Long v. Dunlap

68 S.E. 801, 87 S.C. 8, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 27, 1910
Docket7662
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 801 (Long v. Dunlap) 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
Long v. Dunlap, 68 S.E. 801, 87 S.C. 8, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 88 (S.C. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

The trustees of Winthrop Normal and Industrial College, desiring to build and equip a model practice school building in connection with the college, applied to the legislature for an appropriation of $20,000, stating that such a building, properly equipped, would cost $45,000, but that they could raise $25,000' of the amount needed. By an act, approved February 13, ■1907, (25 Stait., 831), the sum asked for was appropriated, on condition that the trustees raise $25,000' additional for that purpose. The additional sum was raised and deposited in bank, whereupon, by the terms of the act, the appropriation became available.

Under the terms of the act, the said sum of $45,000 was to be expended in erecting and equipping the building. Therefore, no part of it could be used for purchasing a site. It appears, however, that a friend of the college offered to give $25,000 for this school on condition that the trustees raise $30,000 more — making in all $100,000. It does not appear that any other condition was attached to this offer, such as that the money should be used only in erecting and equipping the building, as was the condition of the appropriation. The trustees of the college reported this offer to the legislature, in 1908, and stated that they expected to raise the additional sum of $30',000'. It appeared, however, that at the time of the trial before the referee, they had not succeeded in doing so.

As there was no suitable place on the college property for the location of the practice school, negotiations were commenced with the Rock Hill school district for the purchase of a' lot of eight acres, lying near the college, which had been conveyed to the school district by the Catawba Military Academy. The negotiations resulted in an agreement between the trustees’ of the college and the trustees of the school district for the sale of the property to the college *11 for $20,000, cash. The trustees of the school district— seven in number — were sharply divided as to the wisdom and expediency of selling the property, — four being in favor of it, and three opposed to it.

To prevent the consummation of this agreement, this action was brought by the minority of the trustees of the school district, as such and in their own right as citizens and tax payers, with whom Alex. Long, as chairman of the board of trustees of the Catawba Military Academy, and as a citizen and tax payer, was joined as a plaintiff; against the majority of the trustees of the school district, the trustees of the college, as a corporation, the school district, as a corporation, the Catawba Military Academy, as a corporation, and Ira B. Dunlap, as secretary of the board of trustees of the Catawba Military Academy, to reform the deed of the Catawba Military Academy to the trustees of the school district, and to enjoin the sale of the property to the college.

Reformation of the deed was prayed for on the allegation that it should have contained a covenant, running with the land that it should never be sold, but should be held by the . grantees, in perpetual succession for the purpose of conducting a high school thereon.

The cause of action for reformation was abandoned on circuit, and the facts are mentioned merely to explain the presence of some of the parties to the action.

Injunction against the sale by the school district was prayed for on the allegations that the price agreed upon was grossly inadequate, and that the sale of the property, under the circumstances alleged, was an abuse of discretion so gross as to amount to a breach of trust; and against the college, injunction was prayed for on the allegation that there was no necessity for the acquisition of the property by it, and that it was without power and authority under the statutes to make the contract. The alleged want of power was predicated upon the grounds that the college was *12 prohibited by the statutes from making the contract, and that, having no funds with which to pay for the property at the time of making the contract, it was void for want of consideration and mutuality.

As stated above, the cause of action for reformation was abandoned, and the grounds upon which injunction against the school district was sought were also abandoned on circuit. The point presented for the decision of the Court is thus stated by appellants’ attorneys in their argument: “The complaint contained several allegations and matters which were not insisted upon before the trial Judge, and the relief was sought before him only upon one ground, to wit: That the Winthrop trustees were without funds with which to purchase the property when they made the offer of $20,000 therefor; and that, in consequence, the contract, or agreement, between them and the district trustees was void and not enforceable for want of mutuality.”

After the case had been argued on circuit, but during the term and before the decision was filed, an order was submitted to the Court by the attorneys for the college, upon which the consent of the attorneys for the school district was endorsed, allowing the college to amend its answer by alleging its readiness to pay the purchase price of the property, and praying that, upon its' doing so, the trustees of the school district be required to execute and deliver to the trustees of the college a proper conveyance thereof. Notice of the presentation of this order was given attorneys for plaintiffs, and it was granted over their objection, on the ground that it was consented to by the parties directly interested, and none of the other parties to the action could be prejudiced thereby. In the prayer of the original answer, the college had asked that the trustees of the school district be required to specifically perform their agreement; and in the prayer of the original answers of the majority of the trustees of the school district and of the school district, as *13 a corporation, the Court was asked to compel specific performance of the agreement by the college.

The Circuit Court found that there was no evidence that the college was not able to pay for the property, without using the funds appropriated specifically for the erection and equipment of the school building, and that there was no evidence of any intention on the part of the trustees of the college to misapply any of the funds of the college, and dismissed the complaint for injunction; and decreed that, upon payment by the college of the purchase price of the property, the school district execute and deliver to the trustees of the college a proper conveyance thereof. The Court further decreed that the trustees of the college should not use any of the money appropriated 'by the legislature, or any of the amount raised as a condition of obtaining that appropriation in paying for the property.

The grounds of appeal present the following questions: 1. Was the college prohibited by statute from making the contract? 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 801, 87 S.C. 8, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-dunlap-sc-1910.