Philomath College v. Wyatt

31 P. 206, 27 Or. 390
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 31 P. 206 (Philomath College v. Wyatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philomath College v. Wyatt, 31 P. 206, 27 Or. 390 (Or. 1893).

Opinions

Opinion of

Mr. Justice Moore.

The plaintiff relies mainly upon three points to sustain the decree of the court below: First, that because the constitution of eighteen hundred and forty-one had never been submitted to or adopted by any vote of the membership of the church, it was not the unalterable law of the church; second, that the amendment of the constitution and the revision of the confession of faith were regularly made and legally adopted; third, that the revision of the confession of faith did not materially alter, change, [442]*442or modify any principle or doctrine in which the church believed, and did not add anything to or take anything from the creed of the church.

1. The Church of the United Brethren in Christ is a. voluntary, unincorporated religious society. “The validity and binding effect of the constitution or a bylaw or other proceeding of a voluntary association, as respects its members, rests upon assent, actual or implied. The relation between the members of such associations is one of contract, and the articles of association and bylaws constitute the terms of the agreement”: Protchett v. Schaeffer, 11 Phila. 166. “The members having agreed to these terms, are bound by them, if they do not conflict with law or public policy”: Hyde v. Woods, 2 Sawy. 655. “Individuals who form themselves together into a voluntary association for a common object, agree to be governed by such rules as they think proper to adopt, if there is nothing in them in conflict with the law of the land; and those who become members of the body are presumed to know them, to have assented to them, and they are bound by them”: Innes v. Wylie, 1 Car. and K. 260. The members who have joined this church since May, eighteen hundred and forty-one, are presumed to know the contents of the constitution of that year, have assented thereto, and are bound thereby. To them it is as binding as if the constitution had been submitted to and voted upon at an election duly called for that purpose. They were not bound by its provisions till they became members of the church. The constitution is a part of the contract to which they assented; it is the bond of union between them and the church. There has been a personal assent on their part to its provisions, and to them it is the constitution of the church. The members who had joined prior to May, eighteen hundred and forty-one, by remaining therein, are bound by the constitution of that year; they have by [443]*443their acts personally assented to its provisions. “If a member wishes to dissent from a rule lawfully adopted, and to escape being bound by it, he must procure its repeal or withdraw from the society. If, knowing what the rule is, he remains in the society, he is bound, however loudly he may protest against such rule ”: White v. Brownell, 2 Daly, 329. No effort was made to amend or repeal the constitution till eighteen hundred and eighty-five. Prior to that year all members of the church had assented to the provisions of the constitution of eighteen hundred and forty-one.

2. The opinion of the church and general conferences from eighteen hundred and forty-one to eighteen hundred and eighty-nine is entitled to much weight in determining the character of this instrument. • The general conference of eighteen hundred and thirty-seven framed a constitution, and, doubting its ability to adopt such, ordered its secretary to issue a circular to the members of the church notifying them that at the next general conference a memorial would be presented praying the ratification of the constitution thus framed. The circular was published in the discipline of that year, and distributed among the members of the church. Eminating, as it did, from the highest legislative and ecclesiastical body of the church, the members must have taken notice of it. The next general conference met in Ohio, May tenth, eighteen hundred and forty-one. It did not ratify the constitution adopted by the preceding conference, but adopted another, changing in some particulars the one so framed in eighteen hundred and thirty-seven. The delegates to this general conference were, by the vote of the members, empowered to ratify or reject the constitution of eighteen hundred and thirty-seven. They had met in constitutional convention, were empowered with more than legislative functions, had come directly [444]*444from the people comprising the church, knew their wants, represented the members in their sovereign capacity, and, as such constitutional and conventional delegates, adopted the constitution of eighteen hundred and forty-one. It would be too narrow a construction to say that they had no delegated power to frame and adopt a different constitution from that of eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, or to amend the one so framed.

3. The members of the church have in all their legislation recognized the constitution of eighteen hundred and forty-one as the organic law of the church. The general conference of eighteen hundred and eighty-five adopted the report of committee number six, which says: “It is the sense and belief of your committee that the constitution as it stands is not in harmony with the present wishes of our people.” And again: “Whereas it is desirable and needful to so amend and improve our present constitution as to adapt its provisions more fully to the wants and conditions of the church in this and future time; therefore, resolved, that a commission be appointed, ” etc. The general conference at York, Pennsylvania, in eighteen hundred and eighty-nine, declared that they passed from under the old, and legislated under the amended, constitution. The written instrument adopted by the church in eighteen hundred and forty-one as its constitution has been treated as its fundamental organic law and constitution by the church and by its general conference from the time of its adoption until eighteen hundred and eighty-nine. It was published every four years in the discipline of the church as its organic law and constitution. The constitution of eighteen hundred and forty-one is now more than twenty years old, has been acted upon as genuine by persons having an interest in the question, and, under the rules of evidence of this state, must be [445]*445held to be genuine: 1 Hill’s Code, p. 587.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P. 206, 27 Or. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philomath-college-v-wyatt-or-1893.