167 Ga. 199 | Ga. | 1928
(After stating the foregoing facts.) After having heard the demurrer and the evidence in support of the allegations in the pleadings of the parties, the court overruled the de
Upon consideration of the allegations in the petition, the demurrers thereto, and the evidence submitted to support the allegations, this court is of the opinion that the court did not err in overruling the demurrer to the petition, which in various forms raised the question as to the court’s jurisdiction in the ease and its right to administer the relief prayed. We think the court did have jurisdiction, as that court held and stated in the opening paragraph of the opinion quoted above. Property rights were the basis of the plaintiffs’ cause. The court’s injunction as granted deals with property rights. Matters which were strictly for an ecclesiastical court and the internal affairs of the religious body in question were incidentally involved in this case, and did not form the basis of the petitioners’ case. Certain ecclesiastical questions were necessarily for determination; such questions as whether or not plaintiffs Rakestraw and Smith were the regularly constituted and ordained deacons had to be investigated in order to determine who had the right to possession and control of the church property. And the court properly took this view of it.
If certain prayers, such as the prayer that the defendants “be required to unlock the doors of the church and deliver the church building to the petitioners for the purpose of worshiping,” etc., were prayers for injunction in the nature of a mandatory injunction, the judgment of the court below will not be reversed because this was not stricken; for in the order granted there is no feature of a mandatory injunction. While this particular prayer last referred to was not stricken from the petition, the court did not heed it, but granted an injunction which in effect merely restrained the defendants from interfering with the plaintiffs Rakestraw and Smith in the control of the church as deacons thereof.
Nor did the court err in granting the interlocutory injunction set forth in terms in the court’s judgment and order. Considering all of the evidence in the case, the court below was authorized to find that D. L. Rakestraw and Columbus Smith were the regularly ordained deacons of the Poplar Springs Baptist
None of the other exceptions which were properly made show error in the order and judgment of the trial court.
Judgment affirmed.