Gibbs v. Gilead Ecclesiastical Society

38 Conn. 153
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 38 Conn. 153 (Gibbs v. Gilead Ecclesiastical Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbs v. Gilead Ecclesiastical Society, 38 Conn. 153 (Colo. 1871).

Opinion

Butler, C. J.

The supposed errors of the court below for which a new trial is claimed relate exclusively to the manner in which the case was submitted to the jury. Injustice may have been done the plaintiff by the proceedings of the church and society in Gilead, and of the consociation of Tolland county, and by the verdict of the jury, but we cannot revise their proceedings on this motion except so far as they constituted the subject-matter of the requests made to the court in relation to the charge. Looking then at those requests, the facts involved in them, and the charge as made, we are all satisfied that the case was fairly and legally presented to the jury, and whatever we may think of their verdict it was their province to render it, and it would be going beyond our province to set it aside and grant a new trial on the grounds presented in the motion.

The. plaintiff sought to recover a sum of money which he claimed to be due as balance of a year’s salary on a contract made with the defendants. The contract was made in connection with a settlement, by which an ecclesiastical pastoral relation was created between the plaintiff and defendants and the church connected with them. The contract was in wilting, and consisted of a vote by the church “ to extend a call” to the plaintiff “ to settle with them in the work of the gospel ministry,” and a like vote of the society in substantially the same terms, with a proposition to pay the plaintiff a salary of $600 annually, with the use of the parsonage grounds and [166]*166building?;. The call was accepted and became a contract, and the church being a eonsociated one, the plaintiff was duly settled and established in the pastoral office and relation with the consent and by the. formal action of the consociation to which it belonged.

The contract was in the form usually adopted in such cases, ■ and it is undoubtedly true that such settlements are, by implication, for the work of the gospel ministry according to the polity of the congregational denomination of Christians, and subject to their platforms, constitutions, and usages, and the contrácts for the payment of salary are dependent upon the existence of the pastoral relation, and cease to be operative . whenever that relation ceases to exist. This was substantially conceded on the trial, and it was further conceded that the pastoral relation between a minister and a eonsociated church, under the congregational polity, though theoretically formed for life, can be severed at the request of the parties, or for cause, by the formal action of the consociation with which the church and society are connected.

There was a severance in form of the pastoral relation in this case by. the consociation of Tolland county, and primá facie a termination of the contract for salary. But the severance was upon an ex parte application by the church and society, against the consent of the plaintiff, and notwithstanding’ his protest. He claimed upon the trial that, under the Saybrook Platform as the constitution of the churches, the consociation has not the power or fight to sever the pastoral relation upon the application of one party only, and because they deem it expedient that it should' be severed, and that the action of the consociation was in that respect unauthorized, and in other respects informal, unfair, and invalid, and that the severance was inoperative upon the contract. These claims were denied by the defendants, and the claims thus made and denied constituted the material issues upon which the case was tried.

To establish his claim in relation to the first issue, namely, that the consociation had no power to dismiss for expediency, the plaintiff claimed that the fifteen articles of discipline of [167]*167the Saybrook Platform were the constitution of the congregational churches of Connecticut, and that they conferred no power on the consociation to dismiss on the ground of expediency, and, assuming that the power could not otherwise exist, requested the court so to charge the jury. The court did not so charge, but left the jury to determine, as a controverted question of fact, from the Platform and all the other evidence offered in the case, whether the consociation had such power or not. The plaintiff claims that the court erred in thus charging and refusing to charge, and thus presents the first point made in the case.

It is undoubtedly true, as a general rule, that the construction of a written document, where the meaning is to be collected from the document itself, is matter, of pure law, and for the. court. But that rule, as is evident from the qualification embraced in it, cannot be strictly applied in all cases. It was not applicable in this.

The plaintiff’s “ work in the gospel ministry” was to be in accordance with the congregational polity, and his pastoral relation subject to its usages and laws. That polity and those usages and laws are not all contained in the Platform, nor is it, in any just sense, “ the only constitution of the churches,” as assumed in the plaintiff’s request. That polity is contained in the congregational theory of the .nature of a Christian church; in the.usages of the churches in respect to mutual communion and assistance which existed when the Platform was adopted, and which were not affected by its provisions; in all the work of the Synod of 1708 at Saybrook, including the “Confession of Faith,” “ Heads oí Agreement,” and “Articles of Discipline ” ; in the self-adopted constitutions, rides and by-laws of the consociations, and ■ their interpretations and modifications 01 the Platform; ar d in the corresponding usages adopted by the consociations, associations, aiid churches, since associations and consociations were organized.

The fundamental idea of congregational polity, under which the churches oí Now England were gathered, was that “ particular societies of visible saints, who under Christ their head are statedly joined together for ordinary communion [168]*168with one another in all the ordinances of Christ, are particular churches, having right to choose their own officers, and admonish, discipline and excommunicate scandalous and offending members. The churches of Connecticut were therefore substantially independent, but they recognized the importance of mutual communion and assistance, and in cases of difficulty councils were common. They also recognized the importance of associations of pastors for mutual advice and brotherly intercourse. But the usages in relation to mutual communion and assistance, as they existed prior to 1708,’ were found insufficient for the preservation of harmony and peace in and among the churches. “ For the want of a more energetic government,” says Trumbull in his History, “many churches ran into confusion, and councils were not sufficient tc relieve the aggrieved and restore peace.” In order to establish a more energetic government the General Assembly provided for the calling of a Synod at Srybrook by the following act:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Conn. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-gilead-ecclesiastical-society-conn-1871.