109 Mass. 165 | Mass. | 1872
The respondents were incorporated undei the Gen. Sts. c. 30, §§ 43, 46. Section 43 provides that “ the trustees of any society of the Methodist Episcopal Church,” “ appointed according to the discipline or usages thereof, or as such society chooses, may organize and become a corporation with the powers, privileges, duties and liabilities of chapter sixty-eight, subject, however, to account to the quarterly meeting of such society according to such discipline and usages.” The obvious intent,of the statute was to confer upon such societies the ability to hold parochial property in perpetual succession, by means of trustees having corporate powers ; and at the same time to leave them untrammelled, as far as possible, in respect to their peculiar discipline and usages. This was in conformity with the policy .of the Commonwealth, which is to preserve religious freedom, and at the same time to enable religious societies and organizations to hold by a simple and convenient form of title such property as they may need.
The respondents organized in conformity with the usages and discipline of the church, as established by the general conference in 1860. The members of the board of trustees were nominated by the preacher in charge, the petitioner being one of them, and by the then existing rule the office was permanent. But the general conference, which meets once in four years, and has power at that meeting to make changes in its usages and discipline, met in 1864, and made a change by which trustees were to be elected annually, by the quarterly conference, upon the nomination of the preacher in charge. We think this was a right which the statute reserved to them.
In January 1867 the preacher in charge nominated the persons who then composed the board, including the petitioner, and the quarterly conference elected them.. One of the agreed facts in the case is, that the board, so annually elected, have actually managed the affairs of the church. The petitioner was annually elected their treasurer by each new board till 1869, and acted as such. He continued to be a trustee till March 1871, when he was not reelected. He now contends that, as his first election in 1862 was to an office which was then permanent, he is still enti
Petition dismissed, with costs.