Katz v. Goldman

168 N.E. 763, 33 Ohio App. 150, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 416
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 168 N.E. 763 (Katz v. Goldman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Katz v. Goldman, 168 N.E. 763, 33 Ohio App. 150, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 416 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

This cause is here on appeal, and a motion is made for judgment on the pleadings, consisting of the amended petition and the answer. It is based upon Section 11601, General Code of Ohio, which provides that, when a party is entitled by law to judgment in his favor upon the statements and the allegations of the pleadings, judgment should be so rendered by the court, notwithstanding the verdict has been found against such party. By the pleadings the contest grows out of certain controversies arising from practices in religious faith of the congregations named amongst other defendants in the case, and the question to be decided is whether from the pleadings the issues are purely religious and ecclesiastical, and, if so, whether this court has any jurisdiction or power to interfere with the conduct and practices of a congregation acting under the guidance and supremacy of the duly constituted authorities, as established by the constitution, rules, regulations, customs, practices, and precedents relating to a religious body. The plaintiffs, Abraham A. Katz and others, represent one view, and the defendants, Solomon Goldman and others, who appear to be in a large majority, hold a contrary view in regard to the practices of their faith, as carried on by the authorities representing the congregation mentioned, through the duly constituted board of officers and trustees named amongst the large number of defendants.

To the amended petition a demurrer was filed, and overruled by another branch of the Court of *152 Appeals while sitting under designation in this district, but that does not relieve this court from the responsibility of passing upon the motion now filed for judgment upon the pleadings, and it is claimed that a decision by a Court of Appeals sitting in Lucas county by designation, since the overruling of this demurrer, changes the status as it existed at the time of the overruling of the motion. This decision is found in the case of Altvater v. Meck, 29 Ohio Law Rep., 290.

In the case just cited the principle which has been laid down so many times is repeated and revived, that in matters of religious differences a court of equity will not interfere where there is power within a body duly constituted by the church to settle and conclude the subject in controversy. It is a well-settled rule of law that 'courts will not interfere with ecclesiastical questions involving differences of opinion as to religious conduct, and especially where the members of the congregation in question have created by organic law a tribunal of their own for the settlement of differences, whose finality is supreme judgment.

Regardless, however, of this Lucas county case, it becomes our duty to pass upon the question of the motion for judgment upon the pleadings, regardless of any former action of another Court of Appeals, even sitting in this district, which overruled a demurrer that was filed against the pleading of the plaintiffs.

It is well, before proceeding further, to look at the prayer of the petition. We are asked to decide that a trust was imposed upon the church property; that the property should be used for the purposes *153 of promoting the cause of traditional or orthodox Judaism. We are asked to define that language and to hold that the conduct of the defendants in control of the church property has been a defiance of this trust; we are further asked to find that the old constitution of March, 1917, is still in full force; and we are requested to declare that the new constitution is void, and that the election of trustees, officers, and rabbi, selected under the same, is also void. A further prayer is that the trustees and officers of defendants in office and in possession of the church property prior to the election of 1924 be reinstalled in office, that the property be put in their possession, that all the defendants be permanently enjoined from promulgating doctrines or holding services in the church property contrary to the terms of the trust, that they be prevented from interfering with plaintiffs when promoting in said church the cause of orthodox or traditional Judaism, and that plaintiffs be awarded all other relief to which they may be entitled in equity.

Thus it will be seen that an attempt is made to substitute for the governing power of the congregation a judicial tribunal, whose duty it shall be to assume guardianship over the rights and ceremonies of the church and to become sponsor and guide for the promulgation of the faith of the members and the practices and ceremonies by which the religious services are conducted. In other words, the courts would become the theologians and the monitors directing and controlling the practices indulged in by the membership, and the controlling force in determining whether there was a conformity to the principles of orthodoxy or traditional Judaism.

*154 The prayer of the amended petition in the respects just outlined is a refutation of the right relied upon for the injunctive relief in this case, because under the Constitution not only of the nation, but of the state, and under the universal decisions of our courts, there can be no disturbance or limitation to the power and right to exercise that freedom of conscience which is the basis of our liberty, which doctrine is incorporated in the Bill of Bights. |s,The right to worship according to the dictates of the conscience is predicated upon the theory that Courts cannot interfere in the conduct of the memjbers of congregations practicing their religious faith .under prescribed forms, rules, and authorities in a manner not in violation of express legal authority •or antagonistic to the enjoyment by others of their jnatural rights. And when we consider the prayer /of the petition as above outlined, there is but one ¡reasonable conclusion, and that is that if the prayer ■were granted the members of the congregation in I question would be worshiping, not according to the f dictates of their own consciences and the rules of the ecclesiastical authorities, but according to the dictates of a judicial tribunal, which, under all the authorities, has no right, power, or jurisdiction in the presence of a final church tribunal to assume the monitorship of the religious faith of the members of the congregation or the citizens of a community.

There is a dead line which is an impregnable bar- ;■ rier to a judicial tribunal, and that is the right of a congregation to the conduct of its worship in such form and manner and with such ceremony as agrees with the constituted authorities of the church, which embodies the"sjmnt^he will, and the consent of the *155 members who created and adopted the constitution, by-laws'/and regulations, the precedents and established customs, which determine the processes which , constitute that religious worship originally designated by the organization of the members and the creation of a tribunal which was designated and intended to be the final arbiter in questions concerning the exercise and practices of the faith of the general body. So far as the record discloses, the board of , trustees had finality of judgment, and the conduct / of the church and the promulgation of the faith was I in accordance with the judgment, decrees, and de- X

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Bluebook (online)
168 N.E. 763, 33 Ohio App. 150, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katz-v-goldman-ohioctapp-1929.