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S.Ct. 792 34 L.Ed. 478 (Cite
as: 136 U.S. 1, 10 S.Ct. 792) Supreme
Court of the United States LATE
CORPORATION OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS et al. v. UNITED
STATES. ROMNEY
et al. v. SAME May
19, 1890 Appeals
from the supreme court of the territory of Utah. FULLER,
C. J., and FIELD and LAMAR, JJ., dissenting. West
Headnotes Charities
k37(4) 75k37(4) (Formerly
75k37) Under
the organic act of Utah of September 9, 1850, 9 Stat. 453, 48 U.S.C.A. §§ 1451-1455,
1458, 1460, 1463, 1465, the general system of common law and equity, as it exists
in this country, became operative in the territory of Utah; and therefore, on
the dissolution of the religious and charitable corporation known as the "Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints," its personal property became vested in
the government of the United States, in its sovereign capacity to be applied,
under the general doctrine of cy-pres, either by the court or by direction of
congress, to some kindred object, whereby the general purposes of religion and
charity may be promoted. Charities
k37(4) 75k37(4) (Formerly
75k37) Escheat
k3 152k3 The
fact that all the property of said corporation was held by individuals in trust
for the corporation did not prevent the title from escheating according to the
intent of said acts. Escheat
k3 152k3 Act
Cong. July 1, 1862, 12 Stat. 501, provided that no religious or charitable corporation
in the territories should hold real estate exceeding $50,000 in value, and that
all real estate held by any such corporation contrary to such act should escheat
to the United States. The title of all the real estate acquired by such a corporation
in Salt Lake City remained in the United States as part of the public domain until
November 21, 1871, when it was entered by the mayor of said city under Act Cong.
March 2, 1867, 43 U.S.C.A. § 718 et seq., known as the "Town-Site Act." Held,
that on the dissolution of the corporation all of its real estate in such city,
except a block used for public purposes, reverted to the United States. Territories
k11 375k11 Congress
has plenary and supreme legislative power over the territories of the United States
and their inhabitants. Corporations
k623 101k623 The
charter of a corporation having been forfeited under Act Cong. Feb. 19, 1887,
24 Stat. 635, it was within the power of congress to pass section 17, 24 Stat.
638, thereof, authorizing the United States attorney general to institute proceedings
for the administration and settlement of its affairs. Religious
Societies k35 332k35 Act
Cong. Feb. 19, 1887, § 17, 24 Stat. 638, providing that the attorney general of
the United States shall cause such proceedings as are necessary to wind up the
affairs of the Church of the Latter-Day Saints, and execute the provisions of
Act Cong. Feb. 19, 1887 (Edmunds Act), is constitutional. Religious
Societies k35 332k35 Congress
has plenary and supreme legislative power over the territories of the United States
and their inhabitants; and Act Cong. Feb. 19, 1887, § 19, 24 Stat. 639, abrogating
the charter of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, granted by the
legislature of Utah January 19, 1855, and dissolving the corporation, was a valid
exercise of such power, and the said corporation has ceased to have any existence
as a civil body. *32
**792F. S. Richards, J. O. Broadhead, *41 J. E. McDonald, and
J. M. Butler, for appellants. Atty.
Gen. Garland and Sol. Gen. Jenks, for the United States. BRADLEY,
J. This
case originated under and in pursuance of the act of congress, entitled 'An act
to amend an act entitled 'An act to amend section 5352 of the Revised Statutes
of the United States, in reference to bigamy, and for other purposes, approved
March 22, 1882,'' which act was passed February 19, 1887, and became a law by
not being returned by the president. This act, besides making additional provision
with regard to the prosecution of polygamy in the territories, and other matters
concerning the territory of Utah, provided, *7 in the 13th, 17th, and 26th
sections, as follows: 'Sec. 13. That it shall be the duty of the attorney general
of the United States to institute and prosecute proceedings to forfeit and escheat
to the United States the property of corporations obtained or held in violation
of section three of the act of congress approved the first day of July, eighteen
hundred and sixty-two, entitled 'And act to punish and prevent the practice of
polygamy in the territories of the United States and other places, and disapproving
and annulling certain acts of the legislative assembly of the territory of Utah,'
or in violation of section eighteen hundred and ninety of the Revised Statutes
of the United States; and all such property so forfeited and escheated to the
United States shall be disposed of by the secretary of the interior, and the proceeds
thereof applied to the use of the use and benefit of the common schools in the
territory in which such property may be: provided, that no building, or the grounds
appurtenant thereto, which is held and occupied exclusively for purposes of the
worship of God, or parsonage connected therewith, or burial-ground, shall be forfeited.'
'Sec. 17. That the acts of the legislative assembly of the territory of Utah incorporating,
continuing, or providing for the corporation known as the 'Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter- Day Saints,' and the ordinance of the so-called general assembly of
the state of Deseret incorporating the Church of Jeses Christ of Latter-Day Saints,
so far as the same may now have legal force and validity, are hereby disapproved
and annulled, and the said corporation, in so far as it may now have, or pretend
to have, any legal existence, is hereby dissolved; that it shall be the duty of
the attorney general of the United States to cause such proceedings to be taken
in the supreme court of the territory of Utah as shall be proper to execute the
foregoing provisions of this section, and to wind up the affairs of said corporation
conformably to law; and in such proceedings the court shall have power, and it
shall be *8 its duty, to make such decree or decrees as shall be proper
to effectuate the transfer of the title to real property now held and used by
said corporation for places of worship, and parsonages connected therewith, and
burial-grounds, and of the description mentioned in the proviso to section thirteen
of this act, and in section twenty-six of this act, to the respective trustees
mentioned in section twenty-six of this act; and for the purposes of this section
said court shall have all the powers of a court of equity.' 'Sec. 26. That all
religious societies, sects, and congregations shall have the right to have and
to hold, through trustees appointed by any court exercising probate powers in
a territory, only on the nomination of the authorities of such society, sect,
or congregation, so much real property, for the erection or use of houses of worship,
and for such parsonages and buriai-grounds, as shall be necessary for the convenience
and use of the several congregations of such religious society, sect, or congregation.'
24 St. 637, 638, 641. **793
In pursuance of the thirteenth section, above recited, proceedings were instituted
by information on behalf of the United States in the third district court of the
territory of Utah, for the purpose of having declared forfeited and escheated
to the government the real estate of the corporation called the 'Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints,' except a certain block in Salt Lake City used exclusively
for public worship. On the 30th of September, 1887, the bill in the present case
was filed in the supreme court of the territory, under the seventeenth section
of the act, for the appointment of a receiver to collect the debts due to said
corporation, and the rents, issues, and profits of its real estate, and to take
possession of and manage the same for the time being; and for a decree of dissolution
and annulment of the charter of said corporation, and other incidental relief.
The bill is in the name of the United States, and was brought by direction of
the attorney general against 'the late corporation known and claiming to exist
as the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,'' and John Taylor, 'late
trustee in trust,' and 11 other persons, late assistant trustees of said corporation.
The bill states the creation of the corporation by an ordinance of the assembly
of the socalled 'State of Deseret,' which was afterwards organized as the territory
of Utah. The ordinance was approved the 8th day of February, 1851, and was afterwards
in October, 1851, and January 19, 1855, re enacted by the legislature of the territory
of Utah. A
copy of the original ordinance is appended to the bill, and is as follows: 'An
ordinance incorporating the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. (Approved
february 8, 1851.) Section 1. Be it ordained by the general assembly of the state
of Deseret, that all that portion of the inhabitants of said state which now are
or hereafter may become residents therein, and which are known and distinguished
as 'The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,' are hereby incorporated,
constituted, made, and declared a body corporate, with perpetual succession, under
the original name and style of 'The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,'
as now organized, with full power and authority to sue and be sued, defend and
be defended, in all courts of law or equity in this state; to establish, order,
and regulate worship, and hold and occupy real and personal estate, and have and
use a seal, which they may alter at pleasure. Sec. 2. And be it further ordained,
that said body or church, as a religious society, may, at a general or special
conference, elect one 'trustee in trust, and not to exceed twelve assistant trustees,
to receive, hold, buy, sell, manage, use, and control the real and personal property
of said church, which said property shall be free from taxation, which trustee
and assistant trustees, when elected or appointed, shall give bonds, with approved
security, in whatever sum the conference may deem sufficient, for the faithful
performance of their several duties; which said bonds, when approved, shall be
filed in the general church recorder's office, at the seat of general church business,
when said bonds are approved by said conference, and said trustee and assistant
trustees shall continue in office during the pleasure of said church; and there
shall also be made by the clerk of the conference of said church a certificate
of such election or appointment of said trustee and assistant trustees, which
shall be recorded in the general church recorder's office, at the seat of general
church business; and when said bonds are filed, and said certificates recorded,
said trustee or assistant trustees may receive property, real or personal, by
gift, donation, bequest, or in any manner not incompatible with the principles
of right-eousness or the rules of justice, inasmuch as the same shall be used,
managed, or disposed of for the benefit, improvement, erection of houses for public
worship and instruction, and the well-being of said church. Sec. 3. And be it
further ordained, that, as said church holds the constitutional and original right,
in common with all civil and religious communities, 'to worship God according
to the dictates of conscience,' to reverence communion agreeably to the principles
of truth, and to solemnize marriage compatible with the revelations of Jesus Christ,
for the security and full enjoyment of all blessings and privileges embodied in
the religion of Jesus Christ free to all, it is also declared that such church
does and shall possess and enjoy continually the power and authority, in and of
itself, to originate, make, pass, and establish rules, regulations, ordinances,
laws, customs, and criterions for the good order, safety, government, conveniences,
comfort, and control of said church, and for the punishment or forgiveness of
all offenses relative to fellowship, according to church covenants; that the pursuit
of bliss and the enjoyment of life in every capacity of public association, domestic
happiness, temporal expansion, or spiritual increase upon the earth may not legally
be questioned: provided, however, that each and every act of practice so established
or adopted for law or custom shall relate to solemnities, sacraments, ceremonies,
consecrations, endowments, tithings, marriages, fellowship, or the religious duties
of man to his Maker, inasmuch as the doctrines, principles, practices, or performances
support virtue and increase morality, and are not inconsistent with or repugnant
to the constitution of the United States or of this state, and are founded in
the relevations of the Lord. Sec. 4. And be it further ordained, that said church
shall keep at every full organized branch or stake a registry of marriages, births,
and deaths, free for the inspection of all members, and for their benefit. Sec.
5. And be it further ordained, that the presidency of said church shall fill all
vacancies of the assistant trustees necessary to be filled, until superseded by
the conference of said church. Sec. 6. Be it further ordained, that no assistant
trustee or trustees shall transact business in relation to buying, selling, or
otherwise disposing of church property without the consent or approval of the
trustee in trust of said church.' Comp. Laws Utah 1876, J., 232. *9
The bill states, further, that John Taylor, **794 (since deceased,) on
and prior to the 19th of February, 1887, was trustee in trust, and the other individual
defendants were the assistant trustees, of the corporation. That the corporation
acquired and held large amounts of real and personal property in the territory
of Utah after the 1st of July, 1862,--the value of the real estate being about
$2,000,000, and the value of the personal property about $1,000,000, as held and
owned on the 19th of February, 1887, and which the defendants still claim to hold
in violation of the laws of the United States. That the corporation was a corporation
for religious or charitable purposes. That by the third section of the act of
July 1, 1862, re-enacted as section 1890 of the Revised Statutes of the United
States, any corporation for religious or charitable purposes was forbidden to
acquire or hold real estate in any territory, during the existence of the territorial
government, of greater value than $50,000; and that more than this value of the
property of the said corporation has been acquired since July 1, 1862, which is
not held or occupied as a building or ground appurtenant thereto for the purpose
of the worship of God, or a parsonage connected therewith, or burial-ground. That,
therefore, the real estate referred to, owned by the corporation, is subject to
escheat to the United States. That on the 19th day of February, 1887, (by the
said act of that date,) the charter and act of incorporation of the corporation
aforesaid was disapproved, repealed, and annulled by congress, and the corporation
was dissolved, and all the real estate owned and occupied by it, in excess of
$50,000, not held or occupied for the worship of God, etc., was subject to escheat
to the United States. That the said corporation, and the successor of said John
Taylor as trustee in trust, (whose name is unknown, and who is asked to be made
a party to the bill,) and the other* defendants,*10 assistant trustees,
wrongfully, and in violation of the laws of the United States, still claim to
hold and exercise the powers which were held and exercised by said corporation,
and are unlawfully possessing and using the said real estate, and claim the right
to sell, use, and dispose of the same. That since the 19th of February, 1887,
there is no person lawfully authorized to take charge of, manage, preserve, or
control said property, and the same is subject to irreparable and irremediable
loss and destruction. The bill prays that a receiver may be appointed to receive
and hold all the property of the corporation; that a decree be made declaring
the dissolution and annulment of the charter of the said corporation; that the
court appoint a commissioner to select and set apart out of the real estate which
was held and occupied by the corporation such real estate as may be lawfully held
for religious uses, make necessary orders, and take proceedings to wind up the
affairs of the said corporation, and grant such other and further relief as the
nature of the case may require. On
the 7th of November, 1887, the court appointed a receiver, and on the 8th William
B. Preston, Robert T. Burton, and John R. Winder, claiming to have an interest
in a portion of the property, were made parties to the suit. Demurrers to the
bill having been overruled, the defendants severally answered. The
corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, in its answer,
after stating the granting of its charter by an ordinance of the assembly of Deseret,
and its confirmation by the legislature of the territory of Utah, contended that
this charter was a contract between the government and the persons accepting the
grant, and those becoming corporators; and that the corporation had the power
to hold real and personal property, without limit as to value and amount, for
the purposes of its charter; that it never acquired property in its own name,
but under the powers granted by the ordinance it did acquire and hold certain
real and personal property, in the name of a trustee, in trust for said corporation;
that the act of July 1, 1862, expressly provided that existing vested *11
rights in real estate should not be impaired; that the defendant has ever been
and still is a corporation or association for religious or charitable purposes;
that so much of the act of congress which took effect March 3, 1887, (referring
to the act passed February 19, 1887,) as attempts to dissolve the defendant corporation,
or to interfere with or limit its right to hold property, or to escheat the same,
or to wind up its affairs, is unconstitutional and void; that the United States
has not the power to do this by reason of said contract; that when the act of
March 3, 1887, took effect the said corporation, through its trustees, held and
owned only three parcels of real estate, namely: (1) All of block 87, in plat
A, Salt Lake City survey; (2) part of block 88, plat A, of said survey, containing
2 157-160 acres; (3) part of lot 6, in block 75, plat A, of same survey; that
the defendant corporation had acquired the first two of these lots before July
1, 1862; that the first piece, namely, all of block 87, in plat A, was, ever since
1850, and still is, used and occupied exclusively for purposes of the worship
of God; that the third of said tracts, which is the only tract of land owned by
the corporation on the 3d of March, 1887, which had been acquired subsequent to
July 1, 1862, was always, and still is, used as a parsonage, necessary for the
convenience and use of the corporation; that said corporation had owned other
lands, but had sold and disposed of the same prior to March 3, 1887; that after
the said act took effect, and in pursuance of section 26 of said act, it applied
to the proper probate court for Salt Lake county for the appointment of three
trustees to take the title to the three tracts above described, and on May 19,
1887, said court appointed William B. Preston, Robert T. Burton, and John R. Winder
such trustees; and afterwards said three tracts, except a part of lot 6, in block
75, (the third lot,) were conveyed to said trustees; that the remaining part of
said lot 6 is now held by Theodore McKean, in trust for the defendant corporation,
having been omitted from the conveyance to the said trustees by mistake; that
said corporation **795 does not now hold any real estate whatsoever; that
no successor to said John Taylor has ever been appointed trustee in trust by said
corporation.* *12 The answer denies that the charter and act of incorporation
of the defendant was annulled by the act of 19th February, 1887; and alleges that,
even if said act is valid and binding, it did not go into effect until March 3,
1887. The answer further avers that prior to February 28, 1887, the defendant
corporation from time to time acquired and held personal property for charitable
and religious purposes, and on that day held certain personal property donated
to it by the members of the church and friends thereof, solely for use and distribution
for charitable and religious purposes, such property being always held by its
trustee in trust; and that on the 28th of February, 1887, John Taylor, who then
held all the personal property, moneys, stocks, and bonds belonging to said corporation,
as trustee in trust, with its consent and approval, donated, transferred, and
conveyed the same (after reserving sufficient to pay its then existing indebtedness)
to certain ecclesiastical corporations created and existing under and by virtue
of the laws of the territory of Utah, to be devoted by them solely to charitable
and religious uses and purposes, and delivered the same to them. Wherefore the
defendant avers that when the act of March 3, 1887, went into effect, it did not
own or hold any personal property, except mere furniture, fixtures, and implements
pertaining to its houses of worship and parsonage. The
defendants Wilford, Woodruff, and others, charged as assistant trustees in the
bill, (except Moses Thatcher,) deny that they ever were such assistant trustees,
though they admit that they acted as counselors and advisors of John Taylor, the
trustee in trust. Thatcher admits that he was once elected assistant trustee,
but alleges that his term of office expired 9th of October, 1875, and he has never
acted since. They all deny that they have ever owned or held any property belonging
to the corporation. They all, however, adopt its answer. Preston,
Burton, and Winder, who were made defendants after the suit was commenced, admit
the conveyance to them of the three tracts described in the answer of the corporation,
which they declare that they hold in trust for the Church of *13 Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints. They also adopt the answer of the corporation. Replications
were duly filed. One
Angus M. Cannon intervened as a claimant of certain coal lands supposed to be
affected by the proceedings, and was admitted as a defendant, and filed an answer
explaining his claim. Several
petitions were filed in the cause, with leave of the court, for the purpose of
asking that certain pieces of property therein described might be set apart for
the use of the church. They were:
(1) A petition
by Francis Armstrong, Jesse W. Fox, Jr., and Theodore McKean, who alleged that
they held divers pieces of real estate (described in their petition) in trust
for the use and benefit of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. To
this petition the plaintiff filed a general replication.
(2)
William B. Preston, Robert T. Burton, and John R. Winder filed a petition stating
that they were duly appointed by the probate court of Salt Lake county trustees
to hold title to real estate belonging to the said church, and as such trustees
hold the legal title to certain pieces of land described, to-wit: First,
a piece known as the 'Guardo House' and lot, held for the use and benefit of the
president of the said church as a parsonage, where he has made his home and residence
since 1878; secondly, another piece adjoining the above, known as the 'Historian's
Office' and grounds, the building on which contains the church library and records,
and the legal title to which is in Theodore McKean. The petitioners pray that
the said premises be set apart to said church as a parsonage, and that the title
be confirmed to the trustees. To this petition the United States filed an answer,
denying that said Preston, Burton, and Winder hold the title to said 'Guardo House'
and land, or that they hold the same in trust for the said Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints; that the pretended conveyance under which they claim to
hold the same is void and of no effect, for want of power in the grantors; that
said property has never been a parsonage; and that the property designated as
the historian's office and *14 grounds has never been part of any parsonage.
On the contrary, the plaintiff avers that McKean holds the legal title to said
property in trust for the late corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints as a part of its general property, and that the historian's office and
grounds are entirely separate and apart from the Guardo House and lot, and in
no manner connected therewith. The said Preston, Burton, and Winder filed another
petition, stating their appointment as trustees as aforesaid, and that they, as
such, hold another property described in the petition, (being a portion of block
88, plat A, of Salt Lake City survey,) for the use and benefit of the said church,
which was taken possession of by the agents of said church when Salt Lake City
was first laid out, in 1848, and ever since used and occupied by said church;
and that prior to July 1, 1862, valuable buildings and improvements had been built
thereon, still owned and possessed by the said church; and they pray that said
property be set apart to said church, and the title and possession confirmed to
the petitioners as trustees. The United States filed an answer to this petition
denying the truth of the same. A similar petition was filed by the same parties,
Preston, Burton, and Winder, claiming to hold the legal title to block 87, plat
A, Salt Lake City survey, known as the 'Temple Block,' containing three large
buildings constructed by said church exclusively for religious purposes, and been
in its possession since 1848. They pray that this property may be set apart to
the church, and the title and possession confirmed to the petitioners, as trustees.
The plaintiff, by answer, alleges that the conveyance **796 under which
the petitioners claim this property is also void for want of power in the grantors
to convey. Another
petition was filed by George Romney, Henry Dinwoody, James Watson, and John Clark,
in behalf of themselves and of other members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints, alleging that said members are more than 100,000 in number,
and so numerous that they cannot, without inconvenience and oppressive delays,
be brought before the court. That they all have an interest in *15 common
in the subject of the petition and the questions involved in this suit. That on
the 7th of November, 1887, this court made an order appointing Frank H. Dyer receiver
of the church aforesaid. That he, as such receiver, has seized, taken possession
of, and now holds, subject to the order of the court, the following described
real and personal property, to-wit: (1) All of block 87, plat A, Salt Lake City
survey, known as 'Temple Block.' (2) The east half of lot 6, block 75, plat A
aforesaid, known as the 'Guardo House' and grounds. (3) Part of lot 6, block 75,
plat A aforesaid, known as the 'Historian Office' and grounds. (4) A portion of
block 88, plat A aforesaid, known as part of the 'Tithing-Office' property. (5)
The south half of lots 6 and 7, in block 88, plat A aforesaid, known as part of
the 'Tithing-Office' property. (6) Various tracts of land, designated, containing
a large number of acres situated in to wnship 1 S., range 1 W., United States
survey of Utah, and known as the 'Church Farm;' excepting, however, a tract sold
to the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railway Company by deed dated February
7, 1882. (7) The undivided half of the S. 1/2 of the S. E. 1/4, the S. E. 1/4
of the S. W. 1/4, and lot 4, section 18, and the N. 1/2 of the N. E. 1/4 of section
19, township 3 N., range 6 E., in Summit county, Utah territory, known as 'Coal
Lands.' Also a number of items of personal property, including 800 shares of stock
in the Salt Lake Gas Company; 4,732 shares in the Deseret Telegraph Company; several
promissory notes of different parties and amounts; 30,158 sheep; $237,666.15 of
money. That since said personal property came into possession of the receiver
he has collected rents on the real estate, and dividends on the gas stock; and
that all the property in the possession of the receiver is of the aggregate value
of about $750,000, exclusive of Temple block. That all of said property at the
time so taken, and long prior thereto, was the property of the Church of Jesus
Christ of *16 Latter-Day Saints, and that the possession of the receiver
is wrongful, and without authority or right. That said church is a voluntary religious
society, organized in the territory of Utah for religious and charitable purposes.
That said petitioners and others, for whose benefit they file the petition, are
members of said church, residing in said territory. That the church became possessed
of all of said property in accordance with its established rules and customs,
by the voluntary contributions, donations, and dedications of its members, to
be held, managed, and applied to the use and benefit of the church, for the maintenance
of its religion and charities, by trustees appointed by said members semi-annually,
at the general conference. That John Taylor, the late trustee so appointed, died
on the 25th day of July, 1887, and no trustee has been appointed since. That the
property in the hands of the trustees is claimed adversely to the church, the
petitioners, and the members thereof, and wholly without right, by the United
States, and is wrongfully withheld by the receiver from the purposes to which
it was dedicated and granted. That the petitioners and the members on whose behalf
this petition is filed are equitably the owners of said property and beneficially
interested therein; and, to prevent a diversion thereof from the religious and
charitable purposes of the said church to which they donated and granted said
property, the petitioners pray that, in case said corporation of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints should, upon the final hearing, be held and
decreed to be dissolved, an order may be made decreeing: (1) That the said property
belongs to the individual members of said church, and that they are authorized
to appoint a trustee or trustees to hold, manage, and apply such property to the
purposes for which it was originally given. (2) That said receiver deliver the
possession thereof to such trustee or trustees as may be named and appointed at
a general conference of the members of the church, in accordance with its rules
and customs. To
this petition the United States filed an answer, denying *17 the claim
of the petitioners; admitting the appointment of the receiver, and his taking
possession of the property referred to; denying that at the time of such taking
it was the property of the said Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, whether
the petition is intended to apply to the late corporation or to the voluntary
religious sect which has existed under that name since the dissolution of the
said corporation. It admits that prior to the said dissolution said property belonged
to the corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, but alleges
that since then it has had no legal owner except the United States; denies that
the said Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints has been for years past a
voluntary religious society or association, but alleges that up to the 19th day
of February, 1887, said church existed as a corporation for religious purposes;
and since that time, when it became dissolved, there has existed a voluntary and
unincorporated religious society or sect known by the name of the 'Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints.' It denies that the corporation to which all of said
property belonged acquired the same by voluntary contributions, donations, and
dedications of the members thereof, and alleges that all of said realty was acquired
by purchase, and that said personalty was acquired by said church largely by purchase
and other means, as afterwards set out. It denies that the receiver is wrongfully
withholding and diverting the property from the purposes to which it was donated,
and denies that the petitioners or any other persons are equitably or otherwise
**797 the owners of said property, or any portion thereof, or beneficially
interested therein. The answer then sets forth the incorporation of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints as a body for religious and charitable purposes,
by the act of the territorial assembly of Utah in 1855, and avers that it continued
to be a corporation up to the 19th of February, 1887. It then sets forth the act
of congress of July 1, 1862, before referred to, and the act of March 3, 1887,
disapproving and annulling the act of incorporation aforesaid, and dissolving
the said corporation, and alleges that it did become dissolved. The answer then
states the previous proceedings *18 in the suit, and the appointment of
a receiver, and alleges that the United States had filed in the district court
for the third district of Utah a proceeding in the nature of an information against
all the real property set out in the petition, for the purpose of having the same
declared forfeited and escheated to the United States, which proceedings are now
pending. And the answer alleges that said real property has become forfeited to
the United States, as shown in said information. The answer further states that
the said corporation was a religious corporation for the purpose of promulgating,
spreading, and upholding the principles, practices, teachings, and tenets of said
church, and that it never had any other corporate objects, purposes, or authority;
never had any capital stock or stockholders, nor persons pecuniarily interested
in its property, nor any natural persons authorized to take or hold any personal
property or estate for said corporation, except such trustees as were provided
for by its statute of incorporation, and the power of appointing such trustees
ceased and became extinct at the date of its dissolution; that up to that date
said personal property had been used for and devoted exclusively to the promulgation,
spread, and maintenance of the principles, practices, teachings, and tenets of
said Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, among which the doctrine and
practice of polygamy, or plurality of wives, was a fundamental and essential doctrine,
tenet, and principle of said church, and the same was opposed and contrary to
good morals, public policy, and the laws of the United States, and that the use
made of said personal property was largely for purposes of upholding and maintaining
said doctrine and practice of polygamy, and violating the laws of the United States;
that since said dissolution there has existed a voluntary and unincorporated sect
known as the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,' comprising the great
body of individuals named in said intervention, who formerly formed the membership
of the said corporation; and the organization and general government of said voluntary
religious sect, and its principles, doctrines, teachings, and tenets include the
practice of polygamy, and have been substantially the same as *19 those
of the said corporation; and the said voluntary religious sect has upheld and
maintained the unlawful and immoral practice and doctrine of polygamy as strongly
as the said corporation did; and any uses, purposes, or trusts to which said personal
property could be devoted, in accordance with the original purposes and trusts
to which it was dedicated, would be opposed to good morals, public policy, and
contrary to the laws of the United States. The answer further states that there
are no natural persons or corporations entitled to any portion of the personal
property thereof, as successors in interest to said corporation; that all definite
and legal trusts to which said property was dedicated have totally failed and
become extinct; and that by operation of law the said property has become escheated
to the United States; and the allegation that said property was acquired by voluntary
contributions, donations, and dedications of the members of the corporation is
not true, but the late corporation carried on business to a wide extent, and while
a large amount of personalty in the shape of tithes was paid to the church each
year by the members thereof, yet the personalty now in the hands of the said receiver
is in no part made up of voluntary contributions or tithes paid in as aforesaid,
but is all of it property which was acquired by said corporation in the course
of trade, by purchase, and for a valuable consideration; and it held the same
in its corporate capacity, absolutely and entirely independent of any individual
members of said corporation, and upon the trust and for the uses and purposes
set out, which, as has been alleged, were in whole or in part immoral and illegal.
A replication was filed to this answer. The
last-mentioned petition of intervention and the answer thereto are in the nature
of an original bill and answer. But serve to present the whole controversy in
all its aspects, and for that purpose may properly be retained, as no objection
is made thereto. The
act of congress of July 1, 1862, referred to in the pleadings, is entitled 'An
act to punish and prevent the practice of polygamy in the territories of the United
States, and other places, and disapproving and annulling certain acts of the legislative
assembly of the territory of Utah,' and provides as follows: 'Be it enacted by
the senate and house of representatives of the United States of America, in congress
assembled, that every person having a husband or wife living, who shall marry
any other person, whether married or single, in a territory of the United States,
or other place over which the United States have exclusive jurisdiction, shall,
except in the cases specified in the proviso to this section, be adjudged guilty
of bigamy, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding
five hundred dollars, and by imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years:
provided, nevertheless, that this section shall not extend to any person by reason
of any former marriage whose husband or wife by such marriage shall have been
absent for five successive years without being known to such person within that
time to be living; nor to any person by reason of any former marriage which shall
have been dissolved by the decree of a competent court; nor to any person by reason
of any former **798 marriage which shall have been annulled or pronounced
void by the sentence or decree of a competent court on the ground of the nullity
of the marriage contract. Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, that the following
ordinance of the provisional government of the 'State of Deseret,' so called,
namely, 'An ordinance incorporating the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,'
passed February eight, in the year eighteen hundred and fifty-one, and adopted,
re-enacted, and made valid by the governor and legislative assembly of the territory
of Utah by an act passed January nineteen, in the year eighteen hundred and fifty-five,
entitled 'An act in relation to the compilation and revision of the laws and resolutions
in force in Utah territory, their publication and distribution,' and all other
acts and parts of acts heretofore passed by the said legislative assembly of the
territory of Utah, which establish, support, maintain, shield, or countenance
polygamy, be, and the same hereby are, disapproved and annulled: provided, that
this act shall be so limited and construed as not to affect or interfere with
the right of property legally acquired under the ordinance heretofore mentioned,
nor with the right 'to worship God according to the dictates of conscience,' but
only to annul all acts and laws which establish, maintain, protect, or countenance
the practice of polygamy, evasively called spiritual marriage, however, disguised
by legal or ecclesiastical solemnities, sacraments, ceremonies, consecrations,
or other contrivances. Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, that it shall not be
lawful for any corporation or association for religious or charitable purposes
to acquire or hold real estate in any territory of the United States during the
existence of the territorial government of a greater value than fifty thousand
dollars; and all real estate acquired or held by any such corporation or association
contrary to the provisions of this act shall be forfeited and escheat to the United
States: provided, that existing vested rights in real estate shall not be impaired
by the provisions of this section.' 12 U. S. St. 501. Another
act, known as the 'Edmunds Act,' was approved March 22, 1882, entitled' 'An act
to amend section 5352 of the Revised Statutes of the United States in reference
to bigamy, and for other purposes.' This act contained stringent provisions against
the crime of polygamy, and has frequently come under the consideration of this
court, and need not be recited in detail. The
cause came on to be heard upon the pleadings, proofs, and an agreed statement
of the facts. The court made a finding of facts, upon which a final decree was
rendered. The facts found are as follows: *20 '(1) That the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints was, from the 19th day of January, 1855, to the 3d
day of March, A. D. 1887, a corporation for religious and charitable purposes,
duly organized and existing under and in pursuance of an ordinance enacted by
the legislature of the territory of Utah, and approved by the governor thereof
on the said 19th day of January, A. D. 1855, a copy of which ordinance is made
a part of the complaint herein. (2) That on the 19th day of February, A. D. 1887,
the congress of the United States passed an act entitled 'An act to amend section
5352 of the Revised Statutes of the United States in reference to bigamy, and
for other purposes,' approved March 22, 1882, which purported to disapprove, repeal,
and annul the said charter and act of incorporation of the incorporation of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- Day Saints aforesaid, and passed as aforesaid.
(3) That immediately before the passage of said act of congress of February 19,
1887, the said John Taylor was, and for a long time prior thereto had been, the
qualified and acting trustee in trust of said corporation of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter- Day Saints; that after the passage of said act of congress of
February 19, 1887, the said John Taylor claimed to hold and continued to exercise
the powers conferred upon said Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints by
said act of incorporation until his death, which occurred on the 25th day of July,
A. D. 1887. (4) That at the date of the passage of said act of congress of February
19, A. D. 1887, and for a long time prior thereto, there were no assistant trustees
of said corporation, none having been elected, appointed, or qualified since the
year 1887; that said Wilford Woodruff, Lorenzo Snow, Erastus Snow, Franklin D.
Richards, Brigham Young, Moses Thatcher, Francis M. Lyman, John Henry Smith, George
Teasdale, Heber J. Grant, and John W. Taylor were, at the commencement of this
suit, counselors and advisors of the said John Taylor, and continued to his death
counseling and advising him respecting the management, use, and control of the
property hereinafter described. *21 (5) That since the passage of said
act of congress of February 19, 1887, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints has existed as a voluntary religious sect, of which the said Wilford Woodruff
is the acting president, and it has had duly designated and appointed by the probate
court of Salt Lake county, in said territory, in pursuance of the act of congress
aforesaid, the following-named trustees, William B. Preston, Robert T. Burton,
and John R. Winder, to take the title to and hold such real estate as shall be
allowed said religious sect by law for the erection and use of houses of worship,
parsonages, and burial grounds. (6) That at the time of the passage of said act
of congress of February 19, 1887, there were no outstanding debts of or claims
against said corporation, so far as appears to the court from the evidence herein.
(7) That at the time of the passage of the act of congress of February 19, 1887,
the said corporation owned, held, and possessed the following real estate in said
territory, to-wit.' The items of real estate were then enumerated, being substantially
the same as those specified in the petition of George Romney and others, before
referred to, with the addition of the valuation of each item or piece of property,--the
Temple Block being valued at $500,000, the Guardo House and grounds at $50,000;
the Historian's Office and grounds at $20,000; the Tithing-Office and grounds,
one portion at **799 $50,000, and the other at $25,000; the Church farm
at $110,000; and the seventh item, known as 'coal lands in Summit county,' valued
at $30,000. The court further found as follows: 'The legal title to the real estate,
first above described, known as the 'Temple Block,' at the time said act of February
19, 1887, went into effect, was in John Taylor, as trustee in trust for the said
corporation, which said trustee in trust subsequently, and on the 30th day of
June, 1887, attempted to convey the same to William B. Preston, Robert T. Burton,
and John R. Winder, as trustees, by a certain instrument in writing, in the words
and figures following, to-wit: 'This indenture, made on this thirtieth day of
June, in the *22 year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven,
by and between John Taylor, trustee in trust of that certain body of religious
worshipers called and known as the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,'
party of the first part, and William B. Preston, presiding bishop of said church,
and his two counselors, Robert T. Burton and John R. Winder, parties of the second
part.'' The indenture then recites the appointment of the parties of the second
part, by probate court of Salt Lake county, as trustees to hold certain real property
of the said church located in Salt Lake City, under and in pursuance of the twenty-sixth
section of the act of March 3, 1887, and purports on the part of Taylor, the party
of the first part, in consideration of one dollar to convey to the parties of
the second part, and their successors duly appointed, upon trust, the property
referred to, being all of block 87, in plat A, Salt Lake City survey, for the
use, benefit, and behoof of that body of religious worshipers known and called
the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,' and for such use as said church
or its authorities should dictate and appoint, with provision for the devolution
of the property in case of failure of the trustees. The
court further found as follows: 'The said Temple Block was taken possession of
by the agents of the said Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, then existing
as a voluntary unincorporated religious sect, when Salt Lake City was first laid
out and surveyed, in 1848, and since said date has been in possession of said
church as a voluntary religious sect until it became incorporated as aforesaid,
and then as a corporation; that at the time the same was taken possession of as
aforesaid it was a part of the public domain, and continued to be such until said
land was entered by the mayor of said city, along with other lands, on the 21st
day of November, 1871, under the town-site act of congress entited 'An act for
the relief of cities and towns upon the public lands,' approved March 2, 1867;
that on the 1st day of June, 1872, the same was conveyed by the mayor of said
Salt Lake City to the trustee in trust of said corporation, in whom the title
remained until the act of congress of February 19, 1887, took effect. *23
The facts in regard to the possession and acquisition of the balance of said real
estate above described, are as follows: The second property, above described and
known as the 'Guardo House' and grounds, was owned by Brigham Young individually
at the time of his death, in 1877, and was thereafter transferred and conveyed
by his executors to John Taylor, as trustee in trust for the corporation of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, for a valuable consideration, pursuant
to the powers in them vested by the will of the said Brigham Young; that subsequently,
on the 24th day of April, 1878, the said John Taylor, as trustee in trust, transferred
and conveyed the same to Theodore McKean, on a secret trust for said corporation,
who held the same upon said trust until the 2d day of July, 1887, when he attempted
to convey the same to William B. Preston and Robert T. Burton and John R. Winder,
trustees, by a certain instrument in writing, of which the following is a copy.'
The deed is then set out in the findings, and is altogether similar to that executed
by John Taylor to Preston, Burton, and Winder, before recited. The court further
found a follows: 'That said Guardo House and grounds were used and occupied by
said John Taylor, president of said church, from 1878 up to the time of his death
as a residence. The third property above described, known as the 'Historian's
Office' and grounds, was taken possession of by Albert T. Rockwood in 1848, and
was a part of the public domain, and continued to be such up to the 21st day of
November, 1871, when the town-site of Salt Lake City was entered as aforesaid;
that on the 3d day of October, 1855, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints, through its trustee in trust, Brigham Young, purchased the said Rockwood's
claim to said premises, and at its own cost and expense erected thereon the building
which has ever since been known as the 'Historian's Office' and residence; that
said building was large enough to accomodate the historian's family, and furnish
an office for the church historian; that from the year 1848 until the time of
his death, in 1875, George A. Smith was the historian of *24 said church,
and lived in said building with his family, and had the custody of the books,
papers, and records, of said church relating to its history or public acts of
its officers and members; that the same have always been kept in said building
from the time of its construction until the present time, at the cost of said
church, and that such office is and has been necessary for the use of said historian
in the discharge of his duties; that in 1872 the said George A. Smith obtained
the title to said premises from the mayor of Salt Lake City under the townsite
act, and that after his death the same was conveyed to his wife and one of his
granddaughters, who afterwards transferred and conveyed the same to Theodore McKean
for a valuable consideration; that the said Theodore McKean has ever since that
date held, and now holds, the same on a secret trust, for the use and benefit
of said corporation; that said grounds are immediately west of and adjoining the
Guardo-House grounds. The fourth property above described, known as part of the
'Tithing-Office' and grounds, was taken **800 possession of by the agents
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints when Salt Lake City was first
laid out and surveyed, in 1848, and ever since that time has been used and occupied
by said church as a voluntary sect until it became incorporated as aforesaid,
and then as a corporation, receiving and disbursing tithing and voluntary contributions
of property, and that prior to July 1, 1862, buildings and other improvements
of considerable value had been built thereon by said church; that at the time
said property was taken possession of as aforesaid it was a part of the public
domain, and continued to be such until the 21st day of November, 1871, when said
land was entered as aforesaid along with other lands under said town-site act
by the mayor of Salt Lake City; that Brigham Young, who was then president and
trustee in trust of said corporation, claimed said land under said town-sitelaw,
and it was conveyed to him by Daniel H. Wells, mayor of Salt Lake City; that in
November, 1873, Brigham Young transferred and conveyed said property to George
A. Smith, as the trustee in trust of the corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints, and his successorin office; that on the death of said George
A. Smith *25 the legal title in said premises vested in Brigham Young as
such successor, and the executors of said Brigham Young transferred and conveyed
said property to John Taylor, as the trustee in trust of said corporation, who,
in April, 1878, transferred and conveyed the same to Edward Hunter upon a secret
trust for the use and benefit of said corporation; that said Edward Hunter afterwards,
to-wit, on the 24th day of April, 1878, transferred and conveyed the same to Robert
T. Burton, on a secret trust for said corporation, and on the 2d day of July,
1887, the said Robert T. Burton attempted to convey the same to Willfam B. Preston,
John R. Winder, and himself, as trustees, by a certain instrument in writing,
in the words and figures following, to-wit.' The deed here copied is similar to
the previous deeds before recited. The
court further found as follows: 'The fifth piece of property above described,
known as a part of the 'Tithing-Office' and grounds, was possessed, acquired,
and owned as follows: In the year 1848, Newell K. Whitney, then presiding bishop
of said Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, took possession of lot five,
block eighty-eight, plat A, Salt Lake City survey, and in the same year Horace
K. Whitney took possession of lot six, in said block; that some time in the year
1856 the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, by its agents, took possession
of the south half of said lots, and placed thereon yards and corrals, and
have continued to occupy the same, with said yards and corrals, down to
this period; that in the year 1870 the mayor of Salt Lake City entered the town-site
of Salt Lake City, in trust for the inhabitants and occupants thereof, under the
laws of 1867; that the foregoing lots are a portion of said entry. That said Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter- Day Saints, by its trustee, Brigham Young, filed an
application in the proper court for a title to the south half of said lots, and
the heirs of Newell K. Whitney also filed an application in the proper court for
the south half of lot five, and Horace K. Whitney filed an application in the
same court for the south half of lot *26 six. The court awarded the title
to the said premises to Brigham Young, as trustee as aforesaid. That afterwards,
in the year 1872, Brigham Young, trustee, obtained a deed from the heirs of Newell
K. Whitney to said south half of lot five, and in consideration thereof paid them
seven thousand dollars, and at the same time the said Brigham Young, trustee,
obtained a deed from Horace K. Whitney of lot six, and paid him therefor the sum
of two thousand dollars. At the time the act of congress of February 19, 1887,
took effect, the legal title thereto was held by Robert T. Burton on a secret
trust for the use and benefit of said corporation; that on the 2d day of July,
1887, the said Robert T. Burton attempted to convey the same to William B. Preston,
John R. Widner, and himself, as trustees, by that certain instrument of writing
hereinbefore last set out. The remainder of said real estate, held, owned, and
possessed by said corporation as aforesaid, was acquired by it after the 1st day
of July, 1862, by purchase, but the legal title thereof was at all times held
by persons in trust for said corporation upon secret trusts, and not by the corporation
itself. That at the time the said act of congress of February 19, 1887, took effect,
said corporation owned, held, and possessed the following described personal property,
to-wit.' The items of personal property are then set out, being the same as in
the petition of Romney and others, before referred to. The
court further found as follows: 'That the said corporation of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints was in its nature and by its statute of incorporation
a religious and charitable corporation for the purpose of promulgating, spreading,
and upholding the principles, practices, teachings, and tenets of said church,
and for the purpose of dispensing charity, subject and according to said principles,
practices, teachings, and tenets, and that from the time of the organization of
said corporation up to the time of the passage of said act of February the 19,
1887, it never had any other corporate objects, purposes, and authority; never
*27 had any capital stock or stockholders, nor have there ever been any natural
persons who were authorized under its act and charter of incorporation to take
or hold any personal property or estate of said corporation, except the trustees
provided for by said statute of incorporation. That the said personal property
hereinbefore set out had been accumulated by said late corporation prior to the
passage of said act of February 19, 1887, and that such accumulation extended
over a period of twenty years or more. That prior to and at the time of the passage
of said act the said personal property had been used for and cevotel to the promulgation,
spread, and maintenance of the doctrines, teachings, tenets, and practices of
the said Church of Jesus **801 Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and the doctrine
of polygamy or plurality of wives was one of the said doctrines, teachings, tenets,
and practices of the said late church corporation, but only a portion of the members
of said corporation, not exceeding twenty per cent. of the marriageable members,
male and female, were engaged in the actual practice of polygamy. That since the
passage of the said act of congress of February 19, 1887, the said voluntary religious
sect known as the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints' has comprised
the great body of individuals who formerly composed the membership of said corporation,
and the organization, general government, doctrines, and tenets of said voluntary
religious sect have been and now are substantially the same as those of the late
corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. That certain of
the officers of said religious sect, regularly ordained, and certain public preachers
and teachers of said religious sect, who are in good standing, and who are preachers
and teachers concerning the doctrines and tenets of said sect, have, since the
passage of said act of congress of February 19, 1887, promulgated, taught, spread,
and upheld the same doctrines, tenets, and practices, including the doctrine of
polygamy, as were formerly promulgated, taught, and upheld by the said late corporation,
and the said teachings of the said officers, preachers, and teachers have not
been repudiated or dissented from by said voluntary religious sect, nor have their
*28 teachings and preachings or their actions created any division or schism
in said voluntary religious sect. That any dedication or setting aside of any
of the personal property hereinbefore set out as having belonged to the latecorporation,
to the uses and purposes of or in trust for the members of the late corporation
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, or any of them, would practically
and in effect be a dedication and setting aside of said personal property to the
uses and for the purposes of, and in trust for, the unincorporated religious sect
known as the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.' That at the commencement
of this suit all of said personal property was in the possession of the said William
B. Preston, who held it in trust and for the benefit of said corporation. That
all of the above-described property, real and personal, is now in the possession
of Frank H. Dyer, receiver of this court. That of the above-described real estate
the following tract, including the buildings thereon, situated in said county
of Salt Lake, territory of Utah, and being all of block eighty-seven, (87,) in
plat A, Salt Lake City survey, at the time of the passage of the act of congress
of February 19, 1887, was used exclusively for the worship of God according to
the doctrines and tenets of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. That
several proceedings have been instituted by and with the consent and advice of
this court by information, on behalf of the United States of America, in the third
district court of said territory of Utah, for the purpose of having declared and
adjudged forfeited and escheated to the government of the United States all of
the above-described real estate, excepting the said block eighty-seven of plat
A, Salt Lake City survey, last above mentioned, by virtue of the said act of congress
entitled 'An act to amend section 5352 of the Revised Statutes of the United States
in reference to bigamy, and for other purposes,' which proceedings are now pending
in said court and undetermined.' Upon
this finding of facts the court adjudged and decreed as follows, to- wit: *29
'That on the 3d day of March, 1887, the corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints became, and the same was, dissolved, and that since said
date it has had no legal corporate existence. (2) It is furthermore adjudged and
decreed that the following alleged deeds, hereinbefore set out, were executed
without authority, and that no estate in the property set out in said deeds passed
by the same or any of them, to-wit: The deed dated June 30, 1887, from John Taylor,
trustee in trust, to William B. Preston, Robert T. Burton, and John R. Winder,
as trustees for the property described as the 'Temple Block.' The deed dated July
2, 1887, from Theodore McKean and wife to William B. Preston, Robert T. Burton,
and John R. Winder, as trustees, for property known as the 'Guardo House' and
grounds. The deed dated July 2, 1887, from Robert T. Burton and wife to William
B. Preston, Robert T. Burton, and John R. Winder, as trustees, for the property
described as the 'Tithing-House' and grounds. And it is therefore ordered and
decreed that said alleged deeds, and each of them, be, and the same are hereby,
annulled, canceled, and set aside. (3) It is further adjudged and decreed that
the following-described real estate, to-wit, all of block eighty-seven, in plat
A, Salt Lake City survey, in the city and county of Salt Lake, territory of Utah,
be, and the same is hereby, set apart to the voluntary religious worshipers and
unincorporated sect and body known as the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints,' and that the said William B. Preston, Robert T. Burton, and John R. Winder,
trustees appointed by the probate court of Salt Lake county, as hereinbefore set
out, do hold, manage, and control said property so set aside for the benefit of
said voluntary religious worshipers and unincorporated sect and body, and for
the erection and use by them of houses of worship and for their use and convenience,
in the lawful exercise of worship according to the tenets of said sect and body;
and it is ordered that Frank H. Dyer, receiver of this court, heretofore appointed,
do surrender and deliver possession and control of all of the property so set
aside to the trustees, *30 William B. Preston, Robert T. Burton, and John
R. Winder, aforesaid. (4) It is furthermore adjudged and decreed that, except
as to the Temple Block aforesaid, the petitions of William B. Preston, Robert
T. Burton, and John R. Winder, trustees, filed the 6th day of October, 1888 in
this court, for the setting aside of certain real estate for the uses and purposes
of the religious sect known as the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,'
be, and the **802 same are hereby, denied; and it is adjudged and decreed
that the balance of the real estate over and above said Temple Block, which has
been hereinbefore found as belonging to the said late corporation, has not, nor
has any of it, ever been used, as buildings or ground appurtenant thereunto, for
the purposes of the worship of God, or of parsonages connected therewith, or for
burial-grounds by the said late corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints, nor is the said real estate, except as set aside, or any part thereof,
necessary for such purposes for the unincorporated religious sect known as the
'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.' (5) It is furthermore adjudged
and decreed that all of the real estate set out in the findings of fact hereinbefore
was the property of and belonged to the late corporation of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and the same was held in trust for said corporation;
and, furthermore, that the legal titles of and estates in said real estate, and
every part and parcel thereof, were acquired by said late corporation and its
trustees subsequently to July 1, 1862, and that prior to said date neither the
said corporation nor its trustees had any legal title or estate in and to said
real estate, or any part thereof. (6) And it is further adjudged and decreed that
the petition of intervention by George Romney, Henry Dinwoody, James Watson, and
John Clark, on behalf of themselves and other members of the late corporation
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, filed this day in this court,
which said petition alleges the claim on behalf of the petitioners, and those
for whom it is filed, in and to the real and personal property formerly belonging
to said late corporation, and now *31 in the hands of the receiver of this
court, be, and the same is hereby, denied; and it is adjudged and decreed that
neither said intervenors, nor those in whose behalf they filed said petition,
have any legal claim or title in and to said property, or any part thereof. (7)
And the court does further adjudge and decree that, the late corporation of the
church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints having become by law dissolved as
aforesaid, there did not exist at its dissolution, and do not now exist, any trusts
or purposes within the objects and purposes for which said personal property was
originally acquired, as hereinbefore set out, whether said acquisition was by
purchase or donation, to or for which said personalty, or any part thereof, could
be used, or to which it could be dedicated, that were and are not in whole or
in part opposed to public policy, good morals, and contrary to the laws of the
United States; and, furthermore, that there do not exist any natural persons or
any body, association, or corporation who are legally entitled to any portion
of said personalty as successors in interest to said Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints, nor have there been nor are there now any trusts of a definite
and legal character upon which this court, sitting as a court of chancery, can
administer the personal property hereinbefore set out; and it is furthermore adjudged
that all and entire the personal property set out in this decree as having belonged
to said late corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints has,
by reason of the dissolution of said corporation as aforesaid, on account of the
failure or illegality of the trusts to which it was dedicated at its acquisition,
and for which it had been used by said late corporation and by operation of law,
become escheated to and the property of the United States of America, subject
to the costs and expenses of this proceeding and of the receivership by this court
instituted and ordered. (8) It is futhermore ordered and adjudged that there is
not now, and has not been since the 3d day of March, 1887, any person legally
authorized to take charge of, manage, preserve, and control the personal and real
property hereinbefore set out, except the receiver heretofore appointed by this
court; *32 and it is therefore ordered that the receivership hereinbefore
established by this court is continued in full force and effect, and that the
said receiver shall continue to exercise all and entire the powers and authority
conferred upon him by the decree appointing him; and it is further ordered that
he do continue in his possession and keeping all of the property, real and personal,
hereinbefore set out, except such realty as has been set apart by the provisions
of this decree for the benefit of the unincorporated religious sect known as the
'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,' and that he do safely keep, manage,
and control the same in accordance with the provisions of the order of this court
appointing him receiver, pending the determination of the proceeding upon information
hereinbefore referred to, and until the further order of this court; and final
action upon and determination concerning the accounts, proceedings and transactions
of said receiver, and all matters connected with or incidental thereto, are ordered
to be reserved for the future consideration and decision of this court.' From
this decree the defendants appealed, and the intervenors, Romney and others, also
took a separate appeal, and the case is now here for adjudication. *42
The principal questions raised are--First, as to the power of congress
to repeal the charter of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints; and,
secondly, as to the power of congress and the courts to seize the property
of said corporation, and to hold the same for the purposes mentioned in the decree. The
power of congress over the territories of the United States is general and plenary,
arising from and incidental to the right to acquire the territory itself, and
from the power given by the constitution to make all needful rules and regulations
respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States. It
would be absurd to hold that the United States has power to acquire territory,
and no power to govern it when acquired. The power to acquire territory, other
than the territory north-west of the Ohio river, (which belonged to the United
States at the adoption of the constitution,) is derived from the treaty-making
power, and the power to declare and carry on war. The incidents of these powers
are those of **803 national sovereignty, and belong to all independent
governments. The power to make acquisitions of territory by conquest, by treaty,
and by cession, is an incident of national sovereignty. The territory of Louisiana,
when acquired from France, and the territories west of the Rocky mountains, when
acquired from Mexico, became the absolute property and domain of the United States,
subject to such conditions as the government, in its diplomatic negotiations,
had seen fit to accept relating to the rights of the people then inhabiting those
territories. Having rightfully acquired said territories, the United States government
was the only one which could impose laws upon them, and its sovereignty over them
was complete. No state of the Union had any such right of sovereignty *43
over them; no other country or government had any such right. These propositions
are so elementary, and so necessarily follow from the condition of things arising
upon the acquisition of new territory, that they need no argument to support them.
They are self-evident. Chief Justice MARSHALL, in the case of Insurance Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 511, 542, well said: 'Perhaps the power of governing a territory
belonging to the United States, which has not, by becoming a state, acquired the
means of self-government, may result necessarily from the facts that it is not
within the jurisdiction of any particular state, and is within the power and jurisdiction
of the United States. The right to govern may be the inevitable consequence of
the right to acquire territory. Whichever may be the source whence the power is
derived, the possession of it is unquestioned.' And Mr. Justice NELSON, delivering
the opinion of the court in Benner v. Porter, 9 How. 235, 242, speaking of the
territorial governments established by congress, says: 'They are legislative governments,
and their courts legislative courts; congress, in the exercise of its powers in
the organization and government of the territories, combining the powers of both
the federal and state authorities.' Chief Justice WAITE, in the case of National
Bank v. County of Yankton, 101 U. S. 129, 133, said: 'In the organic act of Dakota
there was not an express reservation of power in congress to amend the acts of
the territorial legislature, nor was it necessary. Such a power is an incident
of sovereignty, and continues until granted away Congress may not only abrogate
laws of the territorial legislatures, but it may itself legislate directly for
the local government. It may make a void act of the territorial legislature valid,
and a valid act void. In other words, it has full and complete legislative authority
over the people of the territories, and all the departments of the territorial
governments. It may do for the territories what the people, under the constitution
of the United States, may do for the states.' In a still more recent case, and
one relating to the legislation of congress over the territory of Utah itself,
(Murphy v. Ramsey, 114 U. S. 15, 44, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 747,) Mr. Justice MATTHEWS
said: *44 'The counsel for the appellants in argument seem to question
the constitutional power of congress to pass the act of March 22, 1882, so far
as it abridges the rights of electors in the territory under previous laws. But
that question is, we think, no longer open to discussion. It has passed beyond
the stage of controversy into final judgment. The people of the United States,
as sovereign owners of the national territories, have supreme power over them
and their inhabitants. In the exercise of this sovereign dominion, they are represented
by the government of the United States, to whom all the powers of government over
that subject have been delegated, subject only to such restrictions as are expressed
in the constitution, or are necessarily implied in its terms.' Doubtless congress,
in legislating for the territories, would be subject to those fundamental limitations
in favor of personal rights which are formulated in the constitution and its amendments;
but these limitations would exist rather by inference and the general spirit of
the constitution from which congress derives all its powers, than by any express
and direct application of its provisions. The
supreme power of congress over the territories, and over the acts of the territorial
legislatures established therein, is generally expressly reserved in the organic
acts establishing governments in said territories. This is true of the territory
of Utah. In the sixth section of the act establishing a territorial government
in Utah, approved September 9, 1850, it is declared 'that the legislative powers
of said territory shall extend to all rightful subjects of legislation, consistent
with the constitution of the United States and the provisions of this act. * *
* All the laws passed by the legislative assembly and governor shall be submitted
to the congress of the United States, and, if disapproved, shall be null and of
no effect.' 9 St. 454. This
brings us directly to the question of the power of congress to revoke the charter
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. That corporation, when the
territory of Utah was organized, was a corporation de facto, existing under
an ordinance of the so-called 'State of Deseret,' approved February *45
8, 1851. This ordinance had no validity, except in the voluntary acquiescence
of the people of Utah then residing there. Deseret, or Utah, had ceased to belong
to the Mexican government by the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and in 1851 it belonged
to the United States, and no government without authority from the United States,
express or implied, had any legal right to exist there. The assembly of Deseret
had no power to make any valid law. Congress had already passed the law for organizing
the territory of Utah into a government, and no other government was lawful within
the bounds of that territory. But, after the organization of the territorial government
of Utah under the act of congress, the legislative assembly of the territory passed
the following resolution: 'Resolved, by the legislative assembly of the territory
of Utah, that the laws heretofore passed by the provisional government of **804
the state of Deseret, and which do not conflict with the organic act of said territory,
be, and the same are hereby, declared to be legal and in full force and virtue,
and shall so remain until superseded by the action of the legislative assembly
of the territory of Utah.' This resolution was approved October 4, 1851. The confirmation
was repeated on the 19th of January, 1855, by the act of the legislative assembly
entitled 'An act in relation to the compilation and revision of the laws and resolutions
in force in Utah territory, their publication and distribution.' From the time
of these confirmatory acts, therefore, the said corporation had a legal existence
under its charter. But it is too plain for argument that this charter or enactment
was subject to revocation and repeal by congress whenever it should see fit to
exercise its power for that purpose. Like any other act of the territorial legislature,
it was subject to this condition. Not only so, but the power of congress could
be exercised in modifying or limiting the powers and privileges granted by such
charter; for, if it could repeal, it could modify,--the greater includes the less.
Hence there can be no question that the act of July 1, 1862, already recited,
was a valid exercise of congressional power. Whatever may be the effect or true
construction of this act, we have no doubt of its validity. As far *46
as it went, it was effective. If it did not absolutely repeal the charter of the
corporation, it certainly took away all right or power which may have been claimed
under it to establish, protect, or foster the practice of polygamy, under whatever
disguise it might be carried on; and it also limited the amount of property which
might be acquired by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, not interfering,
however, with vested rights in real estate existing at that time. If the act of
July 1, 1862, had but a partial effect, congress had still the power to make the
abrogation of its charter absolute and complete. This was done by the act of 1887.
By the seventeenth section of that act it is expressly declared that 'the acts
of the legislative assembly of the territory of Utah, incorporating, continuing,
or providing for the corporation known as the 'Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints,' and the ordinance of theso-called 'General Assembly of the State of Deseret,'
incorporating the said church, so far as the same may now have legal force and
validity, are hereby disapproved and annulled, and the said corporation, so far
as it may now have or pretend to have any legal existence, is hereby dissolved.'
This absolute annulment of the laws which gave the said corporation a legal existence
has dissipated all doubt on the subject, and the said corporation has ceased to
have any existence as a civil body, whether for the purpose of holding property
or of doing any other corporate act. It was not necessary to resort to the condition
imposed by the act of 1862, limiting the amount of real estate which any corporation
or association for religious or charitable purposes was authorized to acquire
or hold; although it is apparent from the findings of the court that this condition
was violated by the corporation before the passage of the act of 1887. Congress,
for good and sufficient reasons of its own, independent of that limitation, and
of any violation of it, had a full and perfect right to repeal its charter and
abrogate its corporate existence, which, of course, depended upon its charter. The
next question is, whether congress or the court had the power to cause the property
of the said corporation to be seized and taken possession of, as was done in this
case. *47 When a business corporation, instituted for the purposes of gain
or private interest, is dissolved, the modern doctrine is that its property, after
payment of its debts, equitably belongs to its stockholders. But this doctrine
has never been extended to public or charitable corporations. As to these, the
ancient and established rule prevails, namely, that when a corporation is dissolved,
its personal property, like that o a man dying without heirs, ceases to be the
subject of private ownership, and becomes subject to the disposal of the sovereign
authority; while its real estate reverts or or escheats to the grantor or donor,
unless some other course of devolution has been directed by positive law, though
still subject, as we shall hereafter see, to the charitable use. To this rule
the corporation in question was undoubtedly subject. But the grantor of all, or
the principal part, of the real estate of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-
Day Saints was really the United States, from whom the property was derived by
the church, or its trustees, through the operation of the town-site act. Besides,
as we have seen, the act of 1862 expressly declared that all real estate acquired
or held by any of the corporations or associations therein mentioned, (of which
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints was one,) contrary to the provisions
of that act, should be forfeited and escheat to the United States, with a saving
of existing vested rights. The act prohibited the acquiring or holding of real
estate of greater value than $50,000 in a territory, and no legal title had vested
in any of the lands in Salt Lake City at that time, as the town-site act was not
passed until March 2, 1867. There can be no doubt, therefore, that the real estate
of the corporation in question could not, on its dissolution, revert or pass to
any other person or persons than the United States. If
it be urged that the real estate did not stand in the name of the corporation,
but in the name of a trustee or trustees, and therefore was not subject to the
rules relating to corporate property, the substance of the difficulty still remains.
It cannot be contended that the prohibition of the act of 1862 could have been
so easily evaded as by putting the property of the corporation into the hands
of trustees. The equitable *48 or trust-estate was vested in the corporation.
The trustee held it for no other purpose; and, the corporation being dissolved,
that purpose was at an end. The trust-estate devolved to the United States in
the same manner as the legal estate would have done had it been in the hands of
the corporation. The trustee became trustee for the United States, instead of
trustee **805 for the corporation. We do not now speak of the religious
and charitable uses for which the corporation, through its trustee, held and managed
the property. That aspect of the subject is one which places the power of the
government and of the court over the property on a distinct ground. Where a charitable
corporation is dissolved, and no private donor or founder appears to be entitled
to its real estate, (its personal property not being subject to such reclamation,)
the government or sovereign authority, as the chief and common guardian of the
state, either through its judicial tribunals or otherwise, necessarily has the
disposition of the funds of such corporation, to be exercised, however, with due
regard to the objects and purposes of the charitable uses to which the property
was originally devoted, so far as they are lawful, and not repugnant to public
policy. This is the general principle, which will be more fully discussed further
on. In this direction, it will be pertinent, in the mean time, to examine into
the character of the corporation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints,
and the objects which, by its constitution and principles, it promoted and had
in view. It
is distinctly stated in the pleadings and findings of fact that the property of
the said corporation was held for the purpose of religious and charitable uses.
But it is also stated in the findings of fact, and is a matter of public notoriety,
that the religious and charitable uses intended to be subserved and promoted are
the inculcation and spread of the doctrines and usages of the Mormon Church, or
Church of Latter-Day Saints, one of the distinguishing features of which is the
practice of polygamy,--a crime against the laws, and abhorrent to the sentiments
and feelings of the civilized world. Notwithstanding the stringent laws which
have been passed by congress,-- notwithstanding all the efforts made to suppress
*49 this barbarous practice,--the sect or community composing the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints perseveres, in defiance of law, in preaching,
upholding, promoting, and defending it. It is a matter of public notoriety that
its emissaries are engaged in many countries in propagating this nefarious doctrine,
and urging its converts to join the community in Utah. The existence of such a
propaganda is a blot on our civilization. The organization of a community for
the spread and practice of polygamy is, in a measure, a return to barbarism. It
is contrary to the spirit of Christianity, and of the civilization which Christianity
has produced in the western world. The question, therefore, is whether the promotion
of such a nefarious system and practice, so repugnant to our laws and to the principles
of our civilization, is to be allowed to continue by the sanction of the government
itself, and whether the funds accumulated for that purpose shall be restored to
the same unlawful uses as heretofore, to the detriment of the true interests of
civil society. It is unnecessary here to refer to the past history of the sect;
to their defiance of the government authorities; to their attempt to establish
an independent community; to their efforts to drive from the territory all who
were not connected with them in communion and sympathy. The tale is one of patience
on the part of the American government and people, and of contempt of authority
and resistance to law on the part of the Mormons. Whatever persecutions they may
have suffered in the early part of their history, in Missouri and Illinois, they
have no excuse for their persistent defiance of law under the government of the
United States. One
pretense for this obstinate course is that their belief in the practice of polygamy,
or in the right to indulge in it, is a religious belief, and therefore under the
protection of the constitutional guaranty of religious freedom. This is altogether
a sophistical plea. No doubt the Thugs of Indiaimagined that their belief in the
right of assassination was a religious belief; but their thinking so did not make
it so. The practice of suttee by the Hindu widows may have sprung from a supposed
religious conviction. The offering of human sacrifices *50 by our own ancestors
in Britain was no doubt sanctioned by an equally conscientious impulse. But no
one, on that account, would hesitate to brand these practices, now, as crimes
against society, and obnoxious to condemnation and punishment by the civil authority.
The state has a perfect right to prohibit polygamy, and all other open offenses
against the enlightened sentiment of mankind, notwithstanding the pretense of
religious conviction by which they may be advocated and practiced. Davis Beason,
133 U. S. 333, ante, 299. And since polygamy has been forbidden by the laws of
the United States, under severe penalties, and since the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints has persistently used, and claimed the right to use, and
the unincorporated community still claims the same right to use, the funds with
which the late corporation was endowed, for the purpose of promoting and propagating
the unlawful practice as an integral part of their religious usages, the question
arises whether the government, finding these funds without legal ownership, has
or has not the right, through its courts, and in due course of administration,
to cause them to beseized and devoted to objects of undoubted charity and usefulness,--such
for example, as the maintenance of schools,--for the benefit of the community
whose leaders are now misusing them in the unlawful manner above described; setting
apart, however, for the exclusive possession and use of the church, sufficient
and suitable portions of the property for the purposes of public worship, parsonage
buildings, and burying-grounds, as provided in the law. The
property in question has been dedicated to public and charitable uses. It matters
not whether it is the product of private contributions, made during the course
of half a century, or of taxes imposed upon the people, or of gains arising from
fortunate operations in business or appreciation in values, the charitable uses
for which it is held are stamped upon it by charter, by ordinance, by regulation,
and by usage, in such an indelible manner **806 that there can be no mistake
as to their character, purpose, or object. The law respecting property held for
charitable uses of *51 course depends upon the legislation and jurisprudence
of the country in which the property is situated and the uses are carried out;
and, when the positive law affords no specific provision for actual cases that
arise, the subject must necessarily be governed by those principles of reason
and public policy which prevail in all civilized and enlightened communities.
The principles of the law of charities are not confined to a particular people
or nation, but prevail in all civilized countries pervaded by the spirit of Christianity.
They are found imbedded in the civil law of Rome, in the laws of European nations,
and especially in the laws of that nation from which our institutions are derived.
A leading and prominent principle prevailing in them all is that property devoted
to a charitable and worthy object, promotive of the public good, shall be applied
to the purposes of its dedication, and protected from spoliation and from diversion
to other objects. Though devoted to a particular use, it is considered as given
to the public, and is therefore taken under the guardianship of the laws. If it
cannot be applied to the particular use for which it was intended, either because
the objects to be subserved have failed, or because they have become unlawful
and repugnant to the public policy of the state, it will be applied to some object
of kindred character, so as to fulfill in substance, if not in manner and form,
the purpose of its consecration. The
manner in which the due administration and application of charitable estates is
secured, depends upon the judicial institutions and machinery of the particular
government to which they are subject. In England, the court of chancery is the
ordinary tribunal to which this class of cases is delegated, and there are comparatively
few which it is not competent to administer. Where there is a failure of trustees,
it can appoint new ones; and where a modification of uses is necessary in order
to avoid a violation of the laws, it has power to make the change. There are some
cases, however, which are beyond its jurisdiction; as where, by statute, a gift
to certain uses is declared void, and the property goes to the king; and in some
other cases of failure of the charity. In such cases the king, as parens patriae,
under his sign manual, disposes of *52 the fund to such uses, analogous
to those intended, as seems to him expedient and wise. These general principles
are laid down in all the principal treatises on the subject, and are the result
of numerous cases and authorities. See Duke, Char. Uses, c. 10, §§ 4, 5, 6; Boyle,
Char. cc. 3, 4; 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 1167 et seq; Attorney General v. Guise, 2
Vern. 266; Moggridge v. Thack well, 7 Ves. 36b, 77; De Themmines v. De
Bonneval, 5 Russ. 289; Town of Pawlet v. Clark, 9 Cranch, 292, 335, 336; Beatty
v. Kurtz, 2 Pet. 566: Vidal v. Girard's Ex'rs, 2 How. 127; Jackson v. Phillips,
14 Allen, 539; Ould v. Hospital, 95 U. S. 303; Jones v. Habersham, 107 U. S. 174,
2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 336. The
individual cases cited are but indicia of the general principle underlying
them. As such they are authoritative, though often in themselves of minor importance.
Bearing this in mind, it is interesting to see how far back the principle is recognized.
In the Pandects of Justinian we find cases to the same effect as those referred
to, antedating the adoption of Christianity as the religion of the Empire. Among
others, in the Digest, (liber 33, tit. 2, law 16,) a case is reported which occurred
in the early part of the third century, in which a legacy was left to a city in
order that from the yearly revenues games might be celebrated for the purpose
of preserving the memory of the deceased. It was not lawful at that time to celebrate
these games. The question was, what was to be done with this legacy. Modestinus,
a celebrated jurist of authority, replied: 'Since the testator wished games to
be celebrated which were not permitted, it would be unjust that the amount which
he had destined to that end should go back to the heirs. Therefore let the heirs
and magnates of the city be cited, and let an examination be made to ascertain
how the trust may be employed so that the memory of the deceased may be preserved
in some other and lawful manner.' Here is the doctrine of charitable uses in a
nutshell. Domat,
the French jurist, writing on the civil law, after explaining the nature of pious
and charitable uses, and the favor with which they are treated in the law, says:
'If a pious *53 legacy were destined to some use which could not have its
effect, as if a testator had left a legacy for building a church for a parish,
or an apartment in a hospital, and it happened either that before his death the
said church or the said apartment had been built out of some other fund, or that
it was noways necessary or useful, the legacy would not, for all that, remain
without any use; but it would be laid out on other works of piety for that parish,
or for that hospital, according to the directions that should be given in this
matter by the persons to whom this function should belong.' And for this principle
he cites a passage from the Pandects. Dom. Civil Law, bk. 4, tit. 2, § 6, par.
6. By
the Spanish law, whatever was given to the service of God became incapable of
private ownership, being held by the clergy as guardians or trustees; and any
part not required for their own support, and the repairs, books, and furniture
of the church, was devoted to works of piety, such as feeding and clothing the
poor, supporting orphans, marrying poor virgins, redeeming captives, and the like.
Partida 3, tit. 28, ll. 12-15. When property was given for a particular object,
as a church, a hospital, a convent, or a community, etc., and the object failed,
the property did not revert to the donor, or his heirs, but devolved to the crown,
the church, or other convent or community, unless the donation contained an express
condition in writing to the contrary. Tapia, Febrero Novisimo, lib. 2, tit. 4,
c. 22, §§ 24-26. A
case came before Lord BACON, in 1619, **807 (Bloomfield v. Stowe Market,
Duke, 624,) in which lands had been given before the Reformation to be sold, and
the proceeds applied, one-half to the making of a highway from the town *54
in which the lands were, one-fourth to the repair of a church in that town, and
the other fourth to the priest of the church to say prayers for the souls of the
donor and others. The lord keeper decreed the establishment of the uses for making
the highway and repairing the church, and directed the remaining fourth (which
could not, by reason of the change in religion, be applied as directed by the
donor) to be divided between the poor of the same town and the poor of the town
where the donor inhabited. In
the case of Baliol College, which came before the court of chancery from time
to time for over a century and a half, the same principle was asserted, of directing
a charity fund to a different, though analogous, use, where the use originally
declared had become contrary to the policy of the law. There a testator, in 1679,
when episcopacy was established by law in Scotland, gave lands in trust to apply
the income to the education of Scotchmen at Oxford, with a view to their taking
Episcopal orders and settling in Scotland. Presbyterianism being re-established
in Scotland after the revolution of 1688, the object of the bequest could not
be carried into effect; and the court of chancery, by successive decress of Lord
SOMERS and Lord HARDWICKE, directed the income of the estate to be applied to
the education of a certain number of Scotch students at Baliol College, without
the condition of taking orders; and, in consideration of this privilege, directed
the surplus of the income to be applied to the college library. See the cases
of Attorney General v. Guise, 2 Vern. 266; Attorney General v. Baliol College,
9 Mod. 407; Attorney General v. Glasgow College, 2 Colly. 665, 1 H. L. Cas. 800.
And see abridgment of the above cases in 14 Allen, 581, 582, [Jackson v. Phillips.] Lord
Chief Justice WILMOT, in his opinion in Attorney General v. Lady Downing, Wilm.
1, 32, looking at the case on the supposition that the trusts of the will (which
were for instituting a college) were illegal and void, or of such a nature as
not fit to be carried into execution, said: 'This court has long made a distinction
between superstitious uses and mistaken charitable uses. By 'mistaken,' I mean
such *55 as are repugnant to that sound constitutional policy which controls
the interest, wills, and wishes of individuals, when they clash with the interest
and safety of the whole community. Property destined to superstitious uses is
given by law of parliament to the king, to dispose of as he pleases; and it falls
properly under the cognizance of a court of revenue. But, where property is given
to mistaken charitable uses, this court distinguishes between the charity and
the use; and, seeing the charitable bequest in the intention of the testator,
they execute the intention, varying the use as the king, who is the curator of
all charities, and the constitutional trustee for the performance of them, pleases
to direct and appoint.' 'This doctrine is now so fully settled that it cannot
be departed from. Id. In
Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36b., 69, Lord ELDON said: 'I have no doubt
that cases much older than I shall cite may be found; all of which appear to prove
that, if the testator has manifested a general intention to give to charity, the
failure of the particular mode in which the charity is to be effectuated shall
not destroy the charity, but, if the substantial intention is charity, the law
will substitute another mode of devoting the property to charitable purposes,
though the formal intention as to the mode cannot be accomplished.' In Hill on
Trustees, (page 450), after citing this observation of Lord ELDON, it is added:
'In accordance with these principles, it has frequently been decided that, where
a testator has sufficiently expressed his intention to dispose of his estate in
trust for charitable purposes generally, the general purpose will be enforced
by the court to the exclusion of any claim of the next of kin to take under a
resulting trust, although the particular purpose or mode of application is not
declared at all by the testator. And the same rule prevails although the testator
refers to some past or intended declaration of the particular charity, which declaration
is not made or cannot be discovered, and although the selection of the objects
of the charity and the mode of application are left to the discretion of the trustees.
And it is immaterial that the trustees refuse the gift, or die, or that their
appointment is revoked in the *56 life-time of the testator, causing a
lapse of the bequest at law. The same construction will also be adopted where
a particular charitable purpose is declared by the testator which does not exhaust
the whole value of the estate; or where the particular trust cannot be carried
into effect, either for its uncertainty or its illegality, or for want of proper
objects. And in all these cases the general intention of the testator in favor
of charity will be effectuated by the court through a cy-pres application
of the fund.' The same propositions are laid down by Mr. Justice Story in his
Equity Jurisprudence, § 1167 et seq. But it is unnecessary to make further quotations.
These authorities are cited (and many more might be adduced) for the purpose of
showing that where property has been devoted to a public or charitable use, which
cannot be carried out on account of some illegality in or failure of the object,
it does not, according to the general law of charities, revert to the donor or
his heirs, or other representatives, but is applied under the direction of the
courts, or of the supreme power in the state, to other charitable objects, lawful
in their character, but corresponding, as near as may be, to the original intention
of the donor. They also show that the authority thus exercised arises in part
from the ordinary power of the court of chancery over trusts, and in part from
the right of the government or sovereign, as parens patriae, to supervise
the acts of public and charitable institutions in the interest of those to be
benefited by their establishment; and, if **808 their funds become bona
vacantia, or left without lawful charge, or appropriated to illegal purposes,
to cause them to be applied in such lawful manner as justice and equity may require. If
it should be conceded that a case like the present transcends the ordinary jurisdiction
of the court of chancery, and requires for its determination the interposition
of the parens patriae of the state, it may then be contended that, in this
country, there is no royal person to act as parens patriae, and to give
direction for the application of charities which cannot be administered by the
court. It is true we have no such chief magistrate. But here the legislature is
the parens *57 patriae, and, unless restrained by constitutional
limitations, possesses all the powers in this regard which the sovereign possesses
in England. Chief Justice MARSHALL, in the Dartmouth College Case, said: 'By the
Revolution, the duties as well as the powers of government devolved on the people.
* * * It is admitted that among the latter was comprehended the transcendent power
of parliament, as well as that of the executive department.' 4 Wheat. 651. And
Mr. Justice BALDWIN, in Magill v. Brown, Brightly, N. P. 346, 373, a case arising
on Sarah Zane's will, referring to this declaration of Chief Justice MARSHALL,
said: 'The Revolution devolved on the state all the transcendent power of parliament,
and the prerogative of the crown, and gave their acts the same force and effect.'
Chancellor Kent says: 'In this country, the legislature or government of the state,
as parens patriae, has the right to enforce all charities of a public nature,
by virtue of its general superintending authority over the public interests, where
no other person is in trusted with it.' 4 Kent, Comm. 508, note. In Fontain v.
Ravenel, 17 How. 369, 384, Mr. Justice MCLEAN, delivering the opinion of this
court in a charity case, said: 'When this country achieved its independence, the
prerogatives of the crown devolved upon the people of the states. And this power
still remains with them, except so far as they have delegated a portion of it
to the federal government. The sovereign will is made known to us by legislative
enactment. The state, as a sovereign, is the parens patriae.' This
prerogative of parens patriae is inherent in the supreme power of every
state, whether that power is lodged in a royal person, or in the legislature,
and has no affinity to those arbitrary powers which are sometimes exerted by irresponsible
monarchs to the great detriment of the people, and the destruction of their liberties.
On the contrary, it is a most beneficent function, and often necessary to be exercised
in the interests of humanity, and for the prevention of injury to those who cannot
protect themselves. Lord Chancellor SOMERS in Cary v. Bertie, 2 Vern. 333, 342,
said: 'It is true infants are always favored. In this court there are several
things which *58 belong to the king as pater patriae, and fall under
the care and direction of this court, as charities, infants, idiots, lunatics,
etc.' The supreme judicial court of Massachusetts well said in Sohier v. Hospital,
3 Cush. 483, 497: 'It is deemed indispensable that there should be a power in
the legislature to authorize a sale of the estates of infants, idiots, insane
persons, and persons not known, or not in being, who cannot act for themselves.
The best interest of these persons, and justice to other persons, often require
that such sales should be made. It would be attended with incalculable mischiefs,
injuries, and losses if estates in which persons are interested, who have not
capacity to act for themselves, or who cannot be certainly ascertained, or are
not in being, could, under no circumstances, be sold, and perfect titles effected.
But, in such cases, the legislature, as parens patriae, can disentangle
and unfetter the estates by authorizing a sale, taking precaution that the substantial
rights of all parties are protected and secured.' These remarks in reference to
infants, insane persons, and persons not known, or not in being, apply to the
beneficiaries of charities, who are often incapable of vindicating their rights,
and justly look for protection to the sovereign authority, acting as parens
patriae. They show that this beneficent function has not ceased to exist under
the change of government from a monarchy to a republic, but that it now resides
in the legislative department, ready to be called into exercise whenever required
for the purposes of justice and right, and is clearly capable of being exercised
in cases of charities as in any other cases whatever. It
is true that, in some of the states of the Union in which charities are not favored,
gifts to unlawful or impracticable objects, and even gifts affected by merely
technical difficulties, are held to be void, and the property is allowed to revert
to the donor or his heirs or other representatives. But this is in cases where
such heirs or representatives are at hand to claim the property, and are ascertainable.
It is difficult to see how this could be done in a case where it would be impossible
for any such claim to be made; as where the property has been the resulting accumulation
of 10,000 petty contributions, *59 extending through a long period of time,
as is the case with all ecclesiastical and community funds. In such a case the
only course that could be satisfactorily pursued would be that pointed out by
the general law of charities, namely, for the government or the court of chancery
to assume the control of the fund, and devote it to lawful objects of charity
most nearly corresponding to those to which it was originally destined. It could
not be returned to the donors, nor distributed among the beneficiaries. The
impracticability of pursuing a different course, however, is not the true ground
of this rule of charity law. The true ground is that the property given to a charity
becomes in a measure public property, only applicable as far as may be, it is
true, to the specific purposes to which it is devoted, but within those limits
consecrated to the public use, and become part of the public resources for promoting
the happiness and well-being of the people of **809 the state. Hence, when
such property ceases to have any other owner, by the failure of the trustees,
by forfeiture for illegal application, or for any other cause, the ownership naturally
and necessarily falls upon the sovereign power of the state; and thereupon the
court of chancery, in the exercise of its ordinary jurisdiction, will appoint
a new trustee to take the place of the trustees that have failed or that have
been set aside, and will give directions for the further management and administration
of the property; or, if the case is beyond the ordinary jurisdiction of the court,
the legislature may interpose and make such disposition of the matter as will
accord with the purposes of justice and right. The funds are not lost to the public
as charity funds; they are not lost to the general objects or class of objects
which they were intended to subserve or effect. The state, by its legislature
or its judiciary, interposes to preserve them from dissipation and destruction,
and to set them up on a new basis of usefulness, directed to lawful ends, coincident,
as far as may be, with the objects originally proposed. The
interposition of the legislature in such cases is exemplified by the case of Town
of Pawlet v. Clark, 9 Cranch, 292, which arose in Vermont. In the town charter,
granted *60 in the name of the king in 1761, one entire share of the town
lands was granted 'as a glebe for the Church of England as by law established.'
There was no Episcopal Church in the town until 1802. In that year one was organized,
and its parson laid claim to the glebe lands, and leased them to Clark and others.
Of course, this church had never been connected with the 'Church of England as
by law established;' and the institution of such a church in 1802 was impossible,
and would have been contrary to the public policy of the state. Meantime, in 1794,
the legislature had granted the glebe lands to the several towns to be rented
by the selectmen lectmen for the sole use and support of public worship, without
restriction as to sect or denomination. This law was subsequently repealed, and
in 1805 the legislature passed another act, granting the glebe lands to the respective
towns, to apply the rents to the use of schools therein. This was held to be a
valid disposition. Mr. Justice STORY, in the course of an elaborate opinion, among
other things, showed that a mere voluntary society of Episcopalians within a town
could no more entitle themselves, on account of their religious tenets, to the
glebe than any other society worshiping therein. 'The glebe,' he said, 'remained
as an haereditas jacens, and the state, which succeeded to the rights of
the crown, might, with the assent of the town, alien or incumber it, or might
erect an Episcopal Church therein,' etc. 'By the Revolution, the state of Vermont
succeeded to all the rights of the crown as to the unappropriated as well as appropriated
glebes.' Pages 334, 335. Again: 'Without the authority of the state, however,
they [the towns] could not apply the lands to other uses than public worship;
and in this respect the statute of 1805 conferred a new right, which the towns
might or might not exercise at their own pleasure.' [FN1] Page 336.
FN1
The frequency with which this power of the legislature is exerted is shown by
a recurrence to the private laws of any of the states. Taking New Jersey for example,
the Index of Private Laws, under the head of 'Academies' alone, refers to the
following acts: (1) By an ancient charter the trustees of the township of Bergen
held certain lands for the common benefit of the freeholders, a portion of which
was set apart for the free school of the township. An academy being organized
and incorporated in the town, its trustees claimed this portion, and sold certain
parcels of it. The legislature, on the representation of the trustees of the township,
confirmed the sales that had been made, but directed that the proceeds and the
land unsold should be vested in the trustees of the township, for the use and
benefit of the free school alone. This, of course, the court of chancery could
not have done. Laws 1814, p. 202. (2) By an act of March 2, 1848, it was enacted
that the title of a lot in the village of Hackensack, formerly vested in the trustees
of the Washington Academy, should be vested in the Washington Institute of Hackensack,
to be held by them for the purposes and trusts, and subject to the conditions,
of the articles of their association. Laws 1848, p. 118. It is probable that the
first institution had ceased to exist. (3) A certain school-house and lot in the
city of Newark was held by trustees for the benefit of 'The Female Union School
Society,' for the education of indigent female children. Not being longer needed
for that purpose, in consequence of the establishment of public free schools in
the city, the legislature authorized the trustees, with the assent of the association,
to sell the property, and pay over the proceeds to a new corporation created for
the support and education of destitute orphan children of the city, called 'The
Protestant Foster Home Society.' Laws 1849, p. 143. (4) In 1854 an act was passed
authorizing the trusteed of the Camden Academy to convey their property to the
board of education of the city of Camden. The reason appears from the following
recital of the act: 'Whereas, a certain lot of land [describing it] has heretofore
been given or bequeathed for the purpose of erection a school-house thereon; and
whereas, the building known as the 'Camden Academy' has been erected thereon by
voluntary subscription; and whereas, the donors of said land, and the subscribers
to the funds for the erection of said building, have, with few exceptions, departed
this life, and the objects which they had in view have in a great degree been
frustrated; and whereas, it is considered that the same may be best promoted by
securing said lot of land, and the building thereon, for the occupancy of public
schools of the city of Camden: Be it enacted,' etc. Laws 1854, p. 353. (5) By
an act passed in 1871, the trustees of Chatham Academy, in the county of Morris,
were authorized to convey any part of the real estate held by them, or to sell
the same, and pay over the proceeds to the trustees of Chatham School-District
No. 1, to be used by them for educational purposes only. Laws 1871, p. 670. Here
was, evidently, another case of an academy having run down, and its operations
discontinued. Instances of this kind of legislation, in which the legislature
clearly acts as parens patriae, may be found almost without number. *61
Coming to the case before us, we have no doubt that the general law of charities
which we have described is applicable *62 thereto. It is true, no formal
declaration has been made by congress or the territorial legislature as to what
system of laws shall prevail there. But it is apparent from the language of the
organic act, which was passed September 9, 1850, (9 St. 453,) that it was the
intention of congress that the system of common law and equity which generally
prevails in this country should be operative in the territory of Utah, except
**810 as it might be altered by legislation. In the ninth section of the act
it is declared that the supreme and district courts of the territory 'shall possess
chancery as well as common-law jurisdiction,' and the whole phraseology of the
act implies the same thing. The territorial legislature, in like manner, in the
first section of the act regulating procedure, approved December 30, 1852, declared
that all the courts of the territory should have 'law and equity jurisdiction
in civil cases.' In view of these significant provisions, we infer that the general
system of common law and equity, as it prevails in this country, is the basis
of the laws of the territory of Utah. We may therefore assume that the doctrine
of charities is applicable to the territory, and that congress, in the exercise
of its plenary legislative power over it, was entitled to carry out that law and
put it in force, in its application to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints. Indeed,
it is impliedly admitted by the corporation itself, in its answer to the bill
in this case, that the law of charities exists in Utah. for it expressly says
'that it was, at the time of its creation, ever since has been, and still is,
a corporation or association for religious or charitable uses.' And again it says
'that prior to February 28, 1887, it had, as such corporation, as it lawfully
might by the powers granted to it by its acts of incorporation, acquired and held
from time to time certain personal property, goods, and chattels, all of which
it had acquired, held, and used solely and only for charitable and religious purposes;
that on the 28th day of February, A. D. 1887, it still held and owned certain
personal property, goods, and chattels donated to it by the members of said church
and friends thereof solely and only for use and distribution for *63 charitable
and religious purposes;' and 'that on February 28, 1887, John Taylor, who then
held all the personal property, moneys, stocks, and bonds belonging to said defendant
corporation as trustee in trust for said defendant, by and with the consent and
approval of defendant, donated, transferred, and conveyed all of said personal
property, moneys, stocks, and bonds held by him belonging to said defendant corporation,
after setting apart and reserving certain moneys and stocks then held by him,
sufficient in amount and necessary for the payment of the then existing indebtedness
of said defendant corporation, to certain ecclesiastical corporations created
and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the territory of Utah, to be devoted
by said ecclesiastical corporations solely and only to charitable and religious
uses and purposes.' poses.' And the intervenors, Romney and others, who claim
to represent the hundred thousand and more individuals of the Mormon Church, in
their petition say 'that the said Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
is, and for many years last past has been, a voluntary religious society or association,
organized and existing in the territory of Utah for religious and charitable purposes;
that said petitioners and others, for whose benefit they file this petition, are
members of said church, residing in said territory; that said church became possessed
of all the above-described property, in accordance with its established rules
and customs, by the voluntary contributions, donations, and dedications of its
said members, to be held, managed, and applied to the use and benefit of said
church, and for the maintenance of its religion and charities, by trustees appointed
by said members semi-annually, at the general conference or meeting of said members.' The
foregoing considerations place it beyond doubt that the general law of charities,
as understood and administered in our Anglo-American system of laws, was and is
applicable to the case now under consideration. Then,
looking at the case as the finding of facts presents it, we have before us--congress
had before it--a contumacious *64 organization, wielding by its resources
an immense power in the territory of Utah, and employing those resources and that
power in constantly attempting to oppose, thwart, and subvert the legislation
of congress, and the will of the government of the United States. Under these
circumstances, we have no doubt of the power of congress to do as it did. It is
not our province to pass judgment upon the necessity or expediency of the act
of February 19, 1887, under which this proceeding was taken. The only question
we have to consider in this regard is as to the constitutional power of congress
to pass it. Nor are we now called upon to declare what disposition ought to made
of the property of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. This suit
is, in some respects, an ancillary one instituted for the purpose of taking possession
of and holding for final disposition the property of the defunct corporation in
the hands of a receiver, and winding up its affairs. To that extent, and to that
only, the decree of the circuit court has gone. In the proceedings which have
been instituted in the district court of the territory, it will be determined
whether the real estate of the corporation which has been seized (excepting the
portions exempted by the act) has or has not escheated or become forfeited to
the United States. If it should be decided in the affirmative, then, pursuant
to the terms of the act, the property so forfeited and escheated will be disposed
of by the secretary of the interior, and the proceeds applied to the use and benefit
of common schools in the territory. It
is obvious that any property of the corporation which may be adjudged to be forfeited
and escheated will be subject to a more absolute control and disposition by the
government than that which is not so forfeited. The non- forfeited property will
be subject to such disposition only as may be required by the law of charitable
uses, while the forfeited and escheated property, being subject to a more absolute
control of the government, will admit of a greater latitude of discretion in regard
to its disposition. As we have seen, however, congress has signified its will
in this regard, having declared that the proceeds shall be applied to the use
and benefit of *65 common schools in the territory. Whether that will be
a proper destination for the nonforfeited**811 property will be a matter
for future consideration, in view of all the circumstances of the case. As
to the constitutional question, wesee nothing in the act which, in our judgment,
transcends the power of congress over the subject. We have already considered
the question of its power to repeal the charter of the corporation. It certainly
also had power to direct proceedings to be instituted for the forfeiture and escheat
of the real estate of the corporation; and, if a judgment should be rendered in
favor of the government in these proceedings, the power to dispose of the proceeds
of the lands thus forfeited and escheated, for the use and benefit of common schools
in the territory, is beyond dispute. It would probably have power to make such
a disposition of the proceeds if the question were merely one of charitable uses,
and not of forfeiture. Schools and education were regarded by the congress of
the Confederation as the most natural and obvious appliances for the promotion
of religion and morality. In the ordinance of 1787, passed for the government
of the territory northwest of the Ohio, it is declared, (article 3:) 'Religion,
morality, and knowledge being necessary to good government and the happiness of
mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged.' Mr.
Dane, who is reputed to have drafted the said ordinance, speaking of some of the
statutory provisions of the English law regarding charities as inapplicable to
America, says: 'But, in construing these laws, rules have been laid down which
are valuable in every state; as that the erection of schools and the relief of
the poor are always right, and the law will deny the application of private property
only as to uses the nation deems superstitious.' 4 Dane. Abr. 239. The
only remaining constitutional question arises upon that part of the seventeenth
section of the act under which the present proceedings were instituted. We do
not well see how the constitutionality of this provision can be seriously disputed,
if it be conceded or established that the corporation ceased to *66 exist,
and that its property thereupon ceased to have a lawful owner, and reverted to
the care and protection of the government as parens patriae. This point
has already been fully discussed. We have no doubt that the state of things referred
to existed, and that the right of the government to take possession of the property
followed thereupon. The application of Romney and others, representing the unincorporated
members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, is fully disposed
of by the considerations already adduced. The principal question discussed has
been whether the property of the church was in such a condition as to authorize
the government and the court to take possession of it and hold it until it shall
be seen what final disposition of it should be made; and we think it was in such
a condition, and that it is properly held in the custody of the receiver. The
rights of the church members will necessarily be taken into consideration in the
final disposition of the case. There is no ground for granting their present application.
The property is in the custody of the law, awaiting the judgment of the court
as to its final disposition, in view of the illegal uses to which it is subject
in the hands of the Church of Latter-Day Saints, whether incorporated or unincorporated.
The conditions for claiming possession of it by the members of the sect or community
under the act do not at present exist. The attempt made, after the passage of
the act on February 19, 1887, and while it was in the president's hands for his
approval or rejection, to transfer the property from the trustee then holding
it to other persons, and for the benefit of different associations, was so evidently
intended as an evasion of the law that the court below justly regarded it as void
and without force or effect. We have carefully examined the decree, and do not
find anything in it that calls for a reversal. It may perhaps require modification
in some matters of detail, and for that purpose only the case is reserved for
further consideration. FULLER,
C. J., with whom concurred FIELD and LAMAR, JJ., (dissenting.) *67
I am constramed to dissent from the opinion and judgment just announced. Congress
possesses such authority over the territories as the constitution expressly or
by clear implication delegates. Doubtless territory may be acquired by the direct
action of congress, as in the annexation of Texas; by treaty, as in the case of
Louisiana; or, as in the case of California, by conquest, and afterwards by treaty;
but the power of congress to legislate over the territories is granted in so many
words by the constitution. Article 4, § 3, cl. 2. And it is further therein provided
that 'congress shall have power * * * to make all laws which shall be necessary
and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers
vested by this constitution in the government of the United States, or in any
department or officer thereof.' Article 1, § 8. In my opinion, congress is restrained,
not merely by the limitations expressed in the constitution, but also by the absence
of any grant of power, express orimplied, in that instrument. And no such power
as that involved in the act of congress under consideration is conferred by the
constitution, nor is any clause pointed out as its legitimate source. I regard
it of vital consequence that absolute power should never be conceded as belonging
under our system of government to any one of its departments. The legislative
power of congress is delegated, and not inherent, and is therefore limited. I
agree that the power to make needful rules and regulations for the territories
necessarily comprehends the power to suppress crime; and it is immaterial, even
though that crime assumes the form of a religious belief or creed. Congress has
the power to extirpate polygamy in any of the territories, by the enactment of
a criminal code directed to that end; but it is not authorized, under the cover
of that power, to seize and confiscate the property of persons, individuals, or
corporations, without office found, because **812 they may have been guilty
of criminal practices. The doctrine of cy-pres is one of construction,
and not of administration. By it a fund devoted to a particular charity is applied
to a cognate purpose, and if the purpose for which this property was accumulated
was such as has been depicted, it *68 cannot be brought within the rule
of application to a purpose as nearly as possible resembling that denounced. Nor
is there here any counterpart in congressional power to the exercise of the royal
prerogative in the disposition of a charity. If this property was accumulated
for purposes declared illegal, that does not justify its arbitrary disposition
by judicial legislation. In my judgment, its diversion under this act of congress
is in contravention of specific limitations in the constitution; unauthorized,
expressly or by implication, by any of its provisions; and in disregard of the
fundamental principle that the legislative power of the United States, as exercised
by the agents of the people of this republic, is delegated, and not inherent. Copr.
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