Jordan v. Landis

175 So. 241, 128 Fla. 604
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 4, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 175 So. 241 (Jordan v. Landis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Landis, 175 So. 241, 128 Fla. 604 (Fla. 1937).

Opinion

Davis, J.

This was a suit in equity brought by Cary D. Landis, as Attorney General pf the State of Florida, for and on behalf of the State, and on relation pf Elizabeth Hungerford Goodwin, a widow, and the Reverend Richard Wright, against the Robert Hungerford Industrial School, a non-profit Florida corporation, and Johñ C. Jordan and Eula B. Jordan, his wife, seeking to quiet title to certain *606 lands in Orange County by cancelling of record a certain deed purporting to have been executed by Warren Logan and S. E. Ives, as surviving trustees of the Robert Hunger-ford Industrial School, unincorporated, to the Robert Hungerford Industrial School, a non-profit corporation, conveying the lands in. controversy; also by cancelling a certain mortgage covering the same lands and other properties, given by Robert Hungerford Industrial School to John C. Jordan, Eula B. Jordan and G. O. Kummer. The bill, as amended, also sought to re-establish a public charitable trust described in the bill with reference to the Robert Hungerford Industrial School and prayed such accounting and discovery as might be found necessary to re-establish and carry out the terms of the trust.

The controversy involved was decided upon the pleadings by the Court below. Upon the facts set up in the bill as amended, an answer and counterclaim, and exhibits, the Chancellor entered his final decree on the merits, cancelling the deed of record from Logan and Ives, as trustees, to the Robert Hungerford Industrial School, incorporated; cancel-ling the. .mortgage from Robert Hungerford Industrial School to the defendants, Jordan and Kummer; quieted permanently the title to the land involved, insofar as the instruments cancelled of record were concerned; permanently enjoined the defendants from further prosecuting a pending foreclosure suit in the Circuit Court of Orange County and retained jurisdiction of the cause to enable those supporting the Robert Hungerford Industrial School project as a charitable trust with their time, finances, or interest, to re-organize its affairs in a manner satisfactory to the Court, in order that the Court could, in this same proceeding, subsequently appoint a permanent trustee or trustees to operate and- manage -the affairs of said public charitable trust.

*607 Appeal was taken from the final decree and certain interlocutory orders that had been entered during the progress of the cause. That appeal is now before this Court for its consideration.

The facts of this controversy may be summarized as follows :

In order to create a public charitable trust, Edward C. Hungerford, on the 20th day of April, 1899, executed a trust deed in favor of eight individual trustees, conveying to the said trustees by said deed for the purpose of the said trust, the fee simple title to a tract of land. The purpose of the said instrument was the creation of a public charitable trust consisting of a co-educational normal school for negroes. The eight original trustees accepted the trust and entered upon the execution thereof. Pursuant to the creation of the said trust, schools were built on the property in question, and a co-educational school for negroes, in accordance with the purpose of the original trust, was conducted thereon. Buildings were built and the school conducted on the basis of contributions made and endowments furnished by various persons, including donor, for the advancement of the trust.

In 1911, certain persons, constituting a part of the trustees and a certain other person, incorporated a non-profit corporation. In 1924 two of the original eight trustees, describing themselves as the surviving trustees, undertook to convey the legal title to the trust property to a third party, namely, the non-profit corporate entity created in 1911. Thereafter, the said non-profit corporation proceeded to subject itself to an indebtedness far in excess of the legal limit of indebtedness fixed by its charter.

In 1931 the said non-profit corporation proceeded to amend its charter to authorize it to subject itself to a limit of indebtedness in excess of the amount to which it had *608 already subjected itself, and, thereupon, executed a mortgage to three of its creditors, mortgaging the entire trust property involved in this controversy to secure said indebtedness.

The mortgage just mentioned was allowed to fall into default and the three creditors instituted mortgage foreclosure proceedings. Thereupon, the Attorney General of the State of Florida, on behalf of the State of Florida, and, on relation of two of the heirs or devisees, or representatives thereof, of the original trust donor, brought this present suit to cancel the purported deed by the surviving trustees and to enjoin the further prosecution of the said mortgage foreclosure action and to cancel the said mortgage. It is admitted in this case that neither the original trustees nor the donor had any part in incurring, or in approving, the debt evidenced by the mortgage made by the-said non-profit corporation. It is also admitted that neither the Attorney General nor the individual relators are es-topped or barred by reason of laches, or acquiescence or knowledge with regard to the' purported deed by the surviving trustees or the subsequent misconduct of the trust by the non-profit corporation.

The complainant below, Elizabeth Hungerford Goodwin and the Reverend Richard Wright, are the successors of the original donor in trust, the former claiming an interest in the property in her own right as the daughter of Edward C. Hungerford while the latter claims an interest in the property as grantee of the reversionary interest of the donor, Edward C. Hungerford, insofar as that reversionary interest became vested in certain grandchildren of Edward C. Hungerford.

The forty-acre tract of land in controversy comprises the heart of the indfistrial school and the trust in favor' of said industrial school created by Edward C. Hungerford. Lo *609 cated thereon are all of the buildings of any particular value belonging to or pertaining to the school. Said property has, since the creation of the trust, always been publicly and notoriously used and actually occupied and well known as a negro industrial school and exists for no other purpose. >

So it is that the said negro school is, and always has been, considered and dealt with as a public trust and charity and not an enterprise for profit. .This is so, because it has never been self-sustaining, but has been supported by gifts, donations, beneficiaries and endowments made by charitable people interested in negro vocational education in Florida. And during the many years that have passed since the trust was created, the school has become possessed of considerable endowment funds and its assumption of a recognized and iinportant place in the function of educating negroes has gained for it a valuable measure of good will, entitling it to be considered as a part of an educational system for the vocational education of negroes as a public undertaking in this State.

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Bluebook (online)
175 So. 241, 128 Fla. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-landis-fla-1937.