Trustees of Peninsula Annual Conference v. Spencer

183 A.2d 588
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 18, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 A.2d 588 (Trustees of Peninsula Annual Conference v. Spencer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of Peninsula Annual Conference v. Spencer, 183 A.2d 588 (Del. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

183 A.2d 588 (1962)

TRUSTEES OF the PENINSULA ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF the METHODIST CHURCH, INC., a Religious Corporation of the State of Delaware, Plaintiff,
v.
Raymond SPENCER, James B. Parsons, Harvey Wells, George Postles, Ralton Webb, Trustees of the Grace Methodist Church, Milton, Delaware, a Religious Corporation of the State of Delaware, Successors to Trustees of the Milton Methodist Protestant Church, Milton, Delaware, a Religious Corporation of the State of Delaware, now operating under the name of Grace Church, Defendants,
Graham Dill, James T. Carey, Ernest Jefferson, William H. Welch and W. Howard Carey, Intervenors.

Court of Chancery of Delaware, Sussex.

July 18, 1962.

*589 Robert W. Tunnell and John E. Messick, of Tunnell & Raysor, Georgetown, for plaintiff.

Russell J. Willard, Jr., of Hastings, Taylor & Willard, Wilmington, for defendants.

Herman C. Brown and Grover C. Brown of Brown & Brown, Dover, for intervenors.

SEITZ, Chancellor.

This is the decision on a motion to intervene in this action by certain members of the congregation of the Grace Methodist Church of Milton, Delaware.

The facts and circumstances under which this motion arises are as follows: There exists in the United States a national church known as The Methodist Church. The Church is organized on the presbyteral system of church government with each local church or congregation irrevocably connected to the others and each local church being an integral part of the parent body. The internal structure of the Church is hierarchically arranged. The local congregations are governed by Quarterly Conferences within each particular church. These in turn are subject to the administrative oversight of an Annual Conference. Finally, at the summit of the pyramid rests the General Conference, the supreme legislative body of the Church. The basic structure of the Church is prescribed in its Constitution, but the particulars of organization, ritual, and procedure are found in the Discipline of The Methodist Church. According to the Discipline, each person who desires to become a member of the Church must declare his loyalty to The Methodist Church. Thereafter, he belongs not only to his local congregation, but to the whole body of Methodist worshippers as well. He is required to submit to all the rules, regulations, and governmental authority of The Methodist Church.

In 1956 a controversy arose between the congregation of the Grace Methodist Church and the Peninsula Annual Conference of The Methodist Church when the former refused to merge with another local congregation or to attend services at a time of day designated by the Bishop of the Conference. As a consequence thereof the Conference in May 1957 voted to discontinue the Grace Methodist Church as an appointment of the Annual Conference and directed the Trustees of the Conference to take over supervision of the property of the Milton congregation. Such action was purportedly taken in accordance with the Discipline of the Church which, it is contended, binds every local church to the commands of the supreme governing body and of certain subordinate bodies within the hierarchy of the Church. The elected trustees of the Grace Church refused to vacate the premises or submit to the supervision of the Annual Conference. Accordingly, the congregation of the Grace Church has continued to hold religious services on part *590 of the property, notwithstanding the Resolution of May 1957.

The Peninsula Annual Conference ("Conference") instituted this suit against the elected trustees of the Grace Church ("Trustees" or "defendants") praying that the court adjudge plaintiff as a corporate body "the actual and real owner" of the property in question. It contends that it is "entitled to receive, hold and enjoy the same as if title to the same had been originally vested in the plaintiff". In the alternative, the Conference contends that Trustees (in their corporate character) are merely trustees for plaintiff and by virtue of the 1957 Resolution are under a duty to convey the property to the Conference. In either case plaintiff prays that the Trustees be compelled to convey the property to the Conference and that the latter be restrained by an injunction "from interfering in any way with the enjoyment, possession, supervision, control and custody of the property."

Suit was commenced by service of process upon the Trustees as the incorporated board of trustees of a religious society. The summons and complaint were drawn in the following form:

TRUSTEES OF THE PENINSULA ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE METHODIST CHURCH, INC., a religious corporation of the State of Delaware, Plaintiff,
v.
RAYMOND SPENCER, JAMES B. PARSONS, HARVEY WELLS, GEORGE POSTLES, RALTON WEBB, TRUSTEES OF GRACE METHODIST CHURCH, MILTON, DELAWARE, a religious corporation of the State of Delaware, successors to TRUSTEES OF THE MILTON METHODIST PROTESTANT CHURCH, MILTON, DELAWARE, a religious corporation of the State of Delaware, now operating under the name of GRACE CHURCH, Defendants.

Service was effected upon the trustees either personally or by leaving the documents with some other person, presumably a member of the individual Trustee's household. In the body of the complaint it was alleged:

"* * * 2. That the defendants comprise the present Board of Trustees of Grace Methodist Church, Milton, Delaware, and are successors to the Trustees of The Milton Methodist Church, Milton, Delaware, a religious corporation of the State of Delaware, and are now operating under the name of Grace Church. The Milton Methodist Protestant Church was incorporated under the Religious Societies Act, its Certificate of Incorporation being recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds, Georgetown, Sussex County, Delaware, in Deed Book 290 at page 46."

Defendants, represented by counsel, admitted the allegation. Plaintiff further alleged in Paragraph 9:

"* * * that on September 26, 1922, after the posting of a notice for ten (10) days on the door of the usual place of worship, in accordance with the Religious Societies Act, § 2166 Code of 1915 now 27 Del. C. 105, the congregation with twenty-two (22) members present, voted to incorporate the local church under the name, The Milton Methodist Protestant Church. The Certificate of Incorporation was received on September 27, 1932, in the office of the Recorder of Deeds and is recorded in Deed Book 290 at page 46."

Defendants admitted:

"* * * that a Certificate of Incorporation is recorded in the records as alleged, and that said Certificate of Incorporation purports to support the remainder of the allegations in Paragraph 9 of the complaint; defendants are without sufficient knowledge or *591 information to enable them to form a belief as to the truth of the remainder of the allegations in Paragraph 9 of the complaint."

Defendants having appeared and answered, plaintiffs sought and obtained answers to certain interrogatories. At a pre-trial conference on November 29, 1961, the parties agreed upon a schedule for the filing of briefs and concurred upon February 13, 1962, as the date for trial. After the Conference had filed its initial brief, the Trustees through their counsel gave oral notice that they withdrew all defenses to the complaint. The court thereupon, on February 14, 1962, entered a final judgment in plaintiff's favor.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A.2d 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-peninsula-annual-conference-v-spencer-delch-1962.