Jenkins v. New Shiloh Baptist Church

56 A.2d 788, 189 Md. 512, 1948 Md. LEXIS 219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1948
Docket[No. 58, October Term, 1947.]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 56 A.2d 788 (Jenkins v. New Shiloh Baptist Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. New Shiloh Baptist Church, 56 A.2d 788, 189 Md. 512, 1948 Md. LEXIS 219 (Md. 1948).

Opinion

*514 Collins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by Mary P. Jenkins et- al. from the dismissal in the Superior Court of Baltimore City of a petition for mandamus, and judgment in favor of the defendants, appellees here, for costs of suit.

The New Shiloh Baptist Church is a Baptist congregation incorporated under the Maryland General Corporation Laws, 1939 Code, Article 23, Sections 275 to 285, originally the Act of 1802, Chapter 111.

The petition for mandamus alleges in part as follows: that the petitioners were members in good standing “morally and financially” of the New Shiloh Baptist Church of Baltimore City, a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of the State of Maryland, a defendant and appellee here. The defendant and appellee, J. Timothy Boddie is the pastor of that church. On or about June 18, 1946, Rev. Boddie sent a notice to the members of the church calling a meeting of the membership for June 21, 1946. At that meeting a motion was made to expel the appellants as members of the church. So much confusion existed when the motion was put that the secretary of the meeting was not sure that it had passed until she consulted the Moderator, Rev. Willis J. Winston, the same night. The pastor has dropped the appellants from the membership roll of the church. The petition further alleges that the attempted expulsion of' the petitioners was illegal and without warrant in law for the following reasons:

. The appellants are in good standing “morally and financially”. Many of the persons present who voted at the meeting were not members of the church and not in good standing in accordance with its Constitution. The notice of the meeting contained no reference to the fact that the petitioners were to go on trial for expulsion from the church, contrary to the Constitution thereof. Article XI of the Constitution provides that a member may be dismissed “by expulsion”, and Article XII of the Constitution, Paragraph B, provides: “No case of discipline shall come before the church or any matters per- *515 taming to the office of Deacons before it has been considered by the Deacons and Pastor.” The case of the appellants was never considered by the Deacons and Pastor. Under the Constitution and By-Laws of the church the petitioners are not liable for expulsion. Their only offense was to disagree with the pastor when he did not in their estimation abide by the Constitution and By-Laws of the church. The appellants believe and aver that the pastor desired to get rid of the appellants so that he could run the church to suit himself, although the appellants have contributed a considerable amount of their time and money toward the welfare and up-building of said church, which is now financially independent. The appellants have demanded to be re-instated as members but the appellees have refused to re-instate them although they have been wrongfully expelled from said membership. The petition prays that a writ of mandamus be issued, directing the defendants to enroll the appellants on the books of the church as members in good standing, in accordance with the Constitution and By-Laws of said church.

An answer was filed by the defendants in which they denied the material allegations of the petition, and alleged that a majority of the church membership had the right to pass the motion to expel the defendants on any ground found justifiable, and the said resolution to expel the appellants was passed by a majority of the church members. They admit that the notice of the meeting made no reference to the fact that appellants were to go on trial for any offense. After the taking of testimony before the trial judge, the mandamus was dismissed and judgment entered in favor of the appellees for costs of suit. From that judgment the appellants appeal.

The testimony shows that the appellants, being 23 members of the New Shiloh Baptist Church (The Church) in good standing, together with four other members of that church on June 17, 1946, wrote and signed the following letter to Rev. Boddie:

*516 “We the undersigned, do hereby charge you with being biased and discriminating against certain members of. the church, dealing unfair and rendering unjust decisions in our business meetings, putting motions before the body for some members and refusing to do the same for other members.

“We furthermore charge you with failure to explain how you obtained a S125.00 last August and refusing to have someone else to explain the samé to the church, and also you have refused to let it come up for discussion in any business meeting since.

“We furthermore charge you with calling or having someone to call, or having the knowledge of them being called, two patrolmen and a policewoman to our business meeting for one purpose to intimidate certain members to keep them from talking.

“We furthermore charge you with permitting Mrs. Violet Whyte to come into and sit beside you in the pulpit throughout the remainder of our business meeting and also permitted her to interfere with and call members down while they were on the floor speaking, knowing her to be a non-member of the Shiloh Baptist Church, and not of the Baptist faith, which is contrary to the Constitution of the Shiloh Baptist Church.

“We further charge you with malfeasance in office.

“We furthermore charge you with splitting the congregation into two groups to the extent that one group is ready to clutch at the other’s throat at the least provocation, and with tearing apart in three years; what it took Rev. W. W. Allen forty years to build.

“We expect you to answer these charges at the next regular business church meeting.”

Three of the members who wrote this letter approached Rev. Boddie on his way to attend a meeting of the Deacons and tried to hand him the letter, which he refused to take and told them to follow him into the church. They followed him into the Board meeting of the Deacons where they handed him the envelope containing the above letter. The three men made no statement to the Deacons *517 and left the room. It is admitted by the defendants that no thought was given as to any disciplinary action against the appellants at the meeting of the Deacons, or at any time until after the charges against the pastor were dismissed by a vote of the congregation. Rev. Boddie on June 18, 1946, wrote a letter to the members of the congregation, which letter follows:

“On Monday evening, June 17th at our regular board meeting three men, namely Messrs. William Bryant, George Hailey and Luke Doles presented to the Pastor and to the board of Deacons through its chairman, Mr. John Forrest, the enclosed contents.

(Letter above quoted)

(Signature of Appellants)

“For nearly twelve months these persons and others in the church have used every unchristian, unbaptistic, unethical and unfair method to poison the membership through lies, slander and malicious propaganda to disturb the peace and quietude of the church, to destroy my reputation and character, humiliate and wreck my family, to ruin my future and to keep the church constantly in a state of uproar and unrest.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 A.2d 788, 189 Md. 512, 1948 Md. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-new-shiloh-baptist-church-md-1948.