State ex rel. Watson v. Farris

45 Mo. 183
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 45 Mo. 183 (State ex rel. Watson v. Farris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Watson v. Farris, 45 Mo. 183 (Mo. 1869).

Opinion

Wagner, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The circuit attorney of the nineteenth judicial circuit exhibited to the Circuit Court, sitting in the county of St. Charles, an information in the nature of a quo warranto, at the relation of Samuel S. Watson, against the defendants in this proceeding. The controversy grows out of a conflict in which different persons claim the right to act as trustees of Lindenwood Female College, an institution of learning situated in St. Charles county. The college was incorporated by an act of the Legislature of this State, approved February 24, 1853, and the third section of the charter provides that the management of the affairs of the corporation shall be vested in a board of fifteen directors, and that at all meetings of the board five members shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. Section 4 provides that the board of directors named in the act of incorporation shall be divided into three classes of five each, one class of which shall vacate their offices in each succeeding year. The section then further declares': “ The vacancies in the board, caused by the expiration of the terms of service of each of said classes, shall be filled by the Presbytery of St. Louis, of which several of the corporators are members, and which is connected with the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, usually styled the Old School.” No difficulty ever arose, nor was there ever any dispute as to what body was entitled to fill the annual vacancies, till the fall of the year in 1866, when a disruption took place in the Presbyterian Church in St. Louis, [190]*190resulting in tbe organization o£ two separate and distinct Presbyteries, each claiming to be the legitimate church organization, and therefore invested with the power of supplying the vacancies as they occurred.

Tbe difficulty and dissension grew out of the action of the General Assembly of the Old School Presbyterian Church in issuing its deliverances on the subject of loyalty and slavery during the progress of the civil war through which the country has just passed. These deliverances inculcated loyalty, took strong ground in favor of the general government in the struggle then going on, and pronounced emphatically against slavery. A minority of the church, residing principally in the two States of Kentucky and Missouri, dissented from the views contained in the deliverances and wrote and published a paper called the Declaration and Testimony, in which the proceedings of the General Assembly were assailed with great acrimony and bitterness. This paper was signed by a number of the ministers and ruling elders of the church. In commenting on the action of the General Assembly the paper says: “ The whole mediatorial glory and dignity of the Messiah has been thus tarnished, and all the offices of prophet, priest, and king, which He executes for the salvation of His people, are subverted and surrendered. If this, then, be not apostacy, surely it needs but little to make it so, clearly, unmistakably, fatally. Nothing can prevent this but the blessing of Almighty God upon the efforts which His faithful witnesses may make to arouse the people to the reality and extent of the evil and danger, and-to bring them, by prompt and decided action, to purge the church of the evil influence which has corrupted and betrayed her. Against this corruption and betrayal, therefore, we testify in the sight of God, and angels, and men. We wash our hands of all participation in its guilt. We declare our deliberate purpose, trusting in God, who can save by few as well as by many, to use our best endeavors to bring back the church of our fathers to her ancient purity and integrity, upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, and under the banner of our only king, priest, and prophet, the Lord Jesus Christ. In this endeavor we pledge ourselves to assist and co-operate with each [191]*191other, and by the grace of God we will never abandon the effort, no matter what sacrifice it may require us to make, until we either have succeeded in reforming the church and restoring her tarnished glory; or, failing in this, necessity shall be laid upon us, in obedience to the apostolic command, to withdraw from those who have departed from the truth.”

And the signers of the Declaration and Testimony sum up the line of action which they proposed to guide their future course -as follows: -

“ 1st. That we refuse to give our support to ministers, elders, agents, editors, teachers, or to those who are in any other capacity engaged in religious instruction or effort, who hold the preceding or similar heresies.
“5th. That we will extend our sympathy and aid as we may have opportunity to all who are in any way subjected to ecclesiastical censure, or civil disabilities, or penalties for their adherence to the principles we maintain, and the repudiation of the errors in doctrine and practice, against which we bear this our testimony.
“ 6th. That we will not sustain or execute, or in any manner assist in the execution, of the orders passed at the last two Assemblies on the subject of slavery and loyalty, and with reference to the conducting of missions in the Southern States, and with regard to the ministers, members and churches in the seceded and border States.
“7th. That we will withhold our contributions from the boards of the church — with the exception of the board of foreign mission — and from the theological seminaries, until these institutions are rescued from the hands of those who are perverting them to the teaching and promulgation of principles subversive of the the system they were founded and organized to uphold and disseminate. And we will appropriate the money thus withheld in aid of these instrumentalities which will be employed for maintaining and defending the principles affirmed in this declaration against the errors herein rejected, and in assisting the impoverished ministers and churches anywhere throughout the country who agree with us in these essential doctrines in restoring and building up their congregations and houses of worship.
[192]*192!i8tk. We recommend that all ministers, elders, church sessions, presbyteries and synods who approve of this Declaration and Testimony, give their public adherence thereto in such manner as they shall prefer, and communicate their names, and, when a church court, a copy of their adhering act.
' “lOth. We do earnestly recommend that on the-day of -, A. D. 1865, a convention be- held in the city of-, composed of all such ministers and ruling elders as may concur in the views and sentiments of this Testimony, to deliberate and consult on the present state of our church, and to adopt such further measures as may seem best suited to restore her prostrated standards, and vindicate the pure and peaceful religion of Jesus, from the reproach which has been brought upon it through the faithlessness and corruption of' its ministers and professors.”

It will be thus perceived that the dissenters, in the Declaration and Testimony, arraigned the General Assembly as being guilty of betrayal, faithlessness, apostacy and corruption, and indicated their purpose to openly resist its authority, and in the event that they could not succeed in enforcing their sentiments, then they avowed their intention to withdraw from its control.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Mo. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-watson-v-farris-mo-1869.