Brooklyn Church Society of Methodist Episcopal Church v. Brooklyn Free Kindergarten Society

152 N.Y.S. 41
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 N.Y.S. 41 (Brooklyn Church Society of Methodist Episcopal Church v. Brooklyn Free Kindergarten Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooklyn Church Society of Methodist Episcopal Church v. Brooklyn Free Kindergarten Society, 152 N.Y.S. 41 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

MADDOX, J.

The conveyance to plaintiff of the premises described in the complaint was a gift from the grantor in memory of her then deceased husband, and the subject of the gift was to be known as the “Hans S. Christian Memorial.” So far as appears from the deed, the grant was not subject to any condition, and there is no forfeiture clause, nor any provision for re-entry for breach of condition. There is no reservation in the grantor of any part of or any right in the land conveyed, and nothing is excepted from the subject of the grant. It is the usual short form of warranty deed, with a covenant against grantor’s acts. Contemporaneously with and bearing the same date as said deed, an agreement between plaintiff and its grantor, Mrs. Christian, was entered into. That agreement had reference to the use of the premises so conveyed. The original of said agreement is lost, but the copy in evidence and the fact of its execution were established by secondary proof. Indeed, in the minutes of a meeting of the board of managers of the plaintiff society, held on March 27, 1897, a copy of said agreement is spread at length. The purpose of the gift was for charitable uses, and the deed and agreement must be read together and construed accordingly.

From a recital in said agreement it appears that the buildings upon said premises were, until the same be sold or otherwise disposed of, as therein provided, to be used as a deaconess home of the plaintiff society. Said agreement then provides that the donor of said gift might, at any time thereafter, but before such sale or other disposition of said premises, erect upon a portion of said premises a building [43]*43for a kindergarten school, which building is “to be under the charge, care, and management” of the plaintiff society, which society shall maintain, heat, and clean the same. The Brooklyn Kindergarten Society is to have the use of such building, subject to the sale or other disposition of said premises as before referred to, "until the system of kindergarten teaching shall be generally adopted and used as a part of the public school system of the city of Brooklyn, unless said premises shall sooner be sold or otherwise disposed of by” the plaintiff society “as therein provided.” It also provides that if the buildings and grounds, or any part thereof, become unsuitable for the purpose stated, or for any other reason it should seem to the donee for its best interest to sell and dispose of the same, or any part thereof, that said donee is expressly authorized to sell and convey the same, or any part thereof, “wholly free and clear from any * * * claim or interest whatsoever, whether legal or equitable, * * * arising from” said agreement or any of the provisions thereof: Provided, however, that the donee will receive and reinvest the proceeds of such sale “in some other piece or parcel of land in the city of Brooklyn, which shall bear the same name and designation, to wit, the Hans S. Christian Memorial, and shall be used for the same purpose or for such other charitable or benevolent purposes as may seem to the trustees of the plaintiff society most advisable and best calculated to carry out the purposes of the” donor in perpetuating “the memory of said Hans S. Christian.” There then follows a concluding clause, which provides:

“Nothing herein contained shall permit the party of the first part to make any change in the use of said property or proceeds for or during the 25 years next ensuing the date hereof, except as hereinbefore provided.”

[1, 2] Thus we find that the plaintiff took and holds the fee of the property, in trust, however, for the charitable uses and purposes so indicated. Such building was thereupon erected by the donor. It has been maintained, heated, and. cleaned by the plaintiff, and has been used, in part, by the defendant for the purpose of conducting a kindergarten school, for which purpose the donor had previously given defendant $10,000. Defendant is still occupying the same for such purpose. In December, 1910,- plaintiff demanded from defendant the possession of the part of said building so “kept and reserved” for and occupied by it for the purpose of a kindergarten school, claiming that “the system of kindergarten teaching” had theretofore been “generally adopted and used as a part of the public school system of the city of Brooklyn.”

In 1897 the city of Brooklyn embraced all of Kings county within its municipal bounds, and by reason of the consolidation of the various municipal corporations in the Greater New York the city of Brooklyn became the borough of Brooklyn therein, covering the same territory within the former city of Brooklyn. The adoption of the kindergarten system and its use in the public school system of the city of Brooklyn. contemplated the territory, then included within the former city. The change from its entity and identity as a separate city to that of one of the boroughs of the greater city does not in any wise affect the rights-of the parties to the action. There is still the same public school sys[44]*44tem, though that system is now controlled by and under the supervision of a department of the greater city, the board of education.

The main question is: Was the kindergarten system of teaching in December, 1910, “generally adopted and used” as a part of the public school system of the “borough”—formerly city—“of Brooklyn”? We here have the past tense of the active verbs “adopt” and “use” modified by the adverb of degree “generally.” Defendant’s counsel urges that the expression “generally adopted and used” imports a universal use ■in all the elementary schools in the territory indicated. To this claim the court cannot give assent. The expression “until generally adopted and used” contemplates a time when that system is commonly adopted and used; that is, in common use in the public schools of Brooklyn. Upon consolidation (1898), the board of education was given and still has power to establish kindergarten classes (Charter of 1897, § 1093; Charters of 1901 and 1906, § 1069), and the maintenance of such classes has been and is provided for (1897 Charter, §§ 1065 [subd. 2] 1112; 1901 and 1906 Charters, §§ 1056,1088). In December, 1897, there were in the then city of Brooklyn 120 elementary schools in the public school system, in 14 of which were provisions for kindergarten teaching, with an attendance of 574 children; while in December, 1910, there were 166 elementary schools in the borough of Brooklyn, in 124 of which was the kindergarten system taught, with an attendance of 12,473 children; and it was also shown on the trial that all school buildings erected in Brooklyn since 1910 have, by direction of the board, facilities for kindergarten instruction. It certainly cannot be claimed that kindergarten instruction in the high, manual training, commercial, and vocational schools is contemplated by the clause in question. That refers, necessarily, to the elementary schools in the borough, and we find that of those maintained in Brooklyn in 1910 nearly 75 per cent, afforded kindergarten instruction. Consequently it can, I take it, be said that such instruction was then commonly—that is, was generally—adopted and used (i. e., afforded), in the public school system of Brooklyn.

The contention of defendant’s counsel that the provision in the agreement in question forbidding the plaintiff “to make any change in the use of such property or proceeds for or during the twenty-five years next ensuing the date” thereof, except as thereinbefore provided, of itself measures the period of time during which the defendant may use said building for the purpose of kindergarten instruction is untenable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Apodaca v. Allison
258 P.2d 711 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1953)
Brooklyn Church Society of M. E. Church v. Brooklyn Free Kindergarten Society
153 N.Y.S. 1107 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 N.Y.S. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooklyn-church-society-of-methodist-episcopal-church-v-brooklyn-free-nysupct-1914.