Harrison v. Hoyle

24 Ohio St. (N.S.) 254
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Ohio St. (N.S.) 254 (Harrison v. Hoyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Hoyle, 24 Ohio St. (N.S.) 254 (Ohio 1873).

Opinions

Opinion by

McIivaine, J.,

in which Day, J., concurred:

On the 4th of April, 1832, one William Hamilton conveyed to John Street, Jacob Holloway, Benjamin Hoyle, and Henry Crew, in fee, the real estate in controversy, “ in trust and for the use of the Ohio Yearly Meeting of the Society of Eriends.” The property thus conveyed was intended to be used for the purposes of a boarding-school, and soon after suitable buildings were erected thereon, and a boarding-school has been maintained therein ever since.

At the date of this conveyance, the Ohio Yearly Meeting was an unincorporated religious body, exercising ecclesiastical jurisdiction over all members of the Society of Eriends, within certain territorial limits, including the State of Ohio. There was not then, nor is there now, any doubt as to the beneficiary intended by the parties to the conveyance. The Ohio Yearly Meeting was well known to grantor and grantees. Nor did any uncertainty arise as to the identity of the beneficiary, until the 5th day of September,'A. d. 1854.

On the day last named, a separation took place in the Ohio Yearly Meeting, which resulted in the organization of two separate and distinct bodies, each of which assumed the name, and from that time hitherto there have been two associations, each claiming to be the Ohio Yearly Meeting, entitled to the trust property described in said conveyance.

[262]*262It is admitted by all parties to this action, that there is, and can be, bnt one “ Ohio Yearly Meeting of the Society of Eriendsand, it is further conceded, that one or the other of the bodies, which resulted from the separation referred to, is the true and legitimate Ohio Yearly Meeting, entitled to the usé and benefit of the property and charity above mentioned.

Persons representing each of these bodies, and also the trustees in whom the legal tit] e to the property is no w vested, are before the court. The plaintiffs, who represent the association seeking to recover the possession and use of this property, will be referred to in this opinion as Binns and his associates; and the defendants, who represent the body now in possession of the property, as Ployle and his associates. The former are also known, and sometimes designated, as Guerneyites, and the latter as "Wilburites.

The controlling question involved in the case is, whether Binns and his associates, or Hoyle and his associates, constitute the true and legitimate “Ohio Yearly Meeting of the Society of Eriends.” A finding in favor of one of these parties is necessarily a finding against the other.

Counsel for defendants claim the controlling question in the case to be as follows : “Was Jonathan Binns duly chosen clerk of the Ohio Yearly Meeting of the Society of Eriends, in 1854, according to the rules, discipline, and usages of the meeting and society ?”

A majority of the court are of- opinion that the proposition contained in this claim of defendants is too narrow. Although it may be said to be within the issue, it does not embrace the whole of it. Eor it may be that Binns and his associates are the true beneficiaries of this charity, though it appear that some irregularity intervened in the mode and manner in which Binns was chosen clerk in 1854; or even though the rules, discipline, and usages of the meeting and of the Society of Exiends did not provide at all for the emergency which arose in the xnatter of [263]*263choosing a clerk for the meeting at its session in that year.

It is quite certain, as it will hereafter appear, that the separation did not take place until Binns assumed to exercise the office of clerk, and it is equally certain that immediately upon the separation Binns became clerk of one of the resultant bodies, and Hoyle of the other. Now, suppose that after the separation neither Binns nor Hoyle was invested with the office-of clerk of the Ohio Yearly Meeting, in conformity to the rules, discipline, or usages of the meeting or the society, it would not follow that neither of the resultant bodies was the true successor of the Ohio Yearly Meeting, or that this trust failed for want of a beneficiary. Or suppose, as the fact is claimed to be, that Hoyle’s term of office had not expired at the time of the separation, and that he continued to act as the clerk of one of the resultant bodies, still, we think it might be made to appear, that he and his associates were the separatists, and ceased not only to be the “ Ohio Yearly Meeting,” but also ceased to be members of the Society of Eriendsand, in either event, it could not be said that they are entitled to the benefits of a trust created in favor of the Ohio Yearly Meeting of the Society of Eriends,” as against the other resultant body, which, according to the principles of the society, might prove itself to be the only true Ohio Yearly Meeting of the society.

That there is a “ Society of Eriends,” whose existence does not depend vipon the Ohio Yearly Meeting, although the latter is embraced within and forms part of the former, is a fact not only established by the testimony, but it is not denied by any of the parties. This society is composed of all true “ Eriends in Unity ” throughout the world. To be a member of this society requires more than a mere profession of a particular religious faith. It requires a practical fellowship or unity with, and adhesion to, the whole body of Eriends, not only in matters of faith, but also in matters of ecclesiastical and disciplinary jurisdiction. It was well said by Chief Justice Shaw, in Earle v. Wood, 8 [264]*264Cush. 464: “ Men are not bound to be Quakers, but if they would be Quakers and brethren in unity with each other, and with their common superiors, they must conform to their rules and judgments. . . . The reasons might satisfy their own consciences in separating, but in doing so, they cease to be Quakers, or Friends in Unity.”

The form of government adopted by this society is peculiar, and remarkable for its lack of centralized power; but, nevertheless, such rules aS' it has provided for its own government and the maintenance of its own integrity stand as the law for our guidance in determining which of the contending parties to this suit constitutes the “ Ohio Yearly Meeting,” embraced within, and composing a part of, the “ Society of Friends.”

This view of the issue brings within the scope of our inquiides all the testimony in the case, embracing more than two thousand printed pages, and requires us to state our conclusions of fact in relation to the following subjects:

1. The history and polity of the Society of Friends.

2. The history and polity of the Ohio Yearly Meeting.

3. The causes which produced the separation in the Ohio Yearly Meeting.

4. The immediate circumstances of the separation.

5. The action and judgment of the “ Society of Friends” in relation thereto.

6. The subsequent relations of the -resultant bodies to the society at large.

I. The distinctive doctrines of Quakerism were first taught in England, shortly before the middle of the seventeenth century. The earliest meetings of this sect of Christians were no doubt held for the purpose of worship only, and it was not until the year 1682 that the “ Society of Friends ” was fully organized for the pux-pose of discipline or church government.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ohio St. (N.S.) 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-hoyle-ohio-1873.