Brown v. Langdon

1 Smith & H. 178
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 15, 1807
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Smith & H. 178 (Brown v. Langdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Langdon, 1 Smith & H. 178 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1807).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

summed up to the jury, February Term, 1807.

In this case, Brown and Larkin are merely nominal plaintiffs. The real party plaintiff is St. John’s Church. If the church recover, it must be because they have a good title. If the church has no title, it is immaterial whether the defendants have any title or not. The church must also prove a seisin within thirty years next before March 1, 1805.

Act of incorporation was passed Feb. 15, 1791.

[The plaintiffs claim title under devise of Samuel Sherburne.]

Will of Henry Sherburne, Dec. 27, 1757, proved April 29, 1758; devise of premises to his sons, Samuel and Henry, in fee. Will of Samuel Sherburne, Feb. 5, 1765, proved Feb. 18, 1765, is in these words: “ I give and bequeath to the Church of England, as by law established in the town of Portsmouth, £2,000, old tenor; to the support of an organist in Queen’s Chapel, under the care and direction'of the vestry and churchwardens for the time being. I give and bequeath to the said church or chapel my moiety or half part of a pasture or lot of land and meadow (the premises) ; which said tract was given me by my honored father in his last will and testament; and this bequest to be under the directions of the church-wardens of said parish for the time being, and to remain as a perpetual [181]*181glebe to the said church and parish, and to their successors for ever.” He then devises to the church another small lot, to be under the care and directions of the church-wardens and vestry as aforesaid, intended as a place to rebuild a school-house upon, to have and to hold the same to the church-wardens and vestry for the time being, for ever.

From these papers it appears that Samuel Sherburne was the owner (for Col. Henry Sherburne’s, his father’s, title is admitted) in 1765 ; that he attempted to devise it, by his will of that date, to the Church of England as by law established in Portsmouth, or Queen’s Chapel in said town. There is no doubt Samuel Sherburne was capable of devising; but can the plaintiffs, St. John’s Church, take and hold the estate devised ? If they cannot, verdict must be in favor of defendants, and the land will either go to the residuary devisee in Samuel Sherburne’s will, or to his heirs at law. It is very clear that Samuel Sherburne could have accomplished his end in another form, against which there could be no objection. He might have devised to certain persons, to hold for specified purposes, or in trust to apply the rents and profits to the use of the minister officiating in that church or chapel. 2 Wooddes. 276, n. 7c. The legal property would in that case have been in the devisees, and they, or (if so provided in the devise) the survivor, might convey to others to hold in trust as before.

If this church had been incorporated in 1765, as they were in 1791, it is said, by defendant’s counsel, they could not take by devise. If they could purchase in any other way, I see no reason why they could not take in this way. I have not had an opportunity, on this point, of availing myself of information acquired by former researches into the powers and capacities of corporate bodies in this State. But at present I see no reason to doubt but that a body politic, like our towns, parishes, or religious societies, is capable of taking by devise, independent of any special authority contained in an act of incorporation.

But it is further said that, supposing the Episcopal Church incorporated in 1765, still this devise would not give them the property in question. This action is brought by St. John’s Church, and the devise was to the Church of England by law [182]*182established in Portsmouth, or Queen’s Chapel. At present, I am of opinion there is nothing in this objection. [16 Mass. 495, cited in margin.] If the church was a body politic in 1765, by the name of Queen’s Chapel, this devise is, in point of form, sufficient to transfer the property to them,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Smith & H. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-langdon-nhsuperct-1807.