Miller v. Green

4 Balt. C. Rep. 602
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedJune 2, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 602 (Miller v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Green, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 602 (Md. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

STANTON, J.

This controversy arises out of the following facts: In February, 1921, the Reverend Albert J. Green was elected pastor of the First Colored Baptist Church of Baltimore City, located on Caroline street, in the City of Baltimore, and at that time there were nine deacons functioning in the work of the church. These deacons had been elected under the pastorate of the Reverend Neal, who preceded the Reverend Albert J. Green. This situation continued until December, 1925, when four more deacons were elected to sereve as members of the Board of Deacons for this church.

At different intervals, and on occasions when the expenditure of money was being discussed, the majority of the Board of Deacons was not in accord, with the plans of the pastor. Some expenditures weré for money appropriated to pay the traveling expenses of the pastor to Baptist conventions, and some were for railroad fare and incidental expenses to Philadelphia, where the pastor was in attendance on meetings of the Board of Foreign Missions. The particular matter of criticism in these items being the custom of the pastor to charge full railroad fare notwithstanding the fact that the pastor traveled on clergyman’s rate, which is one-half fare.

Other items of expenditure personally by the pastor were the money [603]*603for cementing the cellar of the home bought ancl occupied by him; a loan of $160 to the pastor, occasioned by the loss of his ready cash when the banking firm of Taylor & Jenkins failed.

The items of a general nature in the work of the church which occasioned differences in the board were the failure to approve the tithing system; the employment of two church missionaries ; the card index system of membership, and failure to appropriate or direct payment of full amounts of moneys raised for missions. There are other matters of minor importance which it is needless to enumerate, because they can lend no aid in determining the issue in this case, excejrt to give color to the claim of the i>laintiffs, that the action of the pastor in bringing the matter of amoting the deacons for action of the church meeting on December 23rd, 1926, was due to the opposition of certain deacons to expending money for various purposes which the pastor proposed and advocated. This created a condition, according to the defendant Green, where the Board of Deacons made it impossible for him to work harmoniously with the board, and retarded the work of the church in adopting any modern and progressive methods which he might submit. It had been suggested that they all voluntarily ask to be honorably discharged from office, and submit themselves for the action of the church. This proposition was voted down. Conditions gradually got more tense. The hour for the morning service was changed from eleven o’clock to ten thirty. This did not meet the approval or convenience of some of the members, and at the business meeting of the church in November, 1926, a turbulent spirit was manifest, going to the point that one deacon shook his linger at the pastor, in taking him to task for bringing the matter before the church, when the question had not been submitted to the Deacon Board. The contention being that because the pastor had made the change in the hour for the morning service without the action of the Deacon Board, he should take the responsibility for restoring the hour of the morning service. It was the attitude of one or more of the deacons in this meeting that crystallized the purpose of the pastor to submit the question of amotion of the entire Deacon Board for action at the next business meeting of the church, and asking authority to nominate men with whom he could satisfactorily work. When the notice was given for the next business meeting, which was held December 23rd, 1926, the pastor did not say anything about his intended plan concerning the deacons, either by public notice from the pulpit, or in the church bulletin, where a printed notice was given of the annual meeting for the election of officers. These officers were the heads of the auxiliaries, who were elected each year on the fourth Thursday night In December, and never before in the history of this church had an entire Deacon Board been elected at the annual meeting, nor at any other time. Deacons were elected on approval for one year at a church meeting, and then as permanent deacons, with an indefinite tenure of office. Neither did the pastor say anything to the individuals on the Deacon Board about his plan to bring this matter to the attention of the church meeting, and the complaint is made in this case that his failure to give notice, either publicly or personally, that some of the business to be considered at the regular monthly meeting would be the question of honorably discharging the entire Deacon Board, makes the action of the church illegal and void, and ilie removal of the deacons without effect.

The office here involved is that of deacon in a Baptist church, which office carries no emoluments or perquisites. The church has a charter, but no constitution or by-laws. The charter is silent on the office of deacon, either as to his election or removal. There is nothing in Hiscox Church Manual which refers particularly to the removal of deacons from office. The action at this church meeting is not removal from church membership, but merely removal from office bearing in the church, with a continuation of the privileges of church membership.

Does the case made by the allegations of the bill entitle the plaintiffs to the relief which they seek?

The question of notice to a rector, who had a contractual relation with the vestry of an Episcopal Church, was discussed in the Stubbs case in 96 Md. 279. It was there said that the notice given in that case was a reasonable notice to terminate the relations, and remove the rector from his office; but [604]*604that the vestry intended to consider the question of severing his relation as rector at a meeting of the vestry was not a matter concerning which the rector was entitled to notice.

So in this case the congregation or church meeting elected these deacons. They had no vested right to the office. The tenure was indefinite — which means at the will of the body by which they were elected- — and, therefore, the same body which appointed them could remove them at any regularly called meeting, without notice that such action was to be considered at the meeting.

But more nearly in point is the case of Morris Street Baptist Church vs. Dart, 67 S. O., page 338. That case deals with the removal of a pastor of a colored Baptist church. On page 343 the Court says:

“The congregation being the sole legislative and judicial body of the Baptist church, those who connect themselves with it, voluntarily assume the risk of the propriety and justice of congregational action, just as those who become Presbyterians or Episcopalians subject themselves in church affairs to the authority of synods and councils. The only questions, then, we have power to consider, are did the congregation meet; and did it depose the defendant as pastor? If these questions are answered in the affirmative, then the defendant was properly enjoined from interfering with the church property. The action of the church is controlled by the vote of the majority of the congregation, and presumably as a church; it is quite obvious, a civil tribunal cannot regard the sentiment of the majority expressed in any other way.”

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Related

Stubbs v. Vestry of St. John's Church
53 A. 917 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-green-mdcirctctbalt-1927.