Blenon's Estate

1 Brightly 338
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Brightly 338 (Blenon's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blenon's Estate, 1 Brightly 338 (Pa. 1843).

Opinion

[348]*348The following elaborate and learned opinion was delivered by

Baldwin, J.

— This case arises on the will of Sarah Zane, a member of the society of friends, who in the body thereof, describes herself as of the city of Philadelphia: she died in Virginia, but as it has not been questioned, we shall assume this to have been the place of her domicil at the time of her death; the law of the state must therefore govern her disposition of her personal property, as well as of her real estate situated here. 1 Binn. 336, 44; 3 R. 318; 3 Penn. Rep. 187, 8.

The questions which have been made in the argument, and those which necessarily afise in the case, are of the most interesting kind; involving the capacity of the Quaker societies of this and other states, to take real or personal estate by devise, without a charter of incorporation; their right to enjoy [349]*349it for their own use, as a body united for the purposes of religion, charity and education; and what now are, by the Jaw of the land, pious and charitable uses, for which valid donations can be made by deed or will.

In referring to the history of the settlement of this state, the principles of its first settlers, the character of its founder, his systems and institutions, it would seem not a little surprising, that such questions could have remained open till this time: if there are any subjects on which the law could be supposed to be settled, it would be the rights of religious societies and charitable establishments. If there was any part of the law of England which could be congenial to the spirit and policy of the colony, and likely to be adopted by a society of men who sought an asylum from persecution for religious opinion, it would be that which would afford the best protection in the enjoyment of their rights, privileges, immunities and estates, as a religious society. If there were any laws which they would be disposed to leave behind them, they would be those which grew out of feudal tenures, a spirit of persecution, or an established religion; the last laws which they would introduce, would be those which created a forfeiture of all land conveyed to a society incorporated for the purposes of charity and religious worship, according to their own consciences, without regard to the mode of celebrating divine service as prescribed by law, or which prevent a donation for such uses from taking effect, without a special license by charter or act of assembly. Such would be the natural conclusion from the known and practical principles of civil and religious liberty, which have distinguished the policy and jurisprudence of this state through all time, as founded on a system of “free and unlimited Catholicism” in matters of religion, of expanded benevolence in matters of charity, and equality of rights in the enjoyment of property.

These leading features are so strongly impressed on the written laws, and enter so deeply into the customs and common law of the state, as to make it impossible to mistake the character and tendency of the system in the details of its legislation, by colonial authority, or the adoption of the statutes or common law of England. It is not conceivable that the Quaker settlers of this province should have introduced those laws of .the mother country, which would incapacitate them as individuals, or a religious society, from taking, holding or enjoying property as a matter of right without a charter; or expose to a forfeiture to the proprietor, or mesne landlord, lands conveyed to them for the purposes of sepulture, religious worship, or charity, and above all, that William Penn should have adopted the statutes of Henry VIII. declaring the celebration of divine service according to the rites of the catholic church, to be superstitious, and conveyances for its use illegal and void; and the statutes of mortmain which make the enjoyment of property by a religious body, dependent on the pleasure and permission of the lord of the fee; while at the same time he excludes the statute of the 43 Eliz., and the mild and beneficent principles of the common law which that statute has been held to have restored.

The history of the society of Quakers, presents no instance of an incorporation: — did they adopt any rule of law, making one necessary to give them a legal capacity to purchase property"? They have enjoyed it from the earliest time without a license in mortmain — is it liable to be now seized by the state [350]*350as forfeited by the purchaser ? They have their own modes of worship and system of charities — are donations for their support to be regulated by the prohibitory statutes of a foreign country, or confined to the uses specified in its laws? 2 Ves. Sen. 475. They have kindred societies in other states — do the laws of this invalidate a bequest of money to them for purposes of piety and charity 1 These are questions which have been made by the counsel in their objections to the devise of the lot of ground to the yearly meeting of Philadelphia, and the pecuniary bequests to the several meetings of friends in this place, and in Maryland, Virginia and Ohio. The objections to the validity of the dispositions of this will, are not founded on any statutory law of Pennsylvania, but on the English statutes of mortmain, superstitious uses, and wills, alleged to be in force in this state by usage, though not adopted by any act of assembly. The principles of the common law have also been relied on, as supporting the objection to the capacity of the parties to take, for the want of an incorporation, as well as of an act of assembly, containing enabling provisions, analogous to the 43 Eliz., validating dispositions for religious, literary and charitable purposes, and giving jurisdiction to the courts to carry them into effect, as they can do in England.

The field of investigation is from its nature a broad -one, and from the confined course which has been taken in discussing the law of charities in the various cases which have arisen is, in a great measure, a new one.

Though there are several statutes on the subject in England, prior to the 43 Eliz., no treatise or opinion contains a condensed or comparative view of the system of charities, which has grown out of them, so as to enable us by any authority of precedent, or adjudication, to ascertain the definite source of the various principles, which have from time to time, become embodied into the general course of the law of England. Nor have the courts of the United States, or of this state, brought into contrast or comparison, either the policy of the government of England and this country, in relation to religious establishments and rights of conscience, the general course of legislation pursued in either, or the principles of the common law independent of the statutes alluded to.

Proceeding on the assumption that the 43 Eliz. was the only foundation on which charities could be supported, in opposition to prior statutes, and that statute not being considered in force here unless re-enacted, the courts in this country have laid down principles, which resting solely on such assumption, cannot be considered as authoritative in their conclusions, if on a more thorough examination the premises on which they depend should appear to be erroneous. We trust that a review of the course of their adjudication on charities will show that it has not become so settled as to be sanctioned by the maxim of “ communis error facit jus,”

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Related

Ex parte Blumer
86 Pa. 371 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1878)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Brightly 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blenons-estate-pa-1843.