In re the Corporation of Brick Presbyterian Church

3 Edw. Ch. 155
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 26, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 3 Edw. Ch. 155 (In re the Corporation of Brick Presbyterian Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Corporation of Brick Presbyterian Church, 3 Edw. Ch. 155 (N.Y. 1837).

Opinion

The Vice-Chancellor :

The matter before the court, as it now appears upon the master’s report and the mass of testimony connected with it, presents questions which go first to the right of the corporation to sell; and secondly, to the expediency of a sale and consequent removal of the church ?

I shall, however, first notice the necessity of coming to this [157]*157court for leave to sell; and, as to the power of the court of chancery in the case.

By a law passed in the year one thousand eight hundred and six, and continued in the statute book to this day, it is de- • j * dared to be lawful for the chancellor of this state, upon the application of any religious corporation, in case he shall deem it proper, to make order for the sale of any real estate belonging to such corporation, and to direct the application of the moneys arising therefrom by the said corporation, to such uses as the same corporation, with the consent and approbation of the chancellor, shall conceive to be most for the interest of the society to which the real estate so sold did belong:" R. S. 298, § 11.

The object and necessity of this law is explained by the chancellor in the case of The Reformed Protestant Dutch Church in Garden Street v. Mott et al., 7 Paige, 77.

In carrying out the intention of the law, a sound discretion must be exercised. The power to make an order for a sale is given in cases where the Chancellor “ shall deem it proper ” ; and, not otherwise.

It has been said, in the present case, that it is “ improper ” to allow an order for a sale, because the corporation of the city of New-York, the proposed purchasers, have not actually agreed to buy. But I understand the fact to be otherwise ; and the trustees only ask for a provisional order, in the first instance, authorizing them to sell at a price not less than one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and so that if a purchaser cannot be found at that sum, there will be no sale. If one be found and an actual agreement is made, the court, by a subsequent order, can approve and confirm it and direct the application of the proceeds.

Another objection raised against an order for a sale is, that no new site or location for the church is fixed upon by the trustees ; that they have no particular place in view to remove to.

Here, again, I see no insuperable difficulty. A conditional order may be made in the first instance. The trustees do not propose to give possession of the old church, but to reserve the use of it for public worship, until they can procure a site and erect a new edifice.

The case, then, resolves itself into the question, whether [158]*158the trustees have a right and can lawfully sell, without the consent of all the pew holders, hut especially of the vault owners; and if the trustees have such right, then, as to the expediency of the measure ? The first of these questions,

that is, as to the right, affects the interest of some who are not, at present, members of the congregation, and have no connection with the church as a spiritual body; and the other, as to the expediency of a sale, affects those exclusively who are in the latter point of view connected with the church as stated hearers, communicants and worshippers, whether they be pew-holders or not.

The objections to a sale are taken in behalf of some pew-holders who do not consent, and also by persons who claim to be owners of vaults; and it is insisted that no sale or alienation of the property, by which it is to be converted to secular purposes, can be made, without infringing vested legal rights.

As to pew-holders : what are their legal rights ? In England, so far at least as respects the established church, every parishioner has a right to a seat in the church. Pews are, there, a matter altogether of ecclesiastical regulation. It, is the duty of the churchwardens to distribute them in the most convenient way so as to give each parishioner a seat. The grant or faculty from the bishop may confer a greater right, as will be found sufficiently explained in the case of Heeney v. St Peter’s Church, 2 Edwards’s Ch. Rep. 608. A clear summary of the law will also be found in the notes to Corven’s Case, 12 Coke 105, (Fraser’s edit.)

Although pews are a matter of ecclesiastical regulation, yet the common law determines the right and protects a party in the enjoyment of it, by affording an action on the case for disturbance, not of trespass : because he has not the exclusive right.

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