Roland Mouton, Jr. and Delorian Morgan Jones v. Christian Faith Missionary Baptist Church, Clarence Andrews, Marvin Nixon, Walter Ervin, Corey Wilson, Marvin Rausaw, Preston Cook and Christopher Douglas

498 S.W.3d 143, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 5427, 2016 WL 3345478
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 2016
DocketNO. 01-15-00088-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 498 S.W.3d 143 (Roland Mouton, Jr. and Delorian Morgan Jones v. Christian Faith Missionary Baptist Church, Clarence Andrews, Marvin Nixon, Walter Ervin, Corey Wilson, Marvin Rausaw, Preston Cook and Christopher Douglas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roland Mouton, Jr. and Delorian Morgan Jones v. Christian Faith Missionary Baptist Church, Clarence Andrews, Marvin Nixon, Walter Ervin, Corey Wilson, Marvin Rausaw, Preston Cook and Christopher Douglas, 498 S.W.3d 143, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 5427, 2016 WL 3345478 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Rebeca Huddle, Justice

Appellants Roland Mouton, Jr. and De-lorian Morgan Jones sued Christian Faith Missionary Baptist Church, its pastor, Corey Wilson, and. other church members, including Clarence Andrews, Marvin .Nixon, Walter Ervin, Marvin Rausaw, Preston Cook, and Christopher Douglas, after appellants were expelled from church membership and Wilson was elected as the church’s pastor. Appellants sought various declarations and money damages related to appellants’ expulsion and the church’s purported failures to follow its bylaws regarding pastoral selection. The trial court granted the appellees’ plea to the jurisdiction based upon the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine and dismissed appellants’ claims for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Because the trial court was without jurisdiction to resolve the controversy, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

The church’s incorporation

Christian Faith Missionary Baptist Church was incorporated as a Texas nonprofit corporation on June 12, 1969. The articles of incorporation provide that “[t]he management of the affairs of the Corporation shall be vested in the Official Board without the authority of a majority of the membership present and voting at any business meeting.” On April 1, 1999, the church adopted, its presently-effective constitution and bylaws.

Pastoral dispute and expulsion of members

In January 2012, Roland Mouton, Sr., the church’s pastor and appellant Mouton’s father, died. The parties’ dispute centers around the church’s efforts to fill the pastoral vacancy. With respect to a vacancy, the church’s bylaws provided:

In the event of a vacancy, a pulpit committee composed of Deacons and members (five (5) people on the committee) shall be appointed by the church tó seek out a' suitable Pastor and their recommendations will constitute a nomination though any member has the privilege of naming other nominations according to the policy established by the church. The committee shall bring to the consideration of the church on [sic] only one (1) minister at a time. Elections shall be by secret ballot; an affirmative vote of three-fourth (3/4) of those present being necessary for a choice. The Chairman of Deacons and Trustees shall have the right to meet with the Pulpit Committee at any time.

(emphasis added.)

Jones, who then served as the church clerk and secretary, convened a meeting to elect a pulpit committee on February 8, 2012. The pulpit committee was comprised of Jones and other individuals and eventually selected Mouton as their nominee for pastor. However, other members of the church, including Preston Cook, who was Chairman of the Deacons, and Marvin Rausaw, who was Chairman of the Trustees, opposed the actions , of the pulpit committee on the grounds that its members were engaging in “negative behavior not befitting the name.of Christian and action not becoming.of respectable church.members.” In September 2012, Cook and Rau-saw filed an application on behalf of the *147 church for a temporary and permanent injunction to restrain Jones and “the alleged pulpit committee from causing an illegal vote to appoint a Pastor, which is not in the will of the members.” That action was non-suited on October 8, 2012.

On October 13, 2012, a meeting was held at which the deacons, trustees, and congregation voted to adopt a “resolution to restore order in the church.” The resolution, signed by Cook and Rausaw, found that Jones, Mouton, and others involved with'the pulpit committee “have engaged in a campaign of intimidation, threats, assault, falsehoods, and manipulation.”' The resolution expelled from church membership Jones, Mouton,-and the others involved with the pulpit committee on the grounds that they “have hurt the Church, decreased its membership, distracted from its Christian mission, and continue to cause damage to the Church.” Corey Wilson was elected and installed as the church’s new pastor a month later, on November 17, 2012.

Conflicting claims to the church’s bank accounts

On December 13, 2012, Whitney Bank, at which the church held two bank accounts, filed a petition for interpleader, alleging that Mouton, Jones, and a third person, David E. Daniels, had gone to a branch office on November 2, 2012,. and again on November 13, 2012, and attempted to have the current signatories on the church’s accounts removed and themselves added. According to the petition, Mouton, Jones, and Daniels presented a letter signed by Jones representing that she was the church’s secretary and advising the bank that Mouton had been elected pastor of the church. The petition further alleged that after these events, Wilson and another man, Ervin, who was a current signatory on the church’s accounts, notified the bank that Mouton and Jones were not authorized by the church to have access to the accounts and were attempting to defraud the church because Mouton believed that the church’s funds were part of his inheritance from his deceased father. The bank’s petition named appellants and appellees as defendants. The bank was granted a non-suit after depositing the funds in the court’s registry.

The suit between the parties

Appellees answered and cross-claimed against Mouton, Jones, and Daniels for fraud and negligent misrepresentation related to their attempt to gain control of the church’s - bank accounts. Mouton and Jones counterclaimed for a declaration that Mouton was the pastor of the church and. for damages in the amount of the interpleaded funds. They later amended their petition to add requests for declarations that the pulpit committee was properly constituted under the church’s bylaws and that the appellees violated the church’s bylaws by:

• Interfering with the pulpit committee;
• Holding unauthorized meetings;
• Hiring attorneys to file a defective Certificate of Amendment with the Secretary of State and to sue for an injunction; 1 .
• Expelling appellants from membership and changing the locks so that *148 appellants could not access the church; and
• - Selecting Wilson as pastor.

Appellees filed a plea to the jurisdiction in August 2Ó13 and a motion to dismiss appellants’ claims for lack' of standing in October 2013. The trial court denied both. Appellees petitioned for a writ of mandamus challenging the denial of the motion to dismiss for lack of standing, which this court denied1 without specifying its reasons. See In re Christian Faith Missionary Baptist Church, No. 01-14-00057-CV, 2014 WL 2538646, at *1 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] June 5, 2014, orig. proceeding).

In October 2014, appellees filed a combined motion for summary judgment and plea to the jurisdiction. In the plea, appel-lees argued that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over appellants’ claims under the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine because adjudicating the claims would require the trial court to review the church’s discipline of appellants and to impermissi-bly involve itself in the- pastoral selection process.

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498 S.W.3d 143, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 5427, 2016 WL 3345478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roland-mouton-jr-and-delorian-morgan-jones-v-christian-faith-missionary-texapp-2016.