Chapman v. Wilbur

3 Or. 326
CourtMultnomah County Circuit Court, Oregon
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Or. 326 (Chapman v. Wilbur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Multnomah County Circuit Court, Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. Wilbur, 3 Or. 326 (Or. Super. Ct. 1871).

Opinion

Upton, J.

This case was referred, and tbe referree beard tbe cause and reported a decree in favor of tbe plaintiff; it is now submitted on tbe defendant’s motion to set aside tbe report, and on tbe plaintiff’s motion for confirmation.

Tbe following are tbe material facts: On tbe 7th day of September, 1850, that is, .twenty days before tbe passage of tbe donation act, Stephen Coffin, D. H. Lownsdale and W. W. Chapman, being in possession, conveyed two adjacent [327]*327blocks of land, known as blocks 205 and 224 in the city of Portland, to “James H. Wilbur, trustee, for the use and benefit of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Oregon” * * * *‘ for the purpose of erecting' an academy thereon and therewith,” * * * “to be by him conveyed to such person as shall be appointed to receive and hold the title for the use and benefit of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Oregon.” This deed contained the following: “And we further covenant that if we shall obtain title to said property from the United States, we will convey the same as aforesaid by deed of general warranty. We further covenant to warrant and defend the said property against the claims of all persons claiming by, through or under ” us.

Soon after receiving the deed, Wilbur went into possession of the premises, and in concert with the said church erected a building on block 205, and instituted an academy upon it. The plaintiff, about the first day of September, 1853, obtained the legal title to the premises from the United States, and on the tenth day of that month he and his wife executed a deed of the premises to “James H. Wilbur, trustee of the Oregon Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Oregon.” This deed professes to recite the purport of the former deed and to be confirmatory of it, but departs from its tenor in several particulars.

i It states the date of that deed as of the “twenty-fifth of June, 1851,” and refers to the grantors as having then “by deed of quitclaim conveyed to the said James H. Wilbur, trustee as aforesaid, the property hereinafter described, for the purpose of establishing thereon a seminary of learning, to he divided into a male and female academy.’'’

It is not shown to whom this latter deed was delivered, nor with whom it was left at that time, but it was afterwards found in the hands of some one of the several persons Interested in maintaining and conducting the academy.

In 1853 a corporation was formed by act of the territorial legislature, called “the board of trustees of the Portland Academy and Female Seminary.” This corporation was organized, and its trustees held its first meeting on the 4th [328]*328of March, 1854. It is admitted, that this corporation is the agent or person duly appointed “to receive and hold the title for the nse and benefit of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Oregon,” and to manage the affairs of the academy.

Up to about 1858, Mr. Wilbur had continued to act as such agent and trustee, and in the construction of the academy, which was completed in 1851, he had advanced of his own funds over $5,000. Afterwards the defendant, Wilbur, assigned or transferred the two blocks to the said Board of Trustees of the Portland Academy and Female Seminary, and that Board, having audited the accounts of the defendant, and found a large amount due him on account of advances made by him in .constructing the academy building, bargained with him to take block 224 in satisfaction of that claim, and the Board executed a conveyance to him of that block on the 9'th of June, 1860; since which time the defendant has held block 224, claiming it to his sole use.

The plaintiff claims that these acts have worked a forfeiture, and that block 224 should revert to the plaintiff. 'It is claimed that-Wilbur, while trustee, accepted the confirmatory deed as a fulfillment • of the covenants of the original deed of September 7th, 1850, and that thereupon the rights acquired by means of the first deed merged in the legal title, and the first deed was no longer of any force.

To sustain this position the plaintiff produced, among other proofs, the following endorsement, written on the confirmatory deed:

“'I hereby relinquish, convey and give up all my right, title and interest to block No. 205, described in this deed, to the Trustees of the Portland Academy and Female Seminary. J. H. Wilbur.
“Dated Portland, Aug. 15, 1855.”

The evidence shows that the deed had not previously been delivered to Wilbur; but at the time of that endorsement it was produced by some person interested in the affairs of the Academy, at whose request Wilbur made the assignment above set forth; that Wilbur did not then read it or know its contents; and he testifies that he never knew [329]*329its contents, or that there was any discrepancy or difference between its terms and those of the deed of Sept. 7th, 1850, until the year 1869. And that he had not had charge of the affairs of the Academy since 1853.

Aside from what appears on the face of the deed and the indorsement, and the fact that about 1855, it was in the hands of some one of the persons having the management of the academy, the court is left to conjecture in regard to its delivery. Several circumstances, and chiefly the error in reciting the date of the original deed, indicate that the original deed was not present when the confirmatory deed was drafted. And there is no doubt the misdescription of the date resulted from mistake. I think it more reasonable, since one of these discrepancies or departures from the letter of the original deed is positively shown to be the result of inadvertency or mistake, to conclude that the other departures from these terms resulted from the same cause, than to .hold, without other proof, that the parties mutually agreed to cliange the character of the trust.

It is claimed that the principal object in changing the terms employed to express the trust, was to provide for maintaining an academy for males on one of the blocks, and an academy for females on the other. The evidence relied upon to support this conclusion, is the language of the second deed abovo quoted, and the name given to the corporation created by the legislature. The act speaks of the Portland “academy and female seminary;” but the second deed speaks of a “seminary of learning, to be divided into a male and female academy.” I can not say that either of those expressions decidedly indicate whether males and females were to be taught in one building or in two; or if in two, whether both buildings were to be erected on one block. The dissimilarity of these names indicates the reverse of a matured plan to change the character and plan of the institution, or the nature of the trust. If a change in the nature, of the trust had been decided upon, it is hardly probable that the parties would have left the fact to bo inferred from ambiguous expressions contained only in the recitals of the deed; to say nothing as to whether the [330]*330trustees had power to make such change, and thus bind the cestiAs que trust. The discrepancy between the names employed in the act of the legislature, and those in the second deed, as well as the general tenor of the second deed, when compared with the first, indicates inattention to the particulars of the trust, rather than a mature plan of changing its nature."

This conclusion is strengthened by the circumstances that the cestui que trust

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32 Ohio Law. Abs. 328 (Jefferson County Court of Common Pleas, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Or. 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-wilbur-orccmultnomah-1871.