Faust v. Little Rock School District

276 S.W.2d 59, 224 Ark. 761, 1955 Ark. LEXIS 477
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 14, 1955
Docket5-607
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 276 S.W.2d 59 (Faust v. Little Rock School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faust v. Little Rock School District, 276 S.W.2d 59, 224 Ark. 761, 1955 Ark. LEXIS 477 (Ark. 1955).

Opinion

Grieein Smith, Chief Justice.

The suit resulting in this appeal was brought by appellee School District to quiet title to Block 179 of the Original City of Little Rock. ' The District alleged ownership in fee through warranty deed from the City dated March 26, 1870.

Appellants are the heirs of Chester Ashley and Roswell Beebe, who on February 23d, 1843, conveyed to the mayor and alderman of the City, in their corporate capacity, five entire blocks and a fractional one.

Three tracts are involved. The first was what is now Mt. Holly Cemetery on Broadway. A deed requirement was that this property should be used for cemetery purposes only. Another condition was that thereafter interments in Block 179 should be discontinued. Conveyance of this block was to the City — the mayor and aider-men, — to their successors and their survivors in office “. . . as trustees for the uses and purposes hereinafter mentioned,” and “. . . upon the special trust and considerations as hereinafter mentioned, . . . subject also to the restrictions and conditions hereinafter made, . . . [and] for the special purpose of being appropriated and used by [the City] for the erection thereon of a city hospital, workhouse, or any other public buildings as may to them seem most conducive to the public good, and the same shall not be sold or disposed of, nor shall the title vest in the City except upon the conditions aforesaid.” The habendum repeated the grantors ’ terms — that the conveyance was “. . . upon the several conditions and for the special uses and purposes herein set forth and specified, and none other whatsoever. ’ ’

The third conveyance was a grant of Block 154, and was for the purpose of erecting thereon a powder magazine, to be moved from Block 124.

Title remained unchanged until after the date first mentioned (March 26,1870). Then, pursuant to an ordinance of the preceding day, James Y. Fitch as president •of the City Council conveyed Block 179 “. . ._ to the School District of Little Bock.” Peabody Schoolhouse was erected on the site in 1870, and in varying physical •conditions it has remained as a facility appurtenant to the educational system. Gradually the contiguous area became commercialized, with a shifting of population. Besult is that the school’s patronage or enrollment does not justify its continuation. The District’s thought is that the property should be sold and the proceeds used for school purposes in other localities within the Board’s jurisdiction. From an original consideration of $7,000 paid to the City, value of the property has enhanced to an estimated worth of from $350,000 to $400,000.

Appellants contend that the Ashley-Beebe deed created a charitable trust in perpetuity upon condition subsequent. They disagree with the Chancellor’s finding that the City’s conveyance was a breach of condition, creating at that time a right of reentry. In the alternative it is insisted that irrespective of reentry rights, the land came to the District charged with a trust clearly created by the grantors, hence the present conditional ownership must conform to the creative design.

The Chancellor did not think it was necessary to say whether the Ashley-Beebe deed reserved conditional rights in the grantors inuring to their heirs. His view was that even if pertinent events — in the absence of mandatory factors — would have invested appellants with reentry rights, or if as interested taxpayers they would have been justified in claiming that the property could not be sold and the proceeds used as planned, still the conveyance of March 26th, 1870, violated conditions of the grant, thus setting in motion the statute of limitation and making applicable the plea of laches. Both defenses were interposed.

Appellants urge that because the word “condition” appears in the deed five times — four of these references being to Block 179 — the granting intent was to write into the document a condition subsequent. Chester Ashley, they say, was a lawyer exceptionally well versed in his profession, an outstanding attorney of his day. Therefore the choice of words must have formed a part of his obvious plan to compel obedience to the trust or in the alternative establish in the grantors and their heirs the rights here contended for. Supporting their theory that limitation should not be sustained and in furtherance of the contention that they are not guilty of laches, appellants urge that when the City conveyed to the District, use of the property thereafter was in all essential respects similar to the broad plan conceived by Ashley and Beebe: it was a public purpose so completely in harmony with the grantors’ scheme that the heirs should not be charged with notice that alien dominion occurred. It could not, then, be said with reason that a breach of the trust had taken place.

It is recognized by the heirs that their predecessors imposed upon the City a restraint against alienation and that this stricture was violated when the District took the property. But it is reasoned that the transfer merely 'imposed upon the grantee conditions the City was charged with. So analyzed it would follow that the City’s misconduct could not result in an avoidance of the conditions. On the contrary they were passed on to the District with all of the sanctity that a trust imposed.

Conceding appellants’ first premise — that Chester Ashley was a skilled practitioner — appellee counters with the argument that this is a point in its favor. For, say counsel, the very circumstance that the writer of this deed did not by express language insert a right of reentry if conditions were broken augurs the absence of an intention to create such an estate. A further insistence by appellant is that the grant was a charitable donation — a contention appellee things is contradicted by the City’s act in releasing to Ashley and Beebe its claim to Block 124. This supposed valuable consideration prefaces the granting clause in the conveyance of Block 179. Although it is stipulated that the record title to Block 124 was in Ashley, appellee is convinced that various deed recitals sustain a presumption that the City had some interest in the land.

Appellee traces the development of Little Bock’s public school system, showing that the first municipal appropriation for education occurred in 1853 when $500 was made available. Applicable statutes in 1870 made .school operations a township and county function. City participation was ultra vires until 1869, and due to this state of the law Ashley could not have envisioned public school usage when Block 179 was conveyed as land upon which “a city hospital, workhouse, or any other public building” should be erected, to the exclusion of all others.

Appellants urge with impressive sincerity that the School District became a substituted trustee; but appellee points to minutes of the City Council and an ordinance as authority for the conclusion that dealings were arms-length transactions, concluded after orthodox bargaining had occurred. The City’s deed incorporated a covenant of warranty which is ordinarily thought to be contrary to use restrictions, restraint, alienation, or any condition subsequent that might have been impliedly expressed. Appellee believes that conduct of the present grantee has accorded with a presumption of unconditional ownership. Buildings have been maintained and remodeled, and on four occasions mortgages or trust deeds have been executed to secure bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W.2d 59, 224 Ark. 761, 1955 Ark. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faust-v-little-rock-school-district-ark-1955.