34 Wis. 328 | Wis. | 1874
The only question argued in this case in support of the judgment appealed from, is as to whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in equity and for an injunction; and to that question the inquiries of the court will be limited. It is insisted, as the complaint shows the defendants to be mere wrong-doers, that it is but the ordinary case of an application to restrain trespassers against whom there exists an adequate remedy by action at 'law, and so equity is without jurisdiction. The points of dissimilarity between the facts set up in this complaint, so far as any question of the jurisdiction of equity or any of law-arises upon them, and those stated in the complaint in The Trustees, etc., v. Hoessli, 13 Wis., 348, are so few and so slight as to leave little or no room for distinguishing the cases, or for saying that this case is not strictly ruled by that one. The only difference of averment in the respective complaints is, that while there it was alleged that the trespassing defendants had often interfered with the property held by the plaintiff in trust, and then threatened to take into their custody all the temporalities of the religious society plaintiff, and to transact all affairs relative thereto, the allegations here are that the defendants have secretly and fraudulently obtained possession of the church edifice, put new locks and keys on the doors thereof, and, refusing to readmit the plaintiff .by its regularly elected and qualified
It appears to this court, therefore, that the difference between
The true foundation of the powers of chancery, and the necessity for their exercise, are succinctly stated by Justice Sharswood in Roshi’s Appeal, 69 Pa. St., 462, 467, as follows : “ If a private partnership or a corporation falls into confusion affecting all its members, there is no adequate remedy at law — no better remedy than a proceeding in equity to settle the rights of the parties, and to stay by injunction the inconvenience and disturbance caused by opposite factions pretending to act as the society.” As in all good law, there is much sound philosophy and strong common sense in the above remarles, and especially when considered in their bearing upon these church controversies, which was the kind of case in 'which they were made. The learned judge then proceeds with a quotation of the language of Chief Justice Lowrie in the leading case of Kerr v. Trego, 47 Pa. St., 295, where the chief justice says : “ It is the very remedy usually adopted when churches divide into parties, and we applied it in three such cases in the last year. Therein we decide directly on the rights of the property, because that became the aim.” Of what use, we ask, would be the remedy by ejectment to obtain possession of the church edifice, wherein, if the sheriff turned the trespassing parties out on Saturday night, they would in all probability be found in again on Sunday morning ? Of what availability or adequacy such a remedy, unless the sheriff were to do what could not lawfully be done, execute the process on Sunday, and not on one Sunday alone, but stand at the church door with a posse comi-iatus on every Sunday until the spirit of opposition and strife died out or was exhausted, which would probably never be ? We all know and history teaches too plainly the nature, workings and tenacity of these religious schisms and separations, to give any hope or reasonable ground of expectation for the efficacy of such a remedy. A breach, once effected, is seldom or
On the whole case, therefore, and on all the authorities which have been numerously cited by counsel, this court is of opinion that the complaint states a good cause of action in equity, and for the remedy by injunction; and this, whether the jurisdiction of the court is put on the ground above stated, or, as in some of the authorities, upon the ground of a trust, or of a suit to quiet title, or whether, as in others, it is held on the ground of the peculiar nature of the rights and of the property affected and for the time being put in jeopardy or rendered valueless by the trespasses complained of.
By the Court. — The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
The motion for a temporary injunction is denied, for the reason that the application can better be made to the circuit eourt, and without prejudice to such application.