Van Vliet v. Vander Naald

287 N.W. 564, 290 Mich. 365
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1939
DocketDocket No. 105, Calendar No. 40,357.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 287 N.W. 564 (Van Vliet v. Vander Naald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Vliet v. Vander Naald, 287 N.W. 564, 290 Mich. 365 (Mich. 1939).

Opinion

McAllister, J.

William J. Van Vliet, plaintiff herein, a member of the Reformed Church of America, sued defendants, including ministers of the same denomination and also the members of the particular synod of the same church, in an action for libel. The case was tried before a jury and at the conclusion of plaintiff’s proofs, on motion of counsel for defendants, the trial court directed a verdict of no cause of action upon which judgment was entered. Plaintiff appeals.

In 1932, plaintiff was pastor of the Fourth Reformed Church in Kalamazoo. In the course of his pastoral duties, he called at the home of a woman parishioner, who was married and the mother of children, and committed adultery with her which was repeated on two other occasions. Some months afterward he confessed his action to the husband of the woman and thereafter disclosed it to the consistory of his congregation. The matter was then referred to the classis of Kalamazoo, the church body having original jurisdiction to depose minis-' ters. Plaintiff was suspended by the classis and in September, 1932, he was deposed. Thereafter, on several occasions, plaintiff petitioned the classis for reinstatement but was refused and although at one time his petition was favored by a majority, it failed for the reason that the classis by resolution had re *368 quired a two-tliirds majority for affirmative action. The matter was finally again resubmitted to the classis, by a resolution which required only a majority, and resulted in a vote of 17 in favor of the petition, 16 against, and one not voting; and thereupon plaintiff was declared reinstated. However, one of the members of the classis filed complaint against the action of that body with the particular synod, the appellate tribunal of the church, which resulted in the reversal of the action of the.classis, and the passage of a resolution by the particular synod which set forth:

“1. The reinstatement of the Wm. Van Vliet was granted without sufficient evidence of his penitence for the sin committed.
“2. Each consideration of the matter by classis was a separate and distinct case; and therefore the Wm. Van Vliet should have appeared personally to give evidence of his penitence at the meeting of classis Kalamazoo on April 9-19, 1935.
“3. At former sessions of classis Kalamazoo when this matter was considered, classis set the precedent of requiring a two-thirds majority vote for decision; it was therefore unwise on the part of classis to decide the matter finally by a mere majority vote.
“4. The Wm. Van Vliet has destroyed his usefulness as an active Minister of the Word in the Church of Jesus Christ.”

This judgment was then communicated to, and published by The Intelligencer-Leader, the official newspaper of the Reformed Church in America, which is read throughout that denomination; and it is this publication upon which plaintiff bases his action of libel.

Plaintiff complains that the action of the synod was irregular, due to the fact that the complaint was *369 not filed in a proper manner with, the classis; that the classis had too brief a time to prepare for a hearing before the synod; that the action of the synod was based upon insufficient proofs, and mistaken representations; the classis, however, did not complain to the synod on this ground, and its representative appeared before that body, and submitted detailed answer and defense of its action. The judgment of the synod was a reversal of the action of the classis. Plaintiff was not a party to the proceeding. He was not before the synod on an appeal, and there is no similarity in the church law between the hearing and judgment on complaint of the action of a classis, as in this case, and an individual appeal by a direct party to the proceeding. Notes to the constitution of the Reformed Church considered as authority in this case, and introduced in evidence, provide:

“A complaint is entirely different from an appeal. An appeal is an address to higher judicatory by a party directly ruled against by decision of the lower judicatory who asks judicial review of the case. A complaint is an address to the higher judicatory by one not directly dealt with by any act or judicial decision of lower judicatory but who on general grounds of justice and regularity feels that a certain procedure of the lower body has been incorrect and injurious. The complaint must be by way of formalities the same as those required for an appeal, the notice, the complaint itself with reasons, the address to the president of the lower -body within the specified periods. The effect of the complaint presented in orderly way and given formal recognition is to bring the whole record with which it is concerned under review. The higher judicatory will examine the proceedings, not by way of formal trial, and will render its judgment, approving or disapproving. ’ ’

*370 Any objections to tbe form and method of review by the synod of a complaint against the classis would be properly raised by the classis. In this case it was the action of the classis that was being reviewed, and not the action of plaintiff, and, being an outside party to the proceedings, he is in no position to raise objections to such review.

Counsel for plaintiff states in his brief:

“There is no question about the general proposition that a church tribunal, acting within the scope of its authority, is not to be called in question for statements made in the course of a judicial proceeding, whether the statements be true or false. There is also no question that the classis and the particular synod of Chicago have both legislative and judicial functions under the Constitution of the Reformed Church and in general are entitled to the protection of privilege.”

In section 174 of the church constitution, it is provided:

“Any member of the church, or any minority or any member of such minority in a lower church judicatory, who shall consider any act or judicial decision or any part of the formal proceedings thereof to have been so erroneous as to affect injuriously the interests of truth, godliness, or the Kingdom of God, may present a complaint against such act or decision to the next higher judicatory for examination and decision. Such complaint, if entertained, brings the whole record of the case under the review of the higher judicatory.”

The synod had jurisdiction of the complaint.

The statements made in the finding of the synod acting within the scope of its authority in the course of a judicial proceeding were qualifiedly privileged. Civil courts will not enter into a consideration of *371 church, doctrine or church discipline nor will they inquire into the regularity of the proceedings of church tribunals having cognizance of such matters. To do so would be inconsistent with complete and untrammeled religious liberty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 N.W. 564, 290 Mich. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-vliet-v-vander-naald-mich-1939.