Trustees of East Norway Lake Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Church v. Halvorson

44 N.W. 663, 42 Minn. 503, 1890 Minn. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 10, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 44 N.W. 663 (Trustees of East Norway Lake Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Church v. Halvorson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of East Norway Lake Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Church v. Halvorson, 44 N.W. 663, 42 Minn. 503, 1890 Minn. LEXIS 77 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Gileillan, C. J.

From 1866 to 1877, there existed at or near Norway Lake, in what is now the county of Kandiyohi, in this state, an incorporated religious congregation called the “Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Congregation.” In 1877 the persons composing this congregation divided by consent into two congregations, each of which' then became duly incorporated under the statute, one by the name of the “Trustees of the East Norway Lake Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Church of Kandiyohi County, Minnesota,” and the other by the name of the “Trustees of the West Norway Lake Evangelical Lutheran Church of Norway Lake, County of Kandiyohi, and State of Minnesota. ” These two corporations still continue, and they are the plaintiffs in this action. The two corporations acquired as tenants in common, apparently soon after their incorporation, certain real estate, including that in controversy. They appear to have employed one common pastor, and to have used the real estate in controversy as a parsonage. It does not appear that in the deed conveying the real estate to the two corporations there was expressed any trust or use for which the property was to be held.

About 1885, differences of opinion upon certain matters of doctrine had arisen and existed, and still exist, among the members of each of the two congregations. It appears that those holding one set of opinions on these matters of difference, in each of the congregations, were a considerable majority of the congregation. Such majority in each, claiming to be the congregation, held meetings from time to time, which they claimed to be legal meetings of the congregation, and which were so, unless they had ceased to be members of the congregations by reason of the opinions they held upon the matters of [505]*505doctrine referred to. From these meetings no member of the minority was excluded, though the meetings ignored the claim of the minority, as a body, to be the congregation. At these meetings, trustees for each corporation were elected from time to time, as vacancies occurred, thus keeping up a regular succession of trustees fropi the organization of the congregations, and other business was transacted, including the dismissal of the prior pastor, who held the opinions of the minority on the matters of-difference, and the calling of another in his stead. The minority in each congregation also held meetings from time to time, which they, assuming that the majority had ceased to be members of the congregation by reason of holding opinions which the minority regarded to be heretical, claimed to be the meetings of the congregation; and at su.ch meetings they transacted business, called a pastor, and from time to time they elected trustees. And so it came about that there were, and are now, for each congregation, two sets of trustees, — the majority trustees, who are in continuation of the original organizations, and the minority trustees; each set claiming to be the lawful trustees of the corporation. The pastor called by the minorities was the defendant Halvoreon, who was put in possession of the real estate in question by the minority trustees. The majority trustees, having demanded of him the possession, and he having refused to surrender it, caused this action to be brought, in the name of the plaintiff corporations, to recover possession .of it.

The minority trustees have intervened in the action, asking that it be' dismissed; that they and their associates be adjudged to be the rightful congregations of East and West Norway Lake; and that the title to the offices of trustees, as between them and the majority trustees, be determined in their favor. They seek, indeed, to turn this, a simple action in ejectment, into a proceeding, in the nature of quo warranto, to test the title to a corporate office. This, of course, cannot be done. If there was no other reason why it cannot, this would be conclusive — that the opposing claimants to the offices, the majority trustees, are not parties to the action.

But while the question of title to the office cannot be directly and authoritatively determined, so as to oust the intruders and put the [506]*506rightful claimants in possession, it may be necessary to pass upon it as incidental to another and a proper issue in the case. The defendant Halvorson, in his answer, alleges that the minority trustees were the legal trustees of the corporations; that he was put in possession by them, and is in possession under their authority. If these allegations oe true, he is in under and by authority of the plaintiffs, and that would be a defence. So that, as part of that defence, and as between him and the plaintiffs, it is necessary to consider and determine whether the minority trustees were lawful officers of the corporations; and this will make it necessary to determine which of the two sets of meetings, those of the majority or those of the minority, were the lawful meetings of the congregations.

The defendant argues that as the minority trustees are defacto officers, and as they are in possession, an action to put the rightful trustees in possession will not lie until in a proper proceeding, as by quo warranto, the right to the office is first determined. But, first, the minority trustees are not in possession of the land. If Halvorson is rightfully in, his possession is that of the corporations. He is not, whether rightfully or wrongfully in, possessing the land as the tenant or agent of the persons who put him in. The minority trustees could not, in their own names, maintain an action to recover the premises from him. And, secondly, to determine that they are de facto trustees, it will be necessary to determine the point on which their claim to be legal trustees depends. To make one a de facto officer, it is not enough that he claims to be an officer, or that some people think him an officer, or that he assumes to act as such. He must be acting as an officer under color of having been rightfully elected or appointed. Now, unless it be true that the minorities constituted the congregations, and that their meetings were meetings of the congregations, then there was no semblance of an election by the congregations, the bodies entitled to elect. Take the case of a congregation composed of 1,000 members, of whom 40 or 50 should get together, assume to excommunicate the others or declare them no longer members, and assert themselves to be the congregation, and proceed to elect officers. That would have no color of an election by the congregation of 1,000 members, nor by any body having a right [507]*507to elect for that congregation. Such a case is more extreme than this, in that the difference in numbers between the original congregation and the seeeders is greater, but the principle applicable to the eases is the same. In either case, the meeting of the minority, whatever they might claim for themselves, would not have the appearance of a meeting of the original body, and its acts would not appear to be the acts of such original body. To give to their acts the appearance of acts of the congregations, it was necessary that the persons meeting, the minorities, should be the then existing congregations; a thing which is not claimed, if the majorities were still members of the congregations. So that, to decide whether the minority trustees were either de jure or de facto officers of the corporations, we must determine whether in law the bodies which elected them were the congregations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 N.W. 663, 42 Minn. 503, 1890 Minn. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-east-norway-lake-norwegian-evangelical-lutheran-church-v-minn-1890.