified and acting trustees of New Garden Baptist Church and as such trustees have exclusive right, title and interest in and to certain real estate therein described on which is located the church-house; that said church.is an unincorporated, voluntary association, with regularly adopted rules, by-laws and provisions for self-government; that the defendants on or about March 15, 1941, without the consent of the plaintiffs or of said New Garden Baptist Church, and contrary to and in violation of the rules, by-laws and articles of government of said church, did forcibly enter upon said real estate and upon and into the building thereon situate, and did violently and in a disorderly manner attempt to appropriate to themselves and use the church house to the exclusion of and against the will of the members of said New Garden Baptist Church, for whom these plaintiffs hold *1081 title to and possession of said property and building; that said defendants, although, not members of said church, did threaten and assert that they will continue to so unlawfully, forcibly, and without consent enter upon said property and enter upon and into said building, and that the said defendants further threaten and assert that they will continue to permanently further deprive plaintiffs and the .members of said church from the use of said premises and said building; that plaintiffs fear that said defendants will carry out their threats unless restrained by the judgment of the court; that if defendants so continue such trespassing and' unlawful acts as aforesaid, the plaintiffs will suffer an irreparable injury; that defendants will vex, harass and annoy plaintiffs and the members' of said church and will put plaintiffs to the necessity of bringing a multiplicity of actions to protect their rights; that defendants are insolvent and that plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law.

After the filing of the petition, one Frank Wilson and J. H. Sisk filed their application to intervene in said cause, alleging' that they were two of the three regularly elected, qualified and acting trustees of said church. Their application was sustained and they were permitted to intervene in said cause. As intervenors, they filed answer denying the allegations in plaintiffs’ petition, and further answered, claiming that they were the duly elected, qualified and acting trustees of said church; that they were a majority of the trustees of said church and as such trustees have exclusive right, title and interest in and to the property described in the petition; that the plaintiffs and their followers conspired and contrived to deprive the intervenors of their office as trustees and attempted to remove them contrary to the rules and customs of said church; that plaintiffs’ and their followers’ actions were contrary to the rules and customs of said church; that the •meetings at which plaintiffs attempted to remove the intervenors as trustees were held contrary to the rules and customs of said church and that the plaintiffs were without right or authority to prosecute this suit; that the intervenors had not consented, authorized or acquiesced in the filing or prosecution of said suit.

The answer of the four defendants was to the same effect.

The reply puts in issue the question of who are the legal trustees of said church.

It is conceded that the New Garden Primitive Baptist Church is an unincorporated, voluntary, religious association organized for the sole purpose for the worship of God, and that said church is congregational in its nature and was built exclusively by the will of its members in good standing, with no superior or directing power other than found in the government of the church by its own members, through rules, by-laws, practices and customs of said church. There were about 156 members at the time of this controversy.

*1082 The Rules of Decorum of the church were introduced and the pertinent parts are substantially as follows: The business of the church is to be attended to on the third Saturday in each month commencing at eleven o ’clock; a moderator shall be chosen by a majority of the members present, Avho shall preside while the church is on business and shall preserve order; he shall ta!ke the vote of the church, and all business of the church shall be done by majority of the members present except the choice of church officials and the admission of members, in which case the church shall be unanimous; a departure from the articles of faith and Rules of Decorum is a sin against the church for which it has' the right to require satisfaction and failure to comply shall cut the dissenter off from all right to the records and any other property belonging to the church.

The evidence discloses that friction developed in the membership of the church in the fall of 1940 and grew with intensity at each' business meeting thereafter until it culminated in this suit. The trouble did not involve any question of creed, but appears to be solely friction between individual members of the church.

The first vital questions for our decision is, who were the duly elected and qualified trustees of the church at the time of the filing of this suit ?

It appears from the evidence that there were three trustees elected by the church who held the title and were charged with the duty of preserving and caring for the property belonging to the church. It is not clear from the evidence whether the trustees were elected for a definite period of time or whether, when elected, they served until death or resignation or expulsion. It is in evidence that at the beginning of this trouble, Frank Wilson, J. H. Sisk and Joe M. Siegel were the trustees. The'cause of the friction and ill feeling in the congregation is not clear. It seems to have stepped out of the shadows of the past, full grown. It is clear that defendant McAfee was the leader of one faction and Leon Clevenger the leader of another. Over a period of four or five months the factional dispute became more spirited, and at the business meeting of the church on the third Saturday in March, 1941, the matter reached a climax. At this meeting there were approximately 70 members of the church present. A motion was made that Elder Clevenger be elected as moderator as provided for by the rules. A vote was taken and about 40 members voted favorably and no one against. Before- Clevenger could take charge of the meeting as moderator, defendant McAfee went to the platform and announced to the congregation that he had been elected moderator some three or four years before, and “he was going to moderate.” He asked how many would stand with him, and twenty-six or twenty-seven members indicated their willingness to support him.

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.W.2d 424, 237 Mo. App. 1077, 1943 Mo. App. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clevenger-v-mcafee-moctapp-1943.