Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts v. Town of New Haven

21 U.S. 464, 5 L. Ed. 662, 8 Wheat. 464, 1823 U.S. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 12, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 21 U.S. 464 (Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts v. Town of New Haven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts v. Town of New Haven, 21 U.S. 464, 5 L. Ed. 662, 8 Wheat. 464, 1823 U.S. LEXIS 291 (1823).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court, and, after stating the case, proceeded as follows : — It has been contended by the counsel for the defendants, 1st. That the capacity of the plaintiffs, as a corporation, to hold lands in Vermont, ceased by, and as a consequence of, the revolution : 2d. That the society being, in its politic capacity, a foreign corporation, it is incapable of holding land in Vermont, on the ground of alienage ; and that its rights are not protected by the treaty of peace : 3d. That if they were so protected, still, the effect of the last war between the United States and Great Britain, was to put an end to that treaty, and, consequently, to rights derived under it, unless they had been revived by the treaty of peace, which was not done.

1. Before entering upon an examination of the first objection, it may be proper to premise, that this society is to be considered as a private eleemosynary *corporation, although it was created by a charter from the crown, for the administration of a public charity. The endowment of the corporation was to be derived solely from the benefactions of those who might think proper to bestow them, and to this end, the society was made capable to purchase and receive real estates, in fee, to a certain annual value, and also estates for life, and for years, and all manner of goods and chattels, to any amount.

When the defendants’ counsel contends, that the incapacity of this corporation to hold lands in Vermont, is a consequence of the revolution, he is not undei-stood to mean, that the destruction of civil rights, existing at the close of the revolution, was, generally speaking, a consequence of the dismemberment of the empire. If that could ever have been made a serious question, it has long since been settled in this and other courts of the United States. In the case of Dawson's Lessee v. Godfrey (4 Cranch 323), it was laid down by the judge who delivered the opinion of the court, that the effect of the revolution was not to deprive an individual of his civil rights ; and in the case of Terrett v. Taylor (9 Cranch 43), and of Dartmouth College v. Woodward (4 Wheat. 518), the court applied the same principles to private corporations existing within the United States at the period of the revolution. It is very obvious, from the course of reasoning adopted in the last two cases, that the court was not impressed by any circumstance peculiar to such corporations, which distinguished them, in *this respect, from natural persons; on the contrary, they were placed upon precisely the same ground. In Terrett v. Taylor, it was stated, that the dissolution of the regal government, no more destroyed the rights of the church to possess and enjoy the property which belonged to it, than it did the right of any other corporation or individual, to his or its own property. In the latter case, the chief justice, in reference to the corpora, *214 tion of the college, observes, that it is too clear to require the support of argument, that all contracts and rights respecting property remained unchanged by the revolution; and the same sentiment was enforced, more at length, by the other judge who noticed this point in the cause.

The counsel, then, intended, no doubt, to confine this objection to a corporation consisting of British subjects, and existing in its corporate capacity, in England, which is the very case under consideration. But if it be true, that there is no difference between a corporation and a natural person, in respect to their capacity to hold real property ; if the civil rights of both are the same, and are equally unaffected by the dismemberment of the empire, it is difficult to perceive, upon what ground, the civil rights of a British corporation should be lost, as a consequence of the revolution, when it is admitted, that those of an individual would remain unaffected by the same circumstance.

But it is contended by the counsel, that the principle so firmly established, in relation to corporations ^existing in the United States, at the period of the revolution, is inapplicable to this corporation, inasmuch as the courts of Vermont can exercise no jurisdiction over it, to take away its franchises, in case of a forfeiture of them, by misuser or non-user, or in any manner to change the trustees, however necessary such interference might be, for the due administration and management of the charity. If this be a sound reason for the alleged distinction, it would equally apply to other ■ trusts, where the trustees happened to be British subjects, residing in England, and entitled to lands in Vermont, not as a corporate body, but as natural persons, claiming under a common grant.. The question of amenability to the tribunals of Vermont, would be the same in both cases, as would be the consequent incapacity of both to hold the property to which they had an unquestionable legal title, at the period of the revolution.

It is very true, as the counsel has insisted, that the courts of Vermont might not have jurisdiction in the specified cases; and it is quite clear, that were they to exercise it, and decree a forfeiture of the franchises of the corporation, or the removal of the trustees, the plaintiffs would not be less a corporation, clothed with all its corporate rights and franchises. But it is not perceived by the eourt, how this exemption of the corporation from the jurisdiction of a foreign court to forfeit its franchises, or to interfere in its management of the charity, can destroy, or in any manner affect its civil rights, or its capacity to hold and enjoy the property legally *vested in it. It would surely be an extraordinary principle of law, which should visit such a corporation with the same consequences, on account of a want of jurisdiction in the courts of the country where the property lies, to inquire into its conduct, as would happen, if, after such an inquiry, judicially made, the corporation should be found to have forfeited its franchises ; in other words, that the possibility that the corporation might commit a forfeiture, which the law will not presume, or might require the interference of a court of chancery to enforce the due administration of the charter, which might never happen, should produce a forfeiture, or something equivalent to it, of the very funds which were, in whole, or in part, to feed and sustain the charity. This, nevertheless, seems to be the amount of the argument, and it is deemed by the court too unreasonable to be maintained, unless it appeared to be warranted by judicial decisions. It would seem, *215 that the state in which the property lies ought to be satisfied, that the courts of the country in which the corporation exists, will not permit it to abuse the trusts confided to it, or to want their assistance, when it may be required to enable it to perform them in a proper way.

Were it even to be admitted, that the legislature of Vermont was competent to pronounce a sentence of forfeiture of the property belonging to this corporation, upon the ground of its having abused, or not used its franchises, still, the act of 1794 does not profess to have proceeded upon that ground. The only reasons assigned in the ^preamble of the act, for depriving the plaintiffs of this property, are: 1.

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21 U.S. 464, 5 L. Ed. 662, 8 Wheat. 464, 1823 U.S. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/society-for-the-propagation-of-the-gospel-in-foreign-parts-v-town-of-new-scotus-1823.