[ G.R. No. 27619. February 04, 1928 ] 51 Phil. 420
[ G.R. No. 27619. February 04, 1928 ]
RAUL ROGERIO GONZALEZ, BY HIS GUARDIAN AD LITEM ADELAIDA GONZALEZ, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. THE ROMAN CATHOLIC ARCHBISHOP OF MANILA, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT. D E C I S I O N
STREET, J.:
This action was instituted in the Court of First Instance of Manila by Raul Rogerio Gonzalez, through his guardian ad litem, Adelaida Gonzalez, against the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Manila, a corporation sole, represented by His Grace, M. J. O’Doherty, Apostolic Archbishop, for the purpose of obtaining a writ of mandamus requiring the respondent to appoint the plaintiff to a vacant chaplaincy, to enforce an accounting for the income of the chaplaincy for the period during which has been vacant, and to secure other relief. Upon hearing the cause the trial court entered judgment which, as subsequently amended, embraces three features, namely: First, ordering the defendant, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Manila, as a corporation sole, and His Grace, Michael J. O’Doherty, Roman Catholic Apostolic Archbishop of Manila, its sole representative, forthwith to appoint plaintiff, Raul Rogerio Gonzalez, as chaplain of the said chaplaincy founded by Doña Petronila de Guzman; secondly, ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiff, through his guardian ad litem, the sum of one hundred seventy-three thousand, seven hundred and twenty-five pesos (P173,725) as the rents and income of the property of said chaplaincy from January 1, 1911, to December 31, 1925, plus the rents and income accrued since December 31, 1925, from the total of which should be deducted the expenses allowed by the court as legitimate charges against the fund, and requiring the defendant, furthermore, to pay to the plaintiff, through his guardian or guardian ad litem, from the date of plaintiff’s appointment as chaplain, the net income of said property from time to time as collected; thirdly, reserving to plaintiff any legal rights that he may have with reference to the cancellation of the transfer certificate of title No. 17603 in a proper proceeding before the fourth branch of this court, which branch has exclusive jurisdiction of all cases relative to the registration of real estate in the City of Manila (Act No. 2347, sec. 11). From this judgment the defendant appealed. On March 13, 1816, Doña Petronila de Guzman, a resident of what is now the district of Binondo, in the City of Manila, executed a will in which she instructed her executor to take the steps necessary to the foundation of a collative chaplaincy upon certain real property adjacent to her residence in Binondo. The part of the will pertinent to the foundation is found in three paragraphs of the will which read as follows:
“Ninth Item: I declare and dispose that the new house situated in this said town and bounded by this house of my residence toward the right of its exit, which between myself and my deceased sister Da. Vicenta de Guzman we have constructed with our own money, at a cost of one thousand six hundred pesos without including the value of the lot on which it is erected, and I charge my executor to constitute said house into a collative chaplaincy, the foundation of which they shall effect immediately after my death, choosing for chaplain D. Esteban de Guzman, legitimate son of my grandson Dn. Jose Telesforo de Guzman, and in his default, the nearest relative, and in default of the latter, a collegian of San Juan de Letran, who should be an orphan mestizo, native of this said town, and I request the father chaplain to celebrate sixty masses annually, which should be said in the churches of the City of Manila or in those outside of its walls, and in privileged altars, in behalf of the souls of my father, Dn. Tomas de Guzman, and of my mother, Dña. Sebastiana de Jesus, and of my brothers and sisters, and for me, the testatrix, after my days. “Tenth Item: It is my will that for patron of said chaplaincy my executors name the Father President of the College of San Juan de Letran. “Eleventh Item: I appoint my first executor as administrator of the chaplaincy which shall be founded on the house referred to, during the minority of said chaplain.”
The property thus intended as the foundation of the chaplaincy consists of the lots now known as Nos. 210-212. and 214, Rosario Street, Manila, with the improvements thereon. After the death of the testatrix her executor, Don Jose Telesforo de Guzman, on April 24, 1820, addressed a petition to the Archbishop, informing him of the wishes of the testatrix and praying that the property be declared sufficient and that the chaplaincy be created, with the petitioner’s son as chaplain and the petitioner himself as administrator of the property during the minority of the son. This petition, addressed by the executor to the Archbishop, in the part material to be here considered, reads as follows:
“Most Illustrious and Most Reverend Sir—Don Jose Telesforo de Guzman resident of the town of Binondo with all due respect, before Your Illustrious Grace in the best legal form, I present myself and say,—That the annexed testimony which with due solemnity I enclose shows that my deceased great grandmother Da. Petronila de Guzman provided in her last will the institution of a collative chaplaincy for one son of mine named Esteban Sixto de Guzman, student of the Royal College of San Juan de Letran, for the patronage of which the Most Reverend Father President of said college has been named, with a house of lime and stone situated at Calle Rosario as capital, which, according to the certificate hereto attached, nets a rent of one hundred eighty pesos annually, it being located on the Calle Real del Rosario; and I, being her testamentary executor and appointed administrator of my above-mentioned son, present myself before Your Most Illustrious Grace, praying that you declare the living sufficient and order that a title to said chaplaincy issue to my said son and to me the administrator during his minority.”
In support of this petition the executor of the will of the foundress executed, on April 26, 1820, a formal document of endowment, setting aside for pious uses the property intended for the foundation and transferring it to the spiritual properties of the archbishopric. This document, omitting formal parts at the end, reads as follows:
“In the City of Manila on the 26th day of April one thousand eight hundred and twenty, before me the Clerk of Court and the undersigned witnesses, (appeared) D. Jose Telesf oro, resident of the town of Binondo, and testamentary executor of the deceased Da. Petronila de Guzman, as shown by the certificate which was shown me and which appears to have been sealed and signed by the Public Clerk Dn. Francisco Castro de Reyes, to me known, and said— “That whereas the said Petronila de Guzman, deceased, has ordered in the ninth clause of her will that after her death a house of lime and stone belonging to her be constituted into a chaplaincy, which house had been constructed by her and her deceased sister Doña Vicenta de Guzman who died single, at a cost of one thousand six hundred pesos without including the value of the lot whereon said house is erected, in said town of Binondo, being bounded towards the right of its exit by the house in which the said testatrix formerly lived, which was her own; and to accomplish the foundation of said chaplaincy in accordance with law, the said executor appeared before the most Illustrious and Most Reverend Metropolitan Archbishop, stating that (the chaplaincy) was subject to the charge that the incumbent was required to say sixty masses annually, either in the churches of this City or in those without its walls, and in privileged altars, for the benefit of the souls of her deceased parents, Don Tomas de Guzman and Doña Sebastiana de Jesus, of the testatrix and of her brothers and sisters, electing as chaplain her great grandson Don Esteban de Guzman, a student of the Royal College of San Juan de Letran, and as administrator during the minority of the said chaplain, the executor himself, upon whom she has conferred power to appoint as Patron of the chaplaincy the Father President of the said Royal College of San Juan de Letran, asking that the said living (congrua), the rents of the property of which amount at present to P180 per year, be declared sufficient, issuing the corresponding title of chaplain to his said son (i. e., of the executor); and as a consequence whereof he (i. e., the executor) segregates said property from temporal properties and transfers it to the spiritual properties of this Archbishopric, with the restriction that, as a spiritual property, it cannot be alienated or converted into any other estate for any cause, even though of a more pious character, (the grantor) protesting that if the contrary shoud be done from now until then, he declares null and without value or effect whatever may be done or executed contrary to the tenor of these presents, and the said executor affirms and ratifies said conditions before me and the witnesses hereinbelow named, so that by virtue of this Deed of Foundation canonical collation may be conferred on the said appointed chaplain. And for its stability and greater validity he renounces with all solemnity the laws that may favor the said decedent, inserting and repeating herein all the clauses that may be necessary with all the requisites and conditions, so that the purpose which actuated her to do this act of piety may be duly accomplished, with the solemnities above set forth and the conditions herein inserted, which he asks and charges the above named chaplain and those who will succeed him to respect, comply and execute ad perpetuam rei memoriam amen.”
The two documents from which we have just quoted appear to have been passed to the procurator fiscal for comment; and this official made indorsement to the effect that no reason occurred to him for opposing the project and that he accordingly recommended that the establishment be effected. The matter was then brought to the attention of the Archbishop who gave the necessary formal approval to the foundation and an appropriate decree to this effect was entered. According to the note of this decree, His Grace declared that “concurring entirely with what had been expressed by the promotor fiscal, he was approving and approved the foundation of said chaplaincy, with all the circumstances and conditions specified in said clause (of the will) and the deed of foundation, as also the charge of P1,700 upon said house, erecting said sum into spiritual property and making it, as he makes it, by perpetual title, to be of the ecclesiastical forum and jurisdiction.” Since the foundation of this chaplaincy, five chaplains have been appointed thereto by the Archbishop of Manila. The first and second chaplains were great grandsons of the foundress, the third was a great great grandson, and the fourth and fifth great great great grandsons. At the time of their appointments they were respectively more than 13, 21, 22, 27 and 19 years old. The fifth and last chaplain or beneficiary of the chaplaincy in question was Angel Gonzalez, father of the present plaintiff. This individual resigned the office of chaplain, effective December 6, 1910, since which date the chaplaincy has remained vacant. Though not of decisive importance in the case, the document by which Angel Gonzalez was appointed to the chaplaincy on August 21, 1901, is perhaps instructive as indicating the nature of the rights appurtenant to the office. Omitting the formal conclusion, this document reads as follows:
“Whereas, the Chaplaincy founded by Da. Petronila de Guzman, the capital of which consists of a building of brick and mortar erected on its own lot located on the Calle de Kosario, District of Binondo, is now vacant because of the renunciation by its last possessor D. Fernando Maniquis y Guzman; now, therefore, the necessary requisites and qualifications according to law being found concurring in D. Angel Gonzalez y Guzman, tonsured, a boarding student in the College of San Juan de Letran of this City, we order to issue and do issue this present title by virtue of which we elect and appoint the above-named D. Angel Gonzalez y Guzman, as chaplain of the benefice above referred to, and by the manner and form which we best can do, we hereby give him collation, canonical institution and real possession vel quasi of the above-mentioned chaplaincy, which shall be administered as heretofore by the administrator of the funds of this Holy Archbishopric, so that, as such chaplain he may possess and enjoy it as an ecclesiastical benefice and by perpetual title with the obligation of ordering to be said, by means of a priest, while he himself cannot say them, sixty masses annually according to the will of the foundress, and with the understanding that every year he has to show to our Court of Chaplaincies wherein this shall be recorded, that he has discharged said masses, without which requisite the rent which for the purpose may be necessary shall be withheld from him. And by virtue of Holy Obedience we order those to whom these presents may concern to have and treat the said D. Angel Gonzalez y Guzman as the beneficiary and possessor of said chaplaincy, and that they pay him well and faithfully the income which in the future the capital may produce and that which it has produced while vacant, placing upon his conscience the duty of complying with the annexed conditions and relieving us thereof.”
The function of administering the property pertaining to the foundation appears to have been exercised, at least since about 1863, by the Archbishop; and for this service a commission has been charged against the incumbent whenever a chaplain has been in office. In September, 1914, a Torrens title in fee simple was issued for the property in the name of the Archbishop. During vacancies the duty of causing sixty masses to be said per annum, as provided in the will, devolves upon the Archbishop; and this obligation has been performed by the present respondent, at an expense of not more than P300 per year. The trial judge found that, from January 1, 1911, to December 31, 1925, the administrator had obtained, in the way of rents of the property, a total of P153,600. In addition to this there was collected, in the year 1912, the sum of P20,125, as insurance, upon occasion of the destruction by fire of the house belonging to the chaplaincy. The expenses of rebuilding and repairs, over the same period, is stated to have been P24,503.34. All of the income thus received, less the expenses of administration and cost of the masses, has been applied to the purposes of education, beneficence, and charity, under the directions of the Archbishop, with the approval of His Holiness, the Pope. Since the Council of Trent it has been the law of the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church that no person who has received the first tonsure or who has already been ordained in minority is eligible to a benefice before his 14th year (Council of Trent, Chap. 6, sec. 23, July, 1563), that is to say, he must be at least 13 years and 1 day old. With this exception there seems to have been no ecclesiastical law or ordinance of the Church in force at the time the chaplaincy in question was founded, prescribing ecclesiastical qualifications for incumbents of the office of chaplain. However, in the year 1918 a new canon law was promulgated by the Catholic Church to the effect that “the chaplaincies, or simple benefices, are conferred on clericals of the secular clergy;” and in order to be a clerical, one must have received the first tonsure. Also in order to take the first tonsure, one must have begun the study of theology, and in order to study theology, one must be a bachelor. Raul Rogerio Gonzalez, the plaintiff in this action, was born on September 16, 1912. He was therefore nearly 12 years of age when this action was instituted on July 31, 1924. He is a son of Angel Gonzalez, the last incumbent of the chaplaincy in question. At the trial the young man testified that he was then a student in the sixth grade of the public school and that his inclinations and desires are towards an ecclesiastical career. More than two years prior to the institution of this action he was presented to the Archbishop of Manila, with the request that he be appointed to the chaplaincy in question, he being at that time 10 years of age. The application was turned down by the Archbishop in a letter, addressed to the boy’s father, and dated March 20, 1922, on the ground that the youth did not have the necessary qualifications under existing canon law. His Grace, the Archbishop of Manila, testified that although he could not appoint plaintiff as chaplain of the chaplaincy in question, he had made an offer at his expense to educate the plaintiff so that he might obtain the necessary preparations to qualify himself as a cleric and might later be appointed as chaplain. He added, however, that although he did not consider himself in duty bound to make such an offer, the same was made for equitable motives in view of the claim of the child as the nearest relative of the foundress of the said chaplaincy. In the deed of foundation of April 26, 1820, the Presiding Father of the Royal College of San Juan de Letran is designated as patron of the chaplaincy; and before this action was instituted, Father Calixto Prieto, then rector of San Juan de Letran College, addressed a letter to the Archbishop, presenting the plaintiff as candidate for the chaplaincy. Father Prieto stated that, prior to presenting the plaintiff for the chaplaincy, he satisfied himself that the applicant was the heir to the chaplaincy, but did not take account of his moral or intellectual qualifications, leaving these matters to be passed upon by his superior. The application of the plaintiff was also indorsed by other priests of the church. We now pass to the consideration of the nature of the chaplaincy, or office of chaplain, as understood in Spanish and ecclesiastical law. In the first place, it is to be noted that the collative chaplaincy is a form of ecclesiastical benefice, in which the incumbent is appointed and canonically installed by the Bishop, or Archbishop, and given a living, constituting a charge upon specified property, subject to the duty of saying masses and performing other pious or religious duties. The collative chaplaincy is said to be a simple benefice. In the second place, the term “collative chaplaincy” is used in contradistinction to “lay chaplaincy”; and the difference is that the collative chaplaincy can be constituted only upon the intervention of ecclesiastical authority, while the lay chaplaincy does not require such intervention. In the case before us it is undeniable, and admitted, that the chaplaincy in question is of the sort known as the collative chaplaincy. The documents of foundation expressly provide that this chaplaincy shall be of a collative character; and to this end the property which was to serve as the foundation of the chaplaincy was segregated by the executor of Doña Petronila de Guzman from other property pertaining to her estate and transferred to the Church, with the effect of its being converted into spiritual property for the pious use intended. Furthermore, in accepting the transfer, the Archbishop declared, that said property was raised to the status of spiritual property and that it thereby passed to the ecclesiastical forum and jurisdiction. Speaking broadly, the substantial effect of the conveyance of the property to the Church and the acceptance of the transfer by the Archbishop in the manner above stated was that the legal title of the property became vested in the Archbishop, subject to the ecclesiastical charge intended in the creation of the chaplaincy. The trial judge found that the plaintiff is next kin (pariente mas cercano) to the foundress of the chaplaincy, in the sense intended in the Ninth Item of the will, and, therefore, that he is qualified for the chaplaincy in point of relationship. Exception is taken to this finding by the appellant, who maintains that there is no evidence in the record to support it. We are of the opinion, however, that the proof on this point is sufficient, and we shall assume in what is to follow that the necessary relationship on the part of the plaintiff to the foundress exists. As has been already stated, this action was instituted shortly before the plaintiff had reached the age of 12 years; and upon this fact the appellant plants the proposition that the plaintiff is not qualified for the chaplaincy on point of his age. The appellee has attempted to meet this criticism by the filing of an amended complaint on April 5, 1926, when the plaintiff was in his 15th year. We shall therefore assume, for the purposes of this decision, that the immaturity of the plaintiff in point of age is not a fatal obstacle to the maintenance of the action; and at any rate in the view we take of the case this question may be ignored. Upon turning our attention more directly to the legal aspects of the controversy, we discover that the case of the plaintiff proceeds upon a train of reasoning which may be expressed as follows, namely, that the Archbishop, as representative of the Church, is the holder of the empty legal title to the property on which the chaplaincy is founded; that the beneficial interest thereto is vested exclusively in the heirs of the foundress; that the plaintiff, as her next of kin, has an unqualified right to be appointed to the chaplaincy, without regard to his lack of ecclesiastical qualifications; that the plaintiff, having title to the chaplaincy, is entitled to demand of the defendant the entire net income received by the latter as administrator of the property during the pending vacancy, as well as the right to be paid the income that may hereafter be produced by the property so long as the plaintiff shall occupy the post of chaplain. In a word, it is the contention of the plaintiff that the foundation in question is a perfected trust, enforcible in a court of equity, that the Archbishop is a mere trustee, and that the plaintiff is the present rightful beneficiary of the entire property. On the other hand, the attorneys for the Archbishop challenge practically every phase of the plaintiff’s presentation of the case; and in this connection various propositions are submitted by them, which may perhaps be fairly condensed as follows: That the transfer made by the executor of the foundress of the property with which we are here concerned had the effect of conveying it to the Archbishop, as representative of the Church, in whom, upon his acceptance of the same, the entire property became vested, for the purpose of maintaining the chaplaincy in question, and subject to all the circumstances and conditions specified in the documents; that the collative chaplaincy thus constituted is an ecclesiastical benefice, the right of appointment to which is vested exclusively in the Archbishop; that the Church, by lawful ordinance, effective in 1918, has required that, in order to be eligible to the office of chaplain, the candidate must possess ecclesiastical qualifications, of the sufficiency of which the Archbishop is constituted judge; that the plaintiff in this action does not possess the qualifications for chaplain which have thus been prescribed, and the Archbishop has so found and declared; that, by the laws of the Church, the plaintiff, if aggrieved by the decision of the Archbishop, has a right of appeal to His Holiness, the Pope, of which right the plaintiff has not availed himself; that, as the owner of the property which is the subject of this foundation, the Archbishop has the free disposition, for charitable, educational, and religious purposes, of the income derived from the property during a vacancy in the office of chaplain, subject only to the obligation of causing masses to be said as required in the documents of foundation; that the incumbent of the office of chaplain is entitled, from the bounty of the Archbishop, to receive the income derived from the property during his incumbency in the office to the extent necessary to secure a suitable living only, and that, as to the residue, it is the duty of the chaplain to apply it to charitable and religious purposes; that the subject matter of this suit is not a proper matter of cognizance in any civil court; and, finally, that the court of origin was without jurisdiction to compel the Archbishop to perform a canonical function, to wit, to appoint the plaintiff to an ecclesiastical office. While the field of controversy thus laid out is extensive, it will be found, upon a careful survey of the ground, that the decision must in the end turn upon one or two vital points, which are concerned with the right of the plaintiff to the chaplaincy and the right of the court to compel the Archbishop to appoint the plaintiff to said office. At the outset of the discussion we may state that we see no reason to question the jurisdiction of the court over the subject matter of the action. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is beneficiary of a trust, and that the defendant, as trustee, has refused to recognize the plaintiff’s right to the office of chaplain and is diverting the income of the foundation to unlawful uses. As was observed by Mr. Justice Miller, of the Supreme Court of the United States, in the leading case of Watson vs. Jones (13 Wallace, 679, 723; 20 Law. ed., 666), it seems hardly to admit of rational doubt that an individual may dedicate property by way of trust to the purpose of sustaining religious doctrines, provided that in so doing he violates no law of morality and gives to the instrument by which his purpose is to be accomplished the formalities which the law requires. It also seems to be the obvious duty of the court, in a case properly made, to see that the property so dedicated is not diverted from the trust which is thus attached to its use; and so long as there is any one so interested in the execution of the trust as to have a standing in court, it must be that he can prevent the diversion of the property or fund to other and different uses. This is the general doctrine of courts of equity as to charities, and it seems equally applicable to ecclesiastical matters (23 R. C. L., p. 451). But while it may be, and is, the duty of the court to inquire into a case of the character stated in this complaint, the rule to be applied in determining the right to relief is to be sought in the principles governing the courts in dealing with rights derived from ecclesiastical sources. The rule that appears to offer most assistance in the solution of the case before us is that formulated by the Court of Appeals of South Carolina in the case of Harmon vs. Dreher (Speers Eq., 87), to the effect that: Where a civil right depends upon some matter pertaining to ecclesiastical affairs, the civil tribunal tries the civil right and nothing more, taking the ecclesiastical decisions out of which the civil right has arisen as it finds them, and accepting those decisions as matters adjudicated by another jurisdiction. The proposition thus stated in Harmon vs. Dreher has subsequently been considered from different points of view by many able courts, and it has uniformly been looked upon as a sound and correct statement of the law in cases where it is of proper application. Among decisions in which said rule has been quoted with approval are Watson vs. Jones (13 Wall., 679; 20’ Law. ed., 666); Lamb vs. Cain (129 Ind., 486; 14 L. R. A., 518; 29 N. E., 13); and White Lick Quarterly Meeting of Friends vs. White Lick Quarterly Meeting of Friends (89 Ind., 136). Upon examination of the decisions it will be readily apparent that cases involving questions relative to ecclesiastical rights have always received the profoundest attention from the courts, not only because of their inherent interest, but because of the far reaching effects of the decisions in human society. Moreover, courts have learned the lesson of conservatism in dealing with such matters, it having been found that, in a form of government where the complete separation of civil and ecclesiastical authority is insisted upon, the civil courts must not allow themselves to intrude unduly in matters of an ecclesiastical nature. It will be noted that the first and principal relief sought by the plaintiff in the case before us is to obtain from the court an order, in the form of writ of mandamus or injunction, requiring the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Manila to appoint the plaintiff to an ecclesiastical office, for that the office of chaplain is of an ecclesiastical nature is undeniable. It is a sinister omen for the plaintiff’s case that no decision of any civil court whatever can be pointed to as a precedent for such an exercise of judicial power, and the mere novelty of the proposition is an argument against the soundness of the plaintiff’s case. It is true that there are decisions from the Supreme Court of Spain wherein the right to the possession of properties constituting the foundation of chaplaincies has been debated, and numerous cases are found in modern Spanish jurisprudence where actions have been maintained by heirs of the founders to recover property constituting the foundation of chaplaincies; but such actions had their basis in the Spanish legislation abolishing chaplaincies. But so far as our investigations go, and as far as the industry of counsel has revealed, no case has been discovered where Bishop or Archbishop has been compelled to appoint any person to the office of chaplain or other ecclesiastical benefice. It is also true that there are a few English and American decisions in which the rights of rectors, or ministers, after the title to the ecclesiastical office had once been acquired, have been sustained in the courts in the face of attempts to deprive them of their office. But so far as the American courts are concerned, these cases proceed exclusively on the idea of supplying redress for breach of contract; and neither American nor English jurisprudence supplies any precedent for compelling the ecclesiastical authorities to appoint a person to an ecclesiastical office. In dealing with the subject of the conclusiveness of the decisions of church authorities in ecclesiastical matters the author of the monographic article on “Religious Societies,” in Ruling Case Law, has this to say: * * * The judgment of the constituted church tribunal is absolutely conclusive upon the civil courts, whether, in the opinion of the judges of such courts, the decision appears to be right or wrong. Where a right of property turns upon such a decision, the civil courts will allow the property to go in that direction in which the decision of the church tribunal carries it. According to the rule broadly stated by some courts, when a civil right depends upon some matter pertaining to ecclesiastical affairs, the civil tribunal tries the right and nothing more, taking the ecclesiastical decisions out of which the civil right has arisen as it finds them, and accepts such decisions as matters adjudicated by another legally constituted jurisdiction. In conformity with the ideas above set forth, it is insisted, for the appellant, that it was erroneous on the part of the trial court to order the defendant to perform the canonical act of appointing the plaintiff chaplain of the chaplaincy in question, and furthermore that the trial court erred in not accepting as conclusive the decision of the Archbishop in regard to the question whether or not the plaintiff is ecclesiastically qualified to be appointed chaplain. The authorities, we think, strongly indicate that there is merit in this contention. But in our opinion there is another proposition, still more clear, upon which the decision can be safely rested, and this is, that as a matter of fact the plaintiff does not possess the qualifications necessary for appointment to the office of chaplain and consequently that the Archbishop was justified in refusing to appoint the plaintiff to that office. We shall therefore provisionally assume that it is proper for the court to inquire into these qualifications and state our conclusion with respect thereto. Under the law of the Church as it stood when this chaplaincy was created, no ecclesiastical qualifications were required in a candidate for appointment to the office of chaplain; but as we have already stated, a new canon became effective in the Church in 1918 to the effect that, in order to be appointed chaplain, the candidate must be a clerical, and that in order to be a clerical, one must have taken the first tonsure, as a prerequisite to which he must also be a bachelor who has begun the study of theology. It is admitted that the plaintiff in this case does not possess these qualifications, and it is obvious that if the new canon is to be applied to the chaplaincy in question, the action of the Archbishop in refusing to appoint the plaintiff was correct and this court must recognize the validity of his exclusion from the chaplaincy. That the new canon is valid and applicable to candidates for chaplaincies already created is, in our opinion, obvious, since it is general in terms and evidently intended to be applicable to all chaplains appointed in the future. There is no reason discernible why the court should read into it an exception in favor of candidates to chaplaincies already created. But it is said that, if interpreted in this sense, the ordinance will be retroactive. This is in our opinion a mistake. If the Church had attempted to make the ordinance applicable to chaplains already appointed, thereby depriving them of an office as to which title had been previously acquired, the effect would be to make the statute truly retroactive. But such is not the case now before us. When the foundress caused this property to be originally conveyed to the Church as a foundation for the chaplaincy in question, no restriction was imposed with respect to the requirement of ecclesiastical qualifications for the chaplains to be appointed to the benefice; and in submitting the appointment of the chaplains to the ecclesiastical authority, as resulted from the creation of a collative chaplaincy, it must be considered as an implied term of the agreement that the ecclesiastical qualifications for the spiritual office should be such as might be required by the Church. As was said by Mr. Justice Miller in Watson vs. Jones (13 Wall., 679, 729), all who unite themselves to an ecclesiastical body do so with an implied consent to submit to the Church government and they are bound to submit to it. The trial court appears to have been of the opinion that the new canon of 1918 cannot be given effect as regards the chaplaincy in question for the reason that to do so would impair the obligation of the trust involved in the acceptance by the Archbishop of the provisions for the establishment of the chaplaincy, with the result of impairing the obligation of a contract in violation of our Organic Act. This idea is in our opinion fallacious. It is undeniable that under Spanish law an acclesiastical canon such as we are now considering could have been adopted regardless of its effect upon the foundation or the persons interested therein, and it cannot be admitted that an obligation which could be changed under Spanish law has become immutable from the promulgation by Congress of the constitutional provision forbidding the impairment of contracts by legislative Acts. Under said constitutional provision obligations are to be respected as they stand, and it was not intended that, by virtue of this provision, obligations should be made more onerous to either party. If the proposition maintained by the plaintiff’s attorneys be true, then we are confronted with the spectacle of a chaplaincy which is a perpetual sinecure for a chaplain without ecclesiastical qualifications. Perpetuities of any sort are objectionable, but one of this character would be intolerable. As is justly said by the attorney for the appellant, “It is unthinkable that qualifications for chaplains should remain stagnant and the same forever.” In passing upon a question of this character the court is not at liberty to ignore the effects upon human society which would result from adopting the proposition upon which the case for the plaintiff here rests. It follows from what has been said that the plaintiff has not the requisite qualifications for the office of chaplain and the defendant, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Manila, acted within the limits of his proper ecclesiastical authority in excluding the plaintiff from the chaplaincy in question. The trial court was therefore in error in ordering the said defendant to appoint the plaintiff as chaplain of the chaplaincy founded by Doña Petronila de Guzman. As corollary of this, there was also error on the part of the trial court in ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiff, through his guardian ad litem, the amount awarded in paragraph (b) of the dispositive part of the appealed decision. The appellant’s brief contains an elaborate discussion of the rights of the respective parties to the income of the property during the vacancy in the office of chaplain, and of the extent of the rights of the plaintiff during the time that he might occupy the chaplaincy,—all on the supposition that the right of the plaintiff to the office might be upheld by this court. But in view of the fact that we are now to reverse the judgment in its principal features, with the result that the plaintiff will not be appointed chaplain, all discussion of his rights to the income, based on the supposition of his appointment to the chaplaincy, becomes in a measure academic. We shall therefore not enter into any discussion of this phase of the case, and shall content ourselves by observing that if those who are interested in conserving the income derived from the chaplaincy and in holding the defendant responsible for alleged improper diversion of funds should see fit to proceed judicially in an independent proceeding, the action should be brought as a class-suit in behalf of all the descendants of Doña Petronila de Guzman, since under the present decision the minor plaintiff in this action has no particular title to relief. In paragraph (c) of the dispositive part of the appealed decision the trial court reserved to the plaintiff any legal rights that he may have with reference to the cancellation of transfer certificate of title No. 17603, in a proper proceeding before the fourth branch of the Court of First Instance of Manila. The plaintiff did not appeal from this disposition, and the appellant has not assigned error against said feature of the decision. We shall therefore not interfere with the decision on this point, but we should perhaps observe that if relief should be sought in the direction indicated the contention will probably in the end resolve itself into the question whether the Torrens certificate of title now held by the defendant should be annotated so as to show that the property covered by the certificate is held by the defendant subject to the conditions stated in the documents constituting the chaplaincy in question; and of course such proceeding ought also to be brought as a class-suit. The judgment appealed from is therefore reversed and the defendant, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Manila, is hereby absolved from the complaint, without prejudice to the right of proper persons in interest to proceed for independent relief in either of the directions above indicated. So ordered, without express pronouncement as to costs.. Villamor, Ostrand, and Villa-Real, JJ., concur.