Tibballs v. Bidwell
Tibballs v. Bidwell
Opinion of the Court
The object of the present bill is to direct and enforce the appropriation of the income of a certain pecuniary fund, which is in the possession and under the care and manage
The parties were heard upon the bill and answer. From the evidence then produced, the legal results and conclusions from which are presented in the report now before us, it appears that the fund, of which the defendants admit themselves to be in possession and to have the management, was raised by the voluntary subscription of many individuals, sometime previous to the year 1809. By the terms of the articles of subscription, the fund was to be applied “ for the purpose of supporting a congregational teacher of piety and religion to supply the pulpit and perform the duties of a minister in what is called the south part of said town forever; ” and it was stipulated that if the annual income arising from the fund should ever be found more than sufficient for the support of a minister, the surplus should be laid' out to repair the meeting-house, or for such religious purposes as the society should agree. In the month of January of the same year, in a memorial addressed to the legislature of the Commonwealth, representing that they had raised by subscription the sum of four thousand dollars to be preserved as a permanent fund to aid in the support and maintenance of public worship, as stated in their articles of subscription, they prayed to be incorporated as “ The First Congregational Society in the town of Tyringham,” with the powers, privileges and immunities conferred by law upon parishes and other religious societies. Upon this petition, the subscribers to the fund, by an act, passed on the 16th of June, 1809, (St. 1809, c. 1,) were made a body corporate, with the rights of parishes; and, upon their legal organization, they and their successors constituted a poll parish The second section of the act authorized the corporation to receive and accept the fund which had been raised by the subscribers, and directed that the income of it should be applied to the support of a congregational teacher of piety, morality and religion in the south part of the town of Tyringham, forever; and if it should be more than sufficient for that purpose, that
Immediately after the passage of this act, the society was duly organized, and the money which had been raised by subscription was transferred and paid over to them, and trustees were legally appointed, with whom it was deposited, and to whose care and management it was confided.
It is conceded by the plaintiffs that the fund has been properly taken care of, and that the income from it has been lawfully applied and disposed of, ever since it was received by the society, until the close of the year 1848. They complain that subsequently to that time it has been perverted from the uses to which, according to the intendment and purposes of the original subscribers, and the provisions of the act of incorporation, it is legitimately applicable; and they pray the intervention of this court, to ensure by a proper decree its lawful appropriation, and to restrain the defendants from making payments under direction from the society for maintaining public worship in the new meeting-house, as will be hereafter mentioned, which is alleged to be an abuse of their authority.
- Previous to the year 1809, there was a religious society in the south part of the town of Tyringham, with which was connected a church, constituted according to the usages of the congregational denomination. It does not appear to have owned any real estate or to have possessed any property; but there was a building in that part of the town, since known as the old meeting-house, of which its members had the use, and perhaps the exclusive use, for the purpose of holding their meetings for public worship. Upon the organization of the First Congregational Society, the former society appears to have been abandoned and dissolved. It never acted in any way afterwards. The church, however, remained, and immediately became connected and blended with the new corporation. Without any known bargain or agreement, but apparently by the mere tacit
The Fund Society has constantly kept up its organization and preserved its existence under its act of incorporation. It has always made an annual appointment of trustees. Every year since the year 1836, it has voted to appropriate and has actually appropriated the income of its fund to the support of the congregational teachers who have been from time to time the regularly ordained and settled ministers of the aforementioned societies. The defendants were the trustees for the year 1849. Under direction of the society, and in accordance with its votes, they paid one quarter part of the income of its fund for the first quarter of the year for and towards the support of the Rev. Mr. Howe, and in part payment of his salary. This last payment is the alleged misappropriation of which the plaintiffs complain, and from the repetition of which they pray that the defendants may be restrained.
The plaintiffs claim to be members of the corporation established by the act of 1809, that is, of the Fund Society, and to be interested as shareholders in the property belonging to it. With certain associates, after the Congregational Society voted in 1849 to have preaching exclusively in the new meeting-house, they formed and legally organized a new society, which they called the First Religious Society in Monterey. They repaired
But it is very clear, that in this latter relation they have no such right. The “ First Religious Society in Monterey,” having been duly organized, is itself a body corporate, allowed and established by law. Rev. Sts. c. 20, § 1. It has rights of its own, and is altogether distinct from and independent of any and all other religious bodies or associations. The Fund Society was never charged with the duty of making provision for the support of the gospel ministry in other separate, distinct and independent parishes or societies. Nor was it ever authorized to make any such appropriation of its funds. On the other hand, it was not' only empowered, but expressly required, (for such is the necessary consequence of the provisions of its act of incorporation,) to devote the income of its fund to the support of the religious teacher whom it should provide for itself. A refusal therefore to contribute aid to another distinct society, though worshipping in the place where it had formerly and for many years been accustomed to assemble for a similar purpose, affords no legal ground of complaint against it.
Nor was the payment to the Rev. Mr. Howe, under the circumstances already stated, for his salary for the first quarter of the year 1849, an expenditure in conflict with any of the provisions of the act of 1809, by which the subscribers to the fund were incorporated. The society which was thereby established was not only authorized, but explicitly required, to apply the income of the fund intrusted to it, to the support of a congregational teacher of piety and religion in the south part of Tyringham. This it has always faithfully done. It is conóeded by the plaintiffs, and the facts are also fully proved by the evidence in the case, that the new meeting-house is located within the prescribed territorial limits ; that the Rev. Mr. Howe is a con
The only ground upon which it has been urged that such an expenditure of the income of the fund is illegal or unjustifiable is, that public worship was not maintained in 1849 in the same house which was occupied by the Religious Society in the south part of Tyringham in 1809. To this consideration there is a brief but decisive answer. No such restriction was ever imposed upon the society. Its act of incorporation required that the income of the fund, of which it was charged with the care and management, should be expended in the support of a congregational teacher of piety, morality and religion in the south part of Tyringham. This was.the only limitation, in execution of the trust it assumed, to which it was made subject, In the selection of a placey where the services of a teacher, who should receive that income towards his support, should be ren dered, the society was left entirely at liberty to act upon the legally expressed choice of its members. This is a power which belongs to every parish which is not restrained by some special provision. Fassett v. First Parish in Boylston, 19 Pick. 361. And the free exercise of that right involved no dereliction of duty or violation of law. The cases of Baker v. Fates, 16 Mass. 488, and Stebbins v. Jennings, 10 Pick. 172, relied on by the plaintiffs, concerned territorial parishes.
Upon a- consideration of all the allegations of the plaintiffs, and of the evidence adduced in support of them, there does not appear to have been any misapplication of its funds on the part of the society, nor any failure to perform the obligations under which it is placed. Nothing is shown therefore upon which this bill can be maintained.
But there is an objection of a different kind to the maintenance of this bill, apparent upon its face, and which in its effect is insuperable. It cannot be supported for the causes
Bill dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.