Young & Fulton Lumber Co. v. Taylor Street Methodist Episcopal Church

5 Ohio N.P. 378
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedJune 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 378 (Young & Fulton Lumber Co. v. Taylor Street Methodist Episcopal Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young & Fulton Lumber Co. v. Taylor Street Methodist Episcopal Church, 5 Ohio N.P. 378 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

Opinion of court withdrawing testimony..

DELLENBAUGH, J.

This is an action brought on an account.

The averments in the petition in substance are, that the plaintiff at the request of the defendants sold and delivered to> them for their use in the Gordon Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church the lumber and material specified in the account, a copy of which is attached to the petition, marked “Exhibit A”, and made a part thereof.

It is averred in the answer of the defendant, the Taylor Street Methodist -Church,, that it is a religious society, duly organized under the rules, usages and discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church of the' United States of America. It is also averred that the said lot on Gordon Avenue,, and the church erected thereon, are held' by said trustees in accordance with the pro>’isions of the discipline of said Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States and the usages thereof, in trust for it and for its members, -pastors and officers, in accordance with the provisions of the discipline of said church and the usages thereof.

Now, these averments of the answer of the defendant are not denied by any reply in the case at bar.

An application is made by the plaintiff to file an amendment to the petition, which application, in the exercise of a sound discretion, will be granted, although the court has some doubt as to whether this really is permissible at .this time, yet nevertheless, the plaintiff will be given the benefit of this doubt.

In the amendment to the petition it is alleged that in the year 1893, the defendants being the owners of a certain lot of land, situate on Gordon Avenue in the city of Cleveland, in said county, and being duly authorized and empowered in the premises, were engaged in the erection of a church edifice upon said lot, for the use of said The Taylor Street Methodist Episcopal Church, fn the said year, this plaintiff, with the full knowledge of the defendants, furnished to them, for use in the conduction of said church edifice, the lumber and, materials stated in the account, a copy of which is attached to- the petition, and as I [379]*379have said before, made a part thereof.

“Said lumber”, it is furthermore alleged in the amendment to the petition, “was used by the defendants in the construction of said church edifice, and was of the market value, and of the value to the defendants, in thejr said use thereof, of 81328,74, of which the sum of 8470.00 has been paid, leaving unpaid, and due this plaintiff from the defendants, the sum of $858.74, for which sum, with interest thereon from the 31st day of August, 1893, the plaintiff asks judgment. ”

During the course of the trial the court permitted, over the objection of counsel for the defendants, certain evidence to be received. in substance showing that the Taylor Street Methodist Episcopal Church, in the year 1893, duly entered into a contract with Mr. King for the erection of a church on a certain lot owned by it on Gordon Avenue, and that subsequently, that is, after the making of said contract, the pastor of the church, who was also one of the three members of the building committee, went with Mr. King to the office of the plaintiff corporation, and that then and there the pastor of the church pledged the credit of the Taylor Street Methodist Episcopal Church for certain lumber which was afterwards furnished by the lumber company and used in and about the construction of said building.

It is claimed that this promise was an original promise; that the cradit was extended to the church corporation alone, and that thereby it became and was an original promise, and does not come within the statute of frauds.

This evidence was received subject to the future motion of counsel for the defendant, to take it from the jury. It is a vital question in this case, and one that the court felt ought to be given the- fullest measure of thought, and careful consideration so that the rights of all these parties might be properly protected in this case.

The court out of abundant caution permitted this evidence to be received, subject to the objection of counsel for the defendant, and subject to its future withdrawal. The court is now confronted with this motion, that is, whether this evidence is competent in this case or not, and furthermore whether the pastor of the church, who was a member of this building committee, had the right to pledge the credit of the church association itself.

An additional question, also confronts the court; that is, whether there was any subsequent ratification of the acts of the pastor in thus pledging the credit of the church association, if its credit was pledged, at any subsequent meeting of any official body having the power under the laws of the land, and the discipline of the church, to adopt and ratify the pledging of the credit of this church association by the pastor, who, as I said before, was a member of this building committee.

To the extent that my private library has enabled me to go, I have given this question the fullest possible investigation, and I think that the authorities to which I will call the attention of counsel, are clear, convincing and decisive of the rights of the parties in this case.

Now, what are the powers of the trustees of a religious corporation? Let us ascertain what they are, let us solve this question if we can.

In Thomason et al. v. Grace M. E. Church, 45 Pac. Rep., 838, the supreme court of California held:

“The powers-of a religious corporation are vested in its trustees, and can only be exercised by them in their collective capacity, or by such agents, as tney have accredited.
“The secretary of a religious corporation possesses no inherent power to bind the corporation by entering into a contract ip its name and in its behalf.

In Landers v. Frank Street M. E. Church, 21 N. W. Rep., 420, the Supreme Court of New York held, that: “Where the exercise of corporate acts is vested in a select body, an act done by the persons composing that body in a meeting of all the corporators, is not a valid corporate act.”

The same principle was asserted in Cammeyer v. Lutheran Churches, 2 Sandford Chancery, 208; 1 Morawetz on Private Corporations, sec. 531; D’Arcy v. Railway Company, L. R. 2nd Chancery, 158; Constant v. Rector, 4 Daley, 305; 1 Watson on Corporations, sec. 70; and People’s Bank v. St. Anthony’s Roman Catholic Church, — a New York case, by the way, — 17 N. E, Red., 410.

In People’s Bank against St. Anthony’s Roman Catholic Church, supra, the plaintiff brought an action against the church on certain promissory notes signed, not as a board, but separately, by he president, the secretary and the treasurer, who constituted a majority of the trustees. It was proved at the trial that the notes' were signed by said officers acting separately,and not at the same time or at the same place, or while assembled as a board of trustees. The court held that said officers’ signatures raised no presumption of their authority, and in the absence of a showing of such authority, or of previous similar dealings, or of any adoption oc ratification by the corporation, of the instruments; they are. not binding upon it.

Judge Andrews, who delivered the opinion m this case, at pages 409 and 410, says:

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Related

Thomasson v. Grace Methodist Episcopal Church
45 P. 838 (California Supreme Court, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-fulton-lumber-co-v-taylor-street-methodist-episcopal-church-ohctcomplcuyaho-1898.