Chapman v. School District

5 F. Cas. 487, 1866 U.S. App. LEXIS 341
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 27, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 5 F. Cas. 487 (Chapman v. School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. School District, 5 F. Cas. 487, 1866 U.S. App. LEXIS 341 (circtdor 1866).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This suit was before this court at the term of January, 1805, upon exceptions for impertinence to the answer of the city of Portland. Chapman v. School District [Case No. 2,607]. It is brought to quiet title to the complainant’s interest in lot 3, in block 29, of the town of" Portland. The bill alleges that the complainant is seized in fee simple of an undivided one fourth of said lot, and Benjamin Stark the other three fourths thereof; that the defendants — school district No. 1, and the city of Portland — wrongfully claim, and pretend to have some interest or estate in the premises, adverse to the complainant and defendant Stark, and prays a decree quieting his title, etc. Stark was not served with process and did not appear. The other two defendants filed separate amended answers on January 9 and 13, 1865, respectively.

' The defendant, school district No. 1, denies the allegations of the complainant, and for further answer avers, that on November 26, 1849, Daniel PI. Lownsdale and Stephen Coffin, they being then in the joint possession, under the laws of the provisional government of Oregon, of about 640 acres of the public lands, known as the Portland land claim, and including the lot in controversy, did sell to the citizens of Portland, lot No. 3, in block No. 29, and put them in possession of the same, for a valuable consideration, and did at the date last mentioned, also agree in writing to convey said lot to said citizens. A copy of this agreement is attached to the answer and marked “Exhibit A.” That in accordance with such, agreement the said citizens took possession, of the lot and built a school house thereon,, elected trustees and caused the same to be used as a public school for the education of the youth of Portland; that afterwards the said citizens were by law organized into school district No. 1, with power and authority, through directors, to conduct a school in the town of Portland; and that said school district did elect directors, who,, in pursuance of an agreement with the trustees of the citizens of Portland aforesaid, made on November 24, 1S52. did on behalf of such district, enter upon and occupy said lot and house for a public school, and thereafter such trustees ceased to occupy such lot and house for school purposes, “except by and through the defendant" — school district No. 1; that the defendant occupied the premises until 1S57, when one McEwan entered upon them and excluded the defendant, and in 1S63, gave the possession to the defendant Stark, for the purpose of defrauding the district of its use: that the defendant continued to act as school district No. 1, by virtue of the general school law of October 17, [488]*4881SG2, and is exclusively authorized to take charge of all property belonging to the citizens of Portland for school purposes, and is willing and now ready to maintain a school at the place in question; that Stark, at the time of the execution of the Exhibit A, claimed a portion of said land claim, including the premises in controversy, adversely to Lownsdale and Coffin, under the same laws, and in 1S50 said Stark, and Lowns-dale and Coffin, compromised their conflicting claims to the said land claim, and thereby established the boundary between them, so as to leave the premises in question within the land claim of said Stark, and that Stark, in consideration of the premises, agreed with Lownsdale and Coffin to recognize and confirm the acts and doings of the latter, concerning lot 3, in block 29, and with full notice of the same did then and there ratify and confirm the same; that aft-erwards Stark obtained the land conceded to him by the establishment of boundaries, as aforesaid, from the United States, as a settler under the donation law of September 27, 1S50. That at the date of the compromise aforesaid, and after making claim as a settler under said donation law, said Stark did also set apart and dedicate the premises in controversy, to the citizens of Portland for the uses of a public school for the education of the youth of said town, and continued to recognize said dedication and public right from the time when he took possession of the same as aforesaid; and that Stark, in making claim under the donation law, claimed to be a settler on such land during all the period herein referred to, and prior to the time of the settlement of the conflicting boundaries between himself and Lownsdale and Coffin.

The amended answer of the city of Portland is substantially the same as that of the school district, except that it avers that the corporation of Portland, is entitled to the trust alleged to have been created by the bond of November 2G, 1S49, and the proceeding thereunder, and not the school district, and that all the conditions upon which said bond was made, have been performed by or on behalf of the citizens of Portland, and that the municipal corporation is legally entitled and capable of taking such trust and administering it.

The cause was heard upon the amended bill, answers, exhibits thereto and proofs. Upon careful consideration of these, I find the following conclusions of fact to be satisfactorily proven:

1.That on May 22, 1S49, certain persons subscribed a writing whereby, they agreed to pay severally, certain sums of money, to such persons as a majority of the subscribers should designate, for the purpose of building a school and meeting house in the town of Portland; and that such subscribers, at a meeting of the same, held at Portland. June 5, 1819, did elect William M. King, Stephen Coffin and William Warren, Sen., trustees, to carry into effect the purpose of such subscription, and did then and there authorize such trustees to purchase a lot and provide for the building of such school and meeting house in Portland.

2. That on July 2, 1849, the trustees aforesaid, by the name and description of the “trustees of the subscribers of the Portland school and meeting house,” did agree in writing with William Warren, Jr., for the construction of “a house for the purpose of a school and meeting house,” for which the contractor, Warren, was to receive from such trustees the sum of twenty-two hundred dollars.

3. That on November 26, 1S49, Daniel H. Lownsdale and Stephen Coffin, were in the actual possession of the public land, commonly called the Portland land claim, which included the premises in controversy, and that being so in possession, the said Lownsdale and Coffin, did make and sign the following bond for "a deed to said premises: “Know all men by these presents that we, Stephen Coffin and Daniel Lownsdale of the town of Portland, in the territory of Oregon, are bound and firmly held, in the penal sum of three hundred dollars, good and lawful money of the United States, unto the trustees of the school and town meeting house, in the aforesaid town of Portland, who now act as such, and to their successors in office, for the punctual payment of which, we bind ourselves, our heirs and administrators or executors firmly by these presents, in witness whereof, we have hereunto set our hands and affixed our seals, this 26th day of November, A. D. 1849.

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Related

Champion v. Brown
6 Johns. Ch. 398 (New York Court of Chancery, 1822)
McEwen v. City of Portland
1 Or. 300 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1860)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 487, 1866 U.S. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-school-district-circtdor-1866.