36 Barb. 171 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1862
By the Gourt,
The plaintiff is a religious corporation, duly organized under the statute, and has been in existence since the 9th day of March, 1841. The certificate of incorporation provides for six trustees, and the temporal!
The 6th section of the act to provide for the incorporation of religious societies directs the manner in which the election of trustees shall be conducted, and it declares that the persons elected shall receive a certificate of their election from the officers conducting the same, which shall entitle them to act as trustees. Such a certificate is not conclusive, but it is prima facie evidence that the person to whom it is given is a trustee. It constitutes the holder a trustee de facto, and upon all questions and controversies, except a direct proceeding to try the title in the nature of a quo warranta, would be held to clothe the holder with the attributes of the office. The omission to furnish the certificate does not, however, disqualify the person who is duly elected. It is evidence of his title. But his right may be shown aliunde. It is characteristic of this motion, that no proceedings of any meeting of the congregation for the election of trustees are furnished in the motion papers ; nor are there any certificates of election produced or referred to, so that we could form some idea who really were entitled to hold that office. The proof of the right to the office rests mainly upon the assertions of the claimants themselves, coupled with the corroborative evidence in favor of the defendants, to which I will presently refer. Gray, Coffey and the two Strothers swear, that they are severally trustees duly elected, and so does William A. Barnes, the minister. The latter states a fact of some significance, and which throws some light upon the nature of the controversy, and that is, that on the 21st of February, 1861, the defendants Pero, Wenside, Parker and Hooker were expelled and excluded from the church, and one Gridham was chosen clerk in the place of Pero, whose exclusion from the church.
The action is in the name of the corporation, and its professed object is to recover the possession and control of the church edifice or place of worship for the use of the corporation, upon the ground that the corporation has been excluded and dispossessed by the wrongful act and entry of the defendants. In any action brought to enforce a right or redress a wrong, it must be assumed that the plaintiff is present in court, and has a standing therein by his own voluntary act. It can proceed upon no other hypothesis. The complaint speaks in the name of the plaintiff. It is the plaintiff himself that complains of the acts or omissions of the defendant. The answer must contain matter which is a defense to the allegations' of the complaint. It may allege the want of capacity in the plaintiff to sue, or facts in bar or avoidance of the allegations of the complaint, so as to justify or excuse whatever is alleged. But it cannot set up that the plaintiff is not present in court; that some one else is using his name to-institute and prosecute the action without his authority or sanction. Such an answer would not meet a single allegation of the complaint, and would form no issue for trial upon the pleadings. An answer which should allege as a defense, that the attorney was not authorized to bring the action; or, in an action in the name of a corporation, which should set up that it was brought without the authority or knowledge of its managers or directors, would be treated and struck out as sham, simply because such an answer would not meet the allegations of the complaint, or lead to an issue which could be tried. Nul tiel corporation is a plea which involves the corporate existence of the plaintiff, and as a consequence
Emott, Brown and Scrugham, Justices.]
The order made at the special term should be affirmed, with costs to be paid by Milton W. Gray, William Strothers, Thomas Coffey and David Strothers.