58 N.J. Eq. 327 | New York Court of Chancery | 1899
The original bill in this case was filed by complainant as a member of a religious society, whose trustees are incorporated under the general act, to enforce a trust alleged to have been created by the deed under which the defendant church holds its church lot and burying-grounds, and to enjoin a sale which, as is claimed, would violate this trust created by the deed.
Upon the application for a preliminary injunction on the original bill, I considered the nature of the title of the defendant church to its church lot and burying-ground, under the statute and under the deed now in question, made by one Williams to the church, taking the deed to be what on its face it purports to be, a deed of purchase for a substantial money consideration ($565) expressed in the deed. Holmes v. Methodist Episcopal Church, 41 Atl. Rep. 102. The amended bill (paragraphs 4-10 and 26-30) alleges facts showing, or relied on as showing, that the transaction whs not in fact a purchase by the church', but that Williams and others contributed for the purchase of' the land in question (these other persons who did not belong to the society contributing about $170 and Williams the balance), and that the church itself, as a society, gave no consideration to
Second. The complainants, whose rights are only those of members of the religious society,.the grantee in the deed, which, by the final agreement of grantors and grantee, was made a deed ¿purporting to be a deed of purchase and not of gift, have - no
Third. Evidence dehors the deed is not admissible on behalf of' persons standing in the relation of complainants to the-society, to prove that the legal effect of the deed is other than that which is in law given to it by the-recital of the payment-of a substantial money consideration. The case in this respect comes within the general rule of estoppel against proof by parol of a consideration which would affect the legal character of the-instrument. Big. Estop. (5th ed.) p. 479. The complainants in this case do not occupy the double character of contributors-to the-fund and persons interested in the fund so contributed ascestuis que trust as was the case in Ludlam v. Higbee, 3 Stock. 342, 347, and their sole standing on the facts stated in this bill is that of members of a society which had received title as by purchase and under the statute, and not by deed of gift or donation, For the reasons stated in the former opinion, I hold that the only trust on the part of the church toward complainants-under this purchase is that of holding aud disposing of the property under the authority and for the uses and purposes declared by the statute.
The motion to strike out these paragraphs will therefore be • granted.
The motion to strike out paragraphs 14 to 20 must be denied. Under the statute the defendant trustees sustain fiduciary relations in their management and disposal of the church property,, and these paragraphs, of the bill allege personal interests and fraudulent motives on the part of these defendant trustees in the sale of the property and .in the discharge of their trusts. These charges, unanswered and unexplained, constitute a breach-of trust, against which complainants are entitled to relief against: