City of Hartford v. Gillespie

86 S.W.2d 1003, 260 Ky. 833, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 566
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 22, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 86 S.W.2d 1003 (City of Hartford v. Gillespie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Hartford v. Gillespie, 86 S.W.2d 1003, 260 Ky. 833, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 566 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Richardson —

Reversing.

The determination of the issues presented herein requires a chronological statement of the statutes and the deeds involved, and a construction of them.

The city of Hartford, Ohio County, Ky., was incorporated by an act of the General Assembly, approved February 3, 1808. 3 Litt. Laws of Kentucky, p. 442.

In July, 1871, the trustees, under the statutes in operation at that time, constituted a board to do business. They were “a body corporate, and by that name [trustees] may sue and be sued,” with the right to “elect one of their body chairman of that board, with power “to purchase, take, and hold the title to not exceeding forty acres of land, in or near the town, for a public cemetery”; “to improve such ground, and appoint a .keeper thereof”; “to sell small parcels of the ground to individuals for the purpose of interment”; “to receive.and collect subscriptions to aid.in purchasing, taking care of, and repairing such ground.” 2 Stanton’s Revised Statutes of Kentucky, 1867 Ed. p. 422.

The General Assembly, by chapter 99, Acts 1891-02-93, p. 256, classified the cities and. towns of the com *835 monwealth. The city of Hartford was assigned to the fifth class by chapter 116, Acts of 1904, p. 280 (Ky. Stats. 1930, sec. 2740). Each city of the fifth class was thereby declared to be (section 3615, Ky. Stats.) a corporation by the name it then had, with perpetual succession, and with power to sue and be sued, to “purchase, lease, receive, hold and enjoy real and personal property, and control and dispose of the same for the common benefit.” The government of the city of Hartford was, also, thereby (section 3616, Ky. Stats.) vested in a mayor and a city council to consist of six members. And it was further provided (section 3637-9) “that where the city owns a cemetery it shall be under the control and management of the city council; they shall fix the price at which the lots shall be sold, and may execute deeds therefor; a receipt from the treasurer shall be complete evidence of title.”

On the 27th day of July, 1871, a deed was executed and delivered by William P. Forman and Helen For-man, for the consideration of $500, evidenced by notes, “to the trustees” of the town of Hartford and their successors, in office, in trust, conveying to them as trustees, “for the use of the public as a cemetery, and for the use of such persons as the said trustees or their successors, shall sell lots or a part of the premises,” a certain boundary of land, containing twelve acres and three rods with the reservation stated in the deed, which is not now here involved. On November 13, 1916, the city council of Hartford, by and'through J. O. Iler, mayor, and J. A. Howard, clerk, executed and delivered a deed, conveying the same land to J. E. Bean, J. C. Iler, and C." O. Hunter, trustees of Oakwood Cemetery, “and their successors in office” for the recited consideration of $1 in cash, and the further consideration that the grantees and “their successors in offices will keep the amount of $1,000.00 and interest and hold same as a trust fund, not to be used for any purpose, but may use all the interest from the $1,000 annually, together with the proceeds of the burial lots to improve and upkeep the said cemetery.”

The deed undertakes to confer upon Bean, Iler, and Hunter, as trustees, and their successors in office, the power to appoint their successors, with the restriction that a vacancy be filled by them or their successors, by the appointment of a resident of the town of Hartford. John E. Bean was therein designated *836 ■commissioner to make deeds to burial lots, with the power in Bean, Iler and Hunter, as trustees, to appoint another commissioner' in lieu of Bean. And it contains this provision:

“The said trustees shall have the power to make rules governing the cemetery, the same as the city council has, and if at any time, said trustees shall think it best to incorporate the cemetery, this may be done as the law of the state requires. The duty is imposed upon the treasurer of the cemetery, on the request of the city council, to report to it the amount of money received and paid out and the balance on hand in cash or notes.”

The city of Hartford brought this action against W. II. Gillespie, T. H. Black and W. J. Bean, trustees of Oakwood Cemtery, C. O. Hunter, J. O. Iler, and the-executor of John W. Bean. The petition alleges that upon the execution and delivery of the deed by the For-.mans, the city of Hartford, by and through its board of' trustees, immediately took possession of the land described in the deed, as a cemetery, and continuously exercised all authority over it, until the execution and delivery of the deed, by which the city undertook on November 13, 1916, to confer upon J. E. Bean, J. C. Iler,. and C. 0. Hunter, trustees of the Oakwood Cemetery,, all of the city’s authority over the cemetery, and the control of the $1,000 referred to in the city’s deed to-Bean, Her, and Hunter; thereafter J. C. Iler ceased to be a resident of the city of Hartford, and Bean and. Hunter elected W. H. GiÜespie to fill the vacancy in the trusteeship occurring from Iler’s removal from the city.. Later, C. O. Hunter removed from the city, when Bean, and Gillespie elected T. H. Black as Hunter’s successor. And in 1932, upon the death of Bean, Gillespie and. Black elected W. J. Bean to fill the vacancy resulting from the death of J. E. Bean. Gillespie, Black, and W. J. Bean are now claiming to be the successors in office of J. E. Bean, J. C. Iler, and C. O. Hunter. It is charged in the petition they are in the possession of the cemetery, and there are now in their hands, $210.69, cash; $400, .evidenced by Stalsworth’s note, and state warrants of the value of $1,673.62, derived from the sale of lots, and that, from the proceeds of the sale of burial lots, the trustees, acting under the aforementioned deed, had purchased of R. D. Newton a lot adjoining that embraced in the Forman deed, to be used, *837 and was being used, as a part of the cemetery. Hunter, Black, W. J. Bean, J. C. Iler, and the executrix of the estate of John E. Bean, it is alleged, are wrongfully and without right withholding from the city council, the cemetery, the money, notes, and warrants, mentioned above; and are fixing the price of burial lots, selling and conveying the same to the purchasers, although requested to surrender the control and possession of the cemetery and turn over the money, notes and warrants to the city. The city in its petition, prays that the “ownership and rights” of the city of Hartford and Gillespie, Black, W. J. Bean, Hunter, Iler, and the estate of John E. Bean, to the cemetery, money, notes, and state warrants, and the land conveyed by Newton to them as trustees, be determined and declared. A demurrer was sustained to the petition. It was dismissed. A mere reading of the statutes in force at the date of the Forman deed, and the Forman deed, is sufficient to establish that the title to the land described in the For-man deed was in the city of Hartford at the date of the deed of Bean, Iler, and Hunter. The Forman deed, conveying the land to the trustees of the town, did not vest in them, but in the city, the legal title. Trustees of Falmouth v. Horter, 4 Litt. 119; Mason v. Mulholn, 6 Dana, 140.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.W.2d 1003, 260 Ky. 833, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-hartford-v-gillespie-kyctapphigh-1935.