ORGANIZATION OF LUTHERANS v. Mason

743 P.2d 848, 49 Wash. App. 441
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 12, 1987
Docket18179-3-I 19555-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 743 P.2d 848 (ORGANIZATION OF LUTHERANS v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ORGANIZATION OF LUTHERANS v. Mason, 743 P.2d 848, 49 Wash. App. 441 (Wash. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

49 Wn. App. 441 (1987)
743 P.2d 848

ORGANIZATION FOR PRESERVING THE CONSTITUTION OF ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH OF AUBURN, WASHINGTON, Appellant,
v.
JOSEPH E. MASON, ET AL, Respondents.

Nos. 18179-3-I; 19555-7-I.

The Court of Appeals of Washington, Division One.

October 12, 1987.

*442 Everett Holum and McCarthy, Holum, Golob & Casseaux, for appellant.

Robert C. Van Siclen and Smythe, Van Siclen & Sosa, for respondents.

SCHOLFIELD, C.J.

The Organization for Preserving the Constitution of Zion Lutheran Church of Auburn, Washington (hereinafter the Organization) appeals the trial court's dismissal of its complaint against Joseph E. Mason and Zion Lutheran Church of Auburn (hereinafter the Church), arguing the trial court erred in finding it lacked jurisdiction to interpret an election provision in the church constitution. Consolidated with this case is the Organization's appeal from the trial court's subsequent denial of its motion to vacate based upon newly discovered evidence. We reverse and remand this case for trial.

FACTS

The Zion Lutheran Church of Auburn is a member of the Pacific Northwest District of the National Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (LC-MS). The Organization is comprised of members of the Zion Lutheran congregation who opposed the election of Joseph Mason as the new church pastor.

On June 9, 1985, the voting members of Zion Lutheran's congregation met to call a new pastor to fill the vacant senior pastor position. In attendance at that meeting was Pastor Dick Allen representing the District Synod. This dispute arose regarding the meaning of article 5, section 2 of Zion Lutheran's constitution, which read:

*443 The candidate receiving the majority of all votes cast shall, upon unanimous approval, be declared elected.

(Italics ours.) Although Mason received a majority of the votes cast at the meeting, several members of the congregation objected to his nomination for pastor. Nevertheless, after some discussion and with the apparent concurrence of Pastor Allen, the chair ruled any further objections to Mason's nomination invalid and declared a unanimous ballot.

The dispute was referred for resolution to Reverend Erhart Bauer, president of the District Synod, who met with the parties and after consulting the president of the LC-MS, "counseled" the parties as follows:

1. The objections voiced as reasons for not making the vote unanimous are not valid.... Consequently, [Mason] is an eligible candidate on the call list.
2. Zion congregation is a member of the LCMS and subject to Synodical By-Law 1.19e. "While retaining the right of brotherly dissent, members of the Synod are expected as part of the life together within the synodical fellowship to honor and to uphold the resolutions of the Synod ..."
3. The conscience of those who hold a descending [sic] position ... can be respected by casting an abstention vote, rather than blocking unanimity.
4. The congregation may want to affirm the ruling of the chair by vote.
5. Since the appeal has been heard, the call may be issued to Pastor Joe Mason as Pastor of Zion congregation.

A call was subsequently issued to Pastor Mason on July 21, 1985. The following December, the church congregation approved an amendment to its constitution and bylaws, with the effect of eliminating the unanimity requirement of article 5 in favor of a provision requiring a mere majority.

The Organization sought to enjoin the installation of Mason as pastor and moved for summary judgment to enforce the church constitution, or in effect asked for a declaratory judgment that Zion Lutheran's constitution required a unanimous ballot in order to issue a call for a *444 pastor. In response, the Church moved to dismiss the Organization's complaint on the ground the dispute involved ecclesiastical matters over which the civil court lacked jurisdiction, and argued that, in any event, a reasonable interpretation of the constitutional provision at issue would affirm its position. The court dismissed the Organization's complaint with prejudice on March 20, 1986. The court's order does not expressly state the grounds for the dismissal.

In September 1986, the Organization brought a motion to vacate the court's judgment based upon newly discovered evidence. This evidence consisted of two letters, one dated January 23, 1986, from the Pacific Northwest District Synod Committee on Constitutional Matters and addressed to Pastor Mason. In that letter, the committee acknowledged that article 5 of Zion Lutheran's constitution, as originally written, required a unanimous vote, which the committee concluded could not "be established Biblically or from the Confessions." The committee suggested a way Zion Lutheran might amend the provision to require only a three-fifths majority.

The second letter, dated June 1986, was written by the secretary of LC-MS and addressed to Rick Kortum, a member of the Organization. In response to an inquiry from Kortum, the secretary's letter stated that, when a congregation adopts a constitution and bylaws, the synod assumes and expects the congregation to abide by them. The Organization argued these letters were evidence the District and the National Synod act in an advisory capacity only and that they supported the Organization's interpretation of the local church's constitution.

Pending the trial court's decision on its motion to vacate, the Organization asked leave of this court to supplement the Clerk's Papers in its first appeal with these two letters. That motion was denied by the commissioner on the ground "[t]his court will only consider matters presented to the trial court, RAP 9.12". The same day, the trial court denied the Organization's motion to vacate its judgment. *445 Subsequently, the Organization brought a separate appeal from the court's denial of its motion. That appeal was later consolidated with this case.

JURISDICTION

The Church argues the trial court correctly dismissed the Organization's complaint for want of subject matter jurisdiction. We disagree. The first amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits the court from "entangling itself in matters of church doctrine and practice", Southside Tabernacle v. Pentecostal Church of God, 32 Wn. App. 814, 817, 650 P.2d 231 (1982), "but the courts do have jurisdiction, as to civil, contract and property rights which are involved in, or arise from, a church controversy." Reid v. Johnston, 241 N.C. 201, 204, 85 S.E.2d 114, 117 (1954).

[1] Cases from other jurisdictions provide examples of disputes within religious societies over which the civil courts have exercised jurisdiction. For example, Smith v. Riley, 424 So.2d 1166 (La. Ct. App. 1982) held that the trial court had authority to determine whether a church board of trustees was legally constituted and to issue orders necessary to enforce the church's compliance with its own articles of incorporation. Similarly, it has been held that a church member who claimed that his church board of directors was not elected according to the procedure set forth in the church charter had a right to have his claim heard by a civil court. Wilkerson v. Battiste, 393 So.2d 195 (La. Ct. App. 1980). In

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743 P.2d 848, 49 Wash. App. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/organization-of-lutherans-v-mason-washctapp-1987.