Headnotes 1-5, and 8 do not require any elaboration.
Whеre no civil or property rights are involved, civil courts will not review the acts of a majority of the members of a church having a congregational form of government in expelling members of the church at a regular conference of the church. Membership in such a church is not a property right. Where it does not appear that such church has adopted any fixed rules or regulations which require notice of charges to be given a member and opportunity to be heard before his expulsion, a civil court has no jurisdiction to review the act of expulsion where such member has been expelled by a majоrity vote of the members of the church at a regular conference, or to determine whether the steps leading up to the expulsion were legal оr illegal. Mount Olive Primitive Baptist Church
v.
Patrick,
Special ground 7 of the motion for a new trial complains that the court'erred in charging the jury as follows: “I charge you further, gentlemen of the jury, that when a person becomes a member of a church organization, of the character in question here, that such person cаn not be expelled or excluded from such church organization arbitrarily and without notice or trial without giving such person an opportunity to appeаr and be heard, and if you should find in this case that any person or persons have been expelled or excluded from said church arbitrarily and
*809
without giving such person or persons notice or trial and without giving such person or persons an opportunity to appear and be heard, then, I charge you, that such exрulsion and exclusion would be' illegal and void.” Though the charge here given in substance is the same as that which was given in
Everett
v.
Jennings,
137
Ga.
253 (4) (
Special ground 8 complains that the court erred in giving to the jury the following charge: “It is your duty to determine, from the evidence adduced to you, whether or not a labor union is an oath-bound secret society, contrary to the еxamples of Christ and the Apostles. . . If you do not find that a labor *810 union is an oath-bound secret society plainly contrary to the examples of Christ and the Apostles . . you should find against the plaintiffs in this case”; the assignment of error being that it was beyond the province of the court and jury to construe a tenet adopted by the church as to whether or not a labor union was an oath-bound secret society, in that such was a. matter of faith and doctrine which the members of the сhurch had the exclusive right to determine, and was not a question that a court or jury had the right to pass upon.
Special ground 9 assigns error on the following charge: "Now, gentlemen, the burden rests upon the plaintiffs in this case to satisfy you by a preponderance of the evidence: First, that a labor union is an oath-bound sеcret society. Second, that a labor union is an oath-bound secret society which is plainly contrary to the examples of Christ and the Apostles.”
It appears from the minutes of the June, 1949, conference of the church, kept by both factions, that the Anderson Primitive Baptist Church had accepted and reсognized as one of its articles of faith the doctrine and practice that the church “must stand aloof from . . all the worldly . . institutions, such as . . oath-bound secret sоcieties, which are plainly contrary to the examples of Christ and His Apostles.”
It also appears from the uncontradicted evidence that at this conference the members of the church voted 35 to 15 in favor of
&■
motion for “the church to stand aloof from all oath-bound secret societies (including thе Labor Union).” The church, acting through a majority of its members, settled this issue of doctrine and faith, viz., that a labor union was an oath-bound secret society. Whether good or bad, true or false, neither the court nor jury had a right'to pass on the question of whether a labor union is an oath-bound secret society or not. Follоwing the settled principles of the law, the courts of this State and of the United States have consistently adhered to the sound and salutary rule that civil courts havе no power or authority to, interfere in the internal affairs of a religious organization concerning doctrines, faith, or belief.
Stewart
v.
Jarriel,
206
Ga.
855 (
The effect of these charges was to permit the jury to review and determine the correctness or incоrrectness of the church’s action on a question of religious belief and doctrine. The charges were clearly erroneous.
Judgment reversed on the main bill of exceptions; affirmed on the cross-bill.
