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This appeal involves a property dispute between two factions in the congregation of the York Presbyterian Church in York, Alabama. The trial court entered a declaratory judgment in favor of the minority group and ordered the pastor and the clerk of the session, along with the majority group, to vacate the church property. The pastor and the clerk appealed. We affirm.
York called the Reverend Martin Murphy (hereinafter "Murphy") as its minister in 1992. Several members of the congregation, including Aubrey Green, J.E. Cobb, and Warren Grant became upset when Murphy joined the League of the South (hereinafter the "League" or "organization"). According to the record on appeal, the League is a civic group that prides itself in Southern heritage, emphasizes the importance of state and local governance, and supports the concept of secession and *328 the reinstitution of the Confederate States of America.
Murphy solicited church members, including Green, Cobb, and Grant and two seminary students,1 to join the League. He encouraged nonresident League members to join the church, and the church membership soon included the presidents of the national, state, and county League groups. Murphy also used the church as a contact place for the League and listed the church's telephone number and post office box (without mentioning the church's name) in the organization's literature and on his personal Internet Web site. He used the church's copier to duplicate League fliers and announcements. Although Murphy eventually resigned from the League, after resigning he continued to attend League-sponsored meetings and lectures.
Green, Cobb, and Grant were elected to serve as trustees (there were 13 trustees) beginning on June 8, 1997. During an August 29, 1998, meeting, the trustees selected Green, Cobb, and Grant as officers to serve on the trustee executive committee. A congregational meeting, held on December 13, 1998, resulted in a new trustee election, with the church reelecting Cobb and Grant, but not choosing Green, who had objected to the election on the grounds that no vacancies existed on the trustee board. However, the trustees ratified the August 29, 1998, officer selection at a subsequent trustee meeting on March 15, 1999.
Meanwhile, Green, Cobb, and Grant alerted the Tennessee-Alabama Presbytery of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church (hereinafter the "Presbytery"), the regional governing body of the church, about the conflicts within the York congregation. After conducting an investigation, the Presbytery's ecclesiastical commission recommended, among other things, that the church have no connection with the League; it reminded Murphy of his ordination vows; and it rebuked church members who were guilty of shunning. The Presbytery voted a year later to dissolve Murphy's pastoral relationship with the church and to dismiss the church from the Presbytery. Because his church was no longer a member of the Presbytery, Green lost his position as the treasurer of the Presbytery.
During an emergency congregational meeting held the same day of the dismissal, the church voted to form the York Presbyterian Church (hereinafter "YPC" or the "majority group"), as an independent, unincorporated congregation. Despite Green's complaints that the meeting was not authorized by the church session, YPC elected to maintain Murphy as its temporary minister, with the understanding that a more permanent arrangement would be considered later. The majority group claims to own the church building and the manse.
The YPC's desire to own the church property conflicts with the plans of another church created from the same controversy. Those members who did not support Murphy formed and incorporated the York Independent Presbyterian Church, Inc. (hereinafter "YIPC" or the "minority group"). This group also claims to own the property.
Green, Cobb, and Grant, acting as trustees of the church, eventually filed this lawsuit against Murphy; Knox Poole, the clerk of the church's session; Kimmett Geist, the church's treasurer;2 the Presbytery; *329 and the General Synod of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church.3 Green, Cobb, and Grant asked the trial court to find that Murphy and Poole had converted church assets for the League's purposes and to declare Green, Cobb, and Grant to be trustees with control over the church's assets and property. They later amended their complaint to include an ejectment claim when Murphy, Poole, and the majority group refused requests to vacate the church premises.
The parties (other than Grant) stipulated that, because of chronic illness and incompetence, Grant would not testify at trial. Upon the motion of Green and Cobb, the trial court later struck Grant as a plaintiff.
The trial court held that Murphy and Poole had wrongly converted church property for League purposes. The court also concluded that Green and Cobb were the trustees of the church and had the right to possess the property and the authority to determine which of the two new congregations would possess the church's real and personal property. Finally, the court ordered Murphy, Poole, and the majority group off the property and gave the minority group the right of immediate possession. Murphy and Poole appealed.
Although it is arguable that spiritual issues prompted the division in the York congregation, this case involves the civil conflicts of trusteeship and property ownership. Because the resolution of these issues requires a court merely to review church records and incorporation documents, without delving into spiritual matters, there is no constitutional bar to a court's hearing this case.
This evidence was sufficient for the court to conclude that the appellants wrongly converted church assets and violated the purpose clause, which required that the church and its resources be used for faith-based activities.
The trial court found:
"[T]he congregation of the York Presbyterian Church as presently constituted has conducted its affairs in such a manner as not to conform to the Standards of the Presbyterian Doctrine of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Martin Murphy's conduct is such that [it] does not conform to the Presbyterian Doctrine of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church as a Presbyterian minister."
Even though we have carefully considered this argument, we do not understand how it is relevant to this appeal. The *331 record does not include a copy of the Presbyterian Doctrine to assist us in evaluating the appellants' conduct. Moreover, even if the Doctrine was provided in the record and we concluded that the appellants had violated the Presbyterian tenets, it is not apparent, in a case involving a property dispute, how any violation or lack of violation of these tenets could require a reversal. Thus, we do not reach the merits of this issue.
The trial court correctly held that the appellees belong to both groups. As stated in its incorporating documents, the trustees at York were elected to serve three-year terms. The appellees were selected on June 8, 1997; thus, their term expired three years later, on June 8, 2000. However, the appellants argue that the appellees' positions as trustees and officers were compromised when the trustees used irregular procedures at a subsequent meeting. When the appellees were elected as officers and executive committee members, Cobb, as the temporary presiding officer, cast a second vote to break a tie, in violation ofRobert's Rules of Order, the procedural book used at the church's meetings. Robert's Rules of Order § 46, at 192 ("The chair cannot, however, vote twice, first to make a tie and then give the casting vote.").6 According to the appellants, this election was illegal, and the members selected at the December 13, 1998, meeting are the trustees of the church.
This conclusion would be accurate if the trustees, at the meeting on March 15, 1999, had not ratified the August 29, 1998, election of officers, thereby overruling the December election and reinstating Green, Cobb, and Grant as trustees, as trustee officers, and as members of the executive committee.
In order for a person to contest an injury, his interests in a favorable judgment must be "tangible," Reid v. City of Birmingham,
The appellants lack standing to contest this portion of the trial court's judgment. Because the ejectment of the majority group is not a concrete injury to the appellants, the only persons who can raise this issue are the members of the majority group who were ejected from the church property. Therefore, the appellants' challenge to the ejectment of the majority group is not properly raised in this appeal.
The trial court has considerable discretion over relevancy issues.Eason v. Comfort,
Our review of the record and the exhibits indicates no abuse of discretion. The exhibits supported the appellees' position that the League does not espouse Christian principles and that the appellants were using church resources for non-Christian purposes. Green's testimony was necessary to describe each exhibit to the court before it was admitted into the record.
The appellees state that the entire deposition is relevant because it demonstrates that the League proclaims non-Christian beliefs and that Murphy testified falsely when he said that he was no longer associated with the organization.
We will not address this issue. We have been cited no caselaw regarding motions to exclude evidence after trial and after judgment. Furthermore, we do not understand how the question whether Murphy is biased against women pertains to an appeal regarding a property dispute. Thus, even if the trial court erred in relying on the deposition, and we do not hold that it did, the error would not require reversal.
Because the appellants did not object to the exhibits at trial, they did not preserve this issue for appeal. Ex parte Williams,
Even if the trial court erred when it admitted Sproul's interrogatory answers, that error would be harmless because the record contains other evidence that in itself would be sufficient to support the trial court's judgment. Thus, any error in this regard does not require reversal.
AFFIRMED.
Hooper, C.J., and See, Brown, and England, JJ., concur.
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. . . ."
"[T]he civil rights, privileges, and capacities of any citizen shall not be in any manner affected by his religious principles."
"`Relevant evidence' means evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence."
