Furman University v. Wilson Glover

83 S.E.2d 559, 226 S.C. 1
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 15, 1954
Docket16888
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 S.E.2d 559 (Furman University v. Wilson Glover) 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. Wilson Glover, 83 S.E.2d 559, 226 S.C. 1 (S.C. 1954).

Opinion

Henderson, Acting Associate Justice.

There is involved in this case the title to certain lands in the city of Greenville, comprising what is known as the men’s campus of Furman University, and what was formerly known as the Greenville Woman’s College, but since the consolidation of the two institutions referred to as the women’s campus of the University.

The lands were conveyed by Vardry McBee more than a hundred years ago. He died in 1864, and the defendants are those who now answer to the description of his heirs-at-law. The action was brought by the respondents for the purpose of having the court construe the deeds. They ask for a declaratory judgment that Furman University is vested with a fee simple title, with full power to sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the lands. The cause was referred to the master of Greenville County. In his report he holds that the university has a fee simple title, and that there is nothing in any of the deeds affecting the property which would give rise to any enforceable right or interest in the heirs of Vardry McBee. The report was confirmed by Honorable J. Robert Martin, Jr., the resident judge, and adopted by him as his decree.

The men’s campus and the women’s campus of the university are over a mile apart, and are separated by the central commercial and business district of Greenville. During the years the student body has greatly increased in size. The buildings of the university have become inadequate for its use. The separation of the two campuses has resulted in an *4 expense of about $30,000.00 a year for the transportation of students from one school to the other for necessary classroom or laboratory attendance in certain subjects. The trustees have found that additional land is urgently needed. They can acquire twenty-five acres adjoining the men’s campus, at a cost of about $750,000.00. However, in view of the very high price of such adjacent land, and the need for even more space for future expansion, consideration was given to the purchase of an entirely new site, upon which all the facilities of the university could be consolidated. Accordingly, a site containing about one thousand acres, located five miles north-west of the center of the city, was bought at a cost of $440,000.00.

The university plans to landscape and beautify so much of this property as is presently needed, to erect new buildings at a cost of about $8,000,000.00, and to conduct all of its activities there. The trustees wish either to develop the present campus sites in the city so that they will produce income from rentals, or to sell a part, or possibly all of the property, as may be determined hereafter from time to time, and to use the revenue from the property and the proceeds of any sales, for the educational purposes of the university.

Let us take up, first, the deeds covering the men’s campus.

On June 18, 1851, Vardry McBee conveyed twenty-five acres to the State Convention of the Baptist Denomination in South Carolina, a corporation. The deed provided that it was “in trust for and to the use of The Furman University for educational purposes connected with the said The Fur-man University, and for no other purpose whatsoever. That is to say, that the State Convention of the Baptist Denomination in South Carolina shall henceforth and forever permit and suffer the said The Furman University to hold, possess and enjoy the said tract or parcel of land as a site and location for all colleges, academies, schoolhouses, professors’ houses or other buildings or matters of any kind whatsoever necessary for or connected with the educational purposes of the said The Furman University.’’

*5 A few months later, on Jan. 6, 1852, Mr. McBee conveyed an adjoining tract of twenty-five and one-tenth acres to the State Convention, to the use of Furman University, the language being identical with that employed in the earlier deed.

The question is whether the conveyances vested in Fur-man University a fee simple title, without restrictions. The respondents so claim. The appellants, on the other hand, take the position that the deeds gave a fee determinable, and that a sale or lease of the property would give the heirs-at-law of Vardry McBee a right of reverter or of re-entry.

The conveyances contained no express words of a right of reverter, nor any statement from which such right could be implied. It is not provided that the lands were to be held while, or so long as, used for a specified purpose, or that the grantor or his heirs might re-enter on certain conditions. The conveyances were not gifts of Mr. McBee. The land was sold at $150.00 an acre, and the record shows that such was a full price for the property at that time, when Green-ville was a small village.

The respondents strongly urge that the obvious purpose of the provisions in the deeds was to insure that the lands were made available for the use of Furman University, rather than for the separate and independent use and enjoyment of the State Convention, and that the language was a declaration of the purpose for which the land was conveyed. They say that if the provisions had been inserted for the purpose of restricting or limiting the use of the land, such intention would have been expressed by appropriate language, including a provision for a reverter in the event the site was ever used for any other purpose. They make the cogent point that the grantees would not have paid a full consideration for an estate in fee simple and at the same time accept a base or qualified estate, with conditions subsequent or other limitations in favor of the grantor or his heirs.

*6 In seeking to ascertain the intention of the grantor we find that the construction of these instruments is not an open question, since the identical point involved here has been clearly and definitely settled in the case of McManaway v. Clapp, 150 S. C. 249, 148 S. E. 18, decided in 1929.

In that case McManaway had bought from Furman University a lot which was a portion of the lands embraced in the 1851 deed of Vardry McBee, above. McManaway contracted to sell the lot to Clapp, who declined to accept the deed upon the ground that the plaintiff’s title was defective in consequence of the language in the deed of Mr. McBee to the State Convention for the use of the university. A reference was held by the master of the county, and a full report was made. It was confirmed by Honorable M. L. Bonham, at that time a circuit judge, and later the Chief Justice of this Court. The decree of Judge Bonham was unanimously affirmed, the master’s report and the circuit decree being set out in full. It was held that the language in the McBee deed was merely declaratory of the purpose, that the conveyance did not contain any condition subsequent, or reserve any right or interest whatsoever in Vardry McBee or his heirs, that the grantor intended to divest himself fully of the title, that the Baptist Convention held a dry or naked trust, and that the statute of uses operated to convey the fee to Furman University.

As that decision so fully covers the present case, we conclude that the university has a fee simple title in the men’s campus.

Turning now to the women’s campus, it appears that on Aug. 12, 1820, Vardry McBee conveyed a tract of thirty acres.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.E.2d 559, 226 S.C. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furman-university-v-wilson-glover-sc-1954.