80 Ind. 20 | Ind. | 1881
— Action by the appellant to recover of the appellee the possession of certain real estate. The circuit court sustained a demurrer for want of facts to the complaint, and error is assigned upon that ruling.
The complaint shows that on the 20th day of July, A. D. 1876, the Right Reverend Maurice He St. Palais was, and for many years immediately preceding that date had been, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Vincennes, and as such Bishop had ecclesiastical authority, jurisdiction and control of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Vincennes, which Diocese was then, and is now, composed of the counties in the State of Indiana lying south of the north lines of the counties of Vermillion, Parke, Putnam, Hendricks, Marion, Hancock, Henry and Wayne, in the State of Indiana, the county of Hendricks, in said State, being then and now one of the counties included within, and composing a part of, the said Diocese. That, according to the laws, rules, regulations and customs of the Roman Catholic Church, it was then, and continuously ever since has been, and is now, the duty of the person filling and occupying the position of Bishop of the said Diocese, as such Bishop, to look after, supervise, manage and control the various Roman Catholic congregations in the Diocese, and to look after, supervise, control, hold and own all the property, real, personal and mixed, in use’ by all of the Roman Catholic congregations in said Diocese, particularly houses and lands used for religious worship, and for residences for pastors of such congregations, and to exercise authority over, and control the various persons in charge of such congregations as pastors thereof, in ministering to and serving such
That on said 20th day of July, A. D. 1876, Thomas Corliss, Timothy Quinn and Martin Dugan, they then being the owners in fee simple of the real estate hereinafter described, together with their wives, executed to the said Right Reverend Maurice De St. Palais their deed of conveyance of that date, whereby they conveyed and warranted to the said “ Rt. Rev. Maurice Dc St. Palais, D.D., and his successors, in trust for the Catholic congregation of Brownsburg, Indiana,” the said real estate, which deed was duly recorded on the 26th day of J uly,l 876, in the recorder’s office of Hendricks county, Indiana. That “the Catholic congregation of Brownsburg, Indiana,” was at the time an unincorporated congregation of members of the Roman Catholic Church, and not organized pursuant to any law of the State of Indiana, and was then subject to the ecclesiastical authority, jurisdiction and control of the said Maurice Do St. Palais as said Bishop of said Diocese of Vincennes, and was then and is now popularly known as St. Malachai’s Roman Catholic Church, of Brownsburg, Hendricks county, Indiana.
That the said Maurice De St. Palais died on the 28th day of June, A. D. 1877, a resident of Knox county, in the State of Indiana, being at the time such Bishop of the said Diocese, and holding and owning the right and title conveyed to him
That after the said Francis Silas Chatard entered upon the ■discharge of the duties of the position of Bishop of said Diocese, as above mentioned, to wit, October 30th, 1878, the said
That at the time the said Francis Silas Chatard entered upon the exercise and discharge of the duties of the office and position of Bishop of Vincennes, as aforesaid, and from that time continuously up to the present time, and at this time, the said county of Hendricks was, has been, and is now, situated within the said Roman Catholic Diocese of Vincennes,, and subject to the ecclesiastical authority, jurisdiction and control of the said Francis Silas Chatard, as such Bishop of said Diocese of Vincennes; and that according to the laws,' rules, regulations and customs of the Roman Catholic Church above mentioned, it was at that time, and continuously ever since that time has been, and is now, his duty as such Bishop to look after, supervise, manage and control the various Roman Catholic congregations within the said Diocese, and to look after, supervise, control, hold and own all the property, real, personal and mixed, in use by all the Roman Catholic congregations within the said Diocese, particularly houses and
That on the 15th day of December, A. D„ 1880, acting in the exercise of his discretion and in the line of his duty as said
We have no brief from the appellee. It is stated in the appellant’s brief, that the ruling of the circuit court was put upon the ground that the facts alleged in the complaint showed the relation of landlord and tenant between the parties, and that sections 2 and 3 of the act concerning that relation, (2 R. 8.1876, p. 338; R. 8.1881, p. 1128,) made it a tenancy from year to year, determinable by a three months’ notice prior to the expiration of a current year.
The question thus presented is plainly an important one, not only as the decision may affect the policy and administration of the affairs of the church directly concerned, and perhaps other church societies which furnish houses for the use of their pastors, rectors or preachers, but the owners and occupants of real property generally; for it is readily conceivable that in many instances the owner and the tenant will be, in all essential respects, in the same legal relation as the parties to this record, — as, for example, the servant brought into the dwelling, or upon the premises of the employer, and, as an incident to the employment, allotted a room or tenement to occupy while the service lasts; the mechanic or laborer, who, by the terms of his engagement, has the possession or use of a house belonging to the employer, and for which the rent is to be deducted from his wages, or for which he is to pay no specified rent, and makes compensation only by accepting less wages than he would receive if he occupied a house of his own.
While these supposed cases, like the one before us, show the parties in relations somewhat like the ordinary relation of landlord and tenant, they aré yet clearly and broadly distinguishable therefrom.
The case of Kerrains v. People, 60 N. Y. 221, is instructive. It was there held that- “ Where the occupation of a house by a servant is connected with the service, or is required by the employer for the necessary or better perform
“I have cited the language of the court,” says Church, C. J., “because it lays down concisely the correct rule for determining the question involved in this class of cases.” And, proceeding with a recital of the facts in the case before him, adds r “ The inference from these facts is reasonable, if not irresistible, in the absence of any provision for an allowance for rent, that the house was intended to be occupied by an employe for the benefit of the owner in carrying on the mill. The case thus presented is analogous to that of a person employing a coachman or gardener, and allowing or requiring him to reside in a house provided for that purpose on the premises; or a farmer who hires a laborer for wages, to work his farm, and live in a house upon the same. In these cases the character of the holding is clearly indicated by the mere statement of facts.”
“ Many servants,” says Mansfield, C. J., in Rex v. Stock, 2 Taunt. 339, “ have houses given them to live in, as porters at park gates: if a master turns away his servant, does it follow that he can not evict him till the end of the year ? ” To the same effect, see McQuade v. Emmons, 38 N. J. L. 397; Doyle v. Gibbs, 6 Lans. 180.
While it may not be said, upon the facts of the complaint, that the defendant was the hired servant of his Bishop, it does appear that he was appointed to his position by and held it at the discretion of the Bishop, and that his possession of the property was only an incident to his appointment, the better to enable him to discharge the duties of his office, and when, in the exercise of that discretion, which by the rules and customs of the church he had the right to employ, the Bishop removed the defendant from his charge or pastorate over the congregation, his right to possession of the property at once necessarily ceased.
If, under the circumstances, the parties should be deemed to have come under a contract relation to each other, the plain
IVe are, however, of the opinion that the relation of the parties was more like that of master and servant — the possession of the priest being, in fact, the possession of his superior, the Bishop, who had power, at any time and upon his own judgment or discretion, to remove one and install another in the office of pastor, and in the possession of the property of the office.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and with instructions, to overrule the demurrer.