Franklin County Grammar School v. Bailey

62 Vt. 467
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 62 Vt. 467 (Franklin County Grammar School v. Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin County Grammar School v. Bailey, 62 Vt. 467 (Vt. 1890).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Ross, J.

The right of the plaintiff to recover depends upon-whether the act of the Legislature, approved Nov. 25,1884, purporting to give the use of the lands sequestered or granted to-the use of county grammar schools in the town of Riehford, among which is the land sued for, is an act which the Legislature, under the circumstances, could lawfully pass. On Nov. 4, 1799, the Legislature passed an act incorporating the plaintiff,, with the usual powers and rights of a corporation, for the purpose of maintaining a grammar school in St. Albans, in the county of Franklin, upon condition that the inhabitants- of St. Albans should, within two years, erect a house for the grammar [472]*472..school of the value of $800, and forever after keep the same in repair. It is conceded that the condition was complied with in ■erecting and keeping the house in repair to 1860. Then the ■plaintiff entered into an arrangement with School District No. •4 by which that district was to keep and maintain such a building on the lot of the plaintiff sufficient to accommodate one hun•dred pupils on certain considerations. This has been done. It is apparent that the defendants cannot, against their lease of the land from the plaintiff, in this suit, collaterally try the question -whether this arrangement with the school district was such an •act that the State by proper proceedings might have the charter •which it had granted without reserving the right to alter, modify or repeal, set aside and declared forfeited. It is not one of the issues raised and cannot be so adjudged collaterally in this suit. After the charter of the plaintiff and after it had complied with the condition imposed, and while it was maintaining such a -school building as required by the condition, the Legislature, Nov. 7, 1815, passed an act entitled an act appropriating the ■county grammar school lands in the county of Franklin. By ¡section one of this act, the several shares of land in the county •of Franklin granted to the use of the county grammar schools in this State are appropriated to the use of the plaintiff. By ¡section two, it is enacted that the plaintiff shall hold the said rights or shares of land to themselves and successors in trust for dhe use of said Franklin County Grammar School forever. And it is hereby made the duty of said corporation to lease the said Tights or shares of land for such time and for such rents as they -shall deem just, and shall appropriate the rents and profits-of ¡said lands to the use and for the benefit of said Franklin County Grammar School in such a manner as shall be most conducive to the interest and advantage of said school. In this act the Legislature reserved no right to alter, modify or repeal the act, ,=and there existed then, nor now, no constitutional limitation •¡saving such right to future Legislatures. It is apparent that the ■plaintiff might accept or reject the provisions of this act.

[473]*473It does not appear whether this act was passed by the procurement of the plaintiff. Presumably it was. The plaintiff at once-accepted the provisions of the act, took upon itself the duties-imposed, and, in 1835, made a perpetual lease of the land sued for,, reserving the right of re-entry if the rent should not be paid as stipulated. While the defendants may not dispute the title of the plaintiff, their landlord, they may show that the plaintiff’s-right to the land sued for and into the possession of which they entered as the tenants of the plaintiff, has terminated without, their fault, so that when this suit was commenced no rent which the plaintiff could lawfully claim remained unpaid ; and that the plaintiff liad no right to re-enter for the non-payment of rent as-stipulated, or for any other cause, as its right to the use of the-land had been taken away by the act of the Legislature,. Orleans County Grammar School v. Parker, 25 Vt. 696. Hence, the real question is whether the act of 1884 was one-which, under the existing circumstances, the Legislature could legally pass. The decision of this question depends upon whether the act of 1815 and what had been done by the plaintiff under it, under the Constitution of the United States, was subject to-modification or repeal by the Legislature, or to any action on the part ^of the Legislature except to properly enforce the application of the use of the lands thereby appropriated to the purposes for which they were set apart in the charters of the several towns. In the charter of the town of JElichford one-seventieth part or share was set apart “ to the use of the county grammar schools throughout this State.” No question is made but this is a legislative appropriation of this land to the irse named. Town of Pawlet v. Clark, 9 Cranch, 292. The only contention is whether the appropriation of these lands in the county of Eranklin, by the act of 1815, falls within the principle of the Dartmouth College .case, and that class of cases which placed it beyond the power of future Legislatures to-take it from the plaintiff. If the appropriation had been made a part of the original charter of the plaintiff, it is conceded, on the-authority of Caledonia County Grammar School v. Burt, 11 [474]*474Vt. 632, that subsequent Legislatures would have no power to fake the lands from the plaintiff. It is attempted to distinguish this from that ease, mainly because the appropriation was made by an act subsequent to the granting of the charter. In that -case the charter was granted upon condition that the inhabitants •of Peacham contributed to the establishment of the school, and the appropriation of the lands sequestered in the charters of the towns to the use of county grammar schools was contained in the original charter. No right to alter, modify or repeal the charter was reserved. The condition was complied with by the inhabitants of the town. It was hold, following the Dartmouth case, that the lands thus appropriated could not be taken from that school by subsequent legislation. In regard to these lands, in Grammar School v. Burt, it is held that they did not vest in the original proprietors of the town, individually or collectively, but remained with the Legislature and were at its entire disposal, “ except that the charter contained a declaratory covenant or plighted public faith that they should only be appropriated for the uses and purposes mentioned, and to which by the charter they were sequestered and dedicated,” citing Pawlet v. Clark, 9 Cranch, 293. “ Over these rights the Legislature had an absolute and entire control and disposal for the uses and purposes for which they were reserved. Of the one for the use of grammar schools, it had the power to grant it to any one or more, and upon such limitations and conditions as the Legislature chose to express, or without any conditions whatever, in which case it would have only the implied condition that the use must ever •be applied to the purposes of the grant.” In the case at bar the .appropriation by the act of 1815 was without reservation, condition or limitation, except that their use should be applied to the purposes for which they had been sequestered and dedicated by the charter. By its terms this was a full and entire grant of the lands. It was not, as contended, the grant of the rents to be derived from them for a limited term of years, or from year -to year. The language is that the plaintiff “ shall have the said rights or shares of land to themselves and successors in trust for [475]*475'the use of said Franklin County Grammar School forever.” This is as absolute a grant of the lands as is that of the Legislature to the proprietors.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Vt. 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-county-grammar-school-v-bailey-vt-1890.