First Baptist Church of Trinity Heights v. Dennis

253 S.W.2d 695, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1890
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1952
DocketNo. 10093
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 S.W.2d 695 (First Baptist Church of Trinity Heights v. Dennis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas 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 Trinity Heights v. Dennis, 253 S.W.2d 695, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1890 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

This dispute is between majority and minority groups of the First Baptist Church of Trinity Heights of Dallas. The minority group contains about fifteen members out of a total church membership of approximately four hundred.

The suit was brought by the minority group in the name of the church1 against its pastor, the Reverend J. Calvin Dennis, and other officers of the church.

The primary purpose of the suit was to have vested in appellants the possession of all church property, real and personal, to be used and employed by them in accordance with the terms of a certain deed from H. H. Moore and wife, Emma Moore, to the church, dated April 20, 1923, conveying the land upon which the church property is now located.

The Moore deed contained these provisions :

“Should any question of division in denominational principal or fact ever arise in said church, then all authority [697]*697pertaining to the rights and title to said property, together with all improvements and appurtenances thereto, with all furniture, furnishings or other equipment used in connection therewith, shall inhere and vest exclusively in that part of said church holding to the principles now governing said church and as expressed in the present Constitution of the Baptist Missionary Association of Texas.
“In the event there should cease to he any member or members of said church holding to the principles and doctrines, as expressed in the constitution of the Baptist Missionary Association of Texas, all right and titles to said property and appurtenances thereto, with all furniture, furnishings and other equipment used in connection therewith, shall immediately vest in the Corresponding Secretary of the Baptist Missionary Association of Texas, in trust for and subject to the orders of said Association.”

It was the pleading of appellants that they and those for whom they acted constituted that part of the church holding to the principles of the church as expressed in the 1922 Constitution of the Baptist Missionary Association of Texas and that the majority of the membership of such church, including the pastor and many of its officers, had deviated therefrom and had thus lost the right to control the church property. Specifically appellants alleged the following violations of the terms of the Moore deed and the 1922 Constitution:

“(a) The said defendants are threatening and attempting to encumber the said property with the express purposes of then permitting a foreclosure and buy in said property to extinguish and defeat the restrictive clauses in said deed.
“(b) Defendants in the study courses of the church during the year 1950 refused to use the Baptist Missionary Association of Texas literature but on the contrary used the literature of the Southern Baptist Convention.
“(c) Said defendants in 1950 refused to send messengers to the Dallas County Baptist Missionary Association.
“(d) The said defendants during the year 1950 refused to send messengers to the Baptist Missionary Association in the meeting in Port Arthur, Texas.
“(e) That the defendants so manipulated to control the conference meeting in said church on the date of April 4, 1951, to defeat a conference resolution made by Mrs. B. D. Veach, said resolution calling upon the church to reaffirm its loyalty to the Association and North American Baptist Association and to affiliate with them in the different phases of work.”

After hearing considerable evidence the court submitted this issue to the jury:

“Special Issue No. I
“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the division existing among the members of the First Baptist Church of Trinity Heights exists on account of differences in denominational principle or fact?”
This issue was answered “No.”

Two other issues were submitted to the jury conditioned on an affirmative answer to the above issue and were not answered. By a fourth special issue the jury found that appellants and their class had waived their rights in the church property.

We are of the opinion that the answer of the jury to the issue quoted above is amply supported by the evidence and that such issue is decisive of this appeal.

We are also of the opinion that the evidence is undisputed that there was no division among the congregation of the First Baptist Church of Trinity Heights as to any “denominational principal (principle) or fact * * * ” as expressed in the present (1922) Constitution of the Baptist Missionary Association of Texas, this being the language of the restrictive covenant in the Moore deed.

These conclusions bring into focus appellants’ last two points, being numbers six and seven. They relate to Special Issue [698]*698No. I and the accompanying definition of “Denominational principle.” The court defined this term as meaning “a fundamental truth of a religious creed or sect.”

Appellants objected to this definition on the grounds that it was

“ * * * too narrow with reference to the issues in this cause, and same is likewise a comment upon the weight of the evidence and does not take into consideration matters pertaining to organization and church government as distinguished from fundamental faith and practice of the denomination.”

To submission of the issue itself appellants objected on the -ground that there was no evidence of any dispute as denominational principles and that the proper issue to submit was

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the division existing among the members of the First Baptist Church of Trinity Heights exists on account of difference of fact, * *

Appellants in their brief make this statement under these points:

“The Statement of Facts in this case contains 478 pages and in all those pages there is not one word of testimony showing that there was any difference between plaintiffs and defendants in regard to fundamental truths of the Baptist denomination. Plaintiffs and defendants alike were, and so far as the writer of this brief has reason to believe, still are good Baptists; that question or issue simply was not in the case.”

We must ascertain if we can what the grantors in the Moore deed had in mind when they wrote the restrictive covenant in their deed. This must be garnered from the language used and the instrument to which they referred, the Constitution of the Baptist Missionary Association of Texas.

While the Moore deed in the first portion of the paragraph copied herein uses the phrase “denominational principle or fact” we find that the word “fact” is omitted in the latter portion which vests the property in those “holding to the principles” of the church as expressed in the Baptist Missionary Association Constitution. Then too in the succeeding paragraph of such deed provision is made for vesting the church property in the event no member of the church continues faithful to the “principles and doctrines” contained in the Baptist Missionary Association Constitution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 S.W.2d 695, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-baptist-church-of-trinity-heights-v-dennis-texapp-1952.