The Apostolic Faith Mission of Portland, Oregon (USA) established a Southern African branch in 1955 (the respondent), which is a legal persona governed by a constitution approved by the parent church. The first appellant was appointed Overseer of the respondent in 1985. A dispute arose concerning choir uniforms, and when the parent church directed that both choirs be disbanded, the first appellant did not comply and wrote to the parent church threatening to withdraw unless the issue was resolved to his satisfaction. The parent church subsequently removed the first appellant from the position of Overseer in 2005. In November 2011, the first appellant barred the head of the parent church from accessing church branches. On 25 January 2012, the first appellant was suspended from membership pending disciplinary proceedings for violating the church constitution by refusing to submit to the parent church's authority and for litigating against church brethren contrary to Biblical teachings. On 3 February 2012, after his suspension, the first appellant's lawyers wrote to the parent church purportedly on behalf of the respondent, stating that the Southern African church would not accept leadership from America and would amend its constitution. A disciplinary hearing proceeded in the first appellant's absence, and his suspension was confirmed. Rev Onias Z. Gumbo was appointed as the new Overseer. Despite this, the first appellant continued to claim he was still Overseer. The respondent then sought a declaratory order that the appellants were no longer members and must relinquish control of all church properties.
The appeal was allowed with each party bearing its own costs. The High Court judgment was set aside and substituted with an order declaring that: (a) The 1st respondent (appellant), having been suspended on 25 January 2012 while that suspension remains extant, has no right personally or through anyone claiming through him to use the applicant's (respondent's) properties, amenities or name; (b) The 1st respondent or anyone claiming through him must stop using the applicant's name or any similar name; (c) The 1st respondent or anyone claiming through him must immediately relinquish possession of all the applicant's movable and immovable properties (with a detailed list of 28 categories of properties specified). All references to the 2nd, 3rd and 4th appellants in the High Court order were removed.
1. A church incorporated as a legal persona with the capacity to sue and be sued has locus standi to bring legal proceedings where it has a direct and substantial interest in the matter, including where a suspended leader purports to act on its behalf without authority. 2. In resolving church property disputes, civil courts must apply the "neutral principles" approach: (a) courts will enforce express terms governing property use and ownership in church constitutions and documents; (b) courts may not resolve or inquire into matters of religious doctrine to determine property entitlement; (c) courts may apply neutral, objective principles of trust and property law without entanglement in doctrinal issues. 3. Resignation from a voluntary association is a unilateral act constituting an objective question of fact for the court to determine based on conduct, not requiring acceptance. 4. Where a church conducts a disciplinary hearing and decides only to suspend (not dismiss) a member, a civil court cannot declare that member to have ceased membership based on alleged doctrinal violations - it is for the church itself to terminate membership through its disciplinary processes. 5. A member who is suspended from a voluntary association has no right to control or access the association's properties or use its name while the suspension remains extant. 6. Persons who have not been charged, suspended or dismissed by a voluntary association cannot be declared to have ceased membership thereof.
The Court made significant obiter observations on the historical context of church schisms and the relationship between parent churches and local branches in post-colonial Africa. Hlatshwayo JA noted that the spirit of freedom following Zimbabwe's independence in 1980 precipitated rapid growth of independent churches, and that tensions between metropole-based parent churches and peripheral local branches that survived colonial conquest and independence struggles must now respond to democratic dispensation demands. The Court observed that these tensions should not be dismissed as "mere ruses of charlatans and greedy leaders of poor peripheral congregations." The Court also made obiter comments criticizing the carelessness of legal practitioners in drafting the notice of appeal, which incorrectly referred to parties as "Applicant" and "Respondents" rather than "Appellants" and "Respondent," noting that "this lack of attentiveness by legal practitioners is the kind of carelessness that should never manifest at this level of litigation." The Court further observed that "in too many church or voluntary association-related disputes, the parties attempt to abuse the issue of locus standi in order to outwit each other and avoid the merits of the matter being adjudicated upon" and stated it was "high time that the court...takes a robust approach and leans in favour of finding that locus standi exists."
This case is significant in Zimbabwean and South African jurisprudence as it establishes the proper approach for civil courts in resolving church and voluntary association property disputes in post-colonial democratic societies. The judgment affirms the "neutral principles" approach, requiring courts to avoid entanglement in religious doctrinal issues while enforcing express constitutional provisions and applying objective trust and property law principles. The case clarifies that a church-incorporated legal persona has locus standi to protect its interests when former leaders purport to act on its behalf without authority. Importantly, it establishes that civil courts should defer to church disciplinary processes and cannot declare members dismissed based on alleged doctrinal violations when the church itself has only imposed suspension. The judgment addresses the tensions between parent churches established during colonial times and their local branches in the democratic era, recognizing these as legitimate issues requiring resolution through proper constitutional processes rather than unilateral declarations. It reinforces that suspension does not terminate membership and that suspended members cannot control church property during the suspension period.