208 A.D. 695 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
This controversy involves the right of the defendant, as a minister of the Protestant Episcopal church, to enter upon and hold church property and officiate therein as such minister after the expiration* of the term for which it is claimed by the plaintiff the defendant was employed. The Special Term rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff upon the merits, after trial, enjoining and restraining the defendant from performing ministerial functions in said church, from entering upon the property of said church for the purpose of officiating at said church as minister, and from interfering with the plaintiff and its rector in conducting divine worship and other religious work in said church. The plaintiff is a religious corporation, in union with the Protestant Episcopal church in the United States within the diocese of New York. Grace Church at City Island, of which the defendant claims to be a permanent and irremovable minister (in so far as concerns the plaintiff’s right to exclude him from said Grace Church), is also a religious corporation affiliated or in union with said Protestant Episcopal church and diocese.
Grace Church was not self supporting. On November 19, 1920, the Supreme Court authorized the conveyance by the Rector, Wardens and Vestrymen of Grace Church at City Island of all its real property to the plaintiff church. The order was made on petition of the Rector, Wardens and Vestrymen of Grace Church at City Island and obtained the approval of the bishop of the diocese as well as the standing committee of the diocese. No question is raised as to the regularity of this transaction, nor is there any dispute that since the conveyance of the property the temporal affairs of said Grace Church have been managed and controlled by the vestry of the plaintiff church, and that since such conveyance both congregations have been united and have acted as one religious society or parish in the name of the plaintiff church.
On October 3, 1922, at a meeting of the vestry of the plaintiff church, the defendant was elected vicar, or assistant minister, to officiate in the City Island church for one year from October 15, 1922. The defendant was present at such meeting and accepted such engagement and the terms thereof. On June 5, 1923, a meeting of the vestry of the plaintiff church was held, at which the rector of the parish reported that the work of the defendant at City Island was unsatisfactory, and a resolution was thereupon adopted
It is the contention of the appellant that the controversy is an ecclesiastical one, outside of the jurisdiction of a civil court; and this contention is based upon the argument that the relation of the appellant to Grace Church at City Island “ is a pastoral
Canon XX (for the government of the Protestant Episcopal church in the United States of America) distinguishes between a “ minister ” and an “ assistant minister.” As used in this canon the word “ minister ” is synonymous with the word “ rector.” The method of election of the latter is definitely pointed out. It provides for the submission of bis name to the bishop thirty days before election; a subsequent written notice to the ecclesiastical authority of the diocese of his election, signed by the church wardens; which authority, if satisfied that the person so chosen is a duly qualified minister and that he has accepted the office, shall notify the “ secretary of the convention,” who shall record it. “ And such record shall be sufficient evidence of the relation between the minister and the parish.” It then declares that “ a minister is settled ” who, “ according to the rules of said diocese,” has been engaged permanently by any parish or for any term not less than one year.
But, in the case “ of the election of an assistant minister,” no other step is required either before or after election except that upon election “ a certificate from the rector and wardens shall be sent to the bishop.”
Then by canon XXI it is provided:
“ § I. [i.] The control of the worship and the spiritual jurisdiction of the Parish, are vested in the Rector, subject to the Rubrics of the Book of Common Prayer, the Canons of the Church, and the godly counsel of the Bishop. All other Ministers of the Parish, by whatever name they may be designated, are to be regarded as under the authority of the Rector.
*699 “ [ii.] For the purposes of his office and for the full and free discharge of all functions and duties pertaining thereto, the Rector shall, at all .times, be entitled to the use and control of the Church and Parish buildings with the appurtenances and furniture thereof.”
If -there are other provisions of the canonical law beyond those referred to, which dignify and augment the standing and authority of an “ assistant minister,” they have not been pointed out to us. “ We know nothing of them judicially,” and before our courts can declare the status of an ecclesiastic, it must be proved as a matter of fact. (Youngs v. Ransom, 31 Barb. 49, 60.) As already indicated, there was sufficient competent evidence to establish that the precise relation of the defendant to the plaintiff was that of an “ assistant minister,” assigned to officiate in Grace Church at City Island, the temporal proprietorship of which was and is in the plaintiff church, Christ’s Church at Pelham; and that as such “ assistant minister ” the defendant’s employment was for the definite period of one year, which had expired, but to which termination the defendant declined to yield assent. We have defendant’s status pointed out in this record by eminent authority, that of Bishop Manning of the diocese of New York, who, in an affidavit to.which both litigants refer on this appeal by way of interpretation, says: “That Grace Church; City Island, 'is at present a part of the parish of Christ Church at Pelham Manor, under the agreement existing between them. That the rector and vestry of Christ Church is in control of Grace Church, City Island. That Thomas A. F. Collett was never called as rector of Grace Church, City Island, and never had any approval from the deponent as such. That the said Collett was engaged as vicar or assistant minister by the rector and vestry of Christ Church. That under the canonical or ecclesiastical law of the church a vicar or assistant minister is under the control and direction of the rector and vestry of the parish, and that the said Collett is bound, under the canonical law, to obey the direction of the rector and vestry of Christ Church, and has no right, contrary to such direction, to officiate or to enter into or upon church property, for the purpose of officiating or exercising any priestly or ministerial functions or purporting, to exercise any pastoral or other rights as rector of Grace Church, City Island, or as vicar thereof, without the consent of the rector and vestry at Christ Chinch, Pelham.”
In the light of what has been said, the conclusion is reached that the defendant did not occupy a “ pastoral relation ” under the protection accorded by canon XXVI (supra) to a clergyman or minister of a parish. Such being the case, we think the facts
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed, but without costs.
Present — Kelly, P. J., Rich, Jaycox, Manning and Kapper, JJ.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, without costs.