Trustees of the Third Presbyterian Congregation v. Andruss
Trustees of the Third Presbyterian Congregation v. Andruss
Opinion of the Court
This action was commenced in the Circuit Court of the county of Essex, to recover certain arrears of rent and assessments on a pew in the Third Presbyterian Church of Newark. Upon the trial the plaintiffs recovered less than one hundred dollars. The only point submitted for the opinion of this court by the case certified, is, whether the plaintiff' is entitled to costs.
The pew in question was by deed, dated the 1st day of January 1825, conveyed from the plaintiffs to one Hugh McDougall. Ths title of McDougall was subsequently vested by a regular chain of conveyance in the defendant. By the terms of the deed the pew is conveyed, subject to the annual payment of two per cent, upon the appraised value of the pew, and also to the payment of such sums as shall yearly be assessed and affixed upon the said pew, in the mode specified in the deed of conveyance. The obligation to pay the rent and the assess-
The conveyance under which the defendant claims, vests the title in him, his heirs and assigns forever. He has as absolute aud unqualified a property in the thing, as the nature of the subject admits of. Is the subject to be classed among things real-, or personal ?
The precise nature of property in a pew seems not to be very definitely settled. Blk. 2 Com. 429, informs us that pews in a church are somewhat of the same nature as a monument, or tombstone, or a coat of armor, or ensign of honor hung in a church. That they are in the nature of heir looms, and' may descend by custom immemorial from the ancestor to the heir. .
This description can be applicable only to the tangible property, to the material of which the pew is constructed. It may be true as applied to a monument, a coat of armor, or a seat or pew placed in the aisle or chancel of a church. It has no applicability to the right of burial in a particular part of the churchyard, or to the right of occupying a particular pew in a church. Accordingly, we find that an action for removing a coat of armor, for breaking or defacing a monument, or for injuring or destroying a pew, can be maintained only by the party by whom the monument was erected, or the pew constructed, or by his heirs. Cowen’s Case, 12 Co. 105; Dawtrie v. Dee, 2 Roll’s Rep. 140; Palm. 48; Spooner v. Brewster, 3 Bing. 136.
But the exclusive right of occupying a particular seat or pew in a church, is an incorporeal heriditarnent. It is in the nature
And it seems that in England the right to a pew is never a mere personal right. It can exist only as appurtenant to a house in the parish. Unless the right be claimed as appurtenant to a house, and it be so averred in the declaration, no action at common law will lie.° The remedy in such case is of a spiritual nature, and must lie in the ecclesiastical court. Corven’s case, 12 Coke 104; Maaiwaring v. Giles, 5 Barn. & Ald. 356; 1 Chit. Pl. 163, 415; 2 Chit. Pl. 817; 1 Phil. Ec. R. 316.
The reason assigned is, that the freehold of the church and of the churchyard is in the parson, for the common benefit of all the inhabitants of the parish. The body of the church is common to all the inhabitants, and every parishioner who is entitled to Christian burial in the church yard. It is not in the power of the parson to grant an exclusive right to the occupancy of a pew, or to a particular place of burial. Corven’'s case, 12 Coke 104; Com. Dig. Cemetery B.; 8 Barn. & Cress 288.
True, the owner of a pew has not an absolute and unlimited interest in the property. He owns neither the soil beneath, nor the space above it. He has no such ownership of the pew itself, as to authorize his altering or converting it to any other use. ' His interest is both qualified and limited. The absolute ownership is in the corporation, or in the trustees in whom the title is vested. They may encumber the legal title — may alter the pews — may raze and rebuild the edifice without the consent of the pew-holder, and without an invasion of his right.
The title of the pew-holder is usufructuary. He has strictly no title to the pew itself. He cannot treat it as his own property. He can use it only for the purposes to which it has been dedicated, and in the mode prescribed or agreed upon at the time of the purchase. It is in reality a mere easement — a privilege or use in the freehold of another. Still, it is an hereditament, although incorporeal, and as such, when vested, as in the present instance, in the owner, and in his heirs, it is real estate, not personal. But whether it be regarded as a mere easement,
This is the dictate of sound principle, and seems the result of the adjudged cases (when not controlled by statutory regulations) both in England and America. Bates v. Sparrell, 10 Mass. 325; Gay v. Baker, 17 Ibid. 435; Kemball v. Rowley, 24 Pick. 347; Freligh v. Platt, 5 Cowen 494; Price v. The Methodist Church, 4 Ohio 530.
I am aware that some inconvenience may be apprehended from, holding the ownership of pews and of places of burial as real estate. Considerations of supposed expediency or real policy have led to various statutory enactments in different states, regulating the character of the property in pews. In Massachusetts, by statute, pews are real estate throughout the commonwealth, except in Boston, where they are personal property. In Connecticut they are declared by statute to be personal — in New Hampshire to be real estate.
The question before this court is not a question of policy, or of expediency, but of legal principles, and in this view I entertain no doubt that the title to a pew is a title to real estate within the provision of the first section of the act, constituting courts for the trial of small causes.
Let it be certified to the Circuit Court of the county of Essex, as the opinion of this court, that the plaintiff is entitled to costs.
Randolph, J. The plaintiff is entitled to judgment in this case; but whether he may recover costs, depends on the question whether a pew in a church for which a party holds a title, be real or personal estate, I have no hesitation whatever in saying that it belongs to the former. It is an incorporeal hereditament of the nature of an easement; and although it does not partake of all the properties of real estate, or entitle its owner to all the rights of a freeholder, or subject him to all the liabilities of such citizen, yet it comes under the denomination of real estate, and its title cannot be investigated in a justice’s court, and the property in it would go to the heir, unless there be special provision to the contrary. See 10 Mass. 323; 1 T.
Let judgment be for the plaintiff with costs.
Whitehead, J. concurred.
In England, before the Reformation, no separate seats were allowed in the church except perhaps in a few cases to some very great persons; but the body of the church was common to all the parishioners. After the Reformation the ordinary or bishop having the regulation or ordering of the body of the church, granted the right to particular seats to individual parishioners. This grant, called a faculty, was personal and revocable, and all disputes concerning it were determined in the spiritual courts. 1 Burns’ Ec. L. tit. Church, c. 7. Church seat. Crabbe’s Real Property, § iv. Pl. 90, and § x, Pl. 481-2. But when this right had been enjoyed immemorially by the occupants of a certain house who had immemorially repaired the seat, it was held by the common law courts to have.ripened into a right of property which they would notice, and they by prohibition prevented the ordinary and ecclesiastical courts from disturbing the owner or occupants. Hence it was requisite, in prescribing for a pew, to prescribe for it as belonging to the inhabitants of a certain house, from which it could not bo severed, and not to an individual or to land; and to prescribe for it by reason of the repairs. Woolcombe v. Ouldridge, 3 Add. 6. Seemingly at law a consideration which rendered the faculty or license of the ordinary irrevocable. 1 Burns’ Ecc. L.
The American courts and elementary writers seem to have adopted on common law principles the doctrines held in this case as law in those States where propertyin pews has not been regulated by statute. They uniformly hold that the right usually granted by church corporations to a pew in a church is real property ,* that it is incorporeal — an easement only — that it is subject to many restrictions and liable tobe taken away at any needful taking down of the church edifice. That it belongs to the person, descends to the heirs at law, and is transferable like other real estate. See authorities collected in 3 Kent’s Com. 402 (4th Ed.); 1 Hilliard Real Prop. c. 1, § 13.
Cited in Lynd v. Menzies, 4 Vr. 162.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE TRUSTEES OF THE THIRD PRESBYTERIAN CONGREGATION IN NEWARK v. CALEB H. ANDRUSS
- Status
- Published