The principal question of fact is whether the old corporation ■and its adherents were affiliated with the Presbyterian denomination, or whether they were an independent body without ec■clesiastical affiliation with any other body of Christians. If they were so affiliated with and had so become a part of the Presbyterian denomination, then their secular affairs are governed by plain rules of law relating to the ownership of ecclesiastical property, and if they shall be found to be an independent body, they are then governed by other rules which are quite as plain. I have no doubt but that the old corporation and its •adherents were Presbyterians and were affiliated with the Presbyterian denomination in every sense of the word, and that they broke the tie of brotherhood in an irregular and disorderly manner. For do I think it can be said that any fraud or imposition was practiced upon these non-English speaking people, us has been suggested, because the things that they did and saw ■and took part in could not fail to impress the most ignorant •■and careless persons that they were connecting themselves Avith and were a part of the old corporation with all its Presbyterial íormalities. I may pause at this point for a moment to explain
We have seen what interest the Presbyterians of New Brunswick took in this struggling association prior to its organization into a corporation. We have seen that this corporation carried as part of its name the word “Presbyterian,” and that when its name was changed in the following year the word “Presbyterian” was retained. After its incorporation and its segregation from the First Presbyterian Church of New Brunswick, other things were done which still more strongly indicate to my mind' the intention of these people to form and retain the Presbyterian connection. The one hundred and seventy odd Hungarians who became members of the First church were dismissed to the new congregation after its formation, and until the final attempt at separation in 1912 the Presbyterian Church by its Presbytery, its synodical committee and its Session of the First church, exercised a fostering care over the spiritual welfare of this body of Hungarians, and gave them material aid in maintaining their organization. During the whole period of its existence they furnished money for its support, and in every way possible encouraged them by contributions and by advice to continue in their work. On April 9th, 1907, the Rev. Mr. Hamborszky was installed as pastor of the church; he was a
All these proceedings point in but one direction. They indicate beyond question that the Hungarians who belonged to the old corporation fully understood that they were Presbyterians and were bound by their Presbyterian connection. Least of all, can the Rev. Mr. Hamborszky find any excuse whatever for his unseemly and disorderly conduct in his endeavor to release himself from the Presbyterian control. It cannot be said that he did not understand what he was doing;- he is an educated man, perfectly familiar with the English language, and he fully understood every step which he was taking and which he was advising his congregation to take.
There is no doubt about the right of individual members of a church organization to secede therefrom at will. The same is
1 have, therefore, arrived at the conclusion that the original corporation was allied and affiliated with the Presbyterian denomination, as a matter of fact, and that the members understood and believed that they were so connected, and that, as a matter of law, it was not competent for the seceding members of the congregation to appropriate to themselves the church property described in the two deeds hereinabove mentioned, and that the deeds should be declared to be null and void and the
I will advise a decree in accordance with these views.