Pearson v. Church of God

458 S.E.2d 68, 318 S.C. 417, 1995 S.C. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedApril 17, 1995
Docket2336
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 458 S.E.2d 68 (Pearson v. Church of God) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearson v. Church of God, 458 S.E.2d 68, 318 S.C. 417, 1995 S.C. App. LEXIS 58 (S.C. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinions

Howard Judge:

[418]*418This is a breach of contract action. Frank C. Pearson sued the Church of God for breach of an implied contract alleging the Church wrongfully discontinued his pension benefits. The jury returned a verdict for Pearson for $71,000, which was remitted by the court on its own motion to $70,116 to conform to the evidence. The Church appeals. We reverse.

Pearson was an active minister for the Church from 1952 until he retired in 1986. During his 33-year active ministry, he made the required monthly contribution to the Aged Ministers Pension Plan Fund of four percent of his gross income from the ministry. Following his retirement, Pearson began receiving payments from the Fund.

Payments from the Fund are governed by the Minutes of the 62nd General Assembly of the Church of God (Minutes) which read, in pertinent part:

S62. RETIREMENT PLANS I. AGED MINISTERS’ PENSIONING PLAN A. PENSIONING POLICIES
3. Any minister who has been licensed by the Church of God and in active service in the Church for the consecutive past twenty years of his life, at the age of sixty and upon the option of either his part or the part of those officials of the Church to whom he is answerable, or at the superannuating age of sixty-five, shall be eligible to receive an aged minister’s pension, provided that he has for those consecutive past years subscribed to the Aged Ministers’ Pensioning Plan.
19. Any aged minister receiving benefit from the Aged Ministers’ Fund whose ministry has been revoked shall cease to draw compensation from the fund. . . .
S60. DISORDERLY MINISTERS
1. The license of a minister must be revoked when found guilty of adultery or fornication. He shall never be ordained in the Church of God. He shall not be permitted to conduct revivals, preach, or teach for a period of at least three years form the date found guilty. . . .

[419]*419The contract clearly and unambiguously provides for forfeiture of one’s pension upon revocation of one’s ministry.1 Paragraph 3 of S62 gives the eligibility requirements for receiving benefits while paragraph 19 is a more specific provision governing only that class of ministers whose ministries have been revoked. Various other provisions under S60 of the Minutes define disciplinary procedures for disorderly ministers. Separate paragraphs govern different offenses. Paragraph 1, set out above, governs the offense of adultery or fornication. It provides for the revocation of a minister’s license upon a finding of adultery. Section 61 sets out the procedure, trial and appeal of offending ministers. The procedure is described as follows:

[T]he State Board, consisting of not less that three Ordained Ministers, appointed by the State Overseer where available, shall give [the offending minister] due notice of time and place where charges will be considered. The minister shall have a right to attend and be heard at that time. If the State Board shall determine that the conduct of said minister warrants such action, his ministry shall at once be revoked.

In September of 1989, the Church revoked Pearson’s license after Pearson confessed to the Church’s State Trial Board that he had committed adultery. A Revocation of Ministry form was prepared by the Church of God Headquarters in Tennessee. The form reflects the ministry was recalled by “Voluntary surrender.” Thereafter, Pearson stopped receiving pension payments.

Pearson sued the Church claiming that although the Church revoked his pastoral “license,” the Church did not thereby affectively revoke his “ministry” as set fourth in S62 Paragraph 19 of the Minutes. Pearson also argued at trial the Church could not have revoked his ministry by revoking his license because once he retired he had no “ministry” to revoke. Pearson contends that after he retired he had, at most, a “bor[420]*420rowed ministry” which allowed him to preach at the invitation of other Church ministers.

Pearson’s arguments revolve around the meaning to be assigned to the words “license” and “ministry” under the Minutes. As a threshold issue, the Church of God has consistently maintained that this is an ecclesiastical matter, and this court is constitutionally barred from inquiring into the meaning of these words under its doctrine. This court must resolve that issue first, as we are not at liberty to reach a decision premised upon a legal theory which is dependent upon civil judicial authority to intervene.

The South Carolina Constitution, Article 1, Section 2, and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, assures religious freedom, without secular interference. The South Carolina Court of Appeals first addressed this issue in the case of Harmon v. Dreher, 17 S.C. Eq. (Speers Eq.) 87 (1843). In that case our court recognized the following principle:

It belongs not to the civil power to enter into or review the proceedings of a Spiritual Court. The structure of our government has, for the preservation of Civil Liberty, rescued the Temporal Institutions from religious interference. On the other hand, it has secured Religious Liberty from the invasion of Civil Authority. The judgments, therefore, of religious associations, bearing upon their own members, are not examinable here.... Where a civil right depends upon an ecclesiastical matter, it is the civil court, and not the ecclesiastical, which is to decide. The civil tribunal tries the civil right, and no more, taking the ecclesiastical decisions, out of which the right arises, as it finds them.

Id. at 120-21 (emphasis added).

Following the Harmon decision, the United States Supreme Court first addressed this issue in a diversity case, before the First Amendment had been made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. In the case of Watson v. Jones, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) 679, 20 L.Ed. 666 (1872), the Supreme Court, quoting from and relying in part upon the analysis of South Carolina Constitutional law in Harmon, ad[421]*421dressed a controversy over real property between different factions of the same church. In its ruling, the Court recognized the following principle:

In this class of cases we think the rule of action which should govern the civil courts, founded in a broad and sound view of the relations of church and state under our system of laws, and supported by a preponderating weight of judicial authority is, that, whenever the questions of discipline, or of faith, or ecclesiastical rule, custom or law have been decided by the highest of these church judicatories to which the matter had been carried, the legal tribunals must accept such decisions as final, and as binding on them, in their application to the case before them.

Id. at 727. The legal principle that eccleasiastical decisions are not proper subjects of inquiry in civil courts thus was first formally recognized under both South Carolina Constitution Article 1, Section 2, and federal law.2

The United States Supreme Court next addressed the scope of civil review in cases involving ecclesiastical matters in Gonzales v. Roman Catholic Archbishop of Manila,

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Related

Pearson v. Church of God
478 S.E.2d 849 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1996)
Pearson v. Church of God
458 S.E.2d 68 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1995)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
458 S.E.2d 68, 318 S.C. 417, 1995 S.C. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-church-of-god-scctapp-1995.