Hayes v. Manning

172 S.W. 897, 263 Mo. 1, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 897 (Hayes v. Manning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Manning, 172 S.W. 897, 263 Mo. 1, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 377 (Mo. 1914).

Opinions

WALKER, J.

Plaintiffs as officers and members of a Cumberland Presbyterian Church (hereinafter referred to as the Cumberland Church) bring this suit to have reduced to their possession certain property in the city of Marshall, consisting of several lots of ground on which are located a church building, a manse or pastor’s residence, and a mission church. Plaintiffs,, by reason of the .alleged relation they sustain to the church, claim to be the equitable owners of the property, holding same in trust for the church, and that defendants wrongfully withhold same from them. Whereupon they ask a decree for the possession of the property, and that defendants be enjoined from further interfering with their right to the possession and use of same, and that the injunction be made perpetual. Defendants deny the equitable ownership of plaintiffs in the property, or that they are entitled to its possession, but allege that it is-the property of the “Presbyterian Church in the United States” (hereinafter referred to as the Presbyterian Church), the only legal successor of the Cumberland Church, as a result of a union of said churches, and deny that they have refused to permit plaintiffs to use and occupy any part of the property. The reply was a general denial.

Upon a hearing a decree was rendered in plaintiffs’ favor, and defendants were enjoined and re[20]*20strained from the further use of the property. After the usual procedure they appealed to this court.

The Presbyterian and Cumberland churches have practically the same form of government, which is representative or republican, as contradistinguished from religious organizations which are either monarchial in form and governed by a hierarchy, or are pure democracies in which each particular church is a separate entity whose affairs are regulated wholly by its members.

Under the form of government of the churches here involved, a local congregation is called a particular church, which is immediately governed by a church session composed of the minister in charge and the ruling elders elected for terms fixed by the congregation.

Next in order is the presbytery, which embraces a number of particular churches within a prescribed district. The powers of a presbytery are exercised by the ordained ministers in the district and one ruling elder from each' particular church therein. Superior in authority to the presbytery is the synod, which embraces not less than three presbyteries and consists of ministers and ruling elders from each particular church. The General Assembly is the highest authority of the church. It is a representative body composed of ministers and ruling elders selected by and from each of the presbyteries.

The conflicting claims of the parties to. the property in question grew out of a union between the Presbyterian and Cumberland Churches, claimed by defendants to have been consummated by the joint action of the General Assemblies of said churches in 1906. Por a number of years prior thereto the propriety of a union was discussed generally by the members of the respective church organizations; since said union its validity has been challenged by members of the Cumberland Church, and suits have been brought by them [21]*21in different jurisdictions in State and Federal courts to determine the question.

The Cumberland Church sprang out of the Presbyterian Church. Early in the nineteenth century, about 1804 or 1805-, a controversy arose between certain officers and members of the Presbyterian Church, the creed of which is termed the "Westminster Confession of Faith. This controversy, omitting minor matters, centered principally upon differences of opinion-in regard to the doctrine of predestination. This controversy gained strength and became more widespread from year to year as the individual ministers and members of the different churches acquired more liberty of thought, as has always been the case in the history of every formulated belief prepared by one set of men for adoption by others, since the abandonment of the simple faith of the primitive Christians and the promulgation of the first creed at the council of Nicea, until 1810 when three ministers of the Presbyterian Church in the State of Tennessee emphasized their opposition to the established order and by an open breach laid the foundation upon which was built the Cumberland Church. In 1813 the church thus founded established three presbyteries; a .synod was also formed, which set forth the propositions upon which the Cumberland Church differed from the Westminster Confession of Faith.

In 1829 a G-eneral Assembly of the Cumberland Church was established. In 1883 this church promulgated a constitution, and at the meeting of its General Assembly in 1906 it had grown in strength until it had a membership of 185,212, represented by 2869 congregations, 1514 ordained ministers, 114 presbyteries, and 17 synods.

In 1903 the Presbyterian Church revised its Confession of Faith in such a manner that the essential differences in doctrine between it and the Cumberland Church, which had wrought the disruption in 1804 and [22]*221805 and. had led to the establishment of the latter church in 1810, were so far eliminated, as we measure the meanings of their respective creeds and constitutions by comparison and contrast, as to bring the two churches into substantial harmony, thus removing any reasons theretofore existing against reunion. Following the revision of the Confession of Faith by the Presbyterian Church, in 1903 the General Assemblies of the Presbyterian and Cumberland churches at their respective meetings in that year appointed committees to negotiate a union between said churches. These committees agreed upon terms and united in a report embodying same, which was to the effect that there was no material difference in the articles of faith of the two churches, and a reunion was, therefore, recommended ; this report was submitted to the General Assemblies of the respective churches in May, 1904, and was adopted by each of said Assemblies by the required majority, the vote of the Cumberland Assembly being-one hundred and sixty-two in favor of the union to seventy-four against same. Each Assembly thereupon referred the basis of union to its presbyteries, and it was approved by a large majority of the presbyteries of the Presbyterian Church and by those of the Cumberland Church by a vote of sixty in favor of the union to fifty-one against it, one presbytery approving- conditionally and two not voting. The terms of the joint report provided that the union should have binding force when approved by the General Assemblies and presbyteries of the two churches.

The vote of the presbyteries was taken and reported to the General Assemblies of the two churches in 1905, and upon being formally canvassed the result was declared in favor of the union. At the time of the meeting of the General Assembly of the Cumberland Church at which the vote of the presbyteries was reported, there was no division in the church organization or dispute as to the supreme authority of the Gen[23]*23eral Assembly, as is evidenced by each presbytery voting upon the basis of unión and reporting the result to the Assembly.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 897, 263 Mo. 1, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-manning-mo-1914.