Wallace v. Hughes

115 S.W. 684, 131 Ky. 445, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 39
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 21, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 115 S.W. 684 (Wallace v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Hughes, 115 S.W. 684, 131 Ky. 445, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 39 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Barker

Reversing.

The appellees, who were plaintiffs below, instituted this action to recover possession of a lot of land situated in Sturgis, Ky., from the appellants, who were defendants below, and who, it was alleged in the petition, were wrongfully withholding the property from- the plaintiffs. Directly the action involves the title to, and the right to possess, the real estate described in the petition. Incidently there is involved the right of the ecclesiastical organization known as the Cumberland Presbyterian Church to unite with the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.

The plaintiffs, in their petiiton, describe themselves as elders, members, and communicants of the local congregation of Cumberland Presbyterians worship-ping at Sturgis, Ky., and the property, which is the subject of the litigation, is a church house and the lot upon which- it stands at that place. The lot was conveyed on the 6th day of August, 1889, by the Cumberland Iron & Coal Company, to eight named trustees, who are described as composing the session and board of trustees of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, of Sturgis, Ky., and the habendum of the deed provided that they were to have and to hold the property, with all the appurtenances thereto belonging, unto them and to their successors, forever. The appellants (defendants) answered, controverting the [450]*450title and right of possession of appellees to the property sued for, and alleging title and right of possession thereto in themselves as trustees of the Presbyterian Church at Sturgis, the lawful successor to the Cumberland Presbyterian Church at that place, since the reunion of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church with the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.

It will materially lessen our labors to say now that the pleadings in this case, which are long and complicated, present one material issue — i. e., the constitutional right of the general assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church to unite with the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America. If it had such right, in our opinion the property involved in this litigation belongs to the appellants. If this constitutional power 'was lacking, the judgment of the circuit court, awarding it to appellees, was correct.

The Cumberland Presbyterian Church originated in a schism, in the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America in 1810, and was caused by certain differences of opinion which had arisen theretofore concerning the doctrine of foreordination, predestination, and election. A history of the occurrence is contained in the preface to the Confession of Faith officially promulgated by the Cumberland Presbyterian church, and is as follows:

‘ ‘ The Cumberland Presbyterian Church was organized in Dickson county, Tennessee, February 4, A. D. 1810. It was an outgrowth of the great revival of 1800 — one of the most powerful revivals that this country has ever witnessed. The founders of the church were Finis Ewing, Samuel King and Samuel McAdow. They were ministers in the Presbyterian [451]*451Church, who rejected the doctrine of election and .reprobation as taught in the Westminster Confession of Faith. The causes which led to the formation of the church are clearly and distinctly set forth in publications issued at the time, and in various tracts and( books published subsequently. To these the reader .is referred for full information on the subject. The Cumberland Presbytery, which was constituted at the time of the organization of the church, and which originally consisted of only three ministers, was in three years sufficiently large to form three presbyteries. These presbyteries, in October, A. D. 1813, met at the Beech church, in Sumner county, Tennessee, and constituted a synod. This synod at once formulated and published a ‘Brief Statement,’ setting forth the points wherein Cumberland Presbyterians dissented from the Westminster Confession of Faith. They were as follows: (1) That there are no eternal reprobates. (2) That Christ died, not for a part only, but for all mankind. That all infants dying in infancy are saved through Christ and the sanctification of the Spirit. That the Spirit of God operates on the world, or as coextensively as Christ has made atonement, in such a manner as to leave all men inexcusable.
“At this same meeting of synod, too, a committee was appointed to prepare a Confession of Faith. The next year, A. D. 1814, at Sugg’s Creek church, Wilson county, Tennessee, the report of the committee was presented to synod and the revision of the Westminster Confession of Faith which they presented was unanimously adopted as the Confession of Faith of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Subsequently the formation of the General Assembly took place. This judicature, at its first meeting, A. D. [452]*4521829, at Princeton, Ky., made sncli changes in the form of government as were demanded by the formation of this new court. In compiling the Confession of Faith, the fathers of the Cumberland' Presbyterian Church had one leading thought, before them, and that was to so modify the Westminster confession as to eliminate therefrom the doctrine of universal fore-ordination and its legitimate sequences, unconditional election and reprobation, limited' atonement, and divine influence correspondingly circumscribed. All the boldly defined statements of the doctrine objected to' were expunged, and corrected statements were made. But it was impossible to eliminate all the features of hyper-Calvinism from the Westminster Confession of Faith by simply expunging words, phrases, sentences, or even sections, and then attempting to fill the vacancies thus made by corrected statements or other declarations, for the objectionable doctrine,, with its logical sequences, pervaded the whole system of theology formulated in that book. ’ ’

It will thus be seen that the organization of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church originated in differences of opinion which arose concerning certain doctrinal tenets of the Presbyterian Church. The new church grew and prospered, until, at the time it reunited with the mother church, in 1906, it claimed nearly 200,000 communicants, who were scattered throughout the various States of the Union. From the very beginning of its existence, as we shall hereafter more fully show, the new church earnestly desired a reunion with the mother church whenever this could be accomplished on a basis which it could conscientiously accept. This spirit was expressed in circular letters, resolutions of the general assembly, the appointment of committees on fraternity and union, [453]*453and the negotiations for reunion with the mother church and union with other churches whose doctrines nearly approached those held by the new church.

In 1903 the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America revised its creed, by which it undertook to eliminate therefrom whatever constituted the basis for the belief that it taught the doctrine of fatalism as applied to the salvation of men. Thereafter, but in the same year, the General Assemdlies of the Presbyterian Church of the United States, and the Cumberland Presbyterian Church appointed a joint committee on fraternity and union, which set on foot a movement that culminated in a reunion of the two churches.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W. 684, 131 Ky. 445, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-hughes-kyctapp-1909.