Presbyterian Congregation v. Johnston

1 Watts & Serg. 9
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1 Watts & Serg. 9 (Presbyterian Congregation v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Presbyterian Congregation v. Johnston, 1 Watts & Serg. 9 (Pa. 1841).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Gibson, C. J.

This ejectment is brought in the name of the corporation by a minority of the congregation, who, having withdrawn from its stated worship in the church building, insist that the majority have forfeited their corporate rights by dissolving the connexion of the congregation with the Presbytery of Carlisle, and the primitive General Assembly ; and to understand the grounds on which they have placed the controversy, it is necessary to state the case with its circumstances.

The congregation was formed in 1762; for it was proved at the trial that ministerial supplies were furnished in that year by the Presbytery of Donegal, and subsequently by the Presbytery of Carlisle, under whose care it remained till the late convulsion of the Presbyterian body induced it, while disclaiming all intention to become an independent church, to decline for the present the jurisdiction of the conflicting judicatories. Its pulpit seems not to have been regularly filled till the installation of the Reverend Doctor Cathcart in 1793. Such were its origin and ecclesiastical relations. The property in contest was conveyed by John Penn, Sen. and John Penn, Jun., late proprietaries of the province of Pennsylvania, to George Irwin, William Scott, and Archibald M’Lean, “ in trust for, and as a site for a house of religious worship, and a burial place for the use of the said religious society of English Presbyterians and their successors, in and near the said town of York in the county of York; and in confidence that they, the said George Irwin, William Scott, and Archibald M’Lean, and the survivor of them, their and his heirs and assigns, shall and will permit and suffer the said lot or piece of ground and premises and the buildings thereon hereafter to be erected, to be from time to time, and at all times hereafter, at ,the disposal and under the care, regulation, and management of the said religious society and their successors in and near the town of York aforesaid; and to and for no other use, intent, or purpose whatsoever.” The church seems to have been built shortly afterwards, but it was not finished before the installation of Doctor Cathcart. The congregation obtained a patent of incorporation in 1813, by the style of “ The Trustees of the English Presbyterian Congregation in the borough of York ;” but the legal title of the original trustees has not been conveyed to it, and the corporation is now, what the congregation were before, the party beneficially entitled. It will be perceived [36]*36therefore that the minority attempt to use the corporate name in order to oust the majority for an.alleged forféiture of their corporate rights, incurred, as it is supposed, by an application of the property to uses differing from those which the founders prescribed.

By the common law he who gives the first possessions to a corporation is the founder of it, and entitled to the rights which the foundership gives. Viner’s Abr. Tit. Corporations H. 1. These consist in visitation, and correction of any misapplication of his bounty to purposes foreign to its original destination. What then was the purpose prescribed by the Messrs. Penn? It was no more than to carry out the generous policy of their ancestor, the founder of the province, who, though rigidly attached to the principles of the society of Friends, was bigoted to no'particular sect; but munificent to all; and’ who left each to apply his gifts to such pious uses as it might think fit. That his descendants followed his example in this instance, is shown by the terms of the trust, which prescribed no form of doctrine or discipline, the beneficiary being described as the English Presbyterian Congregation, evidently to individuate it; and that subjection to a particular assembly, was not a condition of the grant, is proved by the fact that there was at that time no such assembly in America. The conveyance was executed in 1785; and the General Assembly of the American Presbyterian Church was constituted by the synod of New York and Philadelphia in 1788. It may be said that this congregation was'connected with the elements of which the General Assembly was formed, and that it is bound to conform to those subsequent changes to which its representatives in the synod assented. But were the founders, or the subject of their bounty bound by terms to which the founders did not originally assent ? The original terms could not be altered even with their own consent ; for that they are as incompetent as any one else to add to, or take away from them, was ruled in Philips v. Bury, Skin. 513, in which it was agreed that the founder having given statutes to a college, can not alter them unless he has reserved a right to do so. As tests of sectarian denomination and character, therefore, the divisions that have since taken place about the constitution of the .General Assembly must be laid out of the case. The founders foresaw them not; and had they foreseen them, they would have left them to be dealt with by the congregation at its pleasure. The members of the congregation who erected the building may be thought to have had a separate interest of thejr own in the purpose to which it was to be dedicated; but even they cannot be said to have erected it with a view to a particular union, for though it was not finished till after the assembly was constituted, it was begun, and the pecuniary responsibilities incident to the plan were contracted previously. But by the common law, even subsequent contributors have no other right of [37]*37direction than that which the founder has prescribed; for they come in and give their money on a basis already established, and they can neither add to it nor take any thing from it. If then the Messrs. Penn necessarily gave the ground in contest, subject to the direction of a majority bearing the name of Presbyterians, subsequent contributors with particular views, could not change the destination of it. But though no standard of discipline or faith be prescribed in the conveyance or charter of incorporation, I entirely concur in what Lord Eldon said in the Attorney General v. Pearson, 3 Meriv. Rep. 353, that “ when a house is created for religious worship, and it cannot be discovered what was the nature of the worship intended by it, it must be implied from the usage of the congregation; and that it is the duty of the court to administer the trust in such a.manner as best to establish the usage, considering it as a mattqf of implied contract with the congregation.” I understand by this, that contemporaneous usage is evidence of an implied contract betwixt the founder and the congregation, and consequently of the purpose intended by him; but when, as here, neithér the usage nor the purpose could possibly have existed at the time material to the question, subsequent usage cannot add to that which he intended. I agree with him also, “ that when the members of a congregation become dis-sentient among themselves, it is not in the power of individuals to say, we have changed our opinions, and you who assemble in this place for the purpose of hearing the doctrines and joining in the worship prescribed by the founder, shall no longer enjoy the benefit he intended for you unless you conform to the alterations which have taken place in our opinions.” With all this and much more, I promptly agree when predicated of a congregation adhering as nearly as it can to the principles of its original faith, and not, as in that case, swerving from the tenets of trinitarianism and embracing the hostile tenets of unitarianism.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Watts & Serg. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presbyterian-congregation-v-johnston-pa-1841.