Williamstown Baptist Church v. Henley

148 P.2d 269, 158 Kan. 324, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 8, 1944
DocketNo. 36,034
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 P.2d 269 (Williamstown Baptist Church v. Henley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williamstown Baptist Church v. Henley, 148 P.2d 269, 158 Kan. 324, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 109 (kan 1944).

Opinions

[325]*325The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hoch, J.:

This litigation arose out of a disagreement between an incorporated church organization and a Ladies Aid association over ownership and use of a church building. In an action in injunction, in which the church was plaintiff and the Ladies Aid the principal defendant, the trial court held, inter alia, that the plaintiff was the owner and entitled to exclusive possession and use, subject to a lien of the defendant for certain payments made on a church debt and mortgage. The Ladies Aid appeals.

An organization known as the Williamstown Ladies Aid was organized at Williamstown, Kan., in 1916, there being at that time no church building in the town. In 1919 the Williamstown Baptist Church — hereinafter called the church — was organized and incorporated and erected a church building. Thereafter the Ladies Aid held its meetings in the church building. Apparently the church and the Ladies Aid occupied and used the building jointly for many years under arrangements mutually satisfactory.

In recent years disagreement developed between the two organizations and in July, 1941, the church, through its trustees, brought an action to enjoin the Ladies Aid from possession and from any further use and occupancy of the building. Briefly stated, the allegations of the petition were that the plaintiff was a religious body affiliated with the'Kansas Baptist Convention and duly incorporated under Kansas law; that it was the owner of the building which had been erected about twenty years prior thereto for its use as a church organization; that about two years prior to the filing of the petition the defendant had wrongfully and unlawfully, and without any authorization from the plaintiff, entered into possession and occupancy of the building, had continued in such unlawful possession and use and had refused, after request and demand, to surrender possession of the building and equipment, and that by reason thereof the plaintiff was suffering irreparable loss for which it had no adequate remedy at law. The prayer was for a permanent injunction against the Ladies Aid and its individual members, enjoining them from depriving the plaintiff of possession, control, and occupancy, from disturbing and molesting the plaintiff, “its officers, members and congregation at their worship,” and directing the defendants to deliver possession of the building and equipment to the plaintiff. Attached to the petition were verified copies of a [326]*326mortgage on the property in the amount of one thousand dollars executed by the plaintiff to the Kansas Baptist Convention, together with a partial release of the mortgage, affecting a lot adjoining the building. On motion of the defendant the Kansas Baptist Convention was made an additional party defendant and in March, 1942, filed its answer in which it disclaimed any title or interest in the property and recited that “over a period of several years, this mortgage was paid by the Williamstown Ladies Aid and payment was accepted by the Kansas Baptist Convention as made for the Williamstown Baptist Church,” and that final payment upon the mortgage in the sum of $125 wias made on or about April 14, 1941. It denied, in the answer, that it had promised to assign the mortgage to the Ladies Aid, and stated that a release of the mortgage was ready for delivery as ordered by the court.

On April 15, 1942, the Ladies Aid filed a lengthy amended answer and cross petition, the allegations of which may be summarized as follows: The church delivered its note and mortgage to the Kansas Baptist Convention on or about November 22, 1919; the partial release of the mortgage was executed on September 10, 1926; the building is the only church building in the town; the defendant has held its regular meetings there since the building was erected in 1919; on January 15, 1924, the church became in default in its payments on the note and mortgage and that—

“A member or members of the . . . Board of Trustees, whose name or names is not now known to the defendant, the Williamstown Ladies’ Aid, approached the Williamstown Ladies’ Aid to request financial aid in meeting the mortgage payments; that (the said trustee) did then represent . . . that in return for such financial aid the Williamstown Ladies’ Aid would acquire a vested interest in the said mortgaged property to the extent of all payments made by the said Williamstown Ladies’ Aid on the mortgage or for its payments; and that . . . the said Williamstown Ladies’ Aid did pay to the treasurer of the said Williamstown Baptist Church the sum of one hundred and fifty and no/100 Dollars ($150.00) for the purpose of applying the same to the payment of the said mortgage, and that in pursuance of the aforementioned agreement, the said Treasurer of the Corporation . . . did . . . pay the said sum to the Kansas Baptist Convention to be applied to the mortgage debt.”

Following this the answer set out further payments alleged to have been made by the defendant in 1928, in the years 1930 to 1938 inclusive, and final payment of $125 on April 14, 1941, amounting in all to $969.26 on principal and interest. The answer further alleged that in making these payments on the mortgage debt the defendants—

[327]*327“Relied not only on past representations of the state and local church entities as above set forth, nor on instant representations, oral and otherwise, by the local trustees . . . but also on specific offers made by the Kansas Baptist Convention through its Executive Secretary . . . and that at the time of payment the said George T. Wise did repeatedly assure the representatives of the Williamstown Ladies Aid that the said mortgage would be assigned and surrendered to the Williamstown Ladies’ Aid upon payment of the sum herein-above last written ... on the representations and the behavior of . . . the Williamstown Baptist Church, a corporation, and the representations of the Kansas Baptist Convention.”

The answer further alleged that—

“On July 12, A.D. 1932, the then duly elected, qualified and acting trustees of the . . . Church, or some of their number .' . . informed the Ladies’ Aid that the Williamstown Baptist Church, a corporation, was no longer able to operate actively, and that inasmuch as the Williapastown Ladies’ Aid had acquired, and was then acquiring, an interest in the church property by means of making payments on the Kansas Baptist Convention mortgage, this defendant, the Ladies’ Aid, was at that time requested to take full possession of the church building, and did so by means of .acceptance of the keys from the . . . treasurer of the church . . .; that from that date up to and including the present the defendant, the Williamstown Ladies’ Aid, has had full and exclusive possession of the said church; that it has been the only functioning religious organization in the community; that it has exercised every possible means to obtain the benefits of religious services to the community of Williamstown; that through and by virtue of its efforts, ministers of many faiths, including Mrs. Ruth Henley, a Pentecostal minister, have preached and held services in the church; that the interest of the Williamstown Ladies’ Aid in the church building has been open and notorious during all of the times that the payments above set forth have been made up to and including the present time; that the community, the Kansas Baptist Convention, and the Williamstown Baptist Church . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 P.2d 269, 158 Kan. 324, 1944 Kan. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williamstown-baptist-church-v-henley-kan-1944.