43 Mich. 1 | Mich. | 1880
This is an action brought upon a subscription made for the purchase of a house of worship for a religious society. Prom the evidence it appears that Levi Morrill, who was one of the trustees of the society, had constructed the building on his own land and at his own expense, expecting, but having no assurance, that the society would take it off his hands and reimburse the cost. At one of the regular services of the society, held on a Sunday in August, 1876, the officiating clergyman stated the facts to the congregation, and a proposition was made that the amount needed to purchase the building from Mr. Morrill be then raised by subscription. Many persons then offered sums which they specified. There was a subscription paper with a heading, whereby the several persons promised to pay the. sums set opposite their names respectively. This paper was lost or destroyed, and was not produced on the
The suit was brought in the name of John S. Duffie, Levi Morrill and Peleg Soules, trustees of the Methodist Protestant church of Brockway circuit. The declaration does not allege that they sue as a corporation, nor was there in the case any sufficient evidence that the society was ever incorporated. The record of the society was given in evidence, from which it appeared that at a meeting held in December, 1868, three persons, of whom Levi Morrill was one, were chosen trustees of the church; “the said trustees to hold the property of the Methodist church, Brockway Center, Michigan district, in trust' for said church.” Whether this was intended as an act of incorporation we do not know: it was in itself ambiguous, and it was also incomplete to effect a statutory incorporation. Trustees etc. v. Clark 41 Mich. 730. There w;as no evidence of corporate action afterwards, previous to the subscription on which the suit was brought.
II. It is further objected that there was no evidence tending to support the contract declared upon; that the promise actually proved was not to be performed within a year, and consequently was void under the statute of frauds because not in writing and subscribed by the party himself.
The only special count in the declaration was a count upon a promise to pay twenty-five dollars presently; but we think the evidence tended to support this. The parties were at liberty to take one year’s time or more on giving notes, but the defendant did not avail himself of this privilege. It is true that the evidence on
III. The principal question in the case is whether the contract was void because made on Sunday. The plaintiff in error contends that the business of raising subscriptions on Sunday to pay off a church debt or to purchase a house of worship is within the prohibition of the statute, and that any contract made in the course of it is therefore void. The defendants in error dispute this, and insist that the case is one within the exceptions of the statute. The statute is as follows: “ No person shall keep open his shop, warehouse, or workhouse, or shall do any manner of labor, business, or work, except only works of necessity and _ charity, or be present at any dancing, or at any public diversion, show, or entertainment, or take part in any sport, game, or play, on the first day of the week; and every person so offending shall be punished by a fine not exceeding ten dollars for each offense.” Comp. L., § 1984. Whatever labor, business or work is prohibited by this statute is confessedly illegal, and promises made in the course of it can support no action. So much is conceded.
Is the raising of money for the purchase of a house of worship a work of necessity or charity? That is the question made; or perhaps it is a little narrower than this, namely: Is the solicitation of contributions from a congregation assembled on Sunday for religious worship, in order to pay for a house" of worship which has been erected for their occupation for religious purposes, a work of necessity or charity? The circuit judge was of opinion that the question involved an element of fact as well as of law, and he submitted it to the jury in that view. “If the agreement or contract,” he instructed
The judge was in error in supposing that the question was either wholly or partially a question of fact. It is a question of law purely, and cannot be left to depend upon the opinions of jurors as to what is a work of charity or necessity and what is not. If it could, there would be and could be no settled rule whatever, for jurors will never agree upon it. The question is purely one of statutory construction, and when we find what the statute intends, that intent must be the law for all eases. Nevertheless if the rule of law is found to be in accord with the finding of the jury, namely, that the promise in question is within the exception of the statute, the instruction will thus appear to have been harmless, and the verdict may be allowed to stand.
We shall waste no time upon the question whether the business done in taking the subscriptions was a work of necessity. No doubt the time’ chosen was the most convenient time for taking up subscriptions, because the persons concerned would be likely to be generally present, but it might for the same reason have been the most convenient time for doing other business, such as the trading of horses, the hiring of laborers, and the
"What then are works of charity? What works are exempted from the prohibition of the statute as fit and proper to be done upon a day which is generally observed as a day of rqpt and of worship ? This is the inquiry to which our attention is limited.
Charity is active goodness. It is doing good to our fellow men. It is .fostering those institutions that are established to relieve pain, to prevent suffering, and to do good to mankind in general or to any class or portion of mankind. As the term “charity” is made use of in our law, it no doubt takes on shades of meaning from the Ghristian religion, which has largely affected the great body of our laws, and to which we must trace the’ laws which punish what the Christian regards as the desecration of the first day of the week. It was never doubted, so far as we know, that all the necessary or usual work connected with religious worship was work of charity. If it were not so, the minister who preaches, the organist and precentor who furnish the music, and the sexton who cares for the building on Sunday, would be violating the law every day they performed service for their religious society, and not only would be precluded from recovering compensation, but might be punished for services which are proper in themselves, and for which the day is specially set apart. But their work is not illegal, because it is in a true sense, and indeed in the very highest sense, charitable. Religious societies are formed to do good to mankind.
The Statute of Charitable Uses, 48 Eliz., c. 4, enu
It has been said that “to save life, or prevent or relieve suffering, and this in the case of animals as well as men; to prepare needful food for man and beast; to save property, as in the case of fire, flood, or tempest, or other unusual peril, would unquestionably be acts which fall within the exception” of the statute. Commonwealth v. Sampson 97 Mass. 407 409. By another authority it is asserted of the Sabbath as its observance is protected in Pennsylvania, “that rest, and the public worship of Almighty God, were the primary objects of the institution, both as' a divine and civil appointment; and it seems to me to follow, as a necessary consequence, that no means reasonably necessary to these ends can be regarded as prohibited.” Johnston v. Commonwealth 22 Penn. St. 102 111. In a series of decisions in Massachusetts the exception of the statute is held to cover everything which is morally fit and proper to be done upon Sunday, under the particular circumstances of the case. Commonwealth v. Knox 6 Mass. 76; Flagg v. Millbury 4 Cush. 243;
The support of religious societies being in itself a charity, the general custom of such societies as to the methods by which the means of support may be collected may throw much light on the question what is admissible? The general sense of a Christian people has demanded and secured the law, and their method of observing the day' must be some evidence of the sense in which the law is enacted. Now it is matter of common observation that religious societies solicit moneys for their needs and take subscriptions at their regular meetings on the first day of the week. The custom is from time immemorial. The regular Sabbath Offerings, as they are called, are limited sometimes to gifts for the poor, or for sacramental purposes, or missions, but quite as often they embrace gifts for the general needs of the society, including the repairs of the church, the lighting and heating, the payment of the taxes, and the numerous other needs which do not differ at all from the needs of ordinary business associations. Nobody has ever asserted, so far as we are aware, that the taking up of these Sabbath offerings was illegal and punishable under the statute. On the contrary the custom is considered fitting and proper to the occasion, and the congregation gives
And if small sums may be gathered on Sunday for the support of public worship and for providing buildings for the purpose, and keeping them in repair, why not large sums? Does the amount of the several gifts make any difference when the general object is the same? Is it legal for deacons, vestrymen or other officers to pass a box for the reception of contributions in small change, and illegal for the officiating minister, as he stands in his pulpit, to solicit contributions in dollars ?
In whatever consideration we give to this subject we are to keep in mind that the promise, if void at all, is void because the transaction in the course of which it is made is prohibited and made punishable by statute. If it is, then all business similar in its nature connected with church work and pertaining to what may be called the secular side of religious organizations, must be illegal and punishable also. The clerk of the society could not make his annual report on Sunday; the treasurer could not report the accounts between the society and its several members; the clergyman might be fined for appealing to his parishioners to be more liberal in their donations, and a warden or moderator might be fined for taking on Sunday a vote of the congregation that the salary of the officiating clergyman should be increased. None of these acts pertain to the religious worship, but they are nevertheless means by which religious worship is supported. And the taking up of subscriptions is only one method by which the cost of sustaining churches is apportioned among those who feel disposed to aid in so doing.
There may be and no doubt are differences of opinion as to whether it is wise or even decorous to pursue in aid of church building the course that was taken in this case. With those differences we have nothing to do. The questions which arise upon them are addressed to
We have not overlooked the fact that in Catlett v. The Trustees etc. 62 Ind. 365 it was assumed by the Supreme Court of Indiana that such a promise was illegal. The report of the case does not show that the illegality was contested, and the case seems to have turned on a question of ratification. A point thus assumed without consideration is of course not decided.
We are of opinion that the judgment should be affirmed with costs.