Furman University v. McLeod

120 S.E.2d 865, 238 S.C. 475, 1961 S.C. LEXIS 115
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 5, 1961
Docket17800
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 120 S.E.2d 865 (Furman University v. McLeod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Furman University v. McLeod, 120 S.E.2d 865, 238 S.C. 475, 1961 S.C. LEXIS 115 (S.C. 1961).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This appeal involves a determination of the proper construction and effect to be given to certain deeds in the chain of title of Furman University to its property in the City of Greenville, known as the Women’s Campus.

The decree of the able and distinguished Judge of the Greenville County Court, the late Honorable W. B. McGowan, fully sets forth the facts and correctly disposes of all issues in the case. After eliminating the first paragraph and subsection 5 of the last paragraph, the remainder of the decree of the County Court is adopted, and will be reported, as the opinion of this Court.

Affirmed.

Decree of the Court

The purpose of the proceeding is to have the Court construe and determine the effect of certain deeds in the chain of title of Furman University to what is known as the Women’s Campus on College St., in the City of Greenville, and particularly the deed of December 25, 1854, by which The Trustees of the Greenville Academies conveyed this land to Furman University.

Furman University, a South Carolina corporation organized for educational purposes in 1850, for more than 100 years has maintained and operated in Greenville an institution of higher learning.

*479 It acquired from Vardry McBee during 1851-1852, the property which became known as the Men’s Campus of Fur-man University, located close to the center of what was then the Village of Greenville.

The property which became known as the Women’s Campus also came through a deed from Vardry McBee, having been conveyed by him to The Greenville Academies in 1820; by Greenville Academies to Furman University in 1854 and by Furman University to the State Convention of the Baptist Denomination in 1910. The Women’s Campus, so called, was also located near the center of the then Village of Greenville but on the opposite side of the commercial section from the Men’s Campus, the two campuses being about a mile apart.

In 1937 a consolidation was effected between Furman University and Greenville Woman’s College, in the interest of economy and efficiency of administration. Pursuant thereto, the State Convention of the Baptist Denomination conveyed to Furman University the property which had been conveyed to it in 1910 by Furman University. Two lots adjacent thereto, aggregating about 2.23 acres, which had been acquired by Greenville Woman’s College, from Bettie H. Orr, also were conveyed to Furman University. Thereafter, Furman University also acquired two other contiguous parcels on College Street from H. K. Townes, as Executor, and The Peoples National Bank of Greenville, as Executor.

In the years following the consolidation of the two schools, there was a very large increase in the number of students in attendance, to such an extent that the facilities of Furman University were taxed to capacity. The classrooms were overcrowded, the accommodations for the students were inadequate, and the buildings and facilities for the many other needs and purposes of the University were antiquated and insufficient to provide for its growing needs.

The operation of the two separate campuses proved to be extremely expensive and unsatisfactory as it required the *480 transportation of students through the main part of the City from one campus to the other for various classes, with resultant loss of time, inconvenience and the risk of traffic accidents.

The Board of Trustees of Furman University in 1945 became convinced that the consolidation of the two compuses was the only practical solution and that to meet the need for expansion and provide for the future needs and development of Furman, in keeping with the growth of Greenville, the acquisition of additional lands was an urgent necessity.

The cost of acquiring additional lands adjacent to either campus was prohibitive because of the change and development which had taken place in the immediate vicinity of each. The property adjoining the Men’s Campus had become a thickly populated section and only a few blocks away a commercial district had developed.

The Women’s Campus, only two blocks from Main Street, was virtually in the center of a rapidly growing commercial section of the City.

In view of the then existing situation, the President of the Board of Trustees of Furman University, in 1947, appointed a Committee to make an investigation and study of Furman University, the problems confronting it and its present and future needs.

As a result and based upon the Committee’s report, it was determined by the Board that the most economical and practical solution, one which would take care of expansion needs for the future and prevent the development of an undesirable neighborhood in the vicinity of its campus or the encroachment of commercial establishments, would be the acquisition of an entirely new site.

After careful consideration and study and a thorough investigation by leading architectural and professional firms and the Greenville Real Estate Board, a site was selected and purchased about 1952. The property consists of approximate *481 ly 1,000 acres located on Buncombe Road about five miles north of Greenville Court House outside the present corporate limits of the City of Greenville and on the fringe of the residential area.

The record shows that the Board of Trustees of Furman University intended that when the University had been relocated on the new site, the former campuses would be sold, leased or developed and the proceeds or income therefrom would be used to defray in part the cost of construction of the new facilities and its general educational purposes.

Some question having arisen concerning the power and authority to sell and convey fee simple title to the property known as the Men’s Campus and that comprising its Women’s Campus, plaintiff in December, 1952, instituted a proceeding in the Court of Common Pleas for Greenville County against Wilson Clover and others, being all those answering the description of the heirs at law of Vardry McBee, asking that the Court construe the deeds from Vardry McBee under which it acquired the lands known as the Men’s Campus and also the deed from Vardry McBee by which he conveyed the Women’s Campus and to declare the plaintiff vested with fee simple title to all of said lands with full right and authority to sell, lease and/or otherwise use the same.

The lower Court held that the deeds vested in Furman University fee simple title to all the property comprising the two campuses, free from any trust, restriction or limitation and that Furman University could convey good title thereto.

On appeal, the Supreme Court, in an opinion reported in Furman University v. Glover, 226 S. C. 1, 83 S. E. (2d) 559, 563, affirmed the holding of the Court of Common Pleas to the effect that the heirs of Vardry McBee had no right or interest whatsoever in any of the lands constituting the Men’s Campus and that Furman University held fee simple title to the property “subject to no enforceable condition or restriction, and with the power to grant to any *482

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.E.2d 865, 238 S.C. 475, 1961 S.C. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furman-university-v-mcleod-sc-1961.