Close v. Glenwood Cemetery

107 U.S. 466, 2 S. Ct. 267, 27 L. Ed. 408, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1239
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1883
Docket108
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 107 U.S. 466 (Close v. Glenwood Cemetery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Close v. Glenwood Cemetery, 107 U.S. 466, 2 S. Ct. 267, 27 L. Ed. 408, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1239 (1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gray

delivered thé opinion of the court.

This is a bill in equity, filed on the 25th of October, 1877, by the Glen wood Cemetery, claiming to be a corporation established by act of Congress, against Joseph B. Close, William S. Humphreys, Randolph S. Evans and George Clendenin, praying for a conveyance of the legal title in a tract of land containing ninety acres, situated in the District of Columbia, known as the Glenwood Cemetery; and for an account. The bill was afterwards dismissed by consent as against Humphreys and Evans. The material facts, as shown by the proofs, are as follows: —

In June, 1852, Humphreys, for the sum of $9,000, bought of Junius J. Boyle the tract of land in controversy, and took from him a deed of it, and immediately set about preparing it for use as a cemetery. He enclosed with a high fence, and laid out with drives and walks, and improved and embellished, thirty acres of it, leaving the other sixty acres in their original unimproved condition; and in March, 1853, put Clendenin in charge as superintendent. Humphreys conveyed to Close an undivided half of the premises in April, 1853, and the whole tract in June, 1854. The two deeds were absolute in form, but were, in fact, intended as security; the first for the repayment of $20,000, advanced to Humphreys by Close, for the purpose, as Close knew, of converting the estate into a cemetery ; and the second for the repayment of other advances to the amount of $7,000, already made to him by Close, for the same purpose, and of subsequent like advances, of the amount of which there is no evidence but Close’s own vague and unsatisfactory testimony, unsupported by books or vouchers; and. the parties agreed in writing that if Humphreys should meet his obligations, he should have back one-half of the land. Humphreys thenceforward managed the property, acting for himself and Close, through Clendenin as superintendent, until September, *469 1859, when, having failed to meet his engagements, he relinquished all his interest in the property to Close, and Close became sole owner, and assumed control of the property, retaining Clendenin as his superintendent to manage the cemetery.

On the 27th of July, 1854, Congress passed an act entitled “ An Act to incorporate the proprietors of .Glenwood Cemetery,” by which twelve persons named, eight of them residents of the District of Columbia, and the other four being Close and William Phelps, (since deceased,) residents of New Jersey, and Humphreys and Evans, residing in New York, were created a corporation by the name of “The Proprietors of Glenwood Cemetery in the District of Columbia,” and were empowered “to purchase and hold not exceeding one hundred acres of land in the District of Columbia, north of the limits of (he City of Washington; to sell and dispose of such parts of said land as may not be wanted- for the purpose of a cemetery, provided that at least thirty contiguous acres shall be forever appropriated and set apart as a cemetery ; with authority to said corporation to receive gifts and bequests for the purpose of ornamenting and improving said cemetery; ” and it was enacted that the affairs of the corporation should be conducted by a president and three managers, to be “ elected annually by a majority of the votes of the proprietors,” and “ each proprietor entitled to one vote for each share held by him,” and that until the first election the four last-named persons should be managers ; that the president and managers should have power, among other things, “ to lay out and ornament the grounds,” “ to lay out and sell or dispose of burial lots,” and “ to make such by-laws, rules and regulations as they may deem proper for conducting the affairs of the corporation, for the government of lot-holders and visitors to the cemetery, and for the transfer of stock and the evidence thereof ; ” that “ the capital stock of said company shall be represented by two thousand shares of fifty dollars each,-divided among the proprietors according to their respective interests, and transferable in such manner as the .by-laws may direct; ” that “ no streets, lanes, alleys, roads, or canals of any sort shall be opened through the property of said corporatism, exclusively used and appropriated to the purpose of a cemetery; provided, that nothing herein *470 contained shall authorize said corporation to obstruct any public road or street or lane or alley now actually opened and used as such; ” that any person wilfully destroying,injuring or removing any tomb, monument, gravestone, fence, railing, tree or plant within the limits of the cemetery, should be considered guilty of a misdemeanor; that “ each of the stockholders in the said company shall be held liable in his or her individual capacity for all the debts and liabilities of the said company, however contracted or incurred; ” that “ burial. lots in said cemetery shall not be subject to the debts of the lot-holders thereof, and the land of the company dedicated to the purposes of a cemetery shall not be subject to taxation of any kind; ” that a certificate, under seal of the corporation, of the ownership of any lot, should have the same effect as a conveyance of .real estate; and that “ it may be lawful for Congress hereafter to alter, amend, modify or repeal the foregoing act.” 10 Stat. 789. '

On the 2d of August, 1854, the ceremony of dedicating the cemetery by appropriate religious services and addresses was performed on the spot- in the presence of a number of people. Immediately afterwards 'a pamphlet was published and generally circulated, containing a copy of the charter, a list of the officers, including Close, Phelps, Humphreys and Evans, man-' agers, Close, president, Humphreys, treasurer, and Clendenin, superintendent; a full account of the proceedings at the dedication, in which the property was spoken of as set apart and consecrated for the burial of the dead,.and as “ altogether comprising ninety acres, thirty of which are now fully prepared for interments ; ” and the by-laws of the cemetery, of which the first was,' “ All lots shall be held in pursuance of ‘ An Act to incorporate the Proprietors of Glenwood Cemetery,’ approved July 27, 1854, and shall be used for the purposes of sepulture alone.”

Close soon after received a copy of this pamphlet from Humphreys, and from that time to the filing of the bill never objected to the appropriation of the property in the manner appearing thereby. In the course of the next twenty years, about two thousand lots were sold, and each purchaser was given a copy of the pamphlet, and a certificate or deed of his *471 lot, signed by Close as president, bearing the seal of the company, and having the by-laws printed thereon. The gross receipts from the time of the opening of the cemetery to 1876 were $160,000. No stock was ever issued as provided in the charter.

No taxes were ever paid on any part of the ninety acres. At different times from 1871 to 1876, taxes were assessed, or proposed to be assessed, by the municipal authorities, upon the sixty acres which had not been improved. But Close and Clendenin, by representing to the assessors and collector that the whole tract had been dedicated to burial purposes' in accordance with the charter, and by exhibiting to them the charter and the pamphlet containing the account of the dedication, induced them to recognize the exemption of the whole tract from taxation.

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Bluebook (online)
107 U.S. 466, 2 S. Ct. 267, 27 L. Ed. 408, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/close-v-glenwood-cemetery-scotus-1883.