A bill in equity brought to rescind a purchase made under the
decree of this Court in
Terrett v.
Taylor, 9 Cranch 43, upon the ground that the title
to the property was defective and could not be made good by the
vestry and other persons who were parties to the former suit. Bill
dismissed.
The vestry of the Episcopal "Church of Alexandria," now known by
the name of Christ's Church, is the regular vestry, in succession,
of the Parish of Fairfax, and, in connection with the minister, has
the care and management of all the temporalities of the parish
within the scope of their authority. A sale by them of the church
lands, with the assent of the minister, under the former decree of
this Court, conveys a good title to the purchaser.
Although the church wardens of a parish are not capable of
holding lands, and a deed to them and their successors in office
forever cannot operate by way of grant, yet where it contains a
covenant of general warranty, binding the grantors and their heirs
forever, it may operate by way of estoppel to confirm to the church
and its privies the perpetual and beneficial estate in the
land.
The parishioners have individually no right or title to the
glebe lands; they are the property of the parish in its aggregate
or corporate capacity, to be disposed of, for parochial purposes,
by the vestry, who are the legal agents and representatives of the
parish.
Page 22 U. S. 446
This was a bill brought by the appellant Mason to rescind a
purchase made by him, jointly with W. Jones, of a part of the glebe
land which was sold under the decree of this Court in the case of
Terrett v. Taylor, reported in
13
U. S. 9 Cranch 43. After a confirmation by the court
below, of the report of the sale made by the commissioners for this
purpose, and after various intermediate negotiations, the appellant
gave his promissory notes to John Muncaster, one of the
respondents, and George Deneale, since deceased, who were at the
time Church Wardens of the Episcopal Church of Alexandria, in
payment of part of the purchase money, and judgment having been
obtained against the appellant, upon these notes, in the Circuit
Court for the District of Columbia, the appellant also sought by
his bill a perpetual injunction of this judgment. The grounds of
the prayer of the bill were, that the title of the property was
substantially defective, and could not be made good by the Vestry,
and other persons, who were parties to the bill in the former suit;
that the same bill contained a material misrepresentation of the
facts respecting the title, of which the appellant was, at the time
of the purchase, wholly ignorant, and of which he had but recently
acquired full knowledge.
Upon the final hearing in the court below, the bill was
dismissed, and the cause was brought by appeal to this Court.
Page 22 U. S. 454
MR. JUSTICE STORY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Upon the very voluminous pleadings in this case, assuming more
the shape of elaborate arguments, than the simple and precise
allegation of facts, which belong to chancery proceedings, the
principal questions discussed have been, 1. whether the Vestry of
the Episcopal Church of Alexandria, now known by the name of
Christ's Church, is the regular vestry in succession of the Parish
of Fairfax; 2. whether the existence of another parish church,
called the Falls Church, within the same parish, has any material
bearing upon the title, either as to making parties, or settling
the right to the glebe; 3. whether the appellant had full notice of
the true nature of the title before the purchase, and so took it
with its infirmities, if any such existed; 4. whether, this being
the case of a judicial sale under a decree, the party was not bound
to have applied to the court below, before confirmation of the
sale, or
Page 22 U. S. 455
afterwards, to rescind the sale; and can now maintain an
independent bill for that purpose, the effect of such bill being
collaterally to set aside the sale, as it stands confirmed by the
report. Another point was made at the bar, as to the sufficiency of
the conveyance by Jennings to the Church Wardens, in 1770, to pass
his title in fee for the benefit of the parish. But that point was
put at rest, in the case of
Terrett v. Taylor, and is not
now open for discussion.
Page 22 U. S. 456
If the first question is decided against the plaintiff, it will
be unnecessary to consider the other question, for it is not
denied, that the Vestry of the Parish of Fairfax sufficiently
represent the whole parish for all the purposes of the original
bill, and that both by the former laws of Virginia and the canons
of the Episcopal Church, they, in connection with the minister,
have the care and management of all the temporalities of the parish
within the scope of their authority. To the consideration of this
question the attention of the Court has been mainly directed, and
it is now my duty to explain the grounds upon which we have come to
the conclusion, that the Vestry of the Episcopal Church of
Alexandria is the regular vestry in succession of the Parish of
Fairfax, and being so at the commencement of the former suit, the
main objection to the title to the glebe falls, and the bill of the
plaintiff ought to be dismissed.
By the laws of Virginia, passed antecedent to the revolution,
each parish was authorized to elect a vestry of twelve persons, to
manage their parochial concerns, and however many distinct
Episcopal churches, or places of public worship, there were within
the parish, the same vestry had the superintendence and direction
of them all. In point of fact, there were two such places of
worship within the Parish of Fairfax, the church at Alexandria, and
the Falls Church; but the cure of both belonged to the same
minister, who was the rector of the whole of the parish, and the
parochial concerns were managed by a single vestry. Not the least
trace can be found of any other vestry
Page 22 U. S. 457
until the year 1819, when a vestry was chosen
de facto,
by persons purporting to belong to the Falls Church, and that
portion of the Parish of Fairfax which is not included within the
District of Columbia. Up to the year 1796, it is not disputed that
a vestry was regularly chosen for the whole parish, and the place
of the choice of the vestry, as well as the vestry meetings,
appears to have been usually, but not universally, at Alexandria.
In April, 1796, a vestry was chosen for the parish, to serve for
the usual period of three years, who continued to hold meetings
until April 1799; and from that time, there seems to have been an
interregnum, so far as the minutes in the parish books afford
information, until April, 1804, when a vestry was chosen, for the
usual term of three years; and there has been a continuation of
vestries from that election down to the present time. The validity
of these elections, from 1804, as elections of the vestry of the
parish of Fairfax, forms the point in controversy, and will be
presently considered. Since the year 1800, the Falls Church has
fallen into a state of dilapidation and decay, and public worship
has not been celebrated there by the minister of the Episcopal
Church, on account of its deserted state; but there has been a
regularly inducted minister at the parish church in Alexandria,
where divine services have been constantly performed.
The counsel of the plaintiff contend, that the vestries chosen
in 1804, and subsequently, are not to be deemed the vestries of the
Parish of Fairfax, but of the Episcopal Church (that is, of
Christ's
Page 22 U. S. 458
Church) in Alexandria, and they support their argument upon the
following grounds: 1. that in the parish books the entries
constantly style them the vestry of the Protestant Episcopal
Church, at or in or of Alexandria, and not the vestry of the Parish
of Fairfax; 2. that in point of fact, the congregation of Christ's
Church, in 1803, separated themselves from the Parish of Fairfax,
and formed a distinct Episcopal Church; 3. that the elections were
made by subscribers and contributors to the Episcopal Church in
Alexandria, and not by the parishioners at large of the Parish of
Fairfax.
Under some one of these heads, all the objections urged at the
argument may be arranged.
As to the first point. It is true that in general the style of
the entries of the vestry meetings, since 1804, is as the plaintiff
stated it to be. But it will scarcely be contended that the errors
of a recording clerk, in description, will change the nature or
character of the vestry proceedings, or divest them of their
authority, if, in point of fact, they constituted the vestry of the
Parish of Fairfax. The irregularities of merely ministerial
officers, and especially of parish clerks, whose records are
generally kept in a loose and inaccurate manner, have never been,
hitherto, supposed to have such a controlling authority. courts of
justice will examine into the proceedings of ecclesiastical bodies
with indulgence; and if, upon the whole, a consistent construction
can be given to them, in conformity to existing rights, they will
suppose them to be done in the exercise of those rights, rather
Page 22 U. S. 459
than in gross usurpations of authority. Now there is no pretense
to say, that there existed any right on the part of the
congregation of the Episcopal Church at Alexandria to choose a
vestry of its own, which should not be the vestry of the parish.
The church itself, with the churchyard and appurtenances, belonged
to the Parish of Fairfax. It was the parish church. The vestry,
which had a right to govern and manage its temporal concerns, was
the parish vestry. It was an Episcopal Church, under the direction
and authority of the General Episcopal Church of Virginia, and by
the canons of that church, made in conformity with the laws of
Virginia, and never repealed, the vestry were to be elected for the
parish. It is not lightly to be presumed, therefore, that an
election of a vestry was intended to be made in any other manner
than the canons of the Episcopal Church and the rights of the
parishioners would justify.
The very fact of a total silence, and absence of any objection,
through so long a period, would authorize the conclusion that the
vestry was understood to be a parish vestry, an its acts were for
the benefit of the whole, and not for the part connected with the
Alexandria Church. It should also be recollected that the Falls
Church had fallen into decay, and was no longer used for purposes
of public worship. It was considered in the same light as if
totally destroyed, and then, as the Alexandria Church was the only
worshipping church in the parish, nothing could be more natural
than, in common parlance, and in parochial records, to designate
the vestry as the vestry of the Episcopal Church of,
Page 22 U. S. 460
in, or at Alexandria. It was so in a strict sense, not because
it was not the parish vestry but because the church at Alexandria
was the parish church, and its congregation, in an ecclesiastical
sense, consisted of the Episcopalian parishioners of Fairfax. If we
advert to the history of the Virginia legislation on this subject,
there will be found a natural reason for this apparent change of
style, without any intended change of character.
That legislation is referred to, somewhat at large, in the case
of
Terrett v. Taylor, and need not here be minutely
examined. The act of 1784, ch. 88, created the minister and vestry
of every parish a corporation by the name of the Protestant
Episcopal Church in the parish where they respectively resided.
When, by the subsequent act of 1786, ch. 12, this act was repealed,
there was provision made that all religious societies might,
according to the rules of their sect, appoint from time to time,
trustees to manage their property, which trustees were, by the
subsequent act of 1788, ch. 47. declared to be the successors to
the former vestries. The general Episcopal Church of Virginia, in
convention, adopted general regulations on this subject, conforming
in substance to the act of 1784 and providing for the regular
appointment of vestries, who should be trustees, for every
Episcopal Church in every parish. Under such circumstances, the
natural denomination of the vestry would be the vestry of the
Episcopal Church in the particular parish. And when, in consequence
of the separation of the County of Alexandria from the State of
Virginia,
Page 22 U. S. 461
by the cession to the United States, the parish church fell
within the boundaries of Alexandria, the embarrassment arising from
this new state of things, might well create doubts as to the proper
designation, and introduce the new appellation. Whether this
description was right or wrong is of no consequence, for if there
has been no legal change of character, in contemplation of law, the
regular vestry of this church remains the vestry of the parish. It
appears in proof that a number of the congregation of the church at
Alexandria, are persons residing without the boundaries of the
District of Columbia, and in the Virginia part of the parish, and
there is not the slightest evidence that, in the election of
vestries since 1804, a single parishioner of Fairfax has ever been
refused his vote at any election, on account of his residence.
We think, then, that the circumstance of a change of style in
the parish records furnishes no proof of the asserted change of
character. In the election, however, of 1810, the entry in the
books is that the vestry were elected "to serve the parish as
vestrymen," and, immediately afterwards, in subscribing the test,
they speak of themselves as the vestry "of the Protestant Episcopal
Church of Alexandria." Now what parish is here spoken of? Plainly
the Parish of Fairfax, for no other parish is pretended to exist.
And when the vestry subscribed the test, as vestry of the church of
Alexandria, it is as plain that they understood that the parish and
the church of Alexandria meant the same thing. If then the books of
the
Page 22 U. S. 462
church are to furnish evidence against the defendants, they are
entitled to the benefit of the same records, by way of
explanation.
The second ground is that the congregation of the church at
Alexandria has separated itself from the parish, and formed a
distinct society, and can no longer be deemed the parish church of
Fairfax. This is principally attempted to be sustained by an
agreement made in 1803, which is found fastened, by wafers, to the
vestry book. That agreement, after reciting that a committee was
appointed by "the Protestant Episcopal Church of Alexandria," to
adopt measures for insuring a competent salary for a minister,
&c., and that the committee so appointed had reported, as an
advisable mode, to rent out the pews to occupiers and others, at a
fixed annual rent, amounting in the aggregate to $1,186, and
further proposed soliciting a voluntary subscription to supply any
deficiency; then proceeds to state, that the subscribers agree to
rent the pews, and to pay to the Rev. Thomas Davis (then the Rector
of the parish), the sums annexed to their names, in quarterly
payments, &c., reserving a right to surrender up their pews at
the end of a year. Such is the substance of the agreement; and it
is extremely difficult to perceive how it conduces to prove, in any
shape, the establishment of a new society. It is to be considered,
that the church, whose pews were to be disposed of, was the parish
church of Fairfax, and it cannot be pretended that the parish could
be deprived of it, except by its own consent through its
authorized
Page 22 U. S. 463
agents.
A new society, composed partly of the parishioners, had no more
right or power to dispose of the pews than utter strangers. It
would be as gross a usurpation, and as tortious an act, in the one
case as in the other. But there can be no doubt, that a parish may
regulate the sale or renting of the pews of the church, in such
manner as may conduce to the general benefit. The parish is not the
less the owner of the church, because the pews in it are rented or
sold to others; for the right to the exclusive use of the pews, is
very different from the right to the freehold in the church itself.
The agreement in the present case, was nothing more, and purports
to be nothing more, than a mere agreement for renting the pews. It
is made with persons who are the committee of the church, and who
claim the right to use it. It is an act which might be done by
authority of the parish, without in any respect transcending its
rights or duties.
How then is it to be deemed an act which indicates the creation
of a new society, or a separation from the parish? What authority
could any new society claim to the parish property? If such a claim
had been made, it would have been resisted, and the very
circumstance, that no resistance was made, is conclusive that the
agreement was made in the exercise of ordinary parochial rights,
and indicated no severance of interests. In point of fact, an
agreement in substance like the present was made respecting the
pews in this very church, in the year 1785, and yet no one supposed
that the church ceased to be the parish church, or that the
Page 22 U. S. 464
subscribers constituted a new society. There is another
circumstance which is too significant to be passed over in silence;
it is that the Rev. Mr. Davis, to whom the agreement in question
refers, was regularly inducted, in the year 1792, as Rector of the
Parish of Fairfax, and continued to officiate as such, in this very
church, down to the year 1806, three years after this agreement was
made. During all this period, the freehold of the glebe was vested
in him, as
persona ecclesia. How then is it possible to
maintain that the support of the Rector of the parish in the
exercise of his parochial rights and duties, and the continuance of
the Rector in possession of the glebe and the church, can be
construed as an abandonment of all connection with the parish, and
a renunciation of its privileges? It is a fact, also, corroborative
of the view that has been already taken by the court of this
agreement, that the possession and management of the temporalities
of the church, have always been in the vestries of the Alexandria
Church, since 1804. They have exercised the sole and exclusive
control over them.
They have never disclaimed, in any ecclesiastical assembly their
former connection. They have not applied to the Bishop, or other
proper authority, to be formed into a new and distinct society,
separate from the parish. And yet it is not denied that, by the
rules and customs of the sect, new Episcopal societies are not
admitted to be formed within the bounds of existing parishes,
without the consent of the proper ecclesiastical authority. In the
act of consecration of the
Page 22 U. S. 465
church in 1814, the vestry expressly declare the church to be
the parish church of Fairfax, and in virtue of their authority, as
the vestry thereof, they dedicate it to the public worship of God,
and the Bishop of the diocese then acknowledged and consecrated it
as such.
In the year 1807, the Rev. Mr. Gibson was elected Rector of the
parish, upon the resignation of the Rev. Mr. Davis, and on that
occasion, the vestry resolved, that he should be inducted as Rector
of the parish; and in the succeeding election of the vestry, in the
same year, the vestry are stated in the records to be chosen "to
serve the parish." So that if in the records there are single
expressions which, standing alone, might be of doubtful
interpretation, the solemn acts of the vestry in consecrating the
church, in choosing the minister, and in managing the
temporalities, all point to their character as representatives of
the whole parish. It may be added that in the bill of
Terrett
v. Taylor, the vestry assume to be the parish vestry in
succession, and that in the answer to the present bill, by the
defendants, who are the existing vestry of the Church of
Alexandria, they assert in the most positive and solemn manner the
same character, and utterly deny the allegations of the defendant's
bill on this point. So that unless the court were prepared to
divert the clear purport of the evidence, and the solemn acts of
the Church, for a series of years, and the presumptions arising
from long and undisputed possession of the property, and exercise
of parochial authority, on account of some irregularities, which
may occur in the transactions
Page 22 U. S. 466
of most public bodies, the conclusion cannot be arrived at that
the church at Alexandria has ceased to be the parish church of
Fairfax, or that its congregation has become a distinct
society.
The third ground of objection is that the vestry were chosen not
by the parishioners of Fairfax, but by subscribers and contributors
to the Episcopal Church at Alexandria. This objection proceeds upon
the supposition, that if the vestry is
de facto the vestry
of the parish, the very mode of choice demonstrates that it cannot
be the vestry
de jure. Whether, in a case like that before
the court, the inquiry can properly be gone into as to the mode and
regularity of the choice of a vestry actually in office and
exercising the duties thereof; and if the inquiry be proper,
whether the legal distinction between a vestry
de jure and
de facto, could avail the plaintiff, are questions upon
which it is not necessary for the court to express any opinion. We
think a short examination of the subject will put the objection at
rest, whatever might be the conclusion drawn from such a legal
distinction.
Before the revolution, the Episcopal Church was the established
church of Virginia, and all the parishioners were liable to be
rated for parish taxes, and were entitled to vote in the choice of
the vestry. But the church establishment fell with the revolution,
and the compulsive power of taxation ceased, and as no person could
be compelled to worship in the Episcopal Church or pay taxes for
its support, the parishioners of the Episcopal Church, in the
ecclesiastical sense of the term, afterwards
Page 22 U. S. 467
consisted only of the Episcopalian contributors and members. The
act of 1784, ch. 88, provided that, at all future elections of
vestries, no person should be allowed to vote, who did "not profess
himself a member of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and actually
contribute towards its support." Although this act was repealed by
the act of 1786, ch. 12, yet the same act saved the management of
their property and regulation of their discipline, according to the
rules of their own sect, to all religious societies. By the canons
of the Episcopal Church, subsequently passed, the right to elect
vestries is confined to the
"freeholders and housekeepers, who are members of the Protestant
Episcopal Church within the parish, and regularly contribute
towards the support of the minister, and to the common exigencies
of the church within the parish."
These canons being assented to by the various parishes which
they govern, and not being inconsistent with the laws of Virginia,
are not denied to be in force for parochial purposes. Now there is
not in this record the slightest proof, that any election of the
vestry has been made in any other manner, than that pointed out by
the canons of the church, and the answer of the defendants
expressly avers that the choice has been constantly made according
to the canons of the church, and that no person belonging to the
Falls Church, has ever been a contributor, or ever offered to vote
at any election. It seems to the court, therefore, that the
elections being regularly made, by persons qualified according to
the canons, the whole foundation of the objection is removed.
Page 22 U. S. 468
No inference can be deduced from this circumstance, in proof of
the Alexandria Church having separated itself from the parish, and
become a distinct and independent society.
It has been said that the parishioners of the whole parish are
the
cestuis que trust of the glebe and other parochial
property, and ought to be parties to any bill to dispose of it. But
in an accurate and legal sense, the parishioners are not the
cestuis que trust, for they have, individually, no right
or title to the property. It is the property of the parish, in its
corporate or aggregate capacity, to be applied and disposed of for
parochial purposes, under the authority of the vestry, who are its
legal agents and representatives. Upon the sale of the glebe, the
proceeds become parochial property, and must be applied for the
common benefit, the maintenance of the minister, the repairs of the
churches, and other parochial expenses, by the vestry, in good
faith. But the mode, and extent, and circumstances under which the
fund is to be applied are necessarily left to the discretion of the
vestries, from time to time chosen. An abuse of their trust, or
duty, is not to be presumed, and if it should occur, the same
remedy will belong to the parishioners as in other cases, where
money is wantonly misapplied to wrong purposes, which constitute a
common fund for the benefit of the whole parish, and not for the
benefit of a part. It will be sufficient to decide upon such a case
when it shall arise in judgment. But the individual parishioners
residing out of Alexandria County, were no more necessary to be
made
Page 22 U. S. 469
parties to the bill praying a sale of the glebe, than the
individuals residing within the county. Both were represented in
the only way known to the laws, by the vestry duly appointed to
manage parochial concerns.
These are some of the reasons which have led the court to the
conclusion that has been already stated, to-wit, that the vestry of
the church in Alexandria is, in succession, the regular vestry of
the Parish of Fairfax.
This decision renders it unnecessary to consider the other
points raised at the argument, and it remains only to declare that
the judgment of this Court is that the decree of the circuit court
dismissing the bill be
Affirmed with costs.