Schaefer v. Evangelical Lutheran St. Paul's Church
Schaefer v. Evangelical Lutheran St. Paul's Church
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The wife of the plaintiff, John G. Schaefer, who was an elderly German, died early in the year 1899, and he purchased a lot and buried her in the cemetery belonging to' the Evangelical Lutheran Saint Paul’s Church, an organization composed of his German friends and neighbors, to which his wife had belonged. This cemetery was on land adjacent to the church building.
In 1901 his daughter died with the scarlet fever, and at the same time another daughter and a son were very sick with the same disease. He sent a neighbor to the cemetery where he had buried his wife, with instructions to prepare a grave for the interment of his daughter, and to hasten the same as much as possible, the physicians having directed that, on account of the contagious character of the disease, she should be buried soon. When the neighbor arrived at the churchyard !he was met by the defendant
This action was brought against the church in its corporate capacity, and the trustees and the preacher in their individual capacities, to recover damages, actual and punitive, for the indignities offered. A verified general denial, admitting, however, the corporate character of the church, was filed, and afterward an amendment thereto, which, as a justification for the refusal to permit the burial of the plaintiff’s daughter, pleaded that she was not a member in good standing in the church nor a communicant, and that the rule of the church denied to such persons burial in the cemetery. Upon the trial the plaintiff showed the denial on the part of Krenke to the right of burial for plaintiff’s daughter, and upon cross-examination it was shown that this right was denied because, as was claimed, the daughter was not a member or communicant of the church. It appears in evidence that
The matter contained in the answer, being verified, was sufficient to put the burden upon Mr. Schaefer to prove the authority on the part of Krenke to speak for the corporation and for its trustees in their individual capacities. This not having been done, he failed to make out any case against them. As to Mr. Krenke, his only justification was that the church had a rule under which he assumed to act, but merely as a volunteer; he distinctly disclaimed any right or authority from the congregation so to act.
The law, not being made to enforce the amenities nor always the ethics of life, recognizes the right of a church to enact and enforce such a rule, and had it been in existence at the time Mr. Schaefer purchased his lot, or had there at that time been reserved in the by-laws of the corporation the right subsequently to enact 'such a rule, he would be bound thereby ; but no such showing is found in the evidence. Nor could. Mr. Krenke justify his action under a rule of the-church, even had such rule been binding upon Mr. Schaefer, when he had no authority to speak for the-church. One may not push himself forward to defend-, the contract rights' of another without authority and while disclaiming authority.
¥e think the action of the court below was correct as to the corporation and the trustees and wrong as to Mr. Krenke. To this extent the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for further.proceedings.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.