Malone v. Lacroix

41 So. 724, 144 Ala. 648, 1905 Ala. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 30, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 41 So. 724 (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, 41 So. 724, 144 Ala. 648, 1905 Ala. LEXIS 84 (Ala. 1905).

Opinion

ANDERSON, J

In the year 1833, John M. Lane and Fletcher Lane and their wives, of the county of Limestone, -executed a deed to the lot in question, to Samuel De 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 trust 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 the 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 t'heir 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 plaintiff introduced proceedings had before the register, showing the appointment of the plaintiffs, and [651]*651reciting that they had been named by the proper authority as trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, previous to said appointment. We think that under the terms of the 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 eesUde que trust and which we think but one and the same.

We think the courts of the land can and will take judi-' cial 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 one 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 thereto. “The separation of the Methodist Episcopal Churches, the one North and the other South of a common boundary line, has been the subject of much discussion, in Avhicli the whole community, more or less, felt an interest, and was an event that connected itself with, and formecl a part of the history of the country, of which no well informed man could 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 trustees 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 the Humphrey’s case, supra, said “the difference in name makes no difference in character or authority.” The same court in the case of Humphrey v. Burnside, 4 Bush, 226, said, “the original Methodist Episcopal Church has been cm[652]*652thoritatively divided into two Methodist Episcopal Churches, the one North and the other South of a common boundary Ivne, 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 disciple, and assuming the same organization and name as the original church, is not only a methodist Episcopal Church but is in fact, to the South the Methodist Episcopal Church as 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 th case of Smith v. Swormstedt, 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 Cineral 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 church, as organized and established in the United States atthe time of the foundation of the fund; and that, as the complainants, and those they represent, are not shown to be 'travelling preachers in that connection, hut travelling preachers in connection with a different ecclesiastical organization, they have forfeited their right, and are no1 longer within the description of its beneficiaries.

“This argument, we apprehend, if it proves anything, proves too much; for if sound, the necessary consequence is that the beneficiaries connected with 'the church north, as well as south, have forfeited their right to the fund. [653]*653It can no more be affirmed, either in point of fact or of law', that they are travelling preachers in connection with the Methodist Church as originally constituted, since the division, than of those in connection with the church south. Their organization covers but about half of the territory embraced within that of the former church; and includes within it but little over two-thirds of the travelling preachers. Their general conference is not the general conference of the old church, nor does it represent the interest or posses, territorially, the authority of the same; nor are they the body under whose care the fund was placed by its founders. It may be admitted that, within the restricted limits, the organization and authority are the same as the former church. But the same is equally true in respect to the organization of the church south.

“It is insisted, however, that the General Conference of 1844 possessed no porver to divide the Methodist Episcopal Church as then organized, or to consent to such division: and hence, that the organization of the church south ivas without authority, and the travelling preachers within it separated from an ecclesiastical connection which is essential to enable them to participate as beneficiaries.

“But we do not agree that this division was made without the proper authority.

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Bluebook (online)
41 So. 724, 144 Ala. 648, 1905 Ala. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-lacroix-ala-1905.