Hunter v. Rector, Etc., of St. Anna's Chapel

168 So. 780, 185 La. 217, 1936 La. LEXIS 1177
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 25, 1936
DocketNo. 33360.
StatusPublished

This text of 168 So. 780 (Hunter v. Rector, Etc., of St. Anna's Chapel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunter v. Rector, Etc., of St. Anna's Chapel, 168 So. 780, 185 La. 217, 1936 La. LEXIS 1177 (La. 1936).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

This case was last before us in July, 1933. See Hunter v. Rector, Wardens and Vestrymen of St. Anna’s Chapel, 177 La. 968, 149 So. 537, 538, where the issues involved were fully stated. In that case we said: “On the merits, the evidence appears to sustain the judgment so far as it fixed the amount of plaintiff’s claim.” What we meant was that the testimony *219 supported plaintiff’s claim as to the amount of back salary due plaintiff as rector of St. Anna’s Chapel.

We remanded the case in order that the defendant might introduce testimony in support of its plea that plaintiff’s claim had been extinguished by compensation. The plea or defense made by defendant was that plaintiff had collected and appropriated to his own use and benefit large sums of money which belonged to the church, said sums being in excess of the amount claimed by plaintiff on salary account. Plaintiff admits that he collected and appropriated to his own use and benefit the rents and revenues from certain property in New Orleans for which he has given the church no credit, his claim being that he was entitled to such revenues as he collected and that he owed the church no accounting therefor. The claim of the church is that the rents and revenues from said property belonged to it and not the plaintiff and that he should account now for the amounts collected.

If the amounts so collected by plaintiff belonged to him individually, then the church owes him the amount which he claims. If, on the other hand, the amounts collected by plaintiff as revenues from this property belonged to the church, it now owes plaintiff nothing, because the amounts collected equal or exceed the balance due on plaintiff’s salary.

There was judgment for the plaintiff, and defendant appealed.

The defendant St. Anna’s Chapel is a religious corporation chartered under the laws of Louisiana in 1898. The purpose and objects of the corporation, as set forth in its charter, are “the worship and service of Almighty God according to the rites and discipline of the Protestant-Episcopal Church of the United States of America.” The officers of the corporation consist of a rector, two wardens, and five vestrymen, who administer its affairs and are vested with all the corporate powers of the corporation.

The record discloses that this Episcopal Church was in existence under the same name long before it obtained this charter in 1898. On December 31, 1872, Dr. W. Newton Mercer, who seems to have been a devout Episcopalian and who was a member of the Episcopal Church known as St. Anna’s Chapel, made his will reading as follows:

“I hereby give and bequeath unto the present Rector of the St. Anna Chappel situate on Esplanade street, in this city, and to his successor in office forever, the annual sum of Two Thousand Four Hundred Dollars, to be taken out of the rent of store No. 57 Carondelet Street, in this city, and from no other source, it being my intention that the rents of the said store shall alone and forever be affected to the payment of the said yearly sum of Two Thousand Four Hundred Dollars and that the surplus, if any there be, shall be appropriated to the payment of the insurance, taxes and repairs of the said store.
*221 “And I further ordain that the said store shall be administered during their life time by Pierce Butler and Miss Sarah J. D. Butler his sister, jointly or separately, giving unto them, full power and authority to appoint one or more substitutes in their stead, either by will or otherwise to administer the said property.
“I hereby appoint the said Pierce Butler and Wilmer Shields as executors of this my last will and of any other will which I may have heretofore made; appointing moreover the said Pierce Butler as the sole residuary legatee of all my Estate.”

It will be noted that this bequest of $2,400 per annum, to be given out of the rent of the store on Carondelet street, is made “to the present rector of St. Anna Chappel, situate on Esplanade street, in this city, and to his successor in office forever,” and the question which gives rise to the controversy between plaintiff and defendant is whether the testator intended this as a bequest to the then rector and his successors for their personal use and benefit, or whether he intended it as a bequest to them in their official capacity, for the use and benefit of the church. If the testator intended this as a personal bequest to the then rector and his successors, if he intended that the revenues from this property go to them as individuals and be appropriated by them as they saw fit for their own personal use and benefit, then the plaintiff, who became rector of the church in May, 1889, and served in that capacity until 1922, owes the church no accounting for the revenues received by him from said property. If, on the other hand, the testator intended this as a bequest to the rector of the church in his official capacity to be collected and used by him for the benefit of the church over which he presided, then plaintiff must account to the church for the amounts which he received from that source.

From the date on which plaintiff became rector of the church in 1889 to the year 1901, the revenues from that property were collected apparently by the officers of the church and appropriated to the use and benefit of the church. In 1901 the plaintiff, who was then rector of the church, seems to have conceived the idea that the revenues from this property belonged to him personally, and on November 5, 1901, there was a regular meeting of the vestry of St. Anna’s Chapel, at which meeting the question whether these revenues belonged to the rector personally or to the church was gone into, and it was decided that they belonged to the rector. At that meeting a resolution was adopted declaring in effect that whereas it had been theretofore considered that the revenues from the Mercer bequest belonged .to the church and not to the rector, it then appeared to the officers of the church that an error had been made and that all such revenues as had been collected from the date on which the plaintiff became rector down to the date on which the meeting was held should have gone to the rector personally, and it was acknowledged that the church was indebted unto the rector for the amounts so collected. A committee was appointed to devise ways and means of raising money to reimburse the rector. *223 Whether the amounts so collected were ever paid to the plaintiff is not disclosed by the record.

The record discloses that during the following years there was some dissatisfaction among the members of the congregation as to the matter of these revenues, and on February 17, 1918, there was a special meeting of the vestry at which ,the entire matter was gone over again. At that meeting the plaintiff, who was still rector of the church, prepared and submitted a resolution in his own handwriting in which it was recited that: “It having come to the knowledge of the Vestry of St. Anna’s Chapel that certain reports are in circulation concerning what is known as the Mercer Bequest, a special meeting of the Vestry was held to consider what should be done in the matter. It was unanimously decided to send to the parishioners a copy of Dr.

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Related

Hunter v. Rector, Wardens, Etc., of St. Anna's Chapel
149 So. 537 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 780, 185 La. 217, 1936 La. LEXIS 1177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-rector-etc-of-st-annas-chapel-la-1936.