Schell v. Leander Clark College

2 F.2d 17, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1964
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 8, 1924
Docket6544
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 F.2d 17 (Schell v. Leander Clark College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schell v. Leander Clark College, 2 F.2d 17, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1964 (8th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit in equity to prevent alleged trustees from consummating an alleged breach of trust and for the restoration of, or accounting for, property alleged to have been disposed of by the alleged trustees in violation of their trust. The alleged trustees are Leander Clark College, a corporation of the state of Iowa, T. D. Grites and 20 other persons trustees of that corporation, and Coe College, another Iowa corporation, and these are the defendants in this suit.

The Church of the United Brethren in Christ, hereafter called the Church, is an unincorporated association, which for more than 100 years has conducted its religious, benevolent, and educational activities in the United States and foreign countries, and which is composed of members too numerous to join as plaintiffs in this suit. The plaintiff in this suit is William E. Schell, a member of the Church in good and regular standing, and he brings this suit as such member, on behalf of himself and the other members of the Church similarly situated.

The gravamen of the bill in equity here is that the defendants, who held in trust for the Church the campus of Leander Clark College and an endowment fund of $200,000, all of which were and are the property of the Church, in violation of their trust are about to turn over the $200,000 to the defendant Coe College, unless they are enjoined from so doing by the *19 court, and have transferred the campus to the state of Iowa. The relief sought is an injunction against the delivery of the $200,000 to Coe College and an accounting for the campus.

The defendants made a motion to dismiss the bill, and after consideration the court rendered a decree to the effect that it found “that, under the facts pleaded in the bill, plaintiff, William E. Schell, should not be permitted to maintain this cause as a class suit,” and “ordered and adjudged that plaintiff’s hill be, and the same is, hereby dismissed.” This appeal is from this order.

By their motion to dismiss the bill the defendants have admitted, and this court treats as true, the averments of facts well pleaded in the bill. Counsel for the defendants urged these three reasons why in their opinion the order of dismissal should be affirmed: First, because the Board of Education was the only proper plaintiff in this suit; second, because there is a misjoinder of causes of action, in that the complaint seeks an injunction against the college and its trustees, to prevent the delivery of $200,000 to Coe College, and also an accounting for the campus from the trustees of the college; and, third, because under a statute of Iowa the trustees of the college are vested with the “control and management of its affairs and funds,” and, if they hold the money or property of others in trust for the owners, they are not answerable to the eestuis que trust or to any court for their violation of their trust or disposition of the property.

By the averments of the bill and the motion to dismiss it is admitted that the Church was an unincorporated association, that its members were too numerous to join as plaintiffs, and that the plaintiff is a member, and brings this suit as such member, for himself and all other members similarly situated. If, therefore, the Church had any enforceable equity against the defendants, this plaintiff may maintain this suit to enforce it. When the question is one of common or general interest to many persons, constituting a class so numerous as to make it impracticable to bring them all before the court, one or more may sue or defend for the whole. Story’s Equity Pleadings (10th Ed.) § 97; Federal Equity Rule 38; 1 Foster, Federal Practice (5th Ed.) § 114, p. 423; Helm v. Zarecor, 222 U. S. 32, 33, 34, 37, 38, 32 S. Ct. 10, 56 L. Ed. 77.

Was the Board of Education the only proper party plaintiff to bring this suit? The averments of the complaint which condition the answer to this question sot forth these facts: The Church has conducted its religious and educational activities in the United States for over 100 years. Its organic law is embodied in the Church Discipline, which is subject to amendment only by the general conference of the Church, which meets quadrennially. In the year 3856, as part of its religious, benevolent, and educational work, it established a church college in the state of Iowa, which for many years has been located in the city of Toledo, Iowa. Since 1903 this college has been known as Leander Clark College. Throughout its existence it has been supported by, has acknowledged allegiance to, and has recognized the domination of the Church. Under the provisions of its articles of incorporation its trustees are elected triennially by the Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Illinois annual conferences of the Church, which, in relation to Leander Clark College, are “the co-operating conferences.”

With reference to church colleges, the organic law of the Church—the Church Discipline-provided for a Board of Education, an Ohio corporation to which the Church delegated general supervisory powers over all church schools, and among them the power to determine to which annual conferences each school should be tributary. No school or college could be established, discontinued, relocated, or consolidated with any other without its consent. Leander Clark College throughout its existence met with the requirements and regulations and recognized the authority of the Board of Education and of the Church Discipline as adopted by the general conference until the year 1919.

In June, 1917, a plan of consolidation of Leander Clark College with Coe College was approved by the trustees of the former college. In the autumn of 1917 it was presented to the co-operating conferences, but none of them favored it, and when it was presented to the Board of Education, the consent of which is by the Church Discipline indispensable before any consolidation ean become effective, that board disapproved of the plan and refused to consent to the consolidation. Thereupon the Board of Education made, and in September and October, 1918, presented, a new plan of consolidation to the co-operating conferences at their annual conferences, and they approved of it, and, believing that this plan *20 would be carried through, these conferences authorized the trustees of the college to dispose of the campus property as they saw fit. Afterward the college, through its officers and trustees, purporting to act under this authority, conveyed the campus to the state of Iowa for use as a state institution for destitute orphan children. One of the objects of this suit is to obtain an accounting from the trustees of the college of the disposition of this campus, on the ground that they and their college held it in trust for the Church.

Coe College, however, found fault with the board’s plan, and the board of trustees of Leander Clark College thereupon rescinded all action they had taken adopting the plan of the Board of Education and all other action they had taken looking toward a consolidation with Coe College. Thereafter the trustees of the college drew up another and materially different plan of consolidation, presented this plan to the Board of Education, and that board disapproved and rejected it. After this disapproval and rejection, the college, in accordance with the terms of this rejected plan, transferred its endowment fund of $200,000 to the defendant H. J.

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Bluebook (online)
2 F.2d 17, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 1964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schell-v-leander-clark-college-ca8-1924.