By the Court,
The demurrer being to both counts of the declaration, if either is good the plaintiffs will be entitled to judgment. I will consider the objections to both counts.
It is objected that the release from the patentees to the elders and deacons, being given to parties not in possession, passed no interest. It is true that a release is not the appropriate conveyance by which to transfer a rent. Technically it is given to some person having an interest in the premises, upon which the release is intended to operate. There can be no doubt that in this case the release was intended to operate by way of passing the estate; and rather than the intention of the parties should be defeated, the court might presume a previous lease, conveying a lesser estate in the estate intended to be conveyed. It was intended, however, as an assignment. Perhaps we might" give it effect as a release. The releasors held the estate in trust for the people of the town of Schenectady. The releasees, as inhabitants of the town, had an equitable interest in the very rent; they were a part of the cestuis que use, and, under the circumstances of this case, had all the possession of which the subject was susceptible, to enable them to receive a release. I am inclined to think it sufficient.
Nor is there a substantial objection as it regards the consideration. There is indeed no pecuniary consideration; but the support of the gospel in a Christian country is a sufficient consideration. The conveyance being to the elders and deacons by name as individuals, the legal estate is supposed by the first count to be in them ; and they holding as joint tenants, the estate survived to the last liver and descended to his heir at law, who, in 1772, conveyed to the minister, elders and deacons of the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, which is the style of an incorporation granted in -1734 to the society before known as the elders and deacons of the Nether Dutch Church in Schenectady. To this con
Before the incorporation of the plaintiffs, there was no person in esse capable, as cestui qui use, to take the estate ; and then the persons who were described as elders and deacons stood seised to the use. There was indeed a church, but not incorporated; and when the church received legal capacity to take and hold real estate, the statute executed the possession to the use, and the estate vested. The averment in the declaration that the plaintiffs were elected the minister, elders and deacons, &c. 1 understand alludes to their first receiving a corporate capacity; for previous to that time it is averred Garret Symonse and others were seised of the estate in question. This is the view of the case presented by the second count.
I think the title good; and if so, the plaintiffs are entitled to judgment on the demurrer, with leave to the defendant to plead on payment of costs.