Gram v. Prussia Emigrated Evangelical Lutheran German Society

36 N.Y. 161, 3 Trans. App. 339
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 36 N.Y. 161 (Gram v. Prussia Emigrated Evangelical Lutheran German Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gram v. Prussia Emigrated Evangelical Lutheran German Society, 36 N.Y. 161, 3 Trans. App. 339 (N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

Parked, J.

We may assume, from the facts found by the referee, that the religious incorporation named as one of the Defendants in this case received and held, so far as it might legally do so, the property which it held, under certain trusts, for the propagation and support of the German Evangelical Lutheran faith, including doctrines and government, as held and practised by the German Evangelical Lutheran churches under the Synod of Buffalo and its ministry.

Also, that the action of the Defendants’ trustees, in prohibiting the Plaintiff Gram, pastor of the church, from performing his functions as such pastor in the church edifice, and excluding the Plaintiff Hoge, the school-teacher, chorister, and sexton of said church, from the performance of his functions as such teacher, chorister, and sexton, was in violation of the rules of ecclesiastical government of the Lutheran churches, and of the rights of the Plaintiffs under the same.

The referee, conceding these facts, held, as a conclusion of law, that the Plaintiffs were entitled to no relief, for the reason that *340 the trusts sought to be created were unauthorized by law, and void; and the property vested in, and was held by, the said incorporation unaffected thereby.

Unless the Plaintiffs can sustain the trusts which they allege the Defendants have violated without invoking to their aid the law of charitable uses, as an existing operative system, independent of our statutes of uses and trusts, they cannot under the law, as settled by the decisions of this court, sustain them. The subject of charitable uses was very thoroughly examined in the recent case of Bascom v. Albertson (34 N. Y. 884), and the conclusion clearly and definitely reached, that they are not excepted from the provision of our statute that uses and trusts, except as authorized and modified by the statute itself, are in this State abolished.

We are brought then to the inquiry, whether the trusts in question can be sustained as being authorized by statute. Manifestly, no authority for the creation or allowance of such trusts as these can be found in the article of the Prevised Statutes entitled “ Of uses and trusts.” Is there anything in the charter of this religious incorporation by which they can be sustained 1

The society was incorporated under the general act providing for the incorporation of religious societies, passed April 5, 1813. This act was not repealed by the Devised Statutes, but has remained in operation from the time of its passage to the present time, and, undoubtedly, whatever powers are given by it to the religious societies incorporated under it, are entirely unaffected by the provisions of the Devised Statutes in relation to trusts and perpetuities (Tucker v. St. Clement’s Church, 3 Sand. S. C. 242; S. C. 4 Seld. 558). Every conveyance of lands to such corporations creates a perpetuity, and necessarily implies a trust, although none be expressed. The trusts, however, upon which the trustees of such societies hold the property committed to their charge, cannot be referred to any class of those cases which are authorized by the Devised Statutes, but are dependent entirely upon the provisions of the Act of 1813, above referred to.

It is necessary, then, to ascertain what is the scope and intent *341 of that act, in reference to the property which it allows the religious societies incorporated under it to receive and hold. The trustees of every such society are, by the fourth section of the act, authorized to take into their possession all the temporalities belonging to the society, whether real or personal estate, and whether given, granted, or devised directly to the society, or to any other person for their use; and to receive, hold, and enjoy all churches, meeting-houses, parsonages, and burying-, places, with the appurtenances and estates belonging to the society, in whatsoever manner the same may have been acquired, or in whose name soever the same may be held, as fully and amply as if the right or title thereto had originally been vested in the said trustees; and also to purchase and hold other real and personal estate, and to demise, lease, and improve the same for the use of such society, or other pious uses ; also to repair and alter the churches or meeting-houses, and to erect others if necessary, and to erect dwelling-houses for the use of their.ministers, and school-houses and other buildings for the use of the society, and to make rules and orders for managing the temporal affairs of the society, and to dispose of all moneys belonging thereto, and to regulate and order the renting of the pews in their churches or meeting-houses, and the perquisites for the breaking of ground in the cemetery or churchyards, and in the churches and meeting-houses, for burying the dead; and all other matters relating to the temporal concerns and revenues of the society.

The third section provides the mode by which a religious society may become incorporated at a meeting of the male persons of full age belonging to the church, congregation, or society, held at the church, meeting-house, or other place where they statedly attend for divine worship; and also who are entitled to vote for trustees at the election then held, being every male person of full age who has statedly worshipped with such church, congregation, or society, and has formerly been considered as belonging thereto. And the seventh section provides, in regard to voters at every succeeding election of trustees, that none shall vote except those *342 who have been stated attendants on divine worship in the said church, congregation, or society, at least one year before such election, and shall have contributed to the support of the church, congregation, or society, according to the usages and customs thereof.

In the case of Robertson v. Bullions (1 Kern. 243), in determining the questions presented to the Court, in respect to the removal of trustees of religious corporations, and their obligations to account, it became necessary to pass, to some extent, upon the powers, duties, and functions of such trustees, the tenure by which they hold the corporate property, and the nature of the trusts committed to their charge. One of the questions arising in the case, and which was discussed and decided, was, whether the trustees alone constitute the corporation, and, as such, hold the property in trust for the society existing as a voluntary association, their relation to the society being simply that of a trustee to his cestui que trust, or not, and it was held “ that a religious corporation, under our statute, consists not of the trustees alone, but of members of the society; that the society itself is incorporated, and not merely the trustees and its members are the corporators; that the relation of the trustees to the society is not that of a private trustee to the cestui que trust, but they are the managing officers of the corporation, and trustees in the same sense in which the president and directors of a bank or railroad company are trustees, and are invested, in regard to the temporal affairs of the society, with the powers specifically conferred by the statute, and with the ordinary discretionary powers of similar corporate officers.”

It was also held in that case

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.Y. 161, 3 Trans. App. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gram-v-prussia-emigrated-evangelical-lutheran-german-society-ny-1867.