Helm v. Zarecor

222 U.S. 32, 32 S. Ct. 10, 56 L. Ed. 77, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1865
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 6, 1911
Docket395
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 222 U.S. 32 (Helm v. Zarecor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helm v. Zarecor, 222 U.S. 32, 32 S. Ct. 10, 56 L. Ed. 77, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1865 (1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the court.

The sole question presented by this appeal is with respect to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court. ‘ —

The bill, as amended, was brought by certain ministers, ruling elders and laymen of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, citizens of States other than *33 Tennessee, suing for themselves and for all the members of said church, against individuals, citizens of Tennessee, described as representing not only their own interests but also those of all the members of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, and “The Board of Publication of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church,” a Tennessee corporation. .

The controversy disclosed by the bill arose from the proceedings, taken in 1906, to effect the union of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church and the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, both voluntary religious associations, and relates to the property and management of the defendant corporation. The Board of Publication had been incorporated in 1860, under the direction of the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, for the purpose of conducting its publishing work, and had acquired valuable property consisting of a publishing house and its equipment in Nashville, Tennessee. The original members of the corporation were the committee of publication of the Church, an^l their successors under the charter were appointed by th£ General Assembly to which was committed its regulation and control.

The bill alleged that the two Churches had been legally united and that as a result the property in question was held by the corporation in trust “for the entire reunited denomination;” and, further, that “the Board and its officers and managers were advised and believed and still believe” that the union was valid, that “thereby'the •Board of Publication became a corporation and institution of the reunited Church,” and that the managers of the corporation “could do nothing else than recognize the General Assembly of the united Church by reporting to it and otherwise recognizing its authority.” It was also alleged that a minority of the members of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, and of its ministers, who *34 were opposed to the consolidation, repudiated it and effected a separate organization under the former name, and that thereupon a body assuming to be the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church declared the offices of all the members of the Board of Publication vaeant and proceeded to elect persons of their own organization to fill the supposed vacancies. These persons had made demand for the possession of the corporate property, claiming to be the rightful members of the corporation and that its property was held in trust for the religious association by whose General Assembly they had been elected. It was stated that this claim cast a cloud .upon the equitable title to the property. After reviewing at length the history of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, the action of the representatives of the two Churches which culminated in the alleged consolidation, and the subsequent antagonistic proceedings, the bill prayed for decree that the property in question is held in trust by the corporation for the benefit of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America or the members thereof, and that the members of the Board elected by the reunited Church are the true and lawful members of said Board; that the defendants be enjoined from interfering with the control and management of the corporation by those members or with the corporate property, and that if mistaken with respect to the relief prayed for as to the persons who constitute the Board and have the right of management the court should decree that “whoever may be the members of the Board and whoever may be entitled to such management, they shall manage the corporation and administer the trust for the use and benefit of said reunited Church.”

The defendants filed two pleas to the jurisdiction. In the first plea it was alleged that the complainants had collusively made and omitted both complainants and defendants for the purpose of showing the requisite diversity *35 of citizenship. The second plea set up the pendency of a suit in the Chancery Court of Davidson County, Tennessee, in the nature of a quo warranto proceeding, brought on the relation-of J. H. Zarecor and other individual defendants herein to oust those named as defendants in that suit from membership in the Board of Publication, and from the control and management of its property and to install the relators in their stead. These plea's the court below overruled. As to the ground of the first plea, that certain persons had been omitted as parties, the court held that § 5 of the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, 18 Stat. 472, relates solely to the collusive making of the actual parties plaintiff or the collusive joinder of the actual parties defendant, and that if the parties before the court are properly aligned as plaintiffs and defendants, it is not a ground of dismissal, in so far as the jurisdictional question is concerned, that necessary parties are omitted, either as plaintiffs or defendants, whose presence would defeat the jurisdiction of the court. While the omission of indispensable parties, if any, said the court, would be a ground for dismissal on the merits if they were not joined, or if joined and on proper alignment their citizenship was such as to defeat the Federal jurisdiction, a plea to the jurisdiction would then lie, their omission in the meantime could not defeat the jurisdiction of the court in a controversy between the parties who were before the court. Arid so far as the first plea was based upon the ground that the complainants had collusively made parties plaintiffs and defendants .for the purpose of showing a diversity of citizenship, the plea was held to be insufficient in law in that it did not specify what parties are alleged to have been collusively made. The second plea was overruled because it did , not reach the whole case made by the bill, as the bill did not merely ask a determination as to the- persons who were the true and lawful members of the borporation, which was the only *36 matter involved in the quo warranto proceeding in the state court, but sought a decree declaring the trust upon which the property of the corporation is held and the uses and purposes for which it is to be administered, whoever might be found to be the true and lawful members of the corporation. We need add nothing to what was said by the court below upon these points.

But the court of its own motion dismissed the bill for want of jurisdiction, for the reason that the defendant corporation, the Board of Publication, was not antagonistic to the complainants, and should be aligned upon the same side of the controversy with the complainants; and that, therefore, upon such alignment, some of the defendants and one of the complainants being citizens of the same State, the Circuit Court had no jurisdiction. In this we think the court erred.

It was, undoubtedly, the duty of the court in determining whether there was the requisite diversity of citizenship to arrange the parties with respect to the actual controversy, looking beyond the formal arrangement made by the bill. Removal Cases,

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Bluebook (online)
222 U.S. 32, 32 S. Ct. 10, 56 L. Ed. 77, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helm-v-zarecor-scotus-1911.