Raley v. Umatilla County

Strahan, J.

The object of this suit is to quiet plaintiffs’ title to “College Block,” being block No. 12, in the town' of Pendleton, Umatilla County, Oregon. The defendant demurred to the plaintiffs’ amended complaint, and to each of the alleged causes of suit therein, which demurrer was sustained by the court and the suit dismissed, from which decree this appeal is taken.

The plaintiffs state the interest which they claim in said real property, and then allege the defendant’s title, so that .on the complaint the main facts relied upon by the respective parties are before us. It appears from the complaint that on and prior to the fifth day of December, 1868, Moses E. Goodwin was the owner in fee of the real property in controversy, and on that date he, with the plaintiff Aura M. Raley, who was then his wife, executed and delivered to the defendant a deed, whereby, in consideration of one dollar to them in hand paid by the party of the second part, the receipt of which sum was thereby *174acknowledged, they granted, bargained, sold, and delivered unto the said party of the second part, said Umatilla County, the real property in controversy. The habendum, clause of said deed is as follows: “ To have and to hold the said block of ground with all the appurtenances thereunto belonging unto the said party of the second partfforever; and said parties of the first part do hereby covenant and agree with said party of the second part that they are the true owners of said premises in fee-simple, at the ensealing of these presents, and that they will warrant and defend the same against all claims whatsoever to the use and benefit of the parties of the second part, for the special use, and none other, of educational purposes, and upon which block shall be erected a college or institution of learning free from all sectional or political influence.”

It further appears from the complaint that the plaintiffs have succeeded to all the estate or interest of said Moses E. Goodwin in said property, if any, by inheritance, three fourths thereof to said Olive L. and one fourth to said Aura M., and said Aura M. also claims dower in said property. It also appears from the complaint that before the commencement of this suit, the plaintiffs entered into the possession of said property as for condition broken, and are now in the possession thereof.

1. Power of counties to hold land. Upon the argument, appellants’ counsel insisted that Umatilla County had no power or capacity to take title to the property in controversy, or to receive said deed; and that therefore'plaintiffs’ title was unaffected by reason of the attempted execution and delivery of the same. This is the first question demanding our attention, for the reason that if this objection is well taken it renders the consideration of others unnecessary. By the statute of this State relating to the corporate power and capacity of the several counties therein it is provided : “ That each county shall continue to be a body politic and corporate for the following purposes, to wit, to sue and be sued; to purchase and hold for the use of the county lands lying within its own limits, and any personal estate; to make all necessary contracts, and to do all other necessary acts in relation to the property and concerns of the county.” (Gen. Laws, 535, *175§ 1.) Also by sections 346 and 347 counties are classed as pul-lic corporations. They are public, for the reason they are designed as agencies in the administration of civil government, and they possess and can exercise such powers as have been conferred upon them by the legislature and none others. By the terms of the'section above quoted a county may purchase and hold/or the use of the county lands lying within its own limits. Counsel for the appellants claim that the term “for the use of the county” is to be taken as a limitation upon the power of the county to take, and that therefore, unless it plainly appears that the deed is taken for some purpose or object which the legislature had previously pointed out or authorized by some act, the grant is a nullity and confers no title. I doubt the correctness of this construction. It is harsh, and in many instances, if rigidly applied, might tend to defeat the very object of the legislature in the creation of such corporations. While the subject is not entirely free from difficulty, and it is conceded there is a conflict of authorities on the subject, still the later and better view is that both counties and cities may take land by purchase, gift, or devise under charters and statutes of the same legal importas our own. Chambers v. City of St. Louis, 29 Mo. 543, fully sustains such a conveyance. Under the statute of that State all corporations had power “ to hold, purchase, and convey such real estate as the purposes of the corporation shall require, not exceeding the amount limited in its charter.” It was further provided in said act that “no corporation shall possess or exercise any corporate powers, except such as shall be necessary to the exercise of the powers so enumerated and given.” By the charter of the city of St. Louis the city was authorized to “ purchase, receive, and hold property, real and personal, within said city, and may sell, lease, or dispose of the same for the benefit of the city '; and may purchase, receive, and hold property, real and personal, beyond the limits of the city, to be used for the burial of the dead of the city; also for the erection of water-works to supply the city with water, and also for the establishment of a hospital for the reception of persons infected with contagious and other diseases; also for poor-house, work-house, or house of correction, and may *176sell, lease, or dispose of such property for the benefit of the city.” The statute was silent on the subject of devises. Under these provisions of the charter Bryan Mullanphy made his will, whereby he bequeathed “ one equal undivided one third of all my property, real, personal, and mixed, I leave to the city of St. Louis, in the State of Missouri, in trust, to be and constitute a fund to furnish relief to all poor emigrants and travelers coining to St. Louis on their way bona fide to settle in the 'West.” Much of the real property bequeathed was beyond the limits of the city, and it was not claimed that it was intended or could be used for any of the purposes contemplated by the charter; but the title of the city under the will was sustained. The court said: “There being a right in the city to purchase, if there is a capacity in the vendor to convey, so soon as the conveyance is made, there is a complete sale; and if the corporation in purchasing violates or abuses the power to do so, that is no concern of the vendor or his heirs. It is a matter between the State and the city. The law is only directory in relation to a corporation taking lands. It imposes no penalty, nor does it in terms avoid the conveyance. Nowhere is a corporation in express terms prohibited from taking and holding lands. The city is duly incorporated with authority to hold, purchase, and convey such real and personal estate as the purposes of the corporation shall require; and if, in holding and purchasing real estate, she passes the exact line of her power, it belongs to the government of the State to exact a forfeiture of her charter, and it is not for the courts, in a collateral way, to determine the question of misuser by declaring void conveyances made in good faith. In this view of the subject we are fully sustained by the authorities.” (Baird v. Bank of Washington, 11 Serg. & R. 418; The Banks v. Poiteaux, 3 Raud. 136; Leasure v. Hillegas, 7 Serg. & R. 319; Angell on Corporations, | 152; Silver Lake Bank v. North, 4 Johns. Ch. 370.)

And the same case fully sustains the power of the- city to< execute the trust created by the will. So in Craig v. Secrist, 54 Ind. 419, it was held that a county had the legal capacity to take a devise of the property of a testator as a permanent fund, the income of which was to be used in educating a specified class of *177the children of such county. In disposing of this branch of the case the court said: “ It is further insisted by appellants’ counsel that the will in this case is void, for the reason that the trustee named therein is incapable in law to accept the trust created in and by said will. It is provided by the fifth section of the act under which the devisee in this will may be said to be incorporated, that such corporations ‘ may prosecute and defend suits, and have all the duties, rights, and powers incident to corporations, not inconsistent with the provisions of this act.’ (1 Rev. Stats. 1876, p. 356.) In 1 Perry on Trusts, page 30, section 42, it is said: ‘That at the present day, corporations of every description may take and hold estates as trustees for purposes not foreign to their own existence.’ And in section 43, the same writer says: ‘But if the trusts are within the general scope of the purposes of the institution or the corporation, or if they are collateral to its general purposes, but germane to them, as if the trust relates to matters which will promote and aid the general purposes of the corporation, it may take and hold and be compelled to execute them if it accepts them. Thus, towns, cities, and parishes may take and hold property in trust for the establishment of colleges, for the purpose of educating the poor, .... and for the support of schools.’ The text of this writer is abundantly supported by the authorities he cites. Certaiuly, the purposes of the trust created by the will now being considered, are not foreign to nor inconsistent with the general purposes for which the devisee named in said will was created a corporation. Rather, it seems to us, will the trust in said will, considered in its relation to the objects of said trust, promote and aid the general purposes of said corporation. In our opinion, therefore, the devisee named in said will, the county of Owen.in its corporate capacity, is capable of holding as trustee the estate devised to it in and by said will.” In addition to the authorities already noticed, the following cases also sustain the authority of a public corporation to taire and hold the title to real property, especially where it is in furtherance of some public trust or duty: McDonough v. McDonough, 15 How. 367; Vidal v. Gerard’s Ex’rs, 2 How. 127; Bell County v. Alexander, 22. Tex. *178350; Coggeshall v. Pelton, 7 Johns. Ch. 292. But aside from these authorities, the case of Brown v. Brown, 7 Or. 285, it seems to me, fully sustains the power of a public corporation in this State to take and hold property in trust for a charitable or public purpose. By his last will Cyrus Qlney disposed of his property as follows: —

“1. I bequeath and devise all my personal property and real estate that is capable of being disposed of by will to Jackson G. Hastier and Henry S. Aiken, in trust, first, to pay all my debts; and second, to hold the rest due in perpetuity for the benefit of the town of Astoria, in the county of Clatsop, and State of Oregon.”

In sustaining this bequest the court said: “At the time the will was made, the charter of the town of Astoria gave it authority to ‘purchase, hold, and receive property, real and personal, within said town for public buildings, school purposes, and town improvements.’ Also, to purchase, receive, and hold property within and beyond the limits of the town, to be used for burial purposes, and for the reception of persons affected with contagious .diseases, and for work-houses and houses of correction, and for ithe construction of water-works to supply the town with fresh -water; and to lease, sell, and dispose of the same for the benefit of .thedown. . , . . If the devise had been made directly to the town •of .Astoria, we think it would have been valid in law. It was .equally.so when devised to Hastier and Aiken in trust for the benefit of ihertown.” And Judge Dillon gives the sanction of his mame.to.this view of the subject. He says (2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, § 566): “ Thus a conveyance' of land to a town .or other public'corporation for benevolent or public purposes, as ¡for a site .for a school-house, city or town house, and the like, is ¡based upon a sufficient consideration, and such conveyances are ¡liberally construed In .support of the object named.” But if the ¡premise contended .for ¡by .the appellants were conceded, the conclusion which .they seek .to .draw from it would not follow. The •statute plainly-confers .upon counties the power to acquire and ¡hold real property for certain purposes, and the appellants’ contention is that this deed conveys property to the county outside of and for-other and different purposes than those specified in the *179statute. This is a question which these plaintiffs cannot be permitted to raise, and in which they have no interest. That could only be done at the instance of the State. (2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, § 574; Trustees of Davidson College v. Executors of Maxwell Chambers, 3 Jones Eq. 253; Goudie v. N. W. Co. 7 Pa. St. 253; Land v. Coffman, 50 Mo. 243.)

2. Condition in a grant.. But conceding that the deed in question passed title to the land in controversy to defendant, appellants’ counsel insist that it was an estate upon a condition subsequent, and that the condition not having been performed, the estate terminated upon re-entry. The determination of this question, therefore, becomes necessary. The defendant may have acquired title by the deed, or the appellants may be precluded from claiming that defendant had not legal capacity to take the land for the particular purposes specified in the deed, still, if the estate was upon a condition subsequent, and that condition has not been performed, the plaintiffs might lawfully re-enter and repossess themselves of the estate granted, and thus terminate the estate of the grantee.

An estate upon condition is ‘^one which is made to vest, to be enlarged or defeated upon the happening or not happening of some event.” (Tiedman on Real Property, §§ 271, 272; Wash-burn on Real Property, p. 2.) “The condition which is to affect the estate may be express or implied, and it may be precedent or subsequent. An express condition, otherwise called a condition in deed, is one declared in terms in the deed or instrument by which the estate is created. An implied, or a condition in law, is one which the law implies either from its being always understood to be annexed to certain estates, or as annexed to estates held under certain circumstances. Conditions precedent are, as the term implies, such as must happen before the estate dependent upon them can arise or be enlarged, while conditions subsequent are such as when they do happen defeat the estate.” (2 Washburn on Real Property, p. 3, § 2.)

To create a condition in a grant, apt and appropriate words ought to be used, such as “on condition,” “provided always,” “ if it shall so happen,” or “ so that the grantee pay, etc., within *180a specified time,” and the like. Therefore, “the grant of a lot of land to set a meeting-house thereon does not imply a condition. And an estate upon condition cannot be created by deed, except where the terms of the grant will admit of no other reasonable interpretation. Therefore, reciting in a deed that it is in consideration of a certain sum, and that the grantee is to Co certain things, is not an estate upon condition, not being in terms upon condition, nor containing a clause of re-entry or forfeiture. And yet these words may create a condition if a right of re-entry is reserved in favor of the grantor in case of failure to carry out the intention thus expressed.” (2 Washburn on Real Property, pp. 4, 5.)

In Taylor v. Binford, 37 Ohio St. 262, a conveyance for the use of school purposes only was held not to create a condition. So in Carter v. Branson, 79 Ind. 14, the words in the habendum clause of the deed, “to have and hold for the use of said religious society of friends so long as it may be needed for meeting purposes, then said premises to fall back to the original tract,” did not create a condition subsequent. And the like doctrine is very clearly announced in First Methodist Episcopal Church of Columbia v. Old Columbia Public Ground Company, 103 Pa. St. 608. So, also, in Packard v. Ames, 16 Gray, 327. “A deed of land to a number of persons incorporated as a religious society, habendum to them and their heirs and assigns, and to each and every person who may hereafter become lawful owners and proprietors of a pew in a meeting-house to be built and erected thereon, and which may and shall afterwards be rebuilt thereon by the said proprietors and their successors, to the use and behoof of the said proprietors for the said purpose, and of each and every lawful owner and proprietor of a pew or pews in the meeting-house, to be built and rebuilt on the said lot of land forever, without any clause providing for forfeiture or re-entry, is not a grant upon condition that a meeting-house shall be erected and maintained on the land conveyed.” So a grant of land upon a valuable consideration, upon trust that the trustee “ shall at all times permit all white religious societies of Christians, and the members of such societies, to use the land as a common burying-*181ground, and for no other purpose, was not upon condition subsequent.” (Brown v. Caldwell, 23 W. Va. 187.) Neither is a grant of land which has been used' as a burying-place to a town “for a burying-place forever,” in consideration of love and affection, “and divers other valuable considerations,” a grant upon condition subsequent. And the like doctrine is announced in Thornton v. Tramell, 39 Ga. 202; Bisley v. McNeice, 71 Ind. 434; Ayer v. Emery, 14 Allen, 67. Our conclusions on this point are strengthened by the fact that the appellants are invoking a technical rule of the common law, which rule has never been favored by the courts, but is always construed strictly.’ (Emerson v. Simpson, 43 N. H. 475; Woodworth v. Payne, 74 N. Y. 196; Page v. Palmer, 48 N. H. 385; Godberry v. Shepherd, 27 Miss. 203.)

3. Remedy for breach of condition. The counsel for appellants upon the argument claimed that the defendant was bound by the terms of the deed, in order to save the land conveyed from forfeiture, to erect thereon “a college or institution of learning free from all sectional or political influence ”; and that, inasmuch as there is no law authorizing said county to apply any of the funds under its control to such a purpose, the grant was necessarily defeated. Conceding now that the words in the habendum clause of the deed created a condition subsequent, the conclusion which counsel drew from the fact, it seems to me, does not follow. In such case numerous authorities hold that if the condition is impossible to be performed, or illegal, it is void, and the grantee would take the estate freed from the condition. (Taylor v. Sutton, 15 Ga. 103; 2 Washburn on Real Property, p. 8, § 6.) But it is not now necessaiy to decide that question. It has thus far been assumed that equity had jurisdiction in this case. This assumption has been allowed only at the request of counsel mutually made upon the argument; but the remedy of the plaintiffs was at law upon their theory of the case. If condition subsequent be broken, the party entitled may re-enter, and if necessary have an action to regain his estate, but equity would not entertain jurisdiction for such purposes. The other matters pleaded in the complaint, whereby it is sought to present a case of equitable *182cognizance, are wholly insufficient for that purpose, and do not require special notice.

Let the decree appealed from be affirmed.