A finding by the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands that
the parties sued as defendants do not constitute a judicial entity
such as a
cofradia is not open to reexamination in this
Court.
Where the reasons of the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands
for refusing to grant a new trial on ground of newly discovered
evidence
Page 212 U. S. 464
do not appear, their sufficiency must be presumed, and the
question is not open in this Court.
The Roman Catholic Church has a legal personality and the
capacity to hold property in the insular possessions of the United
States, and this right is not affected by the fact that the
property was acquired by gift or from the public funds.
Ponce
v. Roman Catholic Church, 210 U. S. 296.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought by the defendants in error to recover
a chapel. They obtained a judgment which was affirmed by the
Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands, and then was brought here
by writ of error. The errors assigned are that the court denied the
existence of a
cofradia alleged by the answer to own the
property, and held that it was not a "judicial entity," and that it
was not entitled to possession; that the court held that the Roman
Catholic Church was entitled to the possession of the property;
that it denied a motion for a new trial, and that it ordered the
defendants to deliver possession to the plaintiffs. The facts
found, so far as material, are that the chapel always was devoted
to the ceremonies and worship of the Roman Catholic Church until
December, 1902, when it was taken possession of by members of an
Aglipayan community, who have kept possession and worshipped there
up to the present time; that it was built, and, as we gather, the
lot on which it stands acquired, from gifts of the residents of the
barrio of Concepcion, where the chapel is, these gifts having been
intended to be for the uses of the Roman Catholic Church and
Page 212 U. S. 465
for the exclusive benefit of those who professed the Roman
Catholic religion, and that many of the benefactors still wish the
chapel to be devoted to the former worship, and by the present
occupation are deprived of its use.
The finding that the existence of the
cofradia is not
proved is not open to reexamination here, as only questions of law
are brought up. So as to the affirmance of the refusal to grant a
new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. The evidence
may have been important, but the reasons for the refusal do not
appear, and must be presumed to have been sufficient, as they very
well may have been. The only questions open are those raised by the
decision that the Roman Catholic Church is entitled to the
possession of the property, and they now have been answered by
Ponce v. Roman Catholic Church, 210 U.
S. 296. In that case,
Barlin v. Ramirez, 7
Phil. 41, on the authority of which the present case was decided,
is referred to with approval; the legal personality of the Roman
Church, and its capacity to hold property in our insular
possessions, is recognized, and the fact that such property was
acquired from gifts, even of public funds, is held not to affect
the absoluteness of its right. We think it unnecessary to repeat
the discussion. In this case, the Roman Catholic Church appears to
have been in possession until ejected by the defendants without
right, and, so far as the facts before this Court go, appears
actually to own the property concerned.
Judgment affirmed.