Smith v. Swormstedt

57 U.S. 288, 14 L. Ed. 942, 16 How. 288, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1555
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 25, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by169 cases

This text of 57 U.S. 288 (Smith v. Swormstedt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Swormstedt, 57 U.S. 288, 14 L. Ed. 942, 16 How. 288, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1555 (1854).

Opinion

Mr. Justice NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court'.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Ohio.

The bill is filed by the complainants, for themselves, and in behalf of the travelling and worn out preachers in connection with the society of the Methodist Episcopal Church South in the United States, against the defendants, to recover their share of a fund called the Book Concern, at the city of Cincinnati, consisting of houses, machinery, printing-presses, book-bindery, books, &c., claimed to be of the value of some two hundred thousand dollars.

The bill charges that, at and before the year 1844, there existed in the United States a voluntary association unincorporated, known as the Methodist Episcopal Church, composed of seven bishops, four thousand eight hundred and twenty-eight preachers belonging to the travelling connection, and in bishops, ministers, and members about one million one hundred and nine thousand nine hundred and sixty, united, and bound together in one organized body by certain doctrines of faith and morals, and by certain rules of government and discipline.

*299 That the government of the church was vested in one body called the General Conference, and in certain subordinate bodies called, a.nnual conferences, and in bishops, travelling ministers, and preachers.

The bill refers to a printed volume, entitled “ The Doctrines, and Discipline of .the Methodist Episcopal Church,” as containing the constitution, organization, form of government, and rules of discipline, as well as the doctrines of faith of the'association.

The complainants further charge, that differences and disagreements had sprung up in the church between what was called the northern and southern members,.in respect to the administration of the government with reference to the ownership of slaves by the ministers of the church, of such a character and attended'with such consequences as threatened greatly to impair its usefulness, as well as permanently to disturb its harmony ; and it became and was a question of grave and serious importance whether a separation ought not to take place, according to some geographical boundary to be agreed upon, so as that the% Methodist Episcopal Church should thereafter constitute two separate and distinct organizations. And that, accordingly, a.t a session. of the General Conference held in the city of New York in May, 1844, a resolution wxas passed by a majority of over three fourths of the body, by which it was determined, that, if the annual conferences of the slaveholding States should find it necessary to unite in a distinct ecclesiastical connection,, the following rule should be observed with regard to the northern boundary of such connection — ?ill the societies, stations, and conferences adhering to the church in the' south, by a vote of a majority of the members, should remain under the pastoral care of the southern church; and all adhering to the church north, by a like vote, should remain under the pastoral care of that church. This plan of separation contains eleven other resolutions relating principally to the mode and terms of the division of the common property of the association between the two divisions, in case the separation, contemplated should take place; and which, in effect, provide for a pro raid division, taking the number of the travelling preachers in the church north and south as the basis upon which to make the partition.

The complainants further charge that, in pursuance of the above resolutions, the annual conferences in the slaveholding States -met, and resolved in favor of a distinct and independent organization, ánd erected themselves into a separate ecclesiastical connection, under the provisional plan of separation based upon the discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and to *300 be known as the, Methodist Episcopal Church South. And they insist that-, by virtue of these proceedings, this church, as it had existed in the United States previous to the year 1844, became and was divided into two separate churches, with distinct and independent powers, and authority composed of the several annual conferences, stations, and societies,' lying north and south of the aforesaid line of division. And, also, that by force of the same proceedings, the division of the church south became and was entitled to its proportion of the common property real and personal of the Methodist Episcopal Church, which belonged to it at the time the separation took place; that the . property and funds of the church had been obtained by voluntary contributions, to which the members of the church .south had contributed more than their full share, and which, down to the time of the separation, belonged in common to the Methodist Episcopal Church, as then organized.

The complainants charge, that they are members of the church south, and preachers, some of them supernumerary, and some superannuated preachers, and belonged to the travelling connection of said church; and that, as such, have a personal interest in the property, real and personal, held by the church north, and in the hands of the defendants; and, further, that there are about fifteen hundred preachers belonging to the travelling connection of the church south, each of whom has a direct and personal interest in the same right with the complainants in the said property, the large number of whom make it inconvenient and impracticable to bring them all before the court as complainants.

They also charge, that the defendants are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church North; and that each, as such, has a personal interest in the property; and further, that two of them have the custody and control of the fund in question; and that, in addition to these defendants, there are nearly thirty-eight hundred ..preachers belonging to the travelling connection of the church north, each of whom has an interest in the fund in the same right, so that it is impossible, in view of sustaining a just decision in the matter, to make them all parties to the bill.

The complainants also aver, that this bill is brought by the authority, and under the direction of the general and annual conferences of the church south, and for the benefit of the same, and for themselves, and all the preachers in the travelling connection, and all other ministers and persons having an interest in the property.

The defendants, in their answer, admit most of the facts charged in the bill, as it respects the organization, government; *301 discipline, and faith of the Methodist Episcopal Church as it existed at and previous to the year 1844. They admit the passage of the resolutions, called the plan of separation, at the session of the General Conference of that year, by the majority stated; but deny that the resolutions'were duly and legally passed; and also deny that the General Conference possessed the competent power to pass them, and submit that they were therefore null and void. They also submit that, if the General Conference possessed the power, the separation contemplated was made dependent upon certain conditions, and among others a change of the sixth restrictive article in the constitution of the church, by a vote of the annual conferences, which vote the said conferences refused.

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Bluebook (online)
57 U.S. 288, 14 L. Ed. 942, 16 How. 288, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-swormstedt-scotus-1854.