Calumet Council Building Corp. v. Standard Oil Co. of Indiana

167 F.2d 539, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 1948
DocketNo. 9346
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 167 F.2d 539 (Calumet Council Building Corp. v. Standard Oil Co. of Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calumet Council Building Corp. v. Standard Oil Co. of Indiana, 167 F.2d 539, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457 (7th Cir. 1948).

Opinion

SPARKS, Circuit Judge.

Appellee brought suit to remove two restrictions contained in a deed. The court held both restrictions void and decreed that they be removed as clouds on the title of appellee to the real estate conveyed by the deed wherein they were contained. Appellant, the grantor of the deed, appeals.

The facts were stipulated. Plaintiff, the Calumet Council Building Corporation, was organized in April, 1924, by Calumet Council, a fraternal organization, for the purpose of building a clubhouse. Defendant is an Indiana corporation licensed to do business in Illinois. In 1922, it owned real estate located at the southwest corner of Marquette Road and Stony Island Avenue in the city of Chicago, operating thereon a service -station. In July of that year it purchased the northwest corner lot for the purpose of expanding its business, intending then to build and operate another service station on the property directly across the street from the one it then owned and operated. It paid $60,000 for this -northwest corner lot, the property involved in this controversy. It did not immediately proceed with its plans, and thereafter it received various offers to purchase the property, including a firm offer of $100,000 in July, 1923, which it rejected because of its plan to use it as originally intended, for another service station. In February 1924, a representative of Calumet Council asked Standard to sell the northwest corner to it for the erection of a clubhouse.

Standard agreed to sell its lot, believing that the location of the clubhouse directly across from its service station would increase the business of the station. Figuring the cost of the lot, including purchase-price, taxes, and other items, at $80,000, it agreed to sell for that amount, and the parties agreed that the deed should contain-two restrictions, the first, in effect, to prevent the use of the lot at any time for any business in competition with Standard’s service station on the southwest corner, and the second, not to dispose of the lot until-the clubhouse had been erected thereon. The sale was executed accordingly, and in March 1924, Standard conveyed the lot by warranty deed to three representatives of the Council who thereafter conveyed to-plaintiff. The deed from Standard contained the following conditions, now sought to be declared invalid and removed as clouds on title:

“This -conveyance is made upon the express condition and agreement that no part of the real estate herein conveyed shall be used by the grantees * * * for the purpose of conducting * * * the business-of selling, handling or dealing in gasoline, * * * lubricating oils, or any fuel to be used for internal combustion engines, or lubricants in any form; and if said real estate is hereafter used for any of said purposes, then' * * * the title to said real estate, together with all buildings * * *, shall revert to the grantor herein and it shall be unlawful for the grantor, its successors and assigns, to re-enter '* •* *.

“It is expressly understood and agreed that the above described real estate will be used by the Knights of Columbus, and it is made a condition of this deed that the grantees, * * * will not sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of said real estate (except to said Knights of Columbus) until a Qubhouse has been erected * * * by said Knights * * * on said real estate. [541]*541and upon breach of the above condition, the title to said real estate, together with all the buildings * * *, shall revert to the grantor herein, and it shall be lawful for the grantor, * * * to reenter * * *”

In October, 1927, the Council abandoned its building plans and asked permission to sell the lot without the requirement to build a clubhouse, and in 1928, Standard agreed that it might do so, but it had not, prior to the bringing of this suit, executed or delivered any document releasing such restriction. Standard rejected the Council’s offer to sell the lot back to it and has refused áll requests to release the first restriction.

The court held that the second restriction in the deed constituted such a restraint on alienation as to render it totally void, and that this void restriction invalidated both restrictions no matter what might be said of the first condition standing alone. It held further, however, that the first condition was independently void for the reason that Standard, a foreign corporation, had no power to hold a naked possibility of reverter which, it held, could not be necessary to the business of any corporation. The court stated that he and counsel had been able to find only four cases in the entire United States where a possibility of reverter had been enforced in favor of a corporation, and that in each of those cases the restrictions were in the public interest.

With respect to the first ground for the court’s decision, that the second restriction was so wholly invalid as to render both restrictions invalid, we find no basis in Illinois law for such a ruling. They were created by separate clauses of the conveyance and appear to us to be clearly separable. Such was the case in Dodd v. Rotterman, 330 Ill. 362, 161 N.E. 756, where the court held an agreement not to transfer certain property to any other person an illegal restraint which did not, however, vitiate a covenant to reconvey on demand of the grantor.

We deem it unnecessary to decide the validity or the invalidity of the second condition in view of the fact that appellant has consented to release it at any time and has in fact attempted to release it, by instrument executed and sent to appellee after this suit was started. Appellee contends and the court held that such release is ineffective for the reason that it contains no words of conveyance and was not accepted by appellee. We do not understand that such formal conveyance is essential to the extinguishment of the condition or of the right of reentry for breach of it. The Illinois court in Powell v. Powell, 335 Ill. 533, 167 N.E. 802, held that non-compliance with the condition subsequent does not of itself determine the estate since the right to-enforce a forfeiture may be waived, and the same court, in Sanitary District v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 278 Ill. 529, 116 N. E. 161, held that a grantor may waive a forfeiture and, by its acts, estop itself from insisting upon a forfeiture. Since the record clearly shows that appellant does not intend to enforce a forfeiture for breach of the second condition, and has by its acts estopped itself from enforcing it, has tendered a formal release of it, and offered to-execute another instrument sufficient to release it, we deem it unnecessary to consider the validity of the second condition.

The basis for the ruling of invalidity of the first restriction was ultra vires. On-argument appellee conceded that it would be valid if made by an individual, or if' executed under the later, 1933, Illinois statute on- Corporations. Smith-Hurd Stats., c. 32, § 157.1 et seq. It asserts, however, that two provisions of the Act of 1919, Callaghan’s Illinois Statutes Annotated (1924-Ed.) Chap. 32, Smith-Hurd Ill.Rev.Stats.. 1925, c. 32, in effect at the time of the execution of the conveyance, render the condition invalid. The first, contained in sectiom 6 of the Act, on Powers, permits a corporation to acquire, own, possess and enjoy so much real property as may be necessary for the transaction of the business of such corporation, and to lease, mortgage, pledge, sell, convey or transfer the same.

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Bluebook (online)
167 F.2d 539, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calumet-council-building-corp-v-standard-oil-co-of-indiana-ca7-1948.