Everett v. Trustees of the First Presbyterian Church

53 N.J. Eq. 500
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 53 N.J. Eq. 500 (Everett v. Trustees of the First Presbyterian Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Everett v. Trustees of the First Presbyterian Church, 53 N.J. Eq. 500 (N.J. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

This is, in substance and effect, a suit to recover possession of land, viz., a parsonage-house or manse, and lot.

The defendant, Howard T. Widdemer, is in possession by the permission and as the tenant of the defendant corporation, the Trustees of the First Presbyterian Church of Asbury Park, which holds the legal title to the same.

The ostensible ground for coming into a court of equity for relief is that the legal title is in the defendant corporation, and that it is guilty of a breach of trust in permitting the defendant Widdemer to remain in the possession of the premises; and the prayer is for relief against such breach of trust by enjoining said Widdemer from longer remaining in the possession of the premises and the defendant corporation from permitting him there to remain.

Ho question was raised but that if there be such a breach of trust, and the complainants have standing in this court to complain of it, then they are entitled to the relief sought, and I shall assume, for present purposes, that such is the law of this court. Of course there can be no other ground for coming to this court.

Two questions are raised by the record and were fully discussed at the argument.

[502]*502First. Are the complainants, or either of them, entitled to a standing in this court for the purpose of calling the defendant corporation to account for breach of trust in the premises ?

Second. If so, has there been any breach of trust ?

As to the first question :

The complainant Edward I. Eord is an officer of the church society, which is Presbyterian in its organization, known as a ruling elder, and was, at the time of the filing of the bill, sole acting ruling elder of the church, all the others having been deposed by action of the Presbytery of Monmouth, of which the church, as a spiritual organization, is a part. The complainant Charles Everett is a clergyman of the Presbyterian denomination, a member of the Presbytery of Monmouth, and was appointed by that Presbytery to act as moderator of the session— a body composed of the several ruling elders — of the church while the pastorate was vacant. This was done in accordance with a rule of the Presbyterian church that a session cannot act as a court without the presence, if practicable, of a clergyman as a moderator. Ordinarily the pastor of the church is the moderator, but in the absence of a settled pastor it is the function of the Presbytery to appoint one to act as such. Mr. Everett is not a member of the congregation. The two compose, as they assert, the session of the church, and claim as such.

Let us now inquire as to the standing of these individuals, or either of them, in a court of equity to call the defendant corporation to account.

It is proper to observe, in entering upon this inquiry, that this court takes notice only of property rights, or, to use the language of Chief-Justice Redfield, in his note to Hennessy v. Walsh, 15 Am. L. Reg. (N. S.) 264 (at p. 277): “And to this extent the cases all agree that it must be the unlawful infringement of some personal right of pecuniary value and of a character redressible in the civil courts, in order to justify their' interference in matters professedly of ecclesiastical cognizance.” It can be appealed to only to enforce such rights, and it takes no notice of ecclesiastical doctrines, organization or discipline, except so far as they, or either of them, may affect property [503]*503rights. It follows from this consideration that the inquiry must be as to whether the complainants have any personal property rights of pecuniary value in- the lands in question.

In the case in hand there, is no pretence that either of the complainants has any right of occupation or personal use of the manse. The only property right of that nature which either of them can have in any landed property of the church society is the right to use the church edifice as a place of worship. This is the ordinary use made of houses of worship by attendants therein, and from the nature of the case there can be no other. It is a use which is common to all those entitled by law to worship in a particular edifice, and is not exclusive in its nature, but may be exercised by many persons at one time. It is a beneficial use which, in legal contemplation, has a pecuniary value, and any person who has a right to such use is entitled to resort to the civil courts to protect it.

The manse or parsonage-house owned by a religious society stands upon different footing. There is no right of use in common in that. It is not a sacred building like a church edifice, but is, properly speaking, an endowment or source of pecuniary revenue to aid in support of the worship in the church proper. Its use is not spiritual, but temporal. Though it is ordinarily used as a residence for the pastor, there is nothing in its character or ownership to prevent its being used for other purposes as circumstances may render it profitable or beneficial. It follows that the only property right, legal or equitable, which any individual can have in such manse must be acquired either by a lease or grant from its legal or equitable owner — in this case the parish meeting or the trustees — or from the enjoyment, in common with other members of the society, of the benefit of the pecuniary income derived from its occupation.

Let us inquire whether the complainants occupy such position. It is a conceded proposition that the defendant corporation is not only in name but in fact a mere trustee. It was organized under the first section of the “Act to incorporate trustees of religious societies.” Rev. p. 958. In one aspect the trust upon which it holds the title to property is but a simple one — that is, it is not [504]*504accompanied with any right or power to use or dispose of the property otherwise than at the direction of the cestuis que trustent. Morgan v. Rose, 7 C. E. Gr. 583; Worrell v. Presbyterian Church, 8 C. E. Gr. 96. But while this is so, the act contemplates that the corporation shall not be a mere passive trustee, but shall perform certain active duties requiring the exercise of judgment and discretion, subject always to the direction of the cestui que trust. This is apparent from a perusal of the sixth and seventh sections of the act. And, in point of fact, such has always been the practice in Presbyterian societies in this state. Indeed, the trustees, besides forming a distinct corporate body for the purpose of holding the title to the landed property, also as individuals act as a standing committee of the society or congregation, with power to execute its will when properly expressed, in all matters relating to the temporalities of the society. Worrell v. Church, 8 C. E. Gr. 96 (at p. 105); Robertson v. Bullion, 9 Barb. 64 (at pp. 101, 102). In applying what is there said by the learned judge in his elaborate and carefully-prepared judgment, where all the authorities are collected, it must be borne in mind that, under the New York statute, a religious corporation is composed of all the members of the congregation, while in ours it is composed only of the trustees, who .hold in trust for the congregation.

The defendant corporation, being a trustee merely, it follows that it must have a cestui que trust or cestuis que trustent, and the general rule is that only a cestui que trust

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.J. Eq. 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everett-v-trustees-of-the-first-presbyterian-church-njch-1895.