John Gould v. John H. Whitman

3 R.I. 267
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 6, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 3 R.I. 267 (John Gould v. John H. Whitman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Gould v. John H. Whitman, 3 R.I. 267 (R.I. 1856).

Opinion

*269 By the Court.

— This case comes up by appeal from the decree of the town council of the town of Middle-town, under and by virtue of an act entitled an act to redress misemployment of property given to certain charitable uses,” (Dig. 1844, p. 208.) The act provides that “ whenever real or personal property, or the use, issues or profits of any, have been or shall be given, limited, appointed and assigned by any person to and for the relief of the poor or the bringing up of children to learning, or for any other specific purpose, and have not been or shall not be employed according to the charitable intent of the giver and founder thereof, it shall and may bo lawful for the town council of each town within its respective jurisdiction to inquire of and concerning the same,” &c. Section 2 provides that said town councils, after notice to the parties entrusted with such real or personal property, may set down such orders, judgments and decrees in relation thereto, as the exigency of the case may seem to require.

The petitioners allege, that the town of Middletown has long been in possession of two certain tracts of land of about six acres each, viz: the tract in the south part of the town, bounded east on highway, south on the Whitehall farm, so called, west on land of John Barker, and north on land of Nathaniel and James Wyatt, and now in the possession of Pelóg T. Sherman; the tract in the north part of the town, bounded south and west on highways, north on land of Joshua Coggeshall, east on land of Daniel Chace, and now in the possession of George C. Coggeshall; that said lots have always been applied to the support of schools; that no controversy has ever existed as to the proper design or object to which the profits of them should be applied; but contro *270 Versies have long existed as to the mode in which they should be managed, and the mode in which the profits or income should be apportioned among the different parts of the town; that for many years past the south lot has been managed by the school committee of the town, and the income applied to the support of schools in districts No. 2, 3, 4 and 5 in said town, and the north lot is managed by school district No. 1, and its income applied to the support of schools in that district alone. And the petitioners believe that this present management and apportionment of the profits of said land is not according to the intention or purpose for which the land was appropriated, but is a misemployment thereof.

The petitioners contend that each of these lots was intended for the use of all the inhabitants of the town of Middletown, and inasmuch as the incomes of the west lot are now applied exclusively for the benefit of the inhabitants of district No. 1, to the exclusion of the inhabitants of the other districts of the town, it is a misapplication requiring to be corrected. The respondents, on the other hand, claim that the west lot, lying within district No. 1, being that laid out upon Lintall’s plain, was intended by the proprietors to be for the use of the inhabitants of that district only, and the southern lot, a lot set out from the common beyond Daniel Gould’s, was to be for the separate use of another distinct district there.

The' petitioners have, in their petition, set forth the evidence upon which they rely, viz: the vote of the proprietors of Newport, taken from their records, and certain acts of the town of Middletown, directing the mode of managing these lands and the application of the incomes thereof.

*271 The respondents in reply, put in evidence from the proprietors’ records, that another lot of sis acres, lying-in another part of the township, and within the present limits of the city of Newport, was set apart by the proprietors for school lands, for the use of the proprietors in that part of the township. The respondents also proved, that from the year 1819, and down to the filing of this petition, the inhabitants of the present district No. 1 have been in the control exclusively of the lot in Lintall’s plain, and in the receipt of the issues and profits to their own use for school purposes; that this district, as now constituted, is substantially the same as the squadron lying west of the dividing line described in the vote of the town of April 17, 1754.

Taking the acts of the proprietors, as they appear upon these records, there seems no reasonable doubt as to the class of individuals to whose use this lot was devoted. Both lots could not have been intended for the same set of proprietors, but each lot for a different set — for the use of the proprietors of different districts, different parts of the township.

We think this is quite clear, from the terms in which the proprietors set them apart, and the description of the place in which the lots are to be located. One is to be laid out in the common called LintalVs plain, and it is to be for the benefit of the proprietors in that part of the township. What part of the township ? There is but one answer, viz: in that part in which is the common called Lintall’s plain.

The other lot of six acres, for the like use, (i. e. for school land,) is to be laid out in the common beyond Daniel Gould’s land, and this is to be for the benefit of *272 the proprietors in. that part of the town. Here another part of the township, distinct from Lintall’s plain, is referred to and described. It is the common beyond Daniel G-ould’s, and not the common on Lintall’s plain. The proprietors in that part of the town, also, are to have the benefit of a six acre lot for school purposes. These are different parts of the township of Newport.

It is contended that the practical cotemporaneous construction of this act of the proprietors was otherwise; and much stress has been laid upon the proceedings of the town of Middletown, after its incorporation in 1143, in assuming from time to time to direct in what way the school land thus set apart should be managed, and the incomes applied.

Here it may bo proper to suggest that our inquiry is not now as to the individual or body corporate who ought to manage this charity and dispense it, but whether it is dispensed to those for whom it was intended by the givers.

It does not appear how these lands were managed, by whom, or how the incomes and profits were applied, if applied at all, prior to 1154, a period of fifty years after they were surveyed and located, — whether according to this intent or otherwise. But the town, at a meeting held April 11, 1156, voted that the late method of managing the two schools be altered, and that for the future they be managed as follows: that the town be divided into two squadrons, and that each squadron shall have the sole power of managing its own school houses and lands, and employing schoolmasters, and to fix tho dividing line between the two districts. It does not appear how otherwise than in the mode now provided, the lands had been managed or the profits applied.

*273

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3 R.I. 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-gould-v-john-h-whitman-ri-1856.