Sutter v. Dutch Church

3 Grant 336
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 3 Grant 336 (Sutter v. Dutch Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sutter v. Dutch Church, 3 Grant 336 (Pa. 1862).

Opinion

The facts of the ease, together with the opinion of a majority of the court, by Chief Justice Lowbie, will be found in 6th Wright’s Bep. page 503.

Erom this decision Mr. Justice Thompson dissented, and held [337]*337that a majority of a religious congregation have power to dissolve their connection or union with a denomination with which they have connected themselves after their organization, and filed the following dissenting opinion :—

Thompson, J.

I cannot agree to a judgment of affirmation in either of the above cases, and it is due to the profession as well as to myself that the reasons for my dissent from the judgment of the majority of my brethren should be stated. The case presents some delicate and very nice points in civil jurisprudence. Indeed, I am greatly impressed with the idea that the boundary of mere civil jurisprudence has been transcended in arriving at conclusions below and here.

In order to a satisfactory understanding of what may be said, however, it will be necessary to present the facts, and state the main points of controversy as clearly, but briefly as possible. Dissenting opinions must be self-sustaining, as the facts are not entitled to be officially presented by an authorized reporter, and ordinary readers would hardly be likely to hunt them up for themselves, and hence the necessity for a statement of them in this opinion.

-The complainants claim to be pew-holders, or renters, in the “First Eeformed Dutch Church of the City and vicinity of Philadelphia," and bring their bills of complaint against the trustees of the church to restrain them, as appears by the second bill:—

“1. From dissolving the union formed in 1813 between this ' church in its corporative name and capacity, of the ‘Evangelical Congregation of the City and vicinity of Philadelphia,’ and the New Brunswick classis, an inferior church, judicatory of the Dutch Eeformed Church in the United States; and that it may be decreed to be unlawful for the trustees of the said church to supply the pulpit of the church with a pastor, or to interfere with the exercise of that power by the consistory of the church.

“ 2. In the first bill, which for .’convenience I notice as the second, the prayer is to enjoin the trustees from .applying the income, property and effects of the church in the inculcation or teaching of any other doctrine, faith or practice, than those contained in the Heidelberg Catechism, as expounded in its Galvinistic interpretation; being that given by the ecclesiastical assembly known ms the Synod of Dort, which assembled at Dordrecht, in Holland, in the year 1618 and 1619, and from establishing in the pulpit of the said church as its pastor or teacher, any clergyman who is not of “ sound doctrine” with reference to this standard of faith, and who is not regularly ordained as required by the charter and fundamental articles of said corporation; “ and especially from installing in the pasto[338]*338rate of said church, the Rev. George W. Smiley, or applying the income or effects of said corporation for his maintenance, support or salary, as the minister of said church,” &c.

These I think are the material matters embraced in the plaintiffs’ two bills. Many things seem to be set forth in them by way of inducement, but being denied in the answers, and not proved by the complainants, they consequently go for nothing. Such, for instance, as that the said “First Reformed Dutch Church of the City and vicinity of Philadelphia was originally organized in 1809 that it was the design and purpose of the fundamental law of the church, that the pastors should be Oalvinistic and not Arminian in doctrine, and should be ordained by Christian denominations so holding; that illegal votes had been given in the passage of the resolution dissolving the union with the classis, and the like.

These things were mostly unsustained by proof, and, where there was any testimony, disproved. The complainants’ case gathers no strength from such allegations.

The learned judge of the Common Pleas overruled many points in the plaintiffs’ bills as insufficient in law to entitle them to relief, but, on certain other grounds to be noticed, decreed in both cases in their favor, and hence these appeals by the trustees.

The members of the association which constituted this congregation and church, originally belonged to a congregation known as the “ German Reformed Congregation in the City of Philadelphia,” which was and still is in ecclesiastical’connection with, and is a part of the German Reformed Church of the United States. Its declared standard of faith is the Bible and the Heidelberg Catechism. The withdrawal from the church took place in 1809, and all the testimony accords in proving that the separation was not schismatic, but only because the seceding members wished to have church service in English instead of German, as more profitable and suitable to the education and tastes of the youths belonging to them. Not being able to secure this in the old church, they accordingly withdrew and associated themselves as a congregation, under the name of the “ Second Reformed Association.” Thus certainly regarding the church they left as the same in faith, and to be considered the first German Reformed Church. They soon purchased a burial ground, procured a place to hold public worship, and organized formally as a congregation by the name of the “ Evangelical Reformed Congregation of the City and vicinity of Philadelphia.” By this name they were incorporated by the court in 1810, and to the trustees duly appointed under the charter, the title to the burial ground and church lot was conveyed in trust for the congregation. Fundamental articles for [339]*339the government and declaratory of a standard of faith of the congregation were adopted, and remain unchanged until this hour, excepting only in name. The temporalities of the church were committed to the trustees, and upon them also devolved the duty of calling or inviting candidates for the ministry when there was a vacancy; the eventual employment of whom depended on a vote of the congregation. By the Fundamental Articles the pastor was required to be of the “ Beformed or Presbyterian denomination-, regularly ordained, of sound doctrine, and unblemished character.” And he “ must preach the word of God, and doctrines of Jesus Christ according to the Prophets and the Apostles, and the precepts contained in the Heidelberg Catechism.” Buies and Beg. Art. 1.

“ The spiritual affairs of the congregation,” according to Art. IV., “shall be under the government of the minister and seven elders, who shall form a session.”

By Art. IX. of the charter it is declared that it shall not be construed to prevent the congregation from “ uniting with any other Christian denomination whenever it shall appear to a majority of the members of said congregation to be for their advantage.”

Under this charter and these fundamental articles the congregation remained for several years. It was their desire, and they made efforts, to procure a minister of the German Be-formed denomination to preach to them in English, but were unsuccessful. They procured a clergyman of the Presbyterian, and after him, one or more ministers in succession of the Dutch Beformed denomination, to preach in English. The question was often agitated about a union with some other church judicatory, but never settled until in 1813, during the pastorate of the Bev. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Grant 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutter-v-dutch-church-pa-1862.