This is an action of quo warranto, brought to obtain a judgment of ouster against the defendants, who are alleged to have intruded into the office of trustees of the theological seminary of the Associate Reformed Church of New York. The relators claim to be entitled to this office as the duly and legally elected trustees, while the defendants deny the validity of the relators’ election, and allege a better title in themselves by a different election made by a different constituent body. The question of legal right which thus arises is the only question in the cause, a consideration which it will be necessary to keep in mind in the examination which we are to make.
The office was created by an act of the legislature of the state of New York, passed May 25th, 1836. According to this act, the trustees of the seminary which was then incorporated, were to be chosen by the Associate Reformed Synod of New York, at their annual meeting. It is therefore the relators’ case to establish that they were duly elected to this office by the Associate Reformed Synod of New York at its annual meeting next preceding the commencement of this action. The burden of proof is of course upon the relators ; the defendants are in possession of the office, and they can only be ousted by a better title.
The question in this case, however, is not as to the regularity of the election of the relators, strictly speaking, but upon the identity of the constituent body by which the election must be made. There are shown to be in existence two religious assemblies, each claiming to be the Associate Reformed Synod of New York, and as such, entitled to choose trustees of this seminary. A formal election of trustees has been made by each of these bodies, and the question which I am called to determine is, whether *300the assembly from which the relators derive their title has the better claim to be regarded as the true and properly constituted Associate Reformed Synod of New York.
The Associate Reformed Church in this country is a Presbyterian Church, adhering to a government by presbyters or ministers of equal grade, and ruling elders chosen by the congregations. This government is administered through church sessions or congregational judicatories, thróugh presbyteries consisting of the ministers of a certain district together with a ruling elder from each congregratidh, ánd through particular and genéral synods which are constituted from the presbyteries.
The Synod of New York has occupied the position and relations of a particular synod in the Associate Reformed Church, at' least since 1855, in Which year it united with other particular synods of the same communion, known as the Synods of the "West, ánd a body Was constituted out of the unidh styled the Genéral Synod Of the Associate Reformed Church.
The organization of thesé particular synods, including the Sytiod of New York, consists of á moderator or presiding officer and a clerk. The moderator is chosen by each annual Synod to preside during that synod, and it is also his duty to open the session of the next ensuing synod, and to condúct its proceedings until it has itself become organized by the choice of its own moderator. The book of discipline and chtir'ch government of the Associate Reformed Church expressly reqtiires (book 1, chap. 7) that every stated' meeting of a synod shall be opened with a sermon ' and' prayer by the moderator of the last assembly, and that he shall preside until another moderator shall be chosen. This is the only regtilar and recognized mode of procedure in these assemblies', tinless the last moderator is absent, when the oldest minister present is to take' his place.
The Synod of New York met in the city of New York on the 21st of October, 1857, and elected tile' Rév. Geórgé *301C. Arnold moderator. He presided during the session of 1857, and the Rev. James B. Scouller was the clerk. At the close of their proceedings the synod adjourned to meet in the village of York, on the second Monday of October, 1858, at ten o’clock a. m. It was at this timé and place appointed for the meeting of the synod of 1858, that the occurrences took place which resulted in the formation of two bodies, each claiming to be the Associate Reformed Synod of New York.
It will be seen by what has been said, and still more clearly by referring to the testimony in the case, that it was the right and the duty of Mr. Arnold, if he were present, to open, and in the language of the standards of this church, “ constitute” the synod at York in October, 1858, and to act as its presiding officer until its moderator was chosen. It will also be seen that it was the right and the duty of Mr. Scouller to act as the clerk of that body upon its organization, to furnish its roll or list of members, and to receive and examine their credentials under the direction of the moderator.
When the third Monday of October in 1858 arrived, a considerable number of ministers and elders were present in the church at York appointed for the place of meeting of the synod, and there is no dispute that among them were Messrs. Arnold and Scouller. About ten o’clock, either a few minutes before or a few minutes after, and which it is impossible to say, in the irreconcilable discrepancy as to time among the witnesses, all of them evidently conscientious and religious men—and fortunately the precise moment is in my judgment wholly immaterial—at about ten o’clock, and before Mr. Arnold had taken his seat or proceeded to open the synod in the ordinary manner, one of the members of the synod, the Rev. Mr. Farrington, rose and moved that Dr. McCarrell take the chair. It is not very clear whether this motion was put to the vote. It was accompanied with the statement that Mr. Arnold had *302connected himself Avith another ecclesiastal body, implying that he had ceased to be a member of that synod, and assuming that he was potentially if not literally absent, so that the contingency had occurred in which, according to the discipline of the church, the oldest minister present was to preside, (book 1, chap. 7, sec. 1.) Dr. McCarrell took the chair, called to order, and made a short prayer. A motion was then made that Mr. Wallace should be clerk, accompanied with a statement that Mr. Scouller had also ceased to be a member of the body in the same way as the last moderator. Dr. McCarrell put it to vote and pronounced it carried. A motion was then made to adjourn to another building, which was carried, when the ministers and elders Avho had taken part in these proceedings left the church, and assembled separately elsewhere, claiming to be the true and lawful Associate Reformed Synod of New York. These persons who effected an organization in the manner Avhich has now been described, were a minority of the ministers and elders present and accredited to the synod in the usual way. They numbered sixteen only, nine ministers and seven elders.
After these proceedings had taken place, Mr. Arnold proceeded in the ordinary manner, together with Mr. Scouller, to conduct devotional exercises, and afterwards to open the proceedings as a synod of the persons who remained, and Avho, as has been stated, constituted a very considerable majority of the original body. They also claimed to be and to act as the Associate Reformed Synod of Nbav York. Each body thus had its adherents, ministers, elders and presbyters, and each has continued its organization and its claims down to the present time. Each of these bodies elected trustees of the theological seminary, at that sitting for the year 1858. The minority organization adjourned their assembly to the 16th of June, 1859, when they met, claiming to be the Associate Reformed Synod of New York for 1859, and elected the present defendants *303trustees. The majority organization adjourned to October 4th, 1859, and at that meeting the relators were chosen trustees by the vote of the synod which they contend continued to be the synod of New York.
Thus the court is driven to determine which of these two bodies has the better claim of right to be the constituent body which is to choose the trustees of this seminary. This is indeed the only question in the case. It is not a question of theological doctrines, unless these should turn out to be involved in the question of the constitution of these rival synods, which, I think, is not the fact. Nor is it a question of the discharge of a trust, or the application of trust funds. We are simply to determine now who are the trustees, and that depends upon the determination as to which of the two synods whose history and constitution are disclosed by the evidence, is legally entitled to be recognized as the Associate Beformed Synod of New York.
The proceedings of the party or body from whom the defendants derive their title, have in effect shifted the burden of proof upon the issue. At the origin of their separate organization in 185.8, the persons who acted with Mr. Farrington and Dr. McCarrell, asserted and assumed that the officer who was authorized and required by their discipline to constitute the synod, was to be considered as absent, and after they had perfected their distinct organization they proceeded to separate from themselves, and thus from the rights and privileges of membership in the synod of the church, if they were that body, all those of their number who had been concerned in the proceedings or had sanctioned the acts of which they complained. Such a forfeiture as this, affecting in this case not only ecclesiastical privileges but temporal rights, cannot be presumed, it must be proved. Although, therefore, by the form of the issue and the nature of the case, the relators must establish their title to the office in question, yet in point of fact, upon this evidence, the defendants are compelled to make *304out that the moderator of the synod of 1857 should have been considered by the synod of 1858, and must be regarded by the courts not to have been present when the synod of 1858 was organized. Otherwise the proceedings of the minority at that time were irregular and unjustifiable, and the first and initiatory step in the title of the defendants fails. This is the hinge of the present controversy. If Mr. Arnold and those who remained and acted with him, were at that time members of the synod, and entitled to be recognized as such; if they had not forfeited and positively lost these rights and privileges, the proceedings which constituted the synod from which the defendants derive their title were plainly invalid, and no legal rights could grow up out of them. Nor could any such rights subsequently attach themselves, so far as I can see, to a body which was illegal and invalid in its inception, even if the persons who composed the true synodical assembly, or the body itself, had subsequently been guilty of the gravest offences against the doctrine or the discipline of the church. Whatever equities might arise out of such a state of facts, the .legal right to elect trustees of the theological seminary, according to its charter, could not by any course of events which I can now think of, be transferred from the existing formally and duly constituted synod, to a body of men which had no regular or valid inception or constitution as a judicatory of the church, according to its rules. It becomes therefore important to see upon what this action of the minority, in 1858, was based, and for this purpose we must go back a short distance in the history of this church.
The Associate Reformed Church in this country originated in the union of two bodies of Scotch Presbyterians, known as the Associate and the Reformed Presbyterian Churches. This union was accomplished in 1782. Without tracing the subsequent history of the church or of its organization, it is sufficient to say, that in 1855 there had *305come to be a general synod of the presbyteries in the western states, including three particular synods at the west, and a separate synod of New York, which latter was the body to which the control of the theological seminary was confided, according to its charter. In 1855, the synod of New York united as a particular synod with the general synod of the west, which thus became the supreme legislative and judicial body of the Associate Reformed Church.
During all the time since 1782, however, there had existed a separate organization derived from those who objected to the union made in that year, who insisted that it involved a compromise or a surrender of principles, and who preserved a distinct organization as the Associate Church. This body had grown to be nearly as large as the Associate Reformed Chyrch, or at least as that portion of the latter body which adhered to its general synod. In 1856 negotiations were entered into for a union of the Associate and the Associate Reformed Churches. These negotiations were conducted by the general synods of the churches, and at length, in 1858, resulted in a union of these two bodies, and the formation of a general assembly embracing the particular synods and presbyteries of the Associate and Associate Reformed Churches. This union was the act of the general synods of the two bodies exclusively; no votes were had in the particular synods or the presbyteries, except-the advisory action of the presbyteries upon the plan or overture sent down to them by the general synod. It is indeed one ground of complaint by those who dissent from the union, that it was a stretch or usurpation of power by the general synod of the Associate Reformed Church, and was not effected or sanctioned by the concurrent vote or action of the presbyteries. In like manner individuals were not required, nor indeed permitted, to take any direct part in the act of union, other than by their votes in the bodies to which they belonged, and by their adherence to those bodies after the general synod with which they were *306connected had agreed to unite with the Associate Church, It was a portion of this plan of union that the several Associate Reformed Synods and presbyteries should continue, and retain their separate existence and control over any property or funds under their respective charge. This part of the plan is stigmatized in strong language by the counsel for the defendants; but whatever may have been its design, it does not appear to me to be inconsistent with the formation of a general United Presbyterian Assembly, constituted of joint presbyteries, or of the presbyteries of either church acting in union with those of the other. It is not necessary at present to determine the ultimate consequences of the union accomplished by the two general synods, if that union should produce the application of property or funds belonging to the Associate Reformed Church, to the promulgation of tenets in conflict with the teaching of that church. It is only necessary to see at present whether the union of the general synods of the Associate and Associate Reformed Churches worked the extinction of the subordinate judicatories of these churches, or rather, whether the expression of approval or consent to that union by the persons who voted in the general synod if so facto deprived them of membership in their church, and of a right to sit and act in its assemblies. The claim of the defendants goes to this extent, for as I have already said, the synod of New York, in October, 1858, as a body, had taken no action upon this plan of union, and the individuals whose position in the church and the synod was questioned, had never been called upon as individual ministers or elders or members of the church, to act in any way upon or under the proposed union. If Mr. Arnold, the moderator of the last preceding synod, had ceased to be a member .of the church, and abdicated his office as moderator, it was because as an individual member of another body he had voted in favor of and taken part in the formalities attending the union of the two churches. If *307the synod of New York had by a formal act entered into a coalition with another body, by which it had merged or lost its individual existence, and a portion of its members refusing to consent to or be bound by the act, had remained and organized themselves, the question as it would regard that remnant might be different. A question like this was presented to the chancellor of New Jersey in the case of The Associate Reformed Church agt. The Trustees of the Theological Seminary, (3 Green Ch. R., 79.) The general synod of the Associate Reformed Church in 1822 formed a union with the general assembly of the Presbyterian church, by which it surrendered its separate existence, and became merged in the latter body. This involved the transfer to the latter of the library and funds of the seminary which was under its charge and was not then incorporated. There was a considerable portion of the Associate Reformed Church who, refusing to become connected with the Presbyterian church, remained adhering to their peculiar tenets and their separate organization. They constituted, of necessity, the Associate Reformed Synod, if that body any longer existed, and they proceeded by bill against the Princeton Seminary, to whom their church property had been transferred. The chancellor of New Jersey held that the surrender of the majority of the Associate Reformed Synod, although it might have the effect of merging them in the Presbyterian church, did not put an end to the body which they left, if there remained any constituents to form and re-produce, or rather continue, that body. He held, also, that it was a breach of trust to devote the property which had been contributed for the supply of the ministry of the Associate Reformed Church, to the use of another denomination ; and on these grounds he administered the relief sought.
But the question between these parties is, as I have said, one of legal right, not of the administration of a trust or a charitable use. It is a question only of the right of certain *308persons to sit in the Associate Reformed Synod of New York. I have been unable to see how the gentlemen who seceded from their associates at York, in October, 1858, were authorized to determine or to assume, or how the court can delare, that the participation of Mr. Arnold as a commissioner to the general synod in the completion of a union with another body of Christians under a common government, had ipso facto destroyed his church membership, and vacated his church office, while the church to which he belongs still survived, and was intended to survive, and he declared his intention of continuing his connection with it.
The learned counsel for the defendants insist, that by their action as individuals, Mr. Arnold and those who concurred with him, had joined a different religious body from the Associate Reformed Church to which they had belonged, as if they had become members or office-bearers in the Episcopal or the Methodist church. I am not prepared to admit the analogy of the present case to such a supposed, state of facts. The United Presbyterian Church is rather a name for the union or combination of two religious bodies, each of which was to retain its own organization, and might apparently adhere to its own opinions, so far as they differ from each other. The United Church was not an existing body in which synods or individuals might or should have become merged. The union between the two synods, in 1858, was essentially different from the surrender to the general assembly in 1822. I do not, therefore, feel called upon to decide whether the act of becoming connected with another religious body, would of itself dissolve the connection of an individual with this church. If it were necessary to decide such a question as far as mere legal rights and conditions were concerned, I should not think that such an act alone would ipso facto exscind the member, if he had not renounced his church. It may be a part of the discipline of this or of other churches, to forbid such an irregular connection with another body; but until the discipline was *309applied, by an expulsion of the offender, I do not see that his legal rights or position would be affected. Indeed, if the act of the member of itself terminated his connection with the church; no discipline could be exercised upon him.
After a diligent consideration of the case, aided by the very able arguments of the counsel on both sides, I have arrived at the conclusion that I am not required or authorized to go beyond this point. I am of the opinion, that the action of the persons who constituted the body from which the defendants derive their title, was premature and irregular ; that it was a secession from the synod, and not the constitution of the true synod ; and that it cannot be relied upon to confer any legal rights.
I must therefore hold that the plaintiffs are entitled to judgment.