delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendants are deacons of the society of shakers in the town of Alfred, in'the county of York, and the property of the society was conveyed to them and vested in them subsequently to the act of Massachusetts of 1785, ch. 51; and prior to our act of 1821. The form of conveyance is by deed to the deacons; and it was decided by this court in the case of Anderson v. Brock, 3 Greenl. 243, that the above mentioned statute extended to the society of shakers; and that the deacons of all such societies were, in virtue of it, constituted a corporation for the purposes specified. Our statute of 1821, ch. 42, on the same subject, is almost an exact transcript of the act of Massachusetts. Bylaw, then, the deacons hold the legal estate in trust for the society. On all these points the counsel perfectly agree. And it is also admitted, though the report of the judge does not particularly state the fact, that the present action is founded on a promissory note, which was signed by the defendants as sureties for a young woman, then residing with the society, though not a member of it, for a debt claimed to be due from her to the promissee ;■ though it appears that the verdict was against the plaintiff.
Judgment on the verdict.
