Evenson v. Ellingson

31 N.W. 342, 67 Wis. 634, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 266
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 342 (Evenson v. Ellingson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evenson v. Ellingson, 31 N.W. 342, 67 Wis. 634, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 266 (Wis. 1887).

Opinion

ORton, J.

In the year 1844 two Norwegian Lutheran churches were organized 'on the principles of a Christian church,— one of them by regular members of the Lutheran church and a congregation, settled and living in the east part of Dane and the western part of Jefferson counties, on East Koshkonong prairie, in convenient neighborhood with each other, and was called “the Norwegian Lutheran Church of the Counties of Dane and Jefferson,” and after-wards, in common parlance, “the Eastern Church.” The other one was organized by similar members and a congregation, settled and living wholly in Dane county, on West Koshkonong prairie, and was called “the Western Church.” These churches and their places of meeting for worship were distant from each otker about nine miles, and were both fully organized with the proper ordinances and officers of independent, separate, and distinct churches, although for proper reasons they for a time’ employed the same pastor or minister, who administered to the same separately. These churches very soon took steps to build meeting-houses, and about 1845 or 1846 they did build meeting-houses of convenient access to these two distinct .and distant congregations, and in the place of the one originally built by the Eastern Church there was another one constructed, and in the same place, which has been ever .since, and still was up to the time of the injunction in this [638]*638case, the regular and exclusive house and place of worship of the said Eastern Church and congregation; and titles to church property, both real and personal, within said church and congregation, and used by them, have been taken and still are in said Eastern Church by the name of the “ Norwegian Lutheran Church on Koshkonong Prairie, in the Counties of Dane and Jefferson; ” and said church has uninterruptedly continued to worship and administer the ordinances of the church at the same place and in the same manner, and has adhered to the same doctrines and articles of Christian faith, until their interruption by said injunction, and has always been represented in and recognized by the regular synod of said general church as a separate and independent church in good and proper standing.

It is not material to the question upon which this case is decided whether the Western Church has thus continued to worship in a proper form and manner as a separate and independent church in their, own house of worship, within their congregation, like unto the Eastern Church or not; but it is nevertheless true that the said church has always maintained its separate, distinct, and independent organization to the present time, and both churches and congregations have always elected their trustees and all other officers by the electors of their respective and separate organizations, within their own meeting-houses. In 1854 it appears from the record introduced in evidence —but disputed by the respondents — -that the said Eastern Church, after many years attempting to conduct the business of its tem-poralities by an independent corporate or civil organization of its own, took steps to organize its congregation and membership into a corporation under the Revised Statutes of 1849, but failed in some particulars to fully comply with said statutes; but from that time to the present said church has continued to exercise the functions and powers and. enjoy the franchises of a corporation de facto, and has con-[639]*639tinned to elect its own trustees and manage all its secular concerns as a corporation. Eor the purpose of organizing itself into a corporation as aforesaid, notice was given, to some extent according to the statute then in force, "by said church, for a meeting of the congregation by the name of the Norwegian Lutheran Congregation in the Counties of Dane and Jefferson,” to be held “at the Eastern meetinghouse ” on a certain day therein named. The certificate of what was done at said meeting, signed by the officers thereof, introduced in evidence, shows that “ the Norwegian Lutheran Congregation of the Counties of Dane and Jefferson” met or held a meeting according to said notice, at the Eastern meeting-house in the town of Christiana in the county of Dane; that a majority of the members present chose the presiding officers thereof and adopted a resolution that this religious society be organized as a body corporate, by the election of nine trustees, hereafter to be called and known in their corporate capacity as trustees of the Norwegian Lutheran Congregation in the Counties of Dane and Jefferson, State of "Wisconsin.” The said meeting accordingly elected a full board of nine trustees. There may be some evidence by affidavits (which, however,-was contradicted by counter-affidavits) that said meeting was composed of the joint congregations of the two churches, the Eastern and Western; but the writings and records introduced in evidence most certainly show that said meeting was exclusive^ that of the Eastern Church and congregation as far as the true name of that original organization as a church and congregation is concerned, and the language was inappropriate to any other church and congregation than the Eastern Church, for no other had a congregation within both counties of Dane and Jefferson; and the Western Church and congregation were exclusively within the • county of Dane.

When the two churches and congregations passed by-laws, [640]*640in 1853, for tbe government of both bodies, they provided that the trustees (separately elected by both bodies) should meet “every year December 1st, jointly with the pastor and deacons of the congregations [in the plural], for the purpose of considering the joint affairs of the congregations.” Bight here, evidently, was the inception of this joint body, which has given the plaintiffs the pretext for claiming that there never was a distinct and separate corporation, de jure ■or defacto, of either church and congregation, but that there was one corporation for both, and which included both •churches and congregations. But this language explains itself. There was a quasi body or organization of both bodies into one, but only “for the purpose of considering the joint affairs of the congregations; ” but which was to have nothing to do with the private affairs or management •of either of the churches. They were left to the management of, and have always been managed by, the two churches and congregations separately and independently of each other. The entry on the records of that year afterwards .shows a meeting of “ the trustees for the Eastern and Western Koshkonong congregations for the purpose of organizing in pursuance of section 4 of the by-laws ” adopted at the above joint meeting a short time before, which by-law provided for the election of a secretary and treasurer of such joint body. Whenever, at any time, trustees were to be ■elected or other business to be done, it was done by the Eastern and Western Churches, separately, at their own meeting-houses and by their own electors and members, as appears by their records, down to 1860; and whenever a pastor was to be chosen for both churches, or other joint business to be done, the records show that it was done by “the trustees and deacons for the Kosbkonongs and Liberty Prairie congregations,” etc., and by the “Eastern and Western Koshkonongs and Liberty Prairie congregations,” etc., and by “the trustees of the Eastern and Western Lutheran [641]*641congregations of Koshkonong,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 342, 67 Wis. 634, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evenson-v-ellingson-wis-1887.