The case is this:
Charitable Use. In 1881 Mr. Cooper and his wife executed two deeds, for expressed nominal considerations, to‘ five named individuals as “party of the second part,” described therein as “trustees for the Methodist Episcopal Church of Wayland City and the Protestant Methodist Church of Wayland City, Clark county, Missouri.” These deeds conveyed one lot and part of another in that village, and ran to the named trustees and their “successors and assigns.” The habendum held the usual covenants • of warranty, covenanting to “warrant and defend the title to the said premises unto the said party of the second part and unto their successors and assigns forever,” etc. In the body of the deeds it. is set forth that a one-half interest is conveyed to “said trustees in trust for the Methodist Episcopal Church aforesaid,” and the other one-half interest is conveyed *141“to said trustees for the Protestant Methodist Church aforesaid.” Next follows these provisions:
“This conveyance is made to said trustees, and said lot is conveyed to them for a site or lot upon which to erect a union church, to be owned and held by said trustees and their successors for the two churches above named; neither church nor its trustees are to convey away its half interest for other than church purposes.
“It is further understood and agreed that the church building to be erected on said lot when .completed is to be used as a house of worship by the denominations above mentioned and when not occupied by either of said denominations, said church building-may be used by any other orthodox- or Christian church for public worship.”
Say thirty years later seven named plaintiffs bring suit in the Clark Circuit Court. Three describe themselves as trustees of the Methodist Protestant Church, and four as trustees of the' Methodist Episcopal Church, both churches being “unincorporated associations.” They impleaded defendant as the only heir of the Coopers, who died intestate.
The ostensible object of the suit is to try, determine and adjudge title under former section 650, Revised Statutes 1899. To that end the fact of the execution and terms of the deeds, are set forth. It is alleged that a frame church building was erected on the land and thereafter used for church purposes, and that defendant is the sole heir of the grantors. Then follows this frank allegation (in a sense, the life of the bill and proclaiming its purpose), to-wit:
“Plaintiffs further state that they no longer have any use for said premises for church purposes and now desire to sell the same to be used for other than church purposes, but are upable to do so, for the reason that the defendant, Lizzie Morris, claims to have some sort of revisionary interest in said premises, and by reason *142of such claim, plaintiffs are unable to sell said premises.”
Defendant answered admitting that certain of the plaintiffs are trustees of the one and certain of them trustees of the other church; that both churches are unincorporated associations; that the conveyances were made by her ancestors with the provisions and for the purposes named in the bill; that a church building was erected thereon and used for church purposes; that she is the sole heir of the grantors, but denying all other allegations. It avers that no consideration was paid for the conveyances, that they were “a gift” to the named trustees for the uses and purposes mentioned in the deeds. The answer next repleads the provisions of the conveyances, setting them forth more fully than in the bill, concluding as follows:
“Defendant further answering says, that she is the only heir at law of the grantors of said lot, and has not, and never did claim any right, title or claim to said lot except as hereinafter mentioned, the reversion, to-wit: That so being the heir and daughter of the donors of said lot to said trustees, she has the right to have the wishes of her father and mother carried out so'far as they are stated and requested in said deed of conveyance and that the same be not diverted or put to any use except as the wishes of her said father and mother in that behalf in said deed of conveyances expressed. She further says*that there is nothing for this court to construe in said deed, as the provisions therein are plain and plainly express the purpose of the grantors therein and their express wishes as therein stated.
‘ ‘ Defendant further shows the court, that this suit is brought for the purpose of obtaining a decree of this court, allowing the said trustees and their successors to sell said lots and the building thereon erected to private parties for the personal purposes of said parties and not for the purpose of carrying out the *143wishes of said grantors, hut for the express purpose of diverting’ said charitable trust for other and different uses and purposes than those expressed in said deed and for the purpose of diverting the uses and purposes of said charitable trust, and that the said trustees are threatening and will, unless restrained by a decree of this court, sell said lots and the buildings thereon erected to private persons for their own private uses and in direct opposition and contrary to the trust therein created by said deed.
“Wherefore this defendant asks that said deed be construed as therein provided, and that this court refuse to construe said deed and the provisions thereof so as to enable said trutees and their successors in office from diverting said trust estate and from selling the same for other purposes than expressed in said trust deed and that they and their successors be forever enjoined and restrained from selling said buildings and the lots upon which they are erected to anyone or to any persons contrary to the terms of said trust as created in said deed and to vest title in defendant and for other proper relief.’”
The trial proceeded on admissions in pleadings and those made ore terms; thus it was admitted that the land was a “donation” to the trustees of the churches for a “nominal consideration;” that the Methodist Episcopal Church do not use the building in question as a place of worship, but now have their own independent church in Wayland; that the Protestant Methodist Church have not “sufficient congregation to have services and for that reason are not occupying the church and that all denominations that hold services at Wayland have houses of worship and that this church is unoccupied and vacant. ’ ’
*144Nominal Consideration. *143(Note: A question being sprung below on the scope and import of the foregoing admissions, testimony went in fro and con on the issue whether any *144money consideration was actually paid. On one side it tended to show that none was paid; on the other to show that the two dollars expressed in one deed and one dollar in the other, as money considerations, were actually paid. The chancellor held that no money consideration was paid, that the only consideration was the charitable use. In the view we take of the ease the law would be the same if there was or was not a nominal money consideration passed. What is a nominal consideration in the eye of equity but one in name only? Hence, 'the issue is put aside as frivolous.)
The decree found, inter alia, that the conveyances were made for a site for a union church to be held and owned by the named trustees and their successors; that the building was built and used for church purposes; that the present trustees desire to sell the premises for other than church purposes; that defendant claims a reversionary interest in the land if the same be sold and diverted from the uses for which it was conveyed and that she is the sole heir of the grantors. Following those findings it was decreed that plaintiffs as trustees or their successors in office or either of them were without power to sell or convey the premises for any purpose or use other than mentioned in the Cooper conveyances, or otherwise divert 'the trust. Then follows this clause in the decree:
“The court further finds that if said trustees or their successors, or said churches should sell, convey, or attempt to sell or convey said lot and premises for any other purpose, than as provided in said deed of conveyance, then and in that [event] the said premises shall revert and vest in the said, Lizzie Morris, the defendant herein.”
From that decree, plaintiffs appeal.
On such record the questions here are two, viz.:
(1) Are plaintiffs donees of power to sell the premises for other than church purposes? (2) In the *145case of such, sale, has defendant a reversionary interest?
Those questions are so important and delicate in some possible ramifications, related phases and contingencies that the finger of wisdom points unerringly to one thing, viz., the determination only of the precise case in hand, eschewing a discussion of principles of law applicable to some other case that might be brought looking to other form of relief. We may in part get at what the case is by distinguishing it from what it is not, as questions in logic are determined, or equations in algebra resolved, by elimination.
Charitabie Uses: Distinctions, (a) Assuming that the Coojier deeds conveyed the land to trustees for the purpose of a charitable use, that the grant was accepted, the church built and used and that such was a public charity as contradis-tinguished from a private charity, then our case is not one in which the powers of a court of chancery are invoked to regulate a mere administrative detail of the use. Nor is it one where the powers of a court of chancery (charity being a ward of chan-eery) are invoked to enforce the beauti- * ' ful doctrine of cy pres, the doctrine of approximation in charitable trusts whereby the intent of a testator or grantor (being impossible or impracticable literally) may be carried out as near as possible or as near as may be. Nor is it a case where the Attorney-General is a party as representing the State in the matter of the protection or execution of a public charity. Nor is it a case where, under the pleadings and admissions, the execution of the use has become impossible in fact. The student of jurisprudence curious in that behalf (so that, in order to know the law properly, he may know it by its reason), may consult on such phases: Gaskins v. Williams, 235 Mo. 563; Lackland v. Walker, 151 Mo. 210; Women’s Christian Association v. Kansas City, 147 *146Mo. 103; Sappington v. School Fund Trustees, 123 Mo. 32; Hadley v. Forsee, 203 Mo. 418.
Nor is it a case where the conveyance to a charitable use provided in terms for a re-entry by the grantor, his heirs and assigns upon a breach of the trust, such as was considered in Bredell v. College, 242 Mo. 317. Nor is it, in principle, like that cited by respondent (Henderson v. Hunter, 59 Pa. St. 335) where the land was granted for the erection of a house of worship for the use of the Methodist Episcopal Church “so long as they use it for that purpose, and no longer, and then to return back to the original owner,” etc., where it was held that the words of limitation accompany the creation of the estate, qualify it and prescribe the bounds beyond which, it shall not endure. [P. 340.] Nor is it a case where the doctrine of rescission could be invoked on the grounds of an entire failure of consideration because of a breach of mutual and dependent covenants; nor one where there were conditions subsequent, the breach of which worked a forfeiture. See Reynolds v. Reynolds, 234 Mo. 144; Haydon v. Railroad, 222 Mo. 126, on such phases.
Our case is simply one where, either on the terms of the Cooper deeds, or on general principles of law, appellants say they have the right to sell, for other than church purposes because they desire so to do, and they “desire” so to do because they have “no longer any use "for said premises for church purposes.” On defendant’s side that right is denied, but defendant also says that if it is exercised then the land reverts to her as sole heir of the grantors.
*147Charitable Use: Power to Sell. *146(b) It is first argued by appellants that, on a proper construction of the cold words of the deed, they have the right to sell and convey for other than church purposes in a given contingency, to-wit, when both groups of trustees jointly make the transfer. That the interdiction in the deed against a sale for other than church purposes by either group was intended to *147protect one group or one church against the other, to prohibit a sale for profane purposes by only one and thereby debase or incommode the pious use of the other, and not to inhibit both alienating at one stroke. But is not that view of it more ingenious than sound? If either is prohibited are not both prohibited? The good sense of the thing lies in the answer ilústrate in a homely fashion: If a father prohibit either of his two boys from riding a horse, Bucephalus, under the pains and penalties of punishment, would the youths expect to be acquit of disobedience if they rode Buceph-alus double? If a mother prohibit to either of her two daughters the reading of Don Juan, would it be allowable for them to construe the interdiction so that they might read it in concert? We opine the construction put on the words of the deed by appellants is too narrow, in that it quite ignores the large question, the master fact, viz., the pious use to which the land was devoted. Such strained and unnatural construction smacks of wringing the words so hard the meaning extracted is bitter, even as the wringing of the nose brings blood. [State ex inf. v. Woods, 233 Mo. l. c. 379.] It is referable, maybe, to the adage: The wish is father to the thought.
Charitable User: Reversion, (c) That the grant was to a charitable use cannot be gainsaid. [Strother v. Barrow, 246 Mo. 241.] A use to charity is favored by the law. So, perpetuity is of the essence of such use. [Strother v. Barrow, supra; Lackland v. Walker, 151 Mo. l. c. 250.] Absent provisions to the contrary, a gift to charity is forevei. It is on such premises that the general rule is deduced that when lands have been donated to charity and the title is vested absolutely in trustees for charitable uses, as here, they are inalienable for other purposes. Not only so, but in Missouri the rule is, whatever it be in some jurisdictions,. that they do not re*148vert to the donor or to his heirs. [Women’s Christian Association v. Kansas City, 147 Mo. l. c. 126-7; Lackland v. Walker, 151 Mo. l. c. 250; Academy of the Visitation v. Clemens, 50 Mo. l. c. 171-2.] Whatever the powers of a conrt of chancery to regulate or preserve in some form a charitable use, the terror of forfeiture is not one of them, except under the guarded limitations that there is no escape from that construction. We cannot say that appellants’ power to sell for other than church purposes prospers on any limitation on the general rule known to us.
Take the case at bar. The record shows the value of the land at the time of the original grant was $70 or $80. Presumably the church was built by subscriptions from members of the two associations and the public at large — the widow’s mite here and the dollar there. What natural equity could there be in the proposition, that (absent an express provision of forfeiture in the grant itself, as here) those subscriptions, now in the form of the church building, only sprang as mist from here and there to finally descend in consolidated form as a bountiful and fruitful shower of rain upon the estate of this heir to enhance it? And all because the trustees have taken or in the future might take an erroneous view of their powers? Equity is not so lame and halting that it can afford no relief but forfeiture.
Charitable Use: Conditions Subsequent (d) Take another view. Conditions subsequent are not favored, because they tend to unsettled estates. Nor are forfeitures favored. Where there is no clause of reverter or forfeiture, as here, conditions subsequent do not arise in deeds by mere implication unless the implication is a necessary one. So, whether a provision in question in a deed is a condition precedent or subsequent, or only 4 covenant, is to be determined in each individual case under no general rule, but only by getting at the intent of the gran*149tor by applying the good sense of the thing and looking to the language of the grant in the light of correct rules of interpretation. [Studdard v. Wells, 120 Mo. 25; Haydon v. Railroad, 222 Mo. l. c. 138, et seq.; Reynolds v. Reynolds, 234 Mo. 144.]
The premises all considered, we are of opinion that plaintiffs are without power to alien the trust estate for any except church purposes, and, on the other hand, that defendant has no reversionary interest under the terms of her ancestors’ grant. This does not mean, however, that she has ho right to ask the interference of a chancellor to preserve the trust created by her ancestors.
In coming to this conclusion we have not been unmindful of the rule invoked, to-wit, that in cases of doubt a deed must be construed most favorable to the grantee; nor of other propositions urged, viz., that an instrument is to be construed by its four corners, that the intent is the principal thing, that that intent is to be spelled out from all the provisions of the deed, that those provisions are to be harmonized if possible, that when ascertained the intent must be given effect when practicable and not contrary to law. [Hunter v. Patterson, 142 Mo. l. c. 318, et seq.; Linville v. Greer, 165 Mo. l. c. 397; Walton v. Drumtra, 152 Mo. l. c. 497.] There is no ambiguity in this deed. The intent of the grantors and of those who took under the grant is plain. Mere rules in aid of construction fill little office where construction is not necessary. -
One observation more: There is a pretty conceit, maybe not without some basis in fact, viz.:
“Never, believe me,
Appear the Immortals,
Never alone.”
Accordingly in the analysis and classification of virtues a trio is made, thus: And now ábideth faith, hope and charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity. Agreeable thereto, as said heretofore, the *150law favors and nonrish.es charity. The beneficiaries of it may be somewhat uncertain, the grant a little indefinite, .but the law benignly aids the charitable nse by recognizing that in a public charity uncertainty as to the individual whom the benefit may reach is one of its essential features. [Hadley v. Forsee, supra, l. c. 427; Chambers v. St. Louis, 29 Mo. l. c. 590.]
In this view of it, if we adopt appellants’ contention, what becomes of that feature of the charity, nominated in the Cooper deeds, to-wit, the use of the church by other orthodox or Christian churches when it is “not occupied by either of said denominations?” In construing the deeds thaf particular use is to be neither ignored, destroyed nor curtailed. The right of alienation claimed is totally blind to it, and for that reason, also, must be judicially repudiated.
Charitable Use: Suit to Quiet Title. To sum up results: In so far as the decree gave defendant a reversionary interest it should be reversed. In so far as it denied the .right and power of plaintiffs to sell for other than church purposes it should be affirmed. As the title is now in plaintiffs in trust for the charitable uses named in the . Cooper deeds, it is questionable whether the form of the action under section 650 is appropriate to a decree construing the deeds and denying the right of alienation for purposes other than church purposes now or in the future. But as the heart and life of this action was the avowed purpose of testing out that very question to clear the way for a sale and conversion of the trust estate now or in the future, plaintiffs can with ill grace complain that the chancellor took them at their word and decided the issue. If it be error to go so far (a question we reserve) then the maxim applies, Consensus tollit errorem.
Let the decree be reversed in part and affirmed in part as indicated, supra. It is so ordered.
Woodson, P. Jconcurs, Graves, J., concurs in separate opinion *151in which Woodson, P. J., and Lamm, J., concur; Bond, J., concurs in separate opinion.