County of Oakland v. Mack

220 N.W. 801, 243 Mich. 279, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 623
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1928
DocketDocket No. 62, Calendar No. 33,163.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 801 (County of Oakland v. Mack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Oakland v. Mack, 220 N.W. 801, 243 Mich. 279, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 623 (Mich. 1928).

Opinions

*281 Clark, J.

The bill of complaint is filed by the county of Oakland to quiet its title to lots 117, 134, and 135 of the original plat of the village, now city, of Pontiac. The lots are the site of the county courthouse and jail. Plaintiff had decree. Defendants have appealed.

On November 5, 1818, Stephen Mack and 14 other men entered into a voluntary association, which they designated as Pontiac Company, to purchase lands. Mack was appointed trustee of the company and title to lands was to be taken in his name as trustee; 1,280 acres were purchased accordingly. Mack executed a declaration of trust to the company. After acquiring the lands the company made provision for laying out a town to be known as Pontiac. To advance their interests, members of the company solicited of Hon. Lewis Cass, governor over the territory of Michigan, that the county of Oakland be set off and that the prospective village of Pontiac be selected as county seat, and, to give weight to their solicitations, offered to donate a site or sites for a county jail and a courthouse, and to donate funds.

They were successful. On June 30, 1823, Mack as trustee deeded the lots to certain commissioners for the county. We quote from the deed:

“To have and to hold the above granted and conveyed lots and premises, each and every of them and every part and parcel thereof with the appurtenances unto them the said Enoch Hotchkiss, Ziba Swan and Jonathan Perin, being county commissioners as aforesaid in and for the said county aforesaid, and to their successors in office forever upon trust and confidence nevertheless that the said county commissioners or their successors in office shall cause to be erected on the aforesaid lots numbered 134 and 135 a courthouse for the use of the said county of Oakland and that the said two lots shall be appropriated to no other use or purpose whatever, and that the said county commissioners or their successors in office shall cause to be erected on the said above mentioned lot numbered *282 117, a jail for the use of the said county, and that the said last mentioned lot shall be appropriated to no other use whatever, and that the said county commissioners and their successors in office, shall hold, occupy, possess, rent, lease or sell and convey all or each and every of said lots numbered 29, 30, 31, 32, 33 and 34, to and for the sole use and benefit and behalf of the said county of Oakland and not otherwise. And if the above granted and described lots of land or any or either of them be at any time used, appropriated or sold otherwise than is herein expressed, limited and declared, then the same shall revert back to the said Stephen Mack, trustee, trustee of the said Pontiac Company as above mentioned.”

The county promptly caused to be erected a jail on lot 117 and a courthouse on the other lots.

Mack died in 1826. No provision had been made for a successor as trustee. He left a widow and children. The legislative council of the territory passed an act (2 Terr. Laws, p. 329), approved March 31, 1827, from which we quote:

“Be it enacted by the legislative council of the Territory of Michigan, that Almon Mack, and John M. Mack, administrators of the estate of the said Stephen Mack, deceased, be and they are hereby authorized and empowered to make good and valid conveyances, in fee simple, of all and every part of the above described lands, not heretofore conveyed by the said Stephen Mack, deceased, and of all other lands by him, the said Stephen Mack, held in trust for the said association, called ‘The Pontiac Company,’ to Elon Farnsworth, in trust for and to the use of said Pontiac Company, and the members thereof, and the respective assignees of the several members thereof, being the present proprietors; and said deed of said administrators shall be good and valid in law, for the purposes therein expressed, and taken and received as such in all courts of law and equity in this Territory.
“Sec. 2. That the said Elon Farnsworth, trustee of said Pontiac Company, as aforesaid, be and he is hereby authorized and empowered to make good and valid conveyances, in fee, of all and every part of said lands which may be conveyed to him as trustee, *283 as aforesaid, by the said Almon Mack and John Mack, administrators, as aforesaid, to the several persons to whom they may equitably and justly belong and appertain, as the said association, or a majority thereof, shall from time to time direct.”

Pursuant to such legislative act, and on April 15, 1827, said John M. Mack and Almon Mack, sons and administrators of deceased, gave to Farnsworth, as trustee, a deed, executed also by the widow of Stephen Mack and by the wives of said grantors, which deed purported to convey:

“Being all the lands not heretofore conveyed by the said Stephen Mack in execution and in pursuance of his said trust which are included in section twenty-nine, the northeast quarter of section thirty-two, the northeast, northwest and southwest quarter sections of section twenty-eight and the southeast quarter of section twenty, all in township number three north of range ten east and all lying in that part of the Territory of Michigan now included in the county of Oakland. And also all other lands which were held by the said Stephen Mack at the time of his death in trust for the said association called the Pontiac Company, together with all the privileges and appurtenances to the said lands in anywise appertaining and belonging.”

In 1841 the. county desired to erect other buildings on lots 134 and 135 and Farnsworth as trustee gave to the county a quitclaim deed of such lots, but it was recited in the deed:

“The interest here intended to be conveyed is the right to erect upon said lots public offices for the use of said county of Oakland by the said county commissioners and their successors in office and it being hereby expressly understood that this conveyance shall not in anywise divest the company of said land, but on the contrary it is declared if said premises are used and occupied for any purpose whatever other than mentioned in the deed to said county commissioners dated the thirtieth of June, A. D. 1823, and recorded in the register’s office for said county in Liber A, Folios *284 83, 84, 85, 86 and 87 and for the erection of public offices as hereinbefore mentioned, that the same shall revert to said Pontiac Company as mentioned in said deed hereinbefore referred to. The reversionary in trust in said lots being part of the said lands held in trust, as aforesaid.”

From 1823 to the present time the county has had and occupied the lots for the said uses and purposes. Now, it is stated, greater buildings are required, the lots are not sufficient in size and are not well located, the particulars of which need not be discussed. The county, it seems, desires to dispose of the lots and buildings now near the center of an active business and industrial district and to acquire a new location for its county buildings, and it seeks to be relieved of record of the reverter in the deed of Mack, trustee.

The lots were conveyed to the county on condition subsequent with right of reverter in Mack as trustee on breach of condition.

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.W. 801, 243 Mich. 279, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-oakland-v-mack-mich-1928.