City of Cincinnati v. McMicken

6 Ohio C.C. 188
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio C.C. 188 (City of Cincinnati v. McMicken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Cincinnati v. McMicken, 6 Ohio C.C. 188 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

Cox, J.

The plaintiffs pray the advice and direction of the court as to whether they may remove the University of Cincinnati from its present site on the homestead of Charles McMicken, on McMicken avenue, to a site of forty-three acres offered to be donated to them for that purpose by the city of Cincinnati, on the south end of Burnet Woods, about one-half mile north of the present loeation, and in said city.

They claim that by reason of noises from an inclined plane and smoke from numerous factories and breweries, manufactories and other causes, the present site has become entirely unsuitable for the purposes of an university, such as was contemplated in the will of Charles McMicken, who devised lands and persona] property for that purpose. The heirs of Mc-Micken file answers denying the right of the directors to remove the institution from that site, and claim that it was the homestead for many years of Mr. McMickan; that he was thoroughly acquainted with its character and surroundings, and directed the buildings to be erected there, and that the site is no more unsuitable now, than at the time of making the will [190]*190in 1855, or at his death in 1858, and that the plaintiffs have no authority to change the location, nor can the court order it to be done.

Numerous other defenses are set up, charging violations of the trust confided to plaintiffs by the will, and claiming that plaintiffs are not entitled to the relief sought, but that the devises for a university under said will, have failed by reason of the violation of the trusts confided to plaintiffs, and that all said property has .reverted to the heirs of Charles McMicken.

We have confined the testimony in the case to the objeet sought to be secured by the petition of plaintiffs, to-wit:

First — Is the present site of the university a suitable one for such an institution as McMicken contemplated in his will, and are the directors confined to that locality for all time, for the erection of college buildings ?

Second — If not, has the court the authority to empower them to remove it to another site ?•

Third. — Is the site of the forty-three acres offered on the south side of Burnet Woods a suitable one?

Fourth. — -If the present site be abandoned for the college building, will it be forfeited to the heirs of Mr. McMicken ?'

Fifth. — If not forfeited to the heirs, may the directors erect such building thereon and lease them, or the ground, on the-same terms as authorized by the will for other grounds and. buildings ?

The principle on which we have excluded evidence as totheclaim of the heirs is, that as the property had been dedicated for a particular purpose, if the city appropriated it to an entirely different purpose, it might afford ground for the interference of a court of chancery to compel a specific execution of the trust, by restraining the corporation from such misappropriation ; but even in such a case the property dedicated would not revert to the original owners. Its use would still remain in the city limited only by the conditions imposed in the-grant. 8 Peters, U. S. Rep. 507; 1 Story Equity, 291.

[191]*191When lands are dedicated by the owner to any lawful use, public, private or charitable, and are used for the object and in the manner contemplated by the owner, it enures as a grant. If accepted and used in that manner, it works as an estoppel in pais, precluding the donor from asserting any ownership inconsistent with such use. Brown v. Maury, 6 Ohio, 129. And on the authority cited above, if not used, a court of chancery will compel a specific execution of the trust.

To solve the question as to the suitableness of this site, at present, for a university, we must ascertain from the will of Mr. McMicken, the land of an institution he had in mind when the devise was made.

The 31st section of his will announces his views in these words: “Having long cherished the desire to found an institution where white boys and girls might be taught, not only a knowledge of their duties to their creator and their fellow men, but also to receive the benefit of a sound, thorough and practical English education, and such as might fit them for the active duties of life, as well as instruction in the higher-branches of knowledge (except denominational theology), to-the extent that now or may hereafter be taught in any of the-secular colleges or universities of the highest grade in the couutry, I feel grateful to God that through His kind providence. I have been sufficiently favored to gratify the wish of my heart. I, therefore, give, devise and bequeath to the city of Cincinnati and to its successors, for the purpose of building, establishing and maintaining, as soon as practicable after-my decease, two colleges for the education of white boys and girls, all the following real and personal estate in trust forever, to-wit,” etc. (describing the property devised).

By subdivision 2 of section 32 of the will, Mr. McMicken provides that “ the college buildings shall be erected out of the rents and income of my real and personal estate, and on the premises on which I now reside in the city of Cincinnati, by me purchased from the administrators of Luman Watson, de[192]*192•ceased, and which shall be plain, but neat and substantial in their character, and so constructed that in conformity with their architectural designs they, from time to time, may be enlarged as the rents of the estate devised will allow, and the ends of the institute may require.

The said buildings shall be erected on different parts of said grounds, to-wit: that for the boys on the north, and that for the girls on the south of the road lately cut through the said grounds^ And I direct that the plot of ground on which the college for the boys shall be built, shall comprise not less than from'five to six acres, and that on which the college for the girls shall be built, shall comprise all below the said road, which plot may, I suppose, contain about three acres. Should additional. ground be required for the buildings connected with the college for the girls, 1 would refer to lot No. 32 in the sub-division made, by Jacob Maderia, adjoining the last described premises on the west.”

Witnesses of learning and experience have testified as to what would be a suitable position for such a university. It should be quiet, of good access, with plenty of light, free from noises, cheery, attractive, to the eye, et. Testimony has been offered to prove that the site selected for the university had been for years the homestead of Mr. McMicken that he was a man of intelligence, had been a school-teacher in his early days, and was well qualified to, and did decide, that this was a suitable site; and that the surroundings do not differ now materially from what they were when he executed his will or when he died; that McMicken avenue, instead of being a rough country road as it was then, is paved with granite, and the property can be approached by lines of electric and cable roadá, and that the greatest annoyance arises from an inclined plane authorized to be erected by the city; that some churches have been erected in the vicinity which tend to improve the moral character of the neighborhood. It is true there has been an abandonment of some manufactories and breweries which existed years ago, but the breweries in the [193]

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio C.C. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-cincinnati-v-mcmicken-ohiocirct-1892.