Commonwealth Ex Rel. v. Stauffer

137 A. 179, 289 Pa. 139, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 23, 1926
DocketAppeal, 182
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 137 A. 179 (Commonwealth Ex Rel. v. Stauffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Ex Rel. v. Stauffer, 137 A. 179, 289 Pa. 139, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 535 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

The charter of Albright College provides that certain of its trustees shall be chosen by the East Pennsylvania Annual Conference of the United Evangelical Church. By this action of quo warranto, relators seek to have it adjudged that they, and not respondents, are the trustees selected by that conference. Admittedly the proper determination of their claim depends on whether or not the newly organized Evangelical Church was legally formed by the merger of the Evangelical Association and the United Evangelical Church. If it was, then respondents, who were selected by the annual conference of the consolidated church, are the duly elected trustees; if it was not, then relators, who were selected by those denying that the merger was legally effected, are entitled to the office. The court below entered judgment for relators and respondents appeal.

In 1800 a body of Christians, under the leadership of Jacob Albright, formed a religious association, which a few years afterwards became known as the Evangelical Association. In 1891 certain members withdrew and formed the United Evangelical Church. A brief history of that controversy will be found in our opinion in *143 Krecker v. Shirey, 163 Pa. 534. It later became evident to many of the members of each denomination, however, that no real reason existed for their continued separation. In 1910, the general conference of each church appointed a commission, charged with the duty of acting together in drafting a tentative plan for the organic reunion of the two bodies. This they did, and their plan was reported to, and unanimously approved by each general conference, which thereupon appointed a new committee, charged with the further duty of acting together in preparing a discipline for the reunited church, to be reported to the respective general conferences. This also was prepared, and unanimously adopted by the joint committee. Instead of first making their report to the general conferences, the committee, with the approval of the Judiciary Committee of the United Evangelical Church, sent the plan to each annual conference of both denominations, with a request that they vote upon it and report the result to the general conference to which that particular annual conference was attached. Up to this point, so far as appears, there were no dissentients in either church.

All of the annual conferences of both organizations affirmatively approved of the plan, by considerably more than a two-thirds vote, except the East Pennsylvania Annual Conference of the United Evangelical Church, a majority of which refused to act on the matter, because, as they claimed, — and this was apparently their only objection at the time, — the joint committee erred in not making its report only to the respective general conferences. This was an ungracious objection on their part, since the report was first submitted to the annual conferences at the suggestion of their own representatives. The action of the annual conferences was reported to the general conferences, each of which duly approved the basis of union and the discipline prepared by the committee, and the two then met in joint session and organized the consolidated body, under the name of the *144 Evangelical Church. The effect of that approval was to make unimportant the above objection of the East Pennsylvania Annual Conference, for the general conferences, which had appointed the joint committee, had an unquestionable right to approve of its action, though the plan had not been sent forward in exact accord with the method specified at the time of its appointment.

At the time the merger was .approved by the general conference of the United Evangelical Church, the representatives of the East Pennsylvania Annual Conference entered a protest, setting forth additional reasons why it should not be effectuated under the then existing circumstances. These objections may be briefly summarized as follows: (1) The discipline of the United Evangelical Church did not contemplate a merger with any other denomination, and hence the power to effect it must, in the first instance, be obtained from the membership of the church; (2) The plan of union was not ratified by “two-thirds of the members of all the annual conferences”; (3) It proposed to change the articles of faith of the United Evangelical Church, which, under its. discipline, could never be done; (4) It also antagonized the provision of the discipline that “the annual conference shall never be deprived of the right to determine the legality of its own organization”; and (5) It also proposed to transfer the congregation to the new organization, at another time than “in the month preceding the regular session of the annual conference.” After full consideration, these objections were overruled by the general conference, and the plan of union unanimously adopted, — the representatives of the East Pennsylvania Annual Conference declining to vote.

So far as appears, the members of this annual conference are still the only dissentients, and the question to be decided is whether they can, by their objections as above stated, defeat the reunion of these essentially similar religious organizations. In answering this, several matters are to be steadily borne in mind. The point to be *145 decided is not the same as that which arises when the beneficial interest in trust property is to be determined. In such cases, the intention of the donor is the pole-star of interpretation, and, unless he consents, that intention cannot be affected by matters subsequent. Nor is the point here the same as that which arises when there has been a schism in a particular congregation, but the general church organization remains as before. In this class of cases we sustain that portion of the membership of the particular church which adheres to the parent body. Here, however, the question is which is now the parent body, and in determining this we have held that, if the union is properly effected, the unionists in each particular church are the true congregation, and the change is not a diversion of church property: Nagle v. Miller, 275 Pa. 157. In Ohio the question under consideration has been thrice answered in favor of the merger: Burkett v. Stake, 24 Ohio Law Bulletin & Reporter 235; Burkett v. Hess, Ibid. 239, and Wilson v. Fromm, Ibid. (Nisi Prius Rep., n. s.) 75. In those cases, though the underlying issue was the same as that here, the present record does not so disclose the facts in theta as to enable us to decide that the judgments there, under the principles set forth in Com. ex rel. v. Kelly et al., 287 Pa. 139, adjudicate this action also.

Turning then to the specific objections made by relators, we find that, as contended by them, the discipline of the United Evangelical Church did not provide a method by which the entire organization could be merged with any other denomination. . Nor was it necessary that it should. The right to so unite is inherent 'in every religious denominatoin (Hayes v. Manning, 263 Mo. 1; Harris v. Cosby, 173 Ala. 81; Barkley v. Hayes, 208 Fed. 319), unless there is an “explicit pronouncement to the contrary in their constitution, religious standards or form of government”: Barkley v. Hayes, supra, page 325. “Union among churches is a perfectly legitimate part of their purpose and of their freedom, *146

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Bluebook (online)
137 A. 179, 289 Pa. 139, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-v-stauffer-pa-1926.