In 1844, the Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States, at
a General Conference, passed sundry resolutions providing for a
distinct, ecclesiastical organization in the slave-holding states,
in case the annual conferences of those states should deem the
measure expedient.
In 1845, these conferences did deem it expedient and organized a
separate ecclesiastical community, under the appellation of the
Methodist Episcopal Church South.
At this time there existed property, known as the Book Concern,
belonging to the General Church, which was the result of the labors
and accumulation of all the ministers.
Commissioners appointed by the Methodist Episcopal Church South
may file a bill in chancery in behalf of themselves and those whom
they represent, against the trustees of the Book Concern, for a
division of the property.
The rule is well established that where the parties interested
are numerous, and the suit is for an object common to them all,
some of the body may maintain a bill on behalf of themselves and of
the others, and a bill may also be maintained against a portion of
a numerous body of defendants, representing a common interest.
The Methodist Church was divided. It was not a case of the
secession of apart from the main body. Neither division lost its
interest in the common property.
The General Conference, of 1844, had the legitimate power thus
to divide the church. In 1808, the General Conference was made a
representative body, with six restrictive articles upon its powers.
But none of these articles deprived it of the power of dividing the
church.
The sixth restrictive article provided that the General
Conference should not appropriate the profits of the Book Concern
to any other purpose than for the benefit of the traveling
ministers, their widows &c., and one of the resolutions of 1844
recommended to all the annual conferences to authorize a change in
the sixth restrictive article. This was not imposed as a condition
of separation, but merely a plan to enable the General Conference
itself to carry, out its purposes.
The separation of the church into two parts being legally
accomplished, a division of the joint property by a court of equity
follows, as a matter of course.
The bill was originally filed in the names of Henry B.
Bascom,
Page 57 U. S. 289
a citizen of Lexington, in the State of Kentucky; Alexander L.
P. Green, a citizen of Nashville, in the State of Tennessee;
Charles B. Parsons, a citizen of Louisville, in the State of
Kentucky; John Kelly, a citizen of Wilson County, in the State of
Tennessee; James W. Allen a citizen of Limestone County, in the
State of Alabama; and John Tevis, a citizen of Shelby County, in
the State of Kentucky:
Against Leroy Swormstedt and John H. Power, agents of the "Book
Concern" at Cincinnati, and James B. Finley, all of whom are
citizens of the State of Ohio; and George Peck and Nathan Bangs,
who are citizens of the State of New York, who are made defendants
to this bill.
Bascom, Green, and Parsons were commissioners appointed by the
Methodist Episcopal Church South, to demand and sue for the
proportion belonging to it of certain property, and especially of a
fund called the "Book Concern." Bascom having died whilst the suit
was pending, William A. Smith, a citizen of Virginia, was
substituted in his place. The other plaintiffs were supernumerary
and superannuated preachers, belonging to the traveling connection
of the said church south; and all the plaintiffs were citizens of
other states than Ohio, and sued not only for themselves but also
in behalf of all the preachers in the traveling connection of the
church south, amounting to about fifteen hundred.
The defendants were Swormstedt and Power, agents of the Book
Concern at Cincinnati, and Findley, all traveling preachers of the
Methodist Episcopal Church and citizens of Ohio, and the Methodist
Book Concern a body politic, incorporated by an act of the General
Assembly of Ohio, and having its principal office at Cincinnati, in
that state.
The nature of the dispute and the circumstances of the case are
set forth in the opinion of the Court.
Page 57 U. S. 298
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill is filed by the complainants, for themselves, and in
behalf of the traveling and worn out preachers in connection with
the Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church South in the United
States, against the defendants, to recover their share of a fund
called the Book Concern, at the City of Cincinnati, consisting of
houses, machinery, printing presses, book bindery, books &c.,
claimed to be of the value of some two hundred thousand
dollars.
The bill charges that, at and before the year 1844, there
existed in the United States a voluntary association
unincorporated, known as the Methodist Episcopal Church, composed
of seven bishops, four thousand eight hundred and twenty-eight
preachers belonging to the traveling connection, and in bishops,
ministers, and members about one million one hundred and nine
thousand nine hundred and sixty, united, and bound together in one
organized body by certain doctrines of faith and morals, and by
certain rules of government and discipline.
Page 57 U. S. 299
That the government of the church was vested in one body called
the General Conference, and in certain subordinate bodies called
annual conferences, and in bishops, traveling ministers, and
preachers.
The bill refers to a printed volume, entitled "The Doctrines,
and Discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church," as containing
the Constitution, organization, form of government, and rules of
discipline, as well as the doctrines of faith of the
association.
The complainants further charge, that differences and
disagreements had sprung up in the church between what was called
the northern and southern members, in respect to the administration
of the government with reference to the ownership of slaves by the
ministers of the church, of such a character and attended with such
consequences as threatened greatly to impair its usefulness, as
well as permanently to disturb its harmony; and it became and was a
question of grave and serious importance whether a separation ought
not to take place, according to some geographical boundary to be
agreed upon, so as that the Methodist Episcopal Church should
thereafter constitute two separate and distinct organizations. And
that accordingly, at a session of the General Conference held in
the City of New York in May, 1844, a resolution was passed by a
majority of over three-fourths of the body, by which it was
determined, that, if the annual conferences of the slave-holding
states should find it necessary to unite in a distinct
ecclesiastical connection, the following rule should be observed
with regard to the northern boundary of such connection -- all the
societies, stations, and conferences adhering to the church in the
south, by a vote of a majority of the members, should remain under
the pastoral care of the southern church; and all adhering to the
church north, by a like vote, should remain under the pastoral care
of that church. This plan of separation contains eleven other
resolutions relating principally to the mode and terms of the
division of the common property of the association between the two
divisions, in case the separation contemplated should take place,
and which in effect provide for a
pro rata division,
taking the number of the traveling preachers in the church north
and south as the basis upon which to make the partition.
The complainants further charge that in pursuance of the above
resolutions, the annual conferences in the slave-holding states met
and resolved in favor of a distinct and independent organization,
and erected themselves into a separate ecclesiastical connection,
under the provisional plan of separation based upon the discipline
of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and to
Page 57 U. S. 300
be known as the Methodist Episcopal Church South. And they
insist that, by virtue of these proceedings, this church, as it had
existed in the United States previous to the year 1844, became and
was divided into two separate churches, with distinct and
independent powers, and authority composed of the several annual
conferences, stations, and societies, lying north and south of the
aforesaid line of division. And also that by force of the same
proceedings, the division of the church south became and was
entitled to its proportion of the common property real and personal
of the Methodist Episcopal Church, which belonged to it at the time
the separation took place; that the property and funds of the
church had been obtained by voluntary contributions, to which the
members of the church south had contributed more than their share,
and which, down to the time of the separation, belonged in common
to the Methodist Episcopal Church, as then organized.
The complainants charge that they are members of the church
south, and preachers, some of them supernumerary, and some
superannuated preachers, and belonged to the traveling connection
of said church; and that, as such, have a personal interest in the
property, real and personal, held by the church north, and in the
hands of the defendants; and further, that there are about fifteen
hundred preachers belonging to the traveling connection of the
church south, each of whom has a direct and personal interest in
the same right with the complainants in the said property, the
large number of whom make it inconvenient and impracticable to
bring them all before the court as complainants.
They also charge, that the defendants are members of the
Methodist Episcopal Church North; and that each, as such, has a
personal interest in the property; and further that two of them
have the custody and control of the fund in question; and that, in
addition to these defendants, there are nearly thirty-eight hundred
preachers belonging to the traveling connection of the church
north, each of whom has an interest in the fund in the same right,
so that it is impossible, in view of sustaining a just decision in
the matter, to make them all parties to the bill.
The complainants also aver that this bill is brought by the
authority, and under the direction of the general and annual
conferences of the church south, and for the benefit of the same,
and for themselves, and all the preachers in the traveling
connection, and all other ministers and persons having an interest
in the property.
The defendants, in their answer, admit most of the facts charged
in the bill, as it respects the organization, government,
Page 57 U. S. 301
discipline, and faith of the Methodist Episcopal Church as it
existed at and previous to the year 1844. They admit the passage of
the resolutions, called the plan of separation, at the session of
the General Conference of that year, by the majority stated, but
deny that the resolutions were duly and legally passed, and also
deny that the General Conference possessed the competent power to
pass them, and submit that they were therefore null and void. They
also submit that, if the General Conference possessed the power,
the separation contemplated was made dependent upon certain
conditions, and among others a change of the sixth restrictive
article in the Constitution of the church, by a vote of the annual
conferences, which vote the said conferences refused.
The defendants admit the erection of the church south into a
distinct ecclesiastical organization, but deny that this was done
agreeably to the plan of separation. They deny that the Methodist
Episcopal Church, as it existed in 1844, or at any time, has been
divided into two distinct and separate ecclesiastical
organizations; and submit that the separation and voluntary
withdrawal from this church of a portion of the bishops, ministers,
and members, and organization into a church south, was an
unauthorized separation, and that they have thereby renounced and
forfeited all claim, either in law or equity, to any portion of the
property in question. The defendants admit that the Book Concern at
Cincinnati, with all the houses, lots, printing presses &c., is
now and always has been beneficially the property of the preachers
belonging to the traveling connection of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, but insist that if such preachers do not, during life,
continue in such traveling connection, and in the communion, and
subject to the government of the church, they forfeit for
themselves and their families all ownership in, or claim to the
said Book Concern, and the produce thereof; they admit that the
Book Concern was originally commenced and established by the
traveling preachers of this church, upon their own capital, with
the design in the first place of circulating religious knowledge,
and that, at the General Conference of 1796, it was determined that
the profits derived from the sale of books should in future be
devoted wholly to the relief of traveling preachers, supernumerary
and worn out preachers, and the widows and orphans of such
preachers -- and the defendants submit that the Methodist Episcopal
Church South is not entitled at law or in equity to have a division
of the property of the Book Concern, or the produce, or to any
portion thereof, and that the ministers, preachers, or members, in
connection with such church are not entitled to any portion of the
same, and further, that being no
Page 57 U. S. 302
longer traveling preachers belonging to the Methodist Episcopal
Church, they are not so entitled, without a change of the sixth
restrictive article of the Constitution of 1808, provided for in
the plan of separation, as a condition of the partition of said
fund.
The proofs in the case consist chiefly of the proceedings of the
General Conference of 1844, relating to the separation of the
church and of the proceedings of the southern conferences, in
pursuance of which a distinct and separate ecclesiastical
organization south took place.
There is no material controversy between the parties, as it
respects the facts. The main difference lies in the interpretation
and effect to be given to the acts and proceedings of these several
bodies and authorities of the church. Our opinion will be founded
almost wholly upon facts alleged in the bill, and admitted in the
answer.
An objection was taken, on the argument, to the bill for want of
proper parties to maintain the suit. We think the objection not
well founded.
The rule is well established, that where the parties interested
are numerous, and the suit is for an object common to them all,
some of the body may maintain a bill on behalf of themselves and of
the others, and a bill may also be maintained against a portion of
a numerous body of defendants, representing a common interest.
Story's Eq.Pl. §§ 97, 98, 99, 103, 107, 110, 111, 116,
120; 2 Mitf.Pl.Jer. Ed 167, 2 Paige 19; 4 Mylne & Cranch 134,
619; 2 De Gex & Smale 102, 122.
Mr. Justice Story, in his valuable treatise on equity Pleadings,
after discussing this subject with his usual research and fullness,
arranges the exceptions to the general rule, as follows:
1. Where the question is one of a common or general interest,
and one or more sue or defend for the benefit of the whole.
2. Where the parties form a voluntary association for public or
private purposes, and those who sue or defend may fairly be
presumed to represent the rights and interests of the whole;
and
3. Where the parties are very numerous, and though they have or
may have separate and distinct interests, yet it is impracticable
to bring them all before the court.
In this latter class, though the rights of the several persons
may be separate and distinct, yet there must be a common interest
or a common right, which the bill seeks to establish or enforce. As
an illustration, bills have been permitted to be brought by the
lord of a manor against some of the tenants, and
vice
versa, by some of the tenants in behalf of themselves and the
other tenants, to establish some right -- such as suit to a mill,
or right of common, or to cut turf. So by a parson of a
Page 57 U. S. 303
parish against some of the parishioners to establish a general
right to tithes -- or conversely, by some of the parishioners in
behalf of all to establish a parochial modus.
In all cases where exceptions to the general rule are allowed,
and a few are permitted to sue and defend on behalf of the many, by
representation, care must be taken that persons are brought on the
record fairly representing the interest or right involved, so that
it may be fully and honestly tried.
Where the parties interested in the suit are numerous, their
rights and liabilities are so subject to change and fluctuation by
death or otherwise, that it would not be possible, without very
great inconvenience, to make all of them parties, and would
oftentimes prevent the prosecution of the suit to a hearing. For
convenience, therefore, and to prevent a failure of justice, a
court of equity permits a portion of the parties in interest to
represent the entire body, and the decree binds all of them the
same as if all were before the court. The legal and equitable
rights and liabilities of all being before the court by
representation, and especially where the subject matter of the suit
is common to all, there can be very little danger but that the
interest of all will be properly protected and maintained.
The case in hand illustrates the propriety and fitness of the
rule. There are some fifteen hundred persons represented by the
complainants, and over double that number by the defendants. It is
manifest that to require all the parties to be brought upon the
record, as is required in a suit at law, would amount to a denial
of justice. The right might be defeated by objections to parties,
from the difficulty of ascertaining them, or if ascertained, from
the changes constantly occurring by death or otherwise.
As it respects the persons into whose hands the fund in question
should be delivered for the purpose of distribution among the
beneficiaries, in case of a division of it, we shall recur to the
subject in another part of this opinion.
We will now proceed to an examination of the merits of the
case.
The Book Concern, the property in question, is a part of a fund
which had its origin at a very early day, from the voluntary
contributions of the traveling preachers in the connection of the
Methodist Episcopal Church. The establishment was at first small;
but at present, is one of very large capital, and of extensive
operations, producing great profits. In 1796, the traveling
preachers in General Conference assembled, determined that these
profits should be thereafter devoted to the relief of the traveling
preachers, and their families, and
Page 57 U. S. 304
accordingly resolved, that the produce of the sale of the books,
after the debts were paid, and sufficient capital provided for
carrying on the business, should be applied for the relief of
distressed traveling preachers, for the families of traveling
preachers, and for supernumerary and worn out preachers, and the
widows and orphans of preachers.
The establishment was placed under the care and superintendence
of the General Conference, the highest authority in the church,
which was composed of the traveling preachers, and it has grown up
to its present magnitude, its capital amounting to nearly a million
of dollars, from the economy and skill with which the concern has
been managed, and from the labors and fidelity of the traveling
preachers, who have always had the charge of the circulation and
sale of the books in the Methodist connection throughout the United
States, accounting to the proper authorities for the proceeds. The
agents who have the immediate charge of the establishment make up a
yearly account of the profits, and transmit the same to the several
annual conferences, each, an amount, in proportion to the number of
traveling preachers, their widows and orphans comprehended within
it, which bodies distribute the fund to the beneficiaries
individually, agreeably to the design of the original founders.
These several annual conferences are composed of the traveling
preachers residing or located within certain districts assigned to
them; and comprehended, in the aggregate, the entire body in
connection with the Methodist Episcopal Church. The fund has been
thus faithfully administered since its foundation down to 1846,
when the portion belonging to the complainants in this suit, and
those they represent, was withheld, embracing some thirteen of the
annual conferences.
In the year 1844, the traveling preachers in General Conference
assembled, for causes which it is not important particularly to
refer to, agreed upon a plan for a division of the Methodist
Episcopal Church in case the annual conferences in the
slave-holding states should deem it necessary; and to the erection
of two separate and distinct ecclesiastical organizations. And,
according to this plan, it was agreed that all the societies,
stations, and conferences adhering to the church south, by a
majority of their respective members, should remain under the
pastoral care of that church; and all of these several bodies
adhering, by a majority of its members, to the church north, should
remain under the pastoral care of that church; and further that the
ministers, local and traveling, should, as they might prefer,
attach themselves, without blame, to the church north or south. It
was also agreed that the common property of the church,
including
Page 57 U. S. 305
this Book Concern, that belonged specially to the body of
traveling preachers, should, in case the separation took place, be
divided between the two churches in proportion to the number of
traveling preachers falling within the respective divisions. This
was in 1844. In the following year the southern annual conferences
met in convention, in pursuance of the plan of separation, and
determined upon a division, and resolved that the annual
conferences should be constituted into a separate ecclesiastical
connection, and based upon the discipline of the Methodist
Episcopal Church, comprehending the doctrines and entire moral,
ecclesiastical, and economical rules and regulations of said
discipline, except only so far as verbal alterations might be
necessary, and to be known by the name of the Methodist Episcopal
Church South.
The division of the church, as originally constituted, thus
became complete, and from this time two separate and distinct
organizations have taken the place of the one previously
existing.
The Methodist Episcopal Church having been thus divided, with
the authority and according to the plan of the General Conference,
it is claimed, on the part of the complainants, who represent the
traveling preachers in the church south, that they are entitled to
their share of the capital stock and profits of this Book Concern;
and that the withholding of it from them is a violation of the
fundamental law prescribed by the founders, and consequently of the
trust upon which it was placed in the hands of the defendants.
The principal answer set up to this claim is that, according to
the original Constitution and appropriation of the fund, the
beneficiaries must be traveling preachers, or the widows and
orphans of traveling preachers, in connection with the Methodist
Episcopal Church, as organized and established in the United States
at the time of the foundation of the fund, and that, as the
complainants, and those they represent, are not shown to be
traveling preachers in that connection, but traveling preachers in
connection with a different ecclesiastical organization, they have
forfeited their right and are no longer within the description of
its beneficiaries.
This argument, we apprehend, if it proves anything, proves too
much, for if sound, the necessary consequence is that the
beneficiaries connected with the church north, as well as south,
have forfeited their right to the fund. It can no more be affirmed,
either in point of fact or of law, that they are traveling
preachers in connection with the Methodist Church as originally
constituted, since the division, than of those in connection with
the church south. Their organization covers but about half of
the
Page 57 U. S. 306
territory embraced within that of the former church; and
includes within it but a little over two-thirds of the traveling
preachers. Their general conference is not the general conference
of the old church, nor does it represent the interest or possess,
territorially, the authority of the same; nor are they the body
under whose care this fund was placed by its founders. It may be
admitted that, within the restricted limits, the organization and
authority are the same as the former church. But the same is
equally true in respect to the organization of the church
south.
Assuming therefore that this argument is well founded, the
consequence is that all the beneficiaries of the fund, whether in
the southern or northern division, are deprived of any right to a
distribution, not being in a condition to bring themselves within
the description of persons for whose benefit it was established: in
which event the foundation of the fund would become broken up, and
the capital revert to the original proprietors, a result that would
differ very little in its effect from that sought to be produced by
the complainants in their bill.
It is insisted, however, that the General Conference of 1844
possessed no power to divide the Methodist Episcopal Church as then
organized, or to consent to such division, and hence, that the
organization of the church south was without authority, and the
traveling preachers within it separated from an ecclesiastical
connection which is essential to enable them to participate as
beneficiaries. Even if this were admitted, we do not perceive that
it would change the relative position and rights of the traveling
preachers within the divisions north and south, from that which we
have just endeavored to explain. If the division under the
direction of the General Conference has been made without the
proper authority, and for that reason the traveling preachers
within the southern division are wrongfully separated from their
connection with the church, and thereby have lost the character of
beneficiaries, those within the northern division are equally
wrongfully separated from that connection, as both divisions have
been brought into existence by the same authority. The same
consequence would follow in respect to them, that is imputable to
the traveling preachers in the other division, and hence each would
be obliged to fall back upon their rights as original proprietors
of the fund.
But we do not agree that this division was made without the
proper authority. On the contrary, we entertain no doubt but that
the General Conference of 1844 was competent to make it, and that
each division of the church, under the separate organization, is
just as legitimate, and can claim as high a sanction,
ecclesiastical and temporal, as the Methodist Episcopal
Page 57 U. S. 307
Church first founded in the United States. The same authority
which founded that church in 1784 has divided it, and established
two separate and independent organizations occupying the place of
the old one.
In 1784, when this church was first established, and down till
1808, the General Conference was composed of all the traveling
preachers in that connection. This body of preachers founded it by
organizing its government, ecclesiastical and temporal, established
its doctrines and discipline, appointed its superintendents or
bishops, its ministers and preachers, and other subordinate
authorities to administer its polity, and promulgate its doctrines
and teachings throughout the land.
It cannot therefore be denied, indeed, it has scarcely been
denied that this body, while composed of all the traveling
preachers, possessed the power to divide it and authorize the
organization and establishment of the two separate independent
churches. The power must necessarily be regarded as inherent in the
General Conference. As they might have constructed two
ecclesiastical organizations over the territory of the United
States originally, if deemed expedient, in the place of one, so
they might, at any subsequent period, the power remaining
unchanged.
But, it is insisted, that this power has been taken away or
given up, by the action of the General Conference of 1808. In that
year the Constitution of this body was changed so as to be
composed, thereafter, by traveling preachers, to be elected by the
annual conferences, in the ratio of one for every five members.
This has been altered from time to time, so that, in 1844, the
representation was one for every twenty-one members. At the time of
this change and as part of it, certain limitations were imposed
upon the powers of this General Conference, called the six
restrictive articles:
1. That they should not alter or change the articles of
religion, or establish any new standard of doctrine.
2. Nor allow of more than one representative for every fourteen
members of the annual conferences, nor less than one for every
thirty.
3. Nor alter the government so as to do away with episcopacy, or
destroy the plan of itinerant superintendencies.
4. Nor change the rules of the united societies.
5. Nor deprive the ministers or preachers of trial by a
committee, and of appeal; nor members before the society, or lay
committee, and appeal.
And 6. Nor appropriate the proceeds of the Book Concern, nor the
charter fund, to any purpose other than for the benefit of the
traveling, supernumerary, superannuated, and worn out preachers,
their wives, widows, and children. Subject to these restrictions,
the delegated conference possessed the same powers as when composed
of the entire body of preachers.
Page 57 U. S. 308
And it will be seen that these relate only to the doctrine of
the church, its representation in the General Conference, the
episcopacy, discipline of its preachers, and members, the Book
Concern, and charter fund. In all other respects and in everything
else that concerns the welfare of the church, the General
Conference represents the sovereign power the same as before. This
is the view taken by the General Conference itself, as exemplified
by the usage and practice of that body. In 1820, they set off to
the British Conference of Wesleyan Methodists the several circuits
and societies in Lower Canada. And in 1828 they separated the
Annual Conference of Upper Canada from their jurisdiction, and
erected the same into a distinct and independent church. These
instances, together with the present division, in 1844, furnish
evidence of the opinions of the eminent and experienced men of this
church in these several conferences, of the power claimed, which,
if the question was otherwise doubtful, should be regarded as
decisive in favor of it. We will add that all the northern bishops,
five in number, in council in July, 1845, acting under the plan of
separation, regarded it as of binding obligation, and conformed
their action accordingly.
It has also been urged on the part of the defendants that the
division of the church, according to the plan of the separation,
was made to depend not only upon the determination of the southern
annual conferences, but also upon the consent of the annual
conferences north, as well as south, to a change of the sixth
restrictive article, and as this was refused, the division which
took place was unauthorized. But this is a misapprehension. The
change of this article was not made a condition of the division.
That depended alone upon the decision of the southern
conferences.
The division of the Methodist Episcopal Church having thus taken
place, in pursuance of the proper authority, it carried with it as
matter of law a division of the common property belonging to the
ecclesiastical organization, and especially of the property in this
Book Concern, which belonged to the traveling preachers. It would
be strange if it could be otherwise, as it respects the Book
Concern, inasmuch as the division of the association was effected
under the authority of a body of preachers who were themselves the
proprietors and founders of the fund.
It has been argued, however, that, according to the plan of
separation, the division of the property in this Book Concern was
made to depend upon the vote of the annual conferences to change
the sixth restrictive article, and that whatever might be the legal
effect of the division of the church upon the
Page 57 U. S. 309
common property otherwise, this stipulation controls it and
prevents a division till the consent is obtained.
We do not so understand the plan of separation. It admits the
right of the church south to its share of the common property, in
case of a separation, and provides for a partition of it among the
two divisions, upon just and equitable principles; but, regarding
the sixth restrictive article as a limitation upon the power of the
General Conference, as it respected a division of the property in
the Book Concern, provision is made to obtain a removal of it. The
removal of this limitation is not a condition to the right of the
church south to its share of the property, but is a step taken in
order to enable the General Conference to complete the partition of
the property.
We will simply add, that as a division of the common property
followed, as matter of law, a division of the church organization,
nothing short of an agreement or stipulation of the church south to
give up their share of it, could preclude the assertion of their
right, and, it is quite clear, no such agreement or stipulation is
to be found in the plan of separation. The contrary intent is
manifest from a perusal of it.
Without pursuing the case further, our conclusion is that the
complainants and those they represent, are entitled to their share
of the property in this Book Concern. And the proper decree will be
entered to carry this decision into effect.
The complainants represent not only all the beneficiaries in the
division of the church south, but also the General Conference and
the annual conferences of the same. The share therefore of this
Book Concern belonging to the beneficiaries in that church, and
which its authorities are entitled to the safekeeping and charge
of, for their benefit, may be properly paid over to the
complainants as the authorized agents for this purpose.
We shall accordingly direct a decree to be entered reversing the
decree of the court below, and remanding the proceedings to that
court, directing a decree to be entered for the complainants
against the defendants; and a reference of the case to a master to
take an account of the property belonging to the Book Concern, and
report to the court its cash value, and to ascertain the portion
belonging to the complainants, which portion shall bear to the
whole amount of the fund the proportion that the traveling
preachers in the division of the church south bore to the traveling
preachers in the church north, at the time of the division of said
church. And on the coming in of the report, and confirmation of the
same, a decree shall be entered in favor of the complainants for
that amount.
Page 57 U. S. 310
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record,
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Ohio, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof it is
ordered, adjudged, and decreed by this Court, that the decree of
said circuit court in this cause be, and the same is hereby,
reversed and annulled. And this Court doth further find, adjudge,
and decree:
1. That under the resolutions of the General Conference of the
Methodist Episcopal Church, holden at the City of New York,
according to the usage and discipline of said church, passed on the
eighth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight
hundred and forty-four, in the pleadings mentioned, it was, among
other things, and in virtue of the power of the said General
Conference, well agreed and determined by the Methodist Episcopal
Church in the United States of America, as then existing, that, in
case the annual conferences in the slave-holding states should find
it necessary to unite in a distinct ecclesiastical connection, the
ministers, local and traveling, of every grade and office, in the
Methodist Episcopal Church, might attach themselves to such new
ecclesiastical connection, without blame.
2. That the said annual conferences in the slave-holding states
did find and determine that it was right, expedient, and necessary
to erect the annual conferences last aforesaid into a distinct
ecclesiastical connection, based upon the discipline of the
Methodist Episcopal Church aforesaid, comprehending the doctrines
and entire moral and ecclesiastical rules and regulations of the
said discipline, except only insofar as verbal alterations might be
necessary to, or for a distinct organization, which new
ecclesiastical connection was to be known by the name and style of
the Methodist Episcopal Church South, and that the Methodist
Episcopal Church South was duly organized under said resolutions of
the said General Conference, and the said decision of said annual
conferences last aforesaid, in a convention thereof held at
Louisville, in the State of Kentucky, in the month of May, in the
year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty-five.
3. That by force of the said resolutions of June the eighth,
eighteen hundred and forty-four, and of the authority and power of
the said General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church as
then existing, by which the same were adopted, and by virtue of the
said finding and determination of the said annual conferences in
the slave-holding states therein mentioned, and by virtue of the
organization of such conferences into a
Page 57 U. S. 311
distinct ecclesiastical connection as last aforesaid: the
religious association known as the Methodist Episcopal Church in
the United States of America as then existing, was divided into two
associations, or distinct Methodist Episcopal Churches, as in the
bill of complaint is alleged.
4. That the property denominated the Methodist Book Concern at
Cincinnati, in the pleadings mentioned, was, at the time of said
division, and immediately before, a fund subject to the following
use -- that is to say, that the profits arising therefrom, after
retaining a sufficient capital to carry on the business thereof,
were to be regularly applied towards the support of the deficient
traveling, supernumerary, superannuated, and worn out preachers of
the Methodist Episcopal Church, their wives, widows, and children,
according to the rules and discipline of said church, and that the
said fund and property are held under the act of incorporation in
the said answer mentioned, by the said defendants, Leroy Swormstedt
and John H. Power, as agents of said Book Concern, and in trust for
the purposes thereof.
5. That in virtue of the said division of said Methodist
Episcopal Church in the United States, the deficient, traveling,
supernumerary, superannuated, and worn out preachers, their wives,
widows, and children comprehended in, or in connection with, the
Methodist Episcopal Church South, were, are, and continue to be
beneficiaries of the said Book Concern to the same extent, and as
fully as if the said division had not taken place, and in the same
manner and degree as persons of the same description who are
comprehended in, or in connection with, the other association,
denominated since the division of the Methodist Episcopal Church;
and that as well the principal as the profits of said Book Concern,
since said division, should of right be administered and managed by
the respective general and annual conferences of the said two
associations and churches, under the separate organizations
thereof, and according to the shares or proportions of the same as
hereinafter mentioned, and in conformity with the rules and
discipline of said respective associations, so as to carry out the
purposes and trusts aforesaid.
6. That so much of the capital and property of said Book Concern
at Cincinnati, wherever situate, and so much of the produce and
profits thereof as may not have been heretofore accounted for to
said church south, in the New York case hereinafter mentioned, or
otherwise, shall be paid to said church south, according to the
rate and proportions following, that is to say, in respect to the
capital, such share or part, as corresponds with the proportion
which the number of the
Page 57 U. S. 312
traveling preachers in the annual conferences which formed
themselves into the Methodist Episcopal Church South, bore to the
number of all the traveling preachers of the Methodist Episcopal
Church before the division thereof, which numbers shall be fixed
and ascertained as they are shown by the minutes of the several
annual conferences next preceding the said division and new
organization in the month of May, A.D. eighteen hundred and
forty-five.
And in respect to the produce or profits, such share or part as
the number of annual conferences which formed themselves into the
Methodist Episcopal Church South bore, at the time of said
division, in May, A.D. 1845, to the whole number of annual
conferences then being in the Methodist Episcopal Church, excluding
the Liberia Conference, so that the division or apportionment of
said produce and profits shall be had by conferences, and not by
numbers of the traveling preachers.
7. That said payment of capital and profits, according to the
ratios of apportionment so declared, shall be made and paid to the
said Smith, Parsons, and Green, as commissioners aforesaid, or
their successors, on behalf of said church south and the
beneficiaries therein, or to such other person or persons as may be
thereto authorized by the General Conference of said church south,
the same to be subsequently managed and administered so as to carry
out the trusts and uses aforesaid, according to the discipline of
said church south, and the regulations of the General Conference
thereof.
8. And in order more fully to carry out the matters hereinbefore
settled and adjudged, it is further ordered and decreed, that this
cause be remanded to the said circuit court for further proceedings
-- that is to say,
That the same be referred to a master to take and state an
account as follows:
1. Of the amount and value of the said Book Concern at
Cincinnati, on the first day of May, 1845, and of what specific
property and effects according to a general description or
classification thereof the same then consisted, whether composed of
real or personal estate, and of whatever nature or description the
same may have been, and a similar account as of the date or time
when the said master shall take this account.
2. Of the produce and profits of said Book Concern, from the
time of the General Conference of May, 1844, as reported thereto,
if so reported, up to the time of the said division in May, 1845,
and from the last-mentioned date down to the time of making up his
report, specifying how much of said profits and produce have been
transferred to said Book Concern, at New York, and accounted for to
said church south in the
Page 57 U. S. 313
settlement of the case there, and how much remains to be
accounted for to said church south on the basis settled by this
decree.
And in taking said accounts, and in the execution of said
reference, the said defendants shall produce, on oath, all deeds,
accounts, books of account, instruments, reports, letters, and
copies of letters, memoranda, documents, and writings, whatever
pertinent to said reference, in their possession or control, and
the said defendants may be examined, on oath, on the said
reference; and each party may produce evidence before the master,
and have process to compel the attendance of witnesses.
And the said master is further directed, in respect to any
annual profits of said concern, not heretofore accounted for to
said church south, to allow to said church south interest at the
rate of 6 percent upon such unpaid balances from the date at which
the same ought to have been paid.
And in respect to all the costs in this case, including the
costs of the reference, and all other costs from the commencement
of the case until its conclusion, and in respect to the fees of
counsel and solicitors therein, of both parties, so far as the same
may be reasonable, and in respect of just and necessary expenses,
as well of plaintiffs as of defendants in conducting the suit, the
same ought to be paid out of said Book Concern, and a common charge
thereon, before apportionment and division, and the master is
accordingly directed to allow and pay the same to the respective
parties entitled thereto, and then to apportion the residue
according to the principles fixed in this decree.
And the master is further directed to return his report to the
said circuit court with all convenient dispatch, which court shall
then proceed to enforce the payment of whatever sum or sums may be
found due to said church south, on the confirmation of the master's
report, in such installments as may be by said court adjudged
reasonable, each party having due opportunity of excepting to the
master's report; and all questions arising upon said report, and
not settled by this decree, may be moved before said circuit court,
to which court either party shall be at liberty to apply on the
footing of this decree.