Malone v. Lacroix

143 Ala. 657
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 143 Ala. 657 (Malone v. Lacroix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malone v. Lacroix, 143 Ala. 657 (Ala. 1904).

Opinion

ANDERSON, J.

=In the year 1833, John M. Lane and Fletcher M. Lane aud their wives, of the county of Limestone, executed a deed to the lot in question to SamuelDe Woody, et al., as trustees of the “Methodist church situated in Athens.” “Unto the said parties of the second part, Trustees as aforesaid and to their successors in office, in trast for the use and purposes hereinafter mentioned and declared. * * * * * That they shall erect a building thereon, or cause to be erected a house of worship, for Hie use of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America, according to the rules and discipline which from time to time may be agreed upon. * * And in further trust and confidence, that they shall at all times forever hereafter permit such members and preachers of the said Methodist Episcopal Church to preach and expound God’s Holy word therein.”

The deed further provided that the property should be held by the parties of the second part, “And to< their successors in office chosen and appointed according to the statute of the State of Alabama.”

The register in chancery under section 4193 is clothed with the authority to appoint trustees in case of a vacancy, and the deed required the successors to be appointed under the statute.

The plaintiffs introduced proceedings had before the register, showing the appointment of the plaintiffs, and reciting that they been named by the proper authority as trustees of the Methodist Church, South, previous to said appointment. We think that, under the terms of [660]*660the deed and the statute, the trustees appointed by the register succeeded to the legal title; but, inasmuch as they are designated as trustees for the Methodist Episcopal Church,. South, it might be contended that' they cannot be the lawful successors to persons who were designated in the deed, as trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church of America. This apparent variance relates only to the cestui que trust and which we think but one and the same.

We think the courts of the land can and will take judicial notice of the division of, perhaps, the largest and most powerful protestant church in the United States, of the territory over which jurisdiction was to- be and has been exercised by the subdivisions, respectively, and of the articles of separation with reference to a territorial division of the common property. Not only is this a fact of historical notoriety, but the title to property once held before the separation has often been passed upon by the high courts of the country, and in reference to the rights and ownership of the respective wings of the church theieto. “The separation of the Methodist Church into two- Methodist Episcopal Churches, the one north and the other south of a common boundary line, has been the subject of much discussion, in which the whole community, more or less, felt an interest, and was an event that connected itself with, and formed a part- of the history of the country, of which no well informed man. would be ignorant, and, from its notoriety, courts would take judicial notice of it without, proof.”— Humphrey v. Burnside, 4 Bush, Ky. 215; Hart v. Bodley, Har. 98; Creighton v. Bilbro, 1 Monroe, 138.

In passing upon the title to church property and in upholding the right of the trustees1 of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, to sue for the church property, conveyed to the church before the division under a deed similar to the one before us, the court in Humphrey’s case, supra, said, “The difference in name malees no difference in character or authority.” This same' court, in the case of Humphrey v. Burnside, 4 Bush, 226, said; “The original Methodist Episcopal Church has-been authoritatively divided into two Methodist Episco[661]*661fal Churches, the one north a\nel the other south of a common boundary line, which, according to the plan of separation, limits the extent and jurisdiction of each; that each, within its own limits, is the lawful successor and representative of the original church, possessing all its jurisdiction, and entitled to its name; that neither has :any more right, to exceed those limits than the other; that the Southern Church retaining the same faith, doctrine and discipline, and assuming the same organization and name as the original church, is not only a Methodist Episcopal Church, hut is in fact, to the South, the Methodist Episcopal Church us truly as the other church is so to the North, and is not the less so by the addition of the word South to designate its locality.” See also Gibson v. Armstrong, 7 B. Monroe, 481.

The Supreme Court of Missouri, in the case of Goode v. McPherson, 51 Mo. 126, took judicial notice of the division and of the common boundary line, holding that it was “An event that connected itself with the history of the country, and from its notoriety, courts will take judicial notice of it without, proof.”

The Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Smith v. Swormstedt, 21 U. S. 304-5-6-7-8 (16 Howard’s Report), involving the property of a “Book Concern” owned and -controlled by the church before the separation, said: “In the year 1844 the travelling preachers in General Conference assembled, for causes which it is not important particularly to refer ¡to, agreed upon a plan for a division of the Methodist Episcopal Church in case the annual conferences in the slave-holding States should deem it necessary; and to the erection of two separate and distinct ecclesiastical organizations. And, .according to this plan, it was agreed that all .the societies, stations, and conferences adhering to. the church south, by a majority of their respective members, should remain under the pastoral care of that church; and all of these several bodies adhering, by a majority of its members, to- the church north, should remain under the pastoral care of that church; and, further, that the ministers, local and travelling, should, [662]*662as they might prefer,- attach themselves, without blame, to the church north or south. It was also agreed that the common property of the church, including this Book Concern, that belonged specially to the body of travel-ling preacher's, should, in case the separation took place, be divided between the two* churches in proportion to the number of travelling preachers falling within the respective divisions. This was in 1844. In the following year itihe southern annual conferences met in convention, in pursuance to the plan of separation, ¡and determined upon a division, and resolved that the annual conferences should be constituted into a separate ecclesiastical connection, and based upon the discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church, comprehending the doctrines and entire moral, ecclesiastical, and economical rules and regulations of said discipline, except only so far as verbal alterations might be necessary; and to be known by the name of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.”

“The division of the church, as originally constituted, thus became complete; and from this time two separate and distinct organizations have taken the place of the one previously existing.”

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Brown v. Ashworth
185 So. 754 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1938)
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143 Ala. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-lacroix-ala-1904.