The bill involves the title to the Belvidere Classical Academy, in the town of Belvidere. In 1843, Anna M. Wall caused the land to be conveyed to three trustees in fee:
“Upon this special confidence and trust nevertheless, that they, the said party of the second part, and the survivors and survivor of them, their and his heirs and assigns, and shall hold the said lot for the purpose of building an academy or school house, for the education of youth and to used to promote the cause of education, the improvement of the mind, and morals of the rising generation, the diffusion of scientific knowledge and rational amusement or such other purposes as will have a tendency to render the rising generation intelligent, moral, useful and good citizens if the citizens of Belvidere shall shall see proper to erect a building for that purpose on the said lot, not less than forty-five feet front, and thirty-two feet deep, not less than three stories high, including a basement story under the whole, not less than four feet below the earth and six feet above the earth, in a good substantial,, and workmanlike manner, and complete the same in eighteen months from the date hereof. AndPage 396it is hereby declared that the said party of the second part, and the survivors or survivor of them, and the heirs of such survivors or survivor, and their or his assigns, may continue the said trust from time to time as occasion may require, by conveying a new Trustee or Trustees so as to perpetuate the said Trust, and if it shall so happen that the contributors to the erection of the said building shall become incorporated, then that it shall and may be lawful for the said party of the second part, the survivors or survivor .of them, their and his heirs or assigns to convey the said premises to such corporation and their successors and assigns, upon the trusts herein designated. And it is hereby further declared that if the said building shall be converted to any other purpose, than that herein designated, for the term of five consecutive years, or the said trust shall be violated in any other manner, so that the end and object of the trust herein declared, shall be defeated or perverted. then and in that case the said lot, with the appurtenances, shall revert to and be revested in the said party of the first part, his heirs and assigns.'’
The citizens of Belvidere erected a building as thus stipulated, whereupon, in 1868, the grantees conveyed the premises to the Belvidere Classical Academy, a corporation. The corporation maintained an academy until a few years prior to 1886, when the officials of the organization abandoned the undertaking. Tn 1886, three or four gentlemen, one of whom was the defendant William H. Morrow, residents of Belvidere, took possession of the building, installed teachers, and conducted a school for six years. Thereafter, in the years 1897 and 1898, 190-i and 1905 and 1913, the public school authorities used the building for class rooms. Mr. Morrow seems to have been in possession and control of the building during all of these years, but alwáys willingly surrendering its use for educational purposes whenever request was made. During the periods when the building was not used for school purposes, he, occasionally, and for short spaces, used it in part for the storage of crops, the housing of his colored man, and, latterly, permitted the upper floor to be used for the giving of dancing lessons. On the lawn he erected a tennis court for use of the young folks of the town, and also sometimes kept his fancy chickens in the yard. In Mr. Morrow’s supervision and control of the building he has been a voluntary substituted trustee, with the single aim of preserving the trust for the public, and in fact expressed himself at the hearing that he was anxious to surrender the building to the
The trustees of the Belvidere academy have not appeared, except as they may he represented by Mr. Morrow, who, in his answer, disputes the alleged title of some of the complainants, denies the material facts of the bill upon which the claim to a reverter is founded (which he supports by proof), and also sets up that this court is without jurisdiction in the premises. The defendants’ counsel offered to argue the jurisdictional question before the taking of testimony began, hut, as the point was not brought to my attention until the hearing day, I thought it would expedite the cause to take the proofs and reserve the question for final argument.
The complainants’ counsel argues that the deed creates a charitable irust, and that inasmuch as trusts of this character are under the general supervisory powers of the court of chancery, jurisdiction ought to he exercised to construe the terms of the trust, in analogy to the common practice of construing trusts advisory of the duties of trustees, or in the enforcement of trusts, or where the construction is incidental to other equitable relief.
The cause will be transferred to the law courts under “The Transfer of Causes act’’’ (1912), P. L. p. 117.