Lamont Community Church v. Lamont Christian Reformed Church

777 N.W.2d 15, 285 Mich. App. 602
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 22, 2009
DocketDocket 283154
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 777 N.W.2d 15 (Lamont Community Church v. Lamont Christian Reformed Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamont Community Church v. Lamont Christian Reformed Church, 777 N.W.2d 15, 285 Mich. App. 602 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This property dispute arises from a congregational dispute among members of defendant Lamont Christian Reformed Church (LCRC) that resulted in certain members leaving and forming plaintiff Lamont Community Church (LCC). Both LCRC and LCC claimed ownership of the church property. LCC appeals as of right a judgment quieting title in LCRC. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEEDINGS

LCRC is affiliated with and a part of the Christian Reformed Church in North America (CRCNA or the Denomination). The governing document for CRCNA is *605 the Church Order. Pursuant to the Church Order, there are three assemblies of the Denomination: the council, the classis, and the synod. A council is made up of members of a congregation and manages the affairs of the individual church. A classis is a regional assembly of “neighboring churches” that oversees the congregations in its region and handles appeals from council decisions. Although appealable to synod, decisions made by classis are binding on the councils in the region when left unappealed, or unless and until the synod overrules them. The synod convenes annually and is made up of representatives from each regional classis. Decisions of synod are binding on all classes and councils in the Denomination, but may be appealed to the next synod.

LCRC was originally incorporated in 1880, but when its articles of incorporation terminated in 1902, LCRC reincorporated under 1901 PA 148 (MCL 458.421 et seq.), a statute adopted for the incorporation of Christian Reformed Churches. LCRC is a member of defendant Zeeland Classis. 1 The church property was acquired by LCRC in 1959. LCRC restated and amended its articles of incorporation in 1993.

In 1998, LCRC created defendant Lamont Christian Reformed Church Property Corporation (the Property Corporation) to hold the church property separate from LCRC so that if LCRC decided to leave the Denomination, it could do so and retain the church property. The Property Corporation was purposely made nondenominational. After the church property was transferred from LCRC to the Property Corporation, LCRC began to look into affiliating itself with the United Reform Church and, on September 15, 2004, LCRC’s consistory *606 approved the committee report that had been submitted for leaving the Denomination.

That same month, LCRC’s pastor, Rev. Richard Terpstra, was involved in an accident and criminally charged with driving under the influence, to which he ultimately pleaded guilty. Around that same time, it came to light that, in 2003, Terpstra had been charged with indecent exposure, to which he entered a no-contest plea to a lesser charge of obscene and disorderly conduct. In light of these and certain other events, LCRC’s decision to leave the Denomination was placed on hold.

In December 2004, LCRC suspended Terpstra from his duties and directed him to go to counseling, informing Zeeland Classis of its decision. In March 2005, when LCRC’s consistory reinstated Terpstra, several members complained to the consistory about the reinstatement. Although LCRC’s consistory was supposed to respond to the complaint, it chose to do nothing, sending a letter to Zeeland Classis indicating that it was not taking any action on the congregants’ complaints. The members appealed the consistory’s failure to take action to Zeeland Classis, which ultimately reinstated Terpstra’s suspension and deposed him from the ministry. This decision was not appealed, and it was stipulated that Zeeland Classis had the authority to undertake this appeal and enact discipline against Terpstra, including reinstating his suspension and deposing him.

As a result of Zeeland Classis reinstating Terpstra’s suspension, there were consistory meetings during which church elders discussed the possibility of leaving LCRC and going to another church. Shortly thereafter, a number of people announced they were leaving LCRC, but did not contact Zeeland Classis to consult regarding disaffiliation. On October 30, 2005,132 signatures were obtained as “signatures of commitment” to an un *607 named new congregation. In late November 2005, LCC transmitted articles of incorporation to the state, which were filed on December 2, 2005.

Sometime thereafter, LCC demanded that LCRC turn over the church property. Members of LCRC involved Zeeland Classis in the matter by requesting its assistance in the property dispute. The interim committee of Zeeland Classis, which handles all matters that occur between its three yearly meetings, met with representatives of LCRC and rendered a decision regarding property distribution. The committee determined that all rights in the church property belonged to LCRC, concluding that the members of LCC had disaffiliated from LCRC without following the appropriate disaffiliation procedures. It also noted that the articles of incorporation for the Property Corporation “clearly state that its purpose is to preserve all property rights for the Lamont CRC” and that LCRC continued to exist. The decision further stated that LCRC had failed to consult with Zeeland Classis when it created the Property Corporation and transferred the church property to it and that, if it had, Zeeland Classis would have ruled against permitting LCRC to do so. The committee concluded that the withdrawal from LCRC and the creation of LCC by the “disaffiliated members” was not a response to any doctrinal matter, but a reflection of their disagreement with the decision to depose Terpstra and noted that these members had failed to appeal the decision to synod in conformance with the Church Order. According to the committee, LCC “spurned any and all attempts of the Lamont CRC to work toward reconciliation of their differences” and “[s]ome of the disaffected members [] engaged in unchristian behavior.” The committee determined that “by the provisions of the Church Order, the decisions of the Synod of CRCNA, and the unchristian actions of the disaffected *608 group, that the Lamont Christian Reformed Church is the continuing, legitimate church, and therefore the rightful agent of the church’s property.” The decision of the interim committee was voted on and approved by the entire body of Zeeland Classis at its May 17, 2006, meeting. There was ho appeal to synod.

LCC filed a complaint requesting, among other things, a declaratory judgment that LCC was the owner of the church property, asserting that it was made up of a “majority of the confessing members of the Lamont Christian Reformed Church” and that decisions of the Property Corporation were not subject to review by any denomination, such that, pursuant to the bylaws of the Property Corporation, it was entitled to the church property. Defendants denied that LCC constituted a majority of the professing members of LCRC 2 and filed a counterclaim seeking a declaratory judgment that LCRC was the owner of the church property based on the hierarchical nature of the Denomination. LCC moved for partial summary disposition of LCRC’s counterclaim for declaratory judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
777 N.W.2d 15, 285 Mich. App. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamont-community-church-v-lamont-christian-reformed-church-michctapp-2009.