The bill is for specific performance of a contract for the sale by the complainant to the defendant of a lot of land therein described, and the defense is based on the invalidity of the complainant’s title to all but a very small part of the tract. Obviously the defendant cannot be compelled to accept a deed for a tract of land if the -title to all but a very small part thereof is not good. There is no dispute as to the facts. Part of the land (which will be called lot A) was acquired before the Act of March 1, 1855, and the rest (which will be called lot B) was acquired thereafter. The trusts relating to the two tracts are the same and the beneficiary is the same, viz., the Wilmington Monthly Meeting of Friends, or, as the society was called in the incorporation thereof in 1913, the Wilmington Monthly Meeting of Orthodox Friends.
The trusts concerning all the land were valid, and were not within any prohibition of any statute of the State of Delaware. Doughten v. Vandever, 5 Del. Ch. 51. The beneficiaries • of the trust were the members of the society from time to time, and all the intermediate conveyances, as well as the conveyance tendered to the defendant, conformed to these trusts.
The title to lot A and lot B will be considered separately.
Lot A. In 1856, James Canby, the elder, admittedly held . the legal title to the portion of the land designated as lot A, as sole surviving trustee under certain trusts for the religious Society of Friends. During that year he undertook by deed to convey the land to three new trustees properly appointed pursuant to the terms of the trust, and his grantees did likewise, and so on to the complainant in 1913. Before 1855 there was a simple proceeding for the incorporation of religious societies, and grants and gifts of real estate to religious corporations were invalid, except by deed made at least one year before the death of the grantor, and religious corporations were limited in the amount of income they could have from the real and personal property owned by them. These restrictions are called the *296“mortmain provisions”. But gifts and grants of land might be made to trustees in trust for such corporations even by deed made less than a year before the death of the grantor. So, also, conveyances could be made to persons holding ecclesiastical offices and their successors in office. In these and perhaps other ways the mortmain provisions above referred to might be, and perhaps were, avoided and circumvented, intentionally or otherwise. Then came the Act of March 1, 1855
The journals of the General Assembly do not disclose legislative purpose, and there is no assisting preamble. Nor has attention been called to any contemporary public discussion or evidence of public opinion respecting the subject-matter of that legislation. For the interpretation of its dubious provisions the act itself is the chief and perhaps the only guide, and there are no decisions of other courts that are helpful.
By section 1 it was enacted that a transfer of property to or in trust for any person and his successor in any ecclesiastical office should vest no estate in such person, or his successor; and no such grants to or for such person by designation of his office should vest any estate in any successor of such person. By this section, by way of illustration, a grant to or in trust for “A. B. and his successors as bishop of Delaware,” or to or “in trust for the bishop of Delaware,” were affected. In the first case the beneficiary named and his successor took nothing, and in the latter case the successor took nothing.
By section 2, all grants of real estate dedicated for religious worship must be made to a corporation incorporated under Chapter 39 of the Revised Code, and a grant made for such purposes to any person would vest no title in the grantee.
Section 3 provides that real estate dedicated for religious worship and which had theretofore been transferred to any person “in any eccelesiastical office by the designation of such office or otherwise” should be deemed to be held in trust for the society using the same, and upon the death of the person holding the legal title, the property should vest in the society if then incorporated. If there were then no such corporation, then in such cases, by section 4, the land escheated to the State, *297and by section 5 a convenient way was provided to pass over the title to the corporation when created.
It is probably correct to say 'that the purpose of the Act was to encourage and perhaps enforce the incorporation of religious societies, in order that property held for or used by such societies should be held by the corporation and not by any ecclesiastical officer or by lay trustees. This may have been done either to protect the titles to land, or to bring such property within the mortmain restrictions imposed on such corporations, or both purposes may have existed.
In Willin, et al., Trustees, v. Wright, 2 Boyce 197, 78 Atl. 773 (1911), the court considered that the purpose was to “make conveyances of land for religious purposes to a person or ecclesiastical office impossible and to prevent a conveyance by indirection or the medium of a trust in violation of the spirit of said section 10.” The section referred to is Section 10 of Chapter 39 of the Revised Code, and it invalidated unpurchased transfers of land to religious corporations unless made by deed more than a year before the death of the grantor. Except for the matter above quoted, that decision is not helpful in the case under consideration.
Two divergent views as to the purpose of the Act of 1855 were urged by counsel for the parties. For the defendant it was urged that the Act was a perpetuation in comparatively modem times of the ancient straggles between the Church and State in England concerning the holding of property by the Church, and that it should be construed with that in view. His contention is that the deed of James Canby was ineffective as within the prohibition of section 2, so that James Canby at his death in 1858 held the legal title, and that section 3 did not apply to a case where land had been conveyed to laymen in trust for a religious society. The result claimed was that the land did not escheat to the State, and though the deed of the heirs at law of James Canby may have passed the legal title, the real equitable interest was in those persons who in 1855 were the members of the Wilmington- Monthly Meeting of Friends as individuals, and their heirs and devisees, and not in the corporation, or in the society, as a collective body. *298According to this contention, no provision was made in the Act of 1855 to preserve the land for the Society as a collective body on the death of a sole surviving lay trustee then holding title.
For the complainant it was said that section 2 may not apply to land which had theretofore been conveyed to laymen in trust for a religious society, but only to such land as should thereafter have -been so conveyed. If so, then the deed of James Canby to his successors as trustees and the other mesne conveyances down to that made to the complainant were valid and effective. An alternative contention was that if section 2 invalidated the conveyance by James Canby to the new trustees in 1856, the equitable interest was still in the Society as a collective body, and upon the incorporation thereof in 1913 that interest was vested' in the corporation under section 5 of the Act of 1911, and by the deed of the heirs at law of James Canby the legal title vested as well. Another alternative proposition was that if by section 2 the deed by James Canby in 1856 was invalid, then that section 3 applied to land dedicated to public worship by a religious society, whether held by trustees or granted to a person in an ecclesiastical office, and so applied to the land in question, and under sections 3, 4 and 5, at the death of James Canby in 1858, there being then no incorporation of the Society, the land escheated to the State and by the deed of the Secretary of State passed to the ■ complainant. Undoubtedly there are difficulties in adopting either of these different views, owing to the ambiguity of the language used.
It is clear, as has been said above, that the Act of 1855 was passed to encourage and perhaps enforce the holding of the title to land used for religious purposes by corporations organized under the then existing law, and to prevent the acquisition of unpurchased land for such purposes otherwise than by deed made more than a year before the death of the grantor and with limitations as to the amount of the yearly rents derivable therefrom. The then existing legislation on the subject was Chapter 39 of the Revised Code. It is also evident that the Act of 1855 not only did not aim to take from the religious *299societies any beneficial interest which they had in the land at the time the Act was passed, but it expressly preserved such rights.
Section 2, as well as section 1, relates to future events. Conveyances of real estate dedicated, or to be dedicated, for religious worship for any society must thereafter be made to a corporation created under Chapter 39, and if made otherwise would vest no title in the grantees. This relates to future conveyances. But it in terms surely relates also to land which before the passage of the Act had been dedicated or appropriated to religious worship for a society, as well as lands to be thereafter so dedicated or appropriated. It, therefore, distinctly applies to and affects any conveyance of the greater part of the land in question, for it had theretofore been acquired by the Monthly Meeting of Friends for such purpose. James Canby under this section could not convey it to the new trustees, or any other person, or otherwise than to a corporation of this Monthly Meeting created under Chapter 39. There was no such corporation until 1913. Therefore, no title passed under the deed which James Canby made in 1856.
Section 3, and indeed the whole Act, is not clearly phrased, and much ambiguity exists as to the meaning thereof. By a hard, strict and unyielding interpretation of the words used, the section is capable of being so construed as not to refer to, or include in its operations, land held as James Canby held the land in question, and to relate only to land held by an ecclesiastical officer, which Canby, as trustee, surely was not. This is the contention of the defendant, who urges that it applies only to conveyances theretofore made to an ecclesiastical officer by the designation of his office, and certainly does not include grants to laymen as trustees for an unincorporated religious society. If this be true, then in 1858 on the death of James Canby (whose conveyance in 1856 was ineffectual under section 2) the title did not escheat to the State and did not pass to the complainant by the deed of the Secretary of State. The consequences of so holding were bewildering even to the solicitor for the defendant, who made what was even to him a very unsatisfactory explanation as to the devolution of the beneficial title *300on the death of James Canby. It leaves the question in a hopelessly confused and incomplete condition.
The most reasonable view of section 3, and the one adopted, is this: Section 3 relates to all land dedicated or appropriated, or intended to be dedicated or appropriated, to purposes of religious worship for the use of any congregation or society, whether the dedication or appropriation be made to laymen as trustees in trust for the society, or whether it be transferred to any person in any ecclesiastical office by the. designation of such office or otherwise. It was intended to apply to matters referred to in section 1 and section 2. This is obviously the purpose of the Act. It was not to pull down, confuse or invalidate rights in land, but to secure them for the use of the religious society or congregation, and also subject the land to certain existing restrictions. This purpose was effected by treating the Act in one or the other of several ways, and so far as the particular case in hand is concerned it is unimportant which one of several inconsistent views is correct, so long as the title is considered good. Three interpretations of this section are urged:
(1) The complainant urges that the word “or” be substituted for the word “and” where it first occurs in the section, so that it would read thus:
“That any real estate of the description named in the second section of this Act, or which has been heretofore granted,” etc.
There is authority for such substitution in some cases in construing laws in deference to the meaning of the context, the popular use of the words “or” and “and” being so loose and, frequently inaccurate. 2 Lewis on Statutory Construction, §397. This is plausible and perhaps correct, but is not as satisfactory an interpretation as another to be hereafter considered.
(2) The insertion of the words “also real estate” after the word ‘ ‘ and ’ ’ where first used would be in harmony with the-general purpose of the Act, and would make the section apply to real estate held by laymen in trust for religious bodies as well as land held by ecclesiastical officers. The section would read:
*301“That any real estate dedicated,” etc., “and also real estate which has been heretofore granted,” etc., “to any ecclesiastical officer,” etc.
This is open to objection, as is the prior suggestion, in that it changes the verbiage of the Act.
(3) By the use of the words “or otherwise,” the section applies to real estate transferred to persons other than ecclesiastical officers for the use of a religious society, and makes the section apply to the matters referred to in section 1 and section 2 of the Act. The section makes three classes of persons when read thus:
“That any real estate dedicated or appropriated, or intended to be dedicated or appropriated, to purposes of religious worship for the use of any congregation or society, and which has been heretofore granted, devised or demised to any person or persons (1) in any ecclesiastical office (2) by the designation of such office (3) or otherwise, shall be deemed to be held in trust for the benefit of the congregation or society using the same,” etc.
Section 1 of the Act mentions transfers (1) to or for any person in any ecclesiastical office and (2) to or for any person by the designation of any ecclesiastical office, and section 3 includes both of these as shown above. The words “or otherwise” must refer to something else than ecclesiastical officers or ecclesiastical offices. Naturally, it relates to transfers to laymen for the benefit of the society. This view of the Act is consistent with the general purpose of the Act, and its adoption does not involve the substitution or addition of words. For these reasons it seems correct, and is adopted in interpreting the section.
The result would be that by section 2 no title to lot A vested in the new trustees as grantees of the deed made in 1856 by James Canby, but he continued to hold the same until his death in 1858, and as at that time the religious society using, occupying and enjoying the real estate was then unincorporated, the title escheated to the State of Delaware under section 4, and by the deed of the Secretary of State vested in the complainant by virtue of section 5 of the Act.
*302Lot B. The deed from Dure to trustees for the Society being made subsequent to 1855 was clearly within the prohibition of section 2 of the Act of that year, and no right, title or interest vested in the persons the grantees therein, but remained in the grantor, and on his death passed under his will. Upon the incorporation of the Society in 1913 the legal and equitable title thereto either passed under section 5 of the Act of 1911, or was conveyed by the deed to the corporation from the heirs and devisees of Dure. It is conceded by the solicitor for the defendant that a good title to this relatively small part of the land was conveyed by the deed from the devisees of Dure.
In view of the conclusions stated above, and because of the facts of this case, it is not necessary in this case to consider the bearing and effect on either branch of the title of section 5 of the Act of March 14, 1911 (Chapter 89, Volume 26). This Act was substantially a re-enactment of the very old statute constituting Chapter 39 of the Revised Code; but being enacted subsequent to the Act of 1855, with its stringent and radical provisions, it may have an important bearing, and perhaps a controlling influence, on titles to land granted, devised and demised to or for religious societies before and perhaps after 1855. Its provisions were not relied on by the complainant, or much discussed, by him and not at all by the solicitor for the defendant. The need to invoke the benefit of the Act to obtain the legal title did not here arise, because there were actual conveyances of both branches of the title made to the complainant as a corporation by the holders of the legal title under James Canby or Henry F. Dure, or by the Secretary of State.
The conclusion reached as to the effect of the Act of March 1, 1855, on title to land for religious societies are these: (D Section 2 of that Act applies to grants, conveyances, devises and leases made after the passage of the Act of real estate dedicated prior to the passage thereof to religious worship. (2) Section 3 applies to such real estate so granted, conveyed, devised or leased before the passage of that Act, whether the transfer be made to an ecclesiastical officer, or to laymen as trustees for the congregation or society, or otherwise.
*303Transfers made to a person after 1855 of real estate theretofore or thereafter dedicated or appropriated to purposes of public worship for the use of any congregation or society were made ineffective to vest any title in the person to whom the transfer was made, but all such were valid if made to a religious corporation created under the particular law relating to such corporations. But the beneficial use of real estate which before the Act was passed had been so dedicated and. appropriated, was preserved for the society or congregation until it became incorporated. This applied to real estate whether it had been theretofore transferred to a person in an ecclesiastical office, or to a person by the designation of such office, or to laymen or trustees, or otherwise. In all such cases the persons holding the title transferred to them prior to 1855 could thereafter transfer it only to a' religious corporation so incorporated, but during their lives held it in trust for the congregation or society using it. If no such transfer be made in the lifetime of the transferee the property at the death of the transferee would vest in the religious corporation, if there be one, and if not, then it escheats to the State. If the congregation occupying and enjoying the property afterwards becomes incorporated, the Secretary of State could convey the property to the corporation, which will thereupon be vested with the title to the property.
The complainant is entitled to a decree for specific performance of the contract.*
Note.—On appeal the decree was affirmed by the Supreme Court. See .post p. 479.