Rolfe v. Parker

968 S.W.2d 178, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 773, 1998 WL 208138
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 21, 1998
DocketWD 53510
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 968 S.W.2d 178 (Rolfe v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rolfe v. Parker, 968 S.W.2d 178, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 773, 1998 WL 208138 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

HANNA, Judge.

The appellants in this matter are James R. Rolfe, George Wilken, Edward R. Sechrest, Jr., and Eddie Lee (Rolfe-group). They contend that they were improperly removed from their positions at the Church of Christ “With the Elijah Message” Established Anew 1929, Inc. (Church) by the respondents James Parker, John O’Keefe, and Ernest Fife (Parker-group). The Church is incorporated as a general not-for-profit corporation with its principal place of business at 608 Lacy Rd., Independence.

Legal History:

On or about March 5, 1996, the Rolfe-group filed a motion for preliminary injunction, petition for injunction and declaratory relief, and petition for accounting against the Parker-group in the Jackson County Circuit Court. On April 2, 1996, the Honorable Preston Dean found that it was unlikely that the Rolfe-group would be successful, in that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, and refused to issue the preliminary injunction. On June 11, 1996, Sterling National Bank filed a petition for interpleader to determine which party was entitled to the funds held by Sterling Bank. In September 1996, a three day bench trial was held before Judge Dean. On October 15, 1996, the court refused to grant relief to the Rolfe-group and dismissed the petition, because the issue of who constituted the authority of the Church, was an “ecclesiastical” matter and, therefore, not within the jurisdiction of the civil courts. The court also directed that the impleaded funds from Sterling Bank be paid to the Parker-group.

Facts:

The facts regarding this dispute commenced in 1994, when three of the Church’s apostles were removed from their positions. 1 Several of the same parties involved in this matter took their grievances to the Jackson County Circuit Court where the court re *180 fused to grant relief because the issues were of an “ecclesiastical nature.” As a result of the 1994 dispute, the Church’s articles of incorporation and by-laws were amended on October 8,1994. These amendments created an administrative committee, which consisted of all the apostles residing in the United States. The administrative committee is primarily responsible for ecclesiastical and clerical affairs. 2 In order to conduct business, the administrative committee must have at least a majority of the Quorum present. The amendments to the articles and by-laws also created an executive committee, which consisted of all the bishops residing in the United States. The executive committee is responsible for the temporal and secular affairs of the Church. The amendments also provide for a nine-member board of directors, which consists of six members from the administrative committee and three members from the executive committee.

In February 1995, Apostle George Martin tendered his resignation from the Quorum of Apostles. This resignation left the administrative committee with six apostles living in the United States. The result was a three-three split in the voting, leading to stalemates on many issues. Subsequently, Mr. Martin felt called back by God as an apostle. Only three of the apostles recognized his return. As a result, Apostle Godwin Inyang was contacted in Africa. In his capacity as an apostle — but not as a member of the administrative committee, since he did not reside within the United States — Inyang, as the fourth vote of the seven apostles, accepted Mr. Martin’s resignation and, apparently, did not accept his recall.

On September 30, 1995, at a regularly scheduled “Joint Quorums” meeting of the apostles and bishops, Mr. Paul Savage requested ordination to the position of an apostle. The vote was split three to three and, therefore, the request faded. The next meeting of the Joint Quorum was scheduled for January 13,1996.

In the meantime, in November 1995, members of the Rolfe-group apparently took action to ordain Mr. Savage and re-ordain Mr. Martin as apostles. On January 8,1996, the Parker-group and Apostle Godwin Inyang, constituting four of the seven apostles voted, in their capacity as Quorum of Apostles, to remove the Rolfe-group from their priesthood positions in the Church. Rolfe, Wilken, and Leighton-Floyd (who is not a party to this suit) were removed from their positions as apostle. Additionally, Sechrest and Lee were removed from their positions as bishop.

On January 13, 1996, Messrs. Rolfe, Wil-kin, Sechrest, Savage, and Martin, arrived at the Church for the previously scheduled meeting of the Joint Quorum. The Church was locked, and the Parker-group was inside. The Rolfe-group obtained the services of a locksmith to let them in. A disagreement between the two groups ensued, and the police were called. After the police determined that the dispute was a civil matter, they refused to intervene. The Rolfe-group then withdrew from the premises.

After the altercation, apparently at meetings that afternoon and on January 17,1996, the three members of the Parker-group, as well as Godwin Inyang, voted to remove the entire Rolfe-group from the board of directors. 3 On January 22, 1996, the remaining board of directors met and removed James Rolfe as President of the Church. These meetings were evidenced by letters sent, after the fact, to Rolfe and Sechrest regarding their removal from their corporate and priesthood positions of the Church. These actions, and the propriety thereof, is the basis of this appeal.

Issue:

*181 The Rolfe-group contends that the contest was between two factions within a not-for-profit Missouri corporation disagreeing over which group of individuals was the duly elected and qualified officers of the Church, and this issue was not a “purely ecclesiastical” matter. The Rolfe-group bases its claim on the Church’s October 1994 amended articles of incorporation and by-laws, which they assert served to change the structure of the corporation so that the apostles relinquished control of the Church to the administrative committee who has the primary responsibility for the ecclesiastical and clerical affairs. As such, the actions of the Parker-group did not properly operate to remove them as members of the committees and/or board of directors under the amended articles and bylaws.

The Parker-group, however, contends that this dispute is an ecclesiastical matter. They maintain that whether an individual receives a calling to a priesthood position in the Church is subject to ecclesiastical, not corporate, law and, therefore, “callings, ordinations and removals” of priesthood positions are not within the subject matter jurisdiction of the civil courts. They argue that the Church is ultimately governed by a Quorum of Apostles, and that the board of directors and the executive and administrative committees serve only at the will and pleasure, and under the authority, of the Quorum of Apostles. 4

The trial court determined that the apostles, not the administrative committee, constituted the authority of the Church. Hence, the ultimate issue is who was called to serve as an apostle. The trial court thereby ruled that such determination was of an “ecclesiastical nature” over which the civil courts did not have subject matter jurisdiction.

Standard of Review:

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Bluebook (online)
968 S.W.2d 178, 1998 Mo. App. LEXIS 773, 1998 WL 208138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rolfe-v-parker-moctapp-1998.