The succeeding section, 1304 (1696), provides, that corporations created under this article of the Code, may hold real and personal property, not exceeding in value $50,000, may receive property by gifts, will or devise, holding the same in conformity with all lawful condi
Sections 1305 (1697) provides, how suits may be commenced against such corporations, and section 1306 (1698), how mortgages on any part or all of the property of the corporation must be executed.
Wherever there is an incorporated church, there are two entities, the one, the church as such, not owing its ecclesiastical or spiritual existence to the civil law, and the legal corporation, each separate though closely allied. The church in the ordinary acceptation of the word, is a voluntary association of its members, united together by covenant or agreement, for the purpose of maintaining the public worship of God, observing the ordinances of His house, the promotion of the spirituality of its membership, and the spread of divine truth among others, as they understand and teach it. It is purely voluntary, and is not a corporation nor a quasi corporation. — Parker v. May, 3 Cush. 345; 20 Am. &
In Sale v. The First Regular Bap. Church, 62 Iowa, 26 (s. c. 49 Am. Rep. 136), the church was incorporated and the proceeding was by mandcmus to reinstate a member expelled by the church. In drawing the distinction between the church and the corporation the court said: “The only and primary object of the corporation is the acquisition and taking care of property. The rules of the church as to the discipline of members have no relation to the corporate property or corporate matters. '* * By virtue of her church membership, the plaintiff became a member of the corporation, organized for religious and ecclesiastical purposes. The corporation was not organized for pecuniary profit. No such profit can accrue to any member. No property interest, or any other valuable civil right, has been' affected by the action of the church. The plaintiff has not, and cannot suffer any civil damages whatever. This view is in bannony with Hardin v. Baptist Church, 51 Mich. 137 (s. c. 47 Am. Rep. 555), where numerous authorities are cited.” In this case it was held that manclmius would not lie to restore to membership one claiming to have been wrongfully removed from a church, notwithstanding that church membership was a condition of membership of the corporation. We refer in this connection to the case of Ryan v. Cudahy, 157 Ill. 108, as reported in the 49 Yol. of the Lawyer’s Reports Annotated, 353, where will be found on page 384, under the head of “Ecclesiastical Tribunals,” a synopsis of the decisions of a great number of courts on the 'subject in hand, 'sustaining the views we announce.
“The two bodies, viz.: the corporation and the church, although one may exist within the pale of the other, are in no respect correlative. The objects and interests of the one are moral and spiritual; the other deals with things purely temporal and material.” — Petty v. Tucker, 21 N. Y. 267; Nance v. Busby, 91 Tenn. 303.
The foregoing is quite sufficient to show that the spiritual entity of a church, made up of, members be
Under our statutes for the incorporation of churches, it is to be noted, that the members of the church become incorporated, and not simply the trustees required to be elected preparatory to proceeding in the court of probate to obtain incorporation. It was a proper, simpler and less troublesome proceeding, consulting the conveniences of the church, that certain designated members should be chosen to perform this service for and on behalf of all the members, rather than require all the members themselves to do so. The trustees having been elected, all they are required to do, to complete the incorporation under the statute is, within thirty days after their election, to file in the office of the judge of probate, the certificate required by section 1303 (1695) of the Code, and the members of the church, from the filing of such certificate, become incorporated by the name therein specified. Each member is an incorporator, recognized as a legal civil body distinct from the church as a spiritual body, theretofore and thereafter continuously existing.
In this case, it is alleged the petitioner was both a trustee and elder of the church. To be a trustee, the statute required him to be a member of the church; and it also appears that under the rules of the church, elders must be members. Trusteeship and eldership are then dependent upon membership in the church. It follows, if one is excluded from membership, his office of trustee or elder ceases by virtue of the act of exclusion. Each of these offices it appears is filled by the member's of the church, acting as a church.
It is averred in the petition, that on the 11 July, 1900, at a meeting of such members of the church as were then assembled, such action was taken as was intended to be an exclusion of petitioner from said church. The petitioner treat® the act as one of exclusion, since the prayer of the petition is, that he “be restored to mem
These views are in accord with the decisions of other States and of the Supreme Court of the United States.
In Nance v. Busby, 91 Tenn. 308, which is an exhaustive opinion on the subject, on review of many authorities., and directly applicable to the conditions of this case, it was said by the court, through Judge Burton : “The relations of a member to his church are not contractual. No bond of contract, express or implied, connects him with his communion, or determines his rights. * * The church undertakes to deal only with the spiritual side of man. It does not appeal to his purely human and temporal interests. Admission to its fold is prescribed alone by the church, professing to act only upon the word of God. It claims the power of the keys by divine 'and not human authority. Its right to determine the grounds of admission has never been questioned. Why shall the co-ordinate right of exclusion be scrutinized by the civil power? * * * Civil courts deal only with civil and property rights. If, to determine a property right, it becomes necessary to adjudicate an ecclesiastical question, the courts will go only bo far as is necessary to determine the effect of
In Shannon v. Frost, 3 B. Monroe, 253, it was said: “This court, having no ecclasiastical jurisdiction, can not revise or question ordinary acts1 of church discipline or exclusion. Our only judicial power in the case 'arises from the conflicting claims of the parties to the property and the use of it. And these we must decide, as we do all other civil controversies brought to this tribunal for ultimate decision. We cannot decide who ought to be members of the church, nor whether the excommunicated have been justly or unjustly, regularly or irregularly cut off from the body of the church. We must take the fact of expulsion-as conclusive proof that the persons expelled are not now members of the repudiating church; for whether right or wrong, the act of excommunication must, as to the fact of membership, be law to this court. * * * When they [the complainants] became members, they did so on the condition of continuing or not, as themselves and their church might determine. In that respect, they voluntarily subjected themselves to the ecclesiastical power, and cannot invoke the supervision or control of that jurisdiction by this or any other civil tribunal.”
In the leading case of Watson v. Jones, 13 Wall. (U. S.) on this subject, where Justice Miller reviews the
In McNeil v. B. St. Church, 84 Ala. 23, this court said: “In accordance with the principles of our institutions, and the organic law, the courts refrain from interfering when the office or functions are purely ecclesiastical or spiritual, disconnected from any fixed emoluments, salary, or other temporalities. In such case, there is no legal, temporal right, of which the civil courts can take jurisdiction.”
There can be no difference in the principles announced as airgued by appellant’s counsel, whether they are sought to be applied in a court of law or in courts of equity.
It is clear from what has been said, without reference to alleged defects in the petition for mandamus, making it, as contended, unavailable in this case, that there was no error in the ruling of the court below in denying the mandamus, sustaining the demurrer to the petition and dismissing it.
Affirmed.