Brooke v. Shacklett

13 Gratt. 301
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 23, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 13 Gratt. 301 (Brooke v. Shacklett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooke v. Shacklett, 13 Gratt. 301 (Va. 1856).

Opinion

Daniel, J.

delivered his opinion in the case of Brooke v. Shacklett, but it applies equally to both cases :

In the case of Gallego's ex'ors v. Attorney General, 3 Leigh 450, decided by this court in 1832, it was held that the courts of chancery in this state had ho jurisdiction to enforce devises and bequests to religious societies or congregations. The court said, that as the statute of charitable uses, 43 Eliz. under which alone such vague bequests could be established, if ever in force in Virginia, had been repealed in 1792, in the general repeal of English statutes, charitable bequests were to be treated as standing on the same footing with other bequests. If definite, they were to be treated as trusts which courts of equity would execute by virtue of their ordinary jurisdiction; but if indefinite, they were no longer recognized by law, and could not be enforced: And a devise or bequest of property to or for the uses of a religious congregation was, it was said, of the character last mentioned. It was too uncertain as to the beneficiaries.

The reasoning of the court, it is obvious, applies [310]*310with equal force to a conveyance of property to a religious congregation by deed.

I do not deem it at all necessary to enquire how far the decision in the case just cited may conform to the views of courts elsewhere in respect to this branch of the law, inasmuch as I am -not aware that the authority of the case as a true exposition of the law in this state, has been ever seriously questioned. If, therefore, the law now stood as it did prior to the passage of certain acts whose provisions will be presently noticed, I should find no difficulty in holding that the bill of the appellee ought to have been dismissed as stating no case for the jurisdiction of a court of equity. For though there can be no reverter of the property in question to the grantor or his heirs, inasmuch as the deed purports to be founded on a valuable consideration, and contains a warranty warranting to the trus'tees and their successors, the property, against the claim of the grantors, their heirs, and all persons claiming by or under them; Yet the same indefiniteness as to the beneficiaries which defeated the bequest to the Roman Catholic congregation in Gallego's ex’ors v. Attorney General, is to be found in the deed here, and would present an insuperable difficulty in the way of the court’s undertaking to control the trustees in the performance of their duties, at the instance of a beneficiary in the deed, whether he claimed a use in the property as a member of the Methodist Episcopal church, or as a member of the congregation of that church, worshiping at Salem church-house. It becomes necessary, therefore, to examine the acts of assembly just mentioned, and to enquire whether the trusts of the deed can be brought within the scope of their provisions.

The first of the acts to which I refer, is the act entitled an act concerning conveyances or devises of places of public worship, passed February 3d, 1842. [311]*311This act in substance declares, that where any lot or parcel of land has been heretofore, or shall be hereafter, conveyed to one or more trustees for the use and benefit of any religious congregation as and for a place of public worship, the same and all improvements thereupon shall be held by such trustee or trustees, and their successors, for the purposes of the trust, and not otherwise; that where such conveyance or devise has been heretofore made to trustees, or where such conveyance or devise shall hereafter be made, whether by the intervention of trustees or not, the Circuit superior court of law and chancery for the county or corporation where the property is situate, shall, on application of the attorney for the commonwealth on behalf of the authorized authorities of any such religious congregation, have power and authority to appoint trustees originally where there were none, or to substitute others from time to time, in cases of death, removal from the county or corporation, or other inability to execute the trust beneficially and conveniently; and the legal title shall thereupon become exclusively vested in the whole number of the then trustees, and their successors. The act, after further providing that a majority of the acting trustees of any such congregation may sue and be sued in relation to the title, possession or enjoyment of such property, concludes with a proviso, that such trustees, for the use of a religious congregation, shall not hereafter take or hold at any one time any tract of land in the country, exceeding in quantity thirty acres, or in any incorporated town, exceeding two acres; and that such real property shall not be held by them for any other use than as a place of public worship, religious or other instruction, burial ground and residence of their minister. The next in order is the act of 1S46-7, which gives to any one or more of the members of any religious congregation the right, in his or their [312]*312names, on behalf of such congregation, to commence au<^ prosecute a suit in equity against the trustees, to compel them to apply the property for the use or benefit of the congregation, as their duty shall require. In 1849 these acts were substantially re-enacted and are embodied in the Code, in the eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth and thirteenth sections of chapter 77. The only material changes made by these sections of the Code in the provisions of the acts of 1842 and 1846-7, are those to be found in the eighth and tenth sections ; by the former of which, validity is given not only to every conveyance and devise, but also-to every dedication of property for the uses aforesaid; and by the latter of which it is declared that when books or furniture shall be given or acquired for the benefit of such congregation, to be used on the said land in the ceremonies of public worship, or at the residence of their minister, the same shall stand vested in the trustees having the legal title to the land, to be held by them as the land is held, for the benefit of the congregation.^'

There is, I think, nothing in the language of these laws to show that the legislature designed to confer peculiar benefits on any particular religious sect or sects. And the manifestation of any such design would not only have been utterly at war with the whole spirit of our institutions, but in direct conflict with the letter of the constitution declaring that the legislature “shall not confer any peculiar privileges or advantages on any one sect or denomination.” The terms of the acts are broad enough to embrace not only such congregations as may be independent of others, choosing their own pastors, and making the laws for their own government, but also such as may be united with other congregations under a common government, from which they may respectively receive the pastors that are to instruct them or the laws that [313]*313are to regulate them, without having any voice either in the selection or appointment of the former, or in the framing or enactment of the latter. And such is, I think, the obvious design of the legislature. The benefits which these acts confer are intended for any and every religious congregation, without regard to the peculiarities of religious faith or the forms of church government.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Multi-Circuit Episcopal Church Property Litigation
76 Va. Cir. 1 (Fairfax County Circuit Court, 2008)
Hays v. Harris
80 S.E. 827 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1913)
Wilmoth v. Wilmoth
12 S.E. 731 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1890)
Finley v. Brent
11 L.R.A. 214 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1890)
Hardy v. Wiley
12 S.E. 233 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1890)
Heiskell v. Trout
8 S.E. 557 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1888)
Wilson v. Perry
1 S.E. 302 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1886)
Davis v. Mayo
82 Va. 97 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1886)
P. Episcopal E. Society v. Churchman's Reps.
80 Va. 718 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1885)
Boxwell v. Affleck
79 Va. 402 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1884)
Wade v. Hancock & Agee
76 Va. 620 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1882)
Estate of Hinckley
58 Cal. 457 (California Supreme Court, 1881)
Carskadon v. Torreyson
17 W. Va. 43 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1880)
Hoskinson v. Pusey
73 Va. 428 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1879)
Knox v. Knox's Exors.
9 W. Va. 124 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1876)
Bible Society v. Pendleton
7 W. Va. 79 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1873)
Commonwealth v. Levy
23 Va. 21 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1873)
Kelly v. Love's adm'rs
20 Va. 124 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1870)
Seaburn's Ex'or v. Seaburn
15 Va. 423 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1859)
Phippen v. Durham
8 Va. 457 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1852)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Gratt. 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooke-v-shacklett-va-1856.