First Baptist Church of Paris v. Fort

49 L.R.A. 617, 54 S.W. 892, 93 Tex. 215, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 131
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
DocketNo. 803.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 49 L.R.A. 617 (First Baptist Church of Paris v. Fort) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Baptist Church of Paris v. Fort, 49 L.R.A. 617, 54 S.W. 892, 93 Tex. 215, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 131 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The First Baptist Church of Paris, joined by B. F. Fuller, Stuart Lee, S. H. Webb, W. F. Edwards, J. C. Hunt, R. M. Miller, and J. B. Johnson, who sue as trustees of the said church and in their own right as members thereof, instituted this suit in the District. Court of Lamar Countv against J. M. Fort, B. W. Lewis, S. B. M. Long, Mrs. M. C. Maxey, F. I. Williams, T. S. Preston, M. C. Spivey, G. M. Fortune, and the executors and heirs of Mrs. Emily Williams, deceased, naming them. Plaintiffs sought to recover the possession of certain church property, consisting of the building and lot located in the city of Paris, Lamar County, Texas, and to cancel certain conveyances named therein, and to restrain the defendants from interfering with plaintiffs’ possession of the church property.

The petition sets up the facts with regard to the original organization of the church, the building of the house upon the lot acquired for that purpose, and the facts and circumstances which brought about a division among the members of the said church, charging that the defendants and their adherents, a majority of the members, had departed from the original confession of faith adopted by the church in its organization, and had diverted said property from the purposes to which it was dedicated; and.that the plaintiffs and those represented by them, a minority of the said congregation, had adhered to the original confession of faith, and were, in fact, the First Baptist Church of Paris and entitled to the possession of the said property. The case was tried . before the court without a jury and the following conclusions of fact were filed, upon which judgment was entered for the plaintiffs below.

“1. The court finds that this church was originally organized in about the year 1854, under the name of the United Baptist Church, and adopted, as its articles of faith and covenant, the articles of faith and covenant introduced in evidence, known as the New Hampshire Confession of Faith.

“2. The court finds that on the 10th day of April, 1861, the lot in controversy upon which a church building had been erected was deeded to Lemuel H. Williams, Goodman Tucker, and Hardy Moore, trustees . for said church, under and by the name of the Paris Baptist Church, to have and to hold under them and their successors, as a place of worship for said Paris Baptist Church, and said church and the members thereof continued to hold religious worship on said lot and in said church building under the name of the Paris Baptist Church, and upon the articles of faith and covenant upon which it was originally organized until it became incorporated on the 21st of March, 1890, under the general incorporation laws of Texas, when it was incorporated under the name of the First Baptist Church of Paris, and afterwards erected upon said lot their present church building at a cost of about *221 $20,000; that in order to complete said building or church, the said First Baptist Church of Paris borrowed of one S. D. Crittenden the sum of $5000, and executed by and through some of its trustees a note for said amount, and a deed of trust or mortgage on the said church property to secure the payment of the same.

“3. The court finds that the trustees of the said First Baptist Church of Paris named in its charter were U. Hearon, F. I. Williams, B. F. Fuller, Stuart Lee, Samuel H. Webb, T. S. Preston, and Ira Webster; that said mortgage or deed of trust was executed to M. C. Spivey, trustee, by B. F. Fuller, T. S. Preston, Stuart Lee, and W. F. Edwards as trustees of said First Baptist Church of Paris; that said W. F. Edwards had been elected trustee by said church to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of H. Hearon.

“4. The court finds that the First Baptist Church of Paris had power to mortgage said property-, but that the said deed of trust was invalid because not executed as required by the statutes of Texas, under the seal of the corporation, and for the further reason that said deed of trust was executed without having been authorized by a majority of said church, voting in regular session, as provided by its charter; but, however, the court finds that the said First Baptist Church of Paris is es-topped from deirying the validity of said deed of trust because it obtained the money and used the same in the completion of its church on the faith of said deed of trust and afterwards ratified the same, and by bidding the property in at the sale under said deed of trust.

“5. That said.church, from its original organization up to about the time of the completion of its church building in 1895, continued to worship and hold religious services upon the articles of faith and church covenant upon which it was organized, when dissensions arose among the members of said church over the teachings and preaching of its then pastor, one G. HI. Fortune; that said Fortune, by his preaching and published sermons and articles, denied the full inspiration of the Scriptures, and denied and repudiated the vicarious atonement of Christ-for sinners, and denied that Christ died for and instead of sinners and became their substitute, and denied that Christ’s righteousness was imputed to the righteous, all of which was contrary to the doctrines- and teachings of the Baptist Church and contrary to the articles of faith upon which this church was organized and had continued to worship since its organization.

“(i. The court finds that at the time said dissensions arose the membership of the First Baptist Church of Paris was about four hundred. That said dissensions continued to grow until the church was divided into two factions, one faction adhering to the doctrines, teachings, and preaching of the said G. M. Fortune, and the other faction standing by and adhering to the doctrines of the Baptist Church and the articles of faith upon which the church was organized. That the faction which adhered to the original articles of faith and the doctrines and teachings of the Baptist Church, which faction is, for convenience, herein *222 after styled the anti-Fortuneites, strenuously opposed the re-employment of-said Fortune as pastor of said church, and, after he was employed, insisted upon his resignation because of his doctrines; but at the several metings when these matters came up and were discussed and passed upon, the faction which adhered to the doctrines of said Fortune {which faction is hereinafter styled, for convenience, the Fortuneites), had a majority of the members present and voting and refused to request the resignation of said Fortune and refused to accept his resignation when offered by him, and re-employed him as pastor for an indefinite period of time. That some time in the month of July, 1896, said Fortune tendered his resignation as pastor of the First Baptist Church of Paris, which was accepted by the Fortuneites, and that about the 30th of August, 1896, said Fortune rented a hall in the city of Paris and delivered therein a series of sermons and lectures in opposition and criticism of the creed, of the Baptist Church, which were attended by his adherents; that during this time anti-Fortuneites continued to meet and hold services and Sunday-school in the First Baptist Church building until Sunday next preceding the 6th day of October, .1896, when the church doors were locked and the windows barred by the Fortuneites.

“7.

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Bluebook (online)
49 L.R.A. 617, 54 S.W. 892, 93 Tex. 215, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-baptist-church-of-paris-v-fort-tex-1900.