Tuesday, September 29, 2009

New York Appellate Court Voids Church Election of New Pastor and Trustees

Trustees of Gallilee Pentecostal Church, Inc. v. Williams, (NY App. Div., Sept. 22, 2009), is a case in which plaintiffs sought a declaration as to who are the legal trustees and members of the Gallilee Pentecostal Church in Poughkeepsie, New York. In 1983 when the Church was formed, its articles named six trustees. Despite provisions in the articles and in the New York Religious Corporations Law calling for annual elections, no election of trustees was ever held. Now only two of the original six trustees are alive. In 2006, at the instigation of Frances J. Williams, some 30 people, allegedly members of the church, were notified of a meeting. 17 showed up and purported to elect Williams as pastor and as a trustee, and also purported to elect Barbara Williams-Mahmood as another trustee.

Plaintiffs, who objected to Williams as pastor, sued challenging the validity of the 2006 meeting. The appellate court agreed with their challenge, finding that defendants failed to prove who were church members entitled to vote at the meeting. The court declared that the two remaining original trustees were the only valid trustees. It went on to enjoin Williams and his supporters from exercising any authority or control over church property. [Thanks to Y.Y. Landa for the lead.]