Louisville School Board v. King

107 S.W. 247, 127 Ky. 824, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 22, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 107 S.W. 247 (Louisville School Board v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville School Board v. King, 107 S.W. 247, 127 Ky. 824, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 25 (Ky. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

[828]*828Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

By a writing of date April 11, 1907, Walter S. King for a valuable consideration sold and agreed to convey to tbe appellant Gusta McMichael a parcel of ground in tbe city of Louisville. Tbe lot had previously been conveyed to. tbe Louisville Banking Company by a deed from tbe Parkland Improvement Company, dated July 10, 1897. On August 31, 1905, tbe Louisville Banking Company by deed conveyed tbe same lot to Grant and Wilson. Later Walter Wilson by deed conveyed bis undivided one-half interest therein to Grant, who by deed, of April 20, 1906, conveyed, the entire lot to tbe appellee, King. Pursuant tó tbe written contract of April 11, 1907, appellee offered to convey appellant Gusta McMichael the lot in question, and tendered her a deed therefor; but she refused to accept tbe deed or otherwise comply with tbe contract of sale. Thereupon appellee brought, suit against her in tbe court below for a specific performance of tbe contract. She resisted its performance on tbe ground that appellee did not have title to tbe property and that- tbe deed tendered would not have conveyed her tbe title, because it bad, prior to the conveyance of tbe property to appellee, been vested by escheat in tbe Louisville School Board. The answer, after setting forth tbe several deeds under which appellee claimed title, averred that the property, while owned by tbe Louisville Banking Company, a corporation engaged in tbe business of banking, “was not proper or necessary for carrying oñ tbe legitimate business of the said Louisville Banking Company, and, they having held same for more than five years, it became thereby ipso facto escheated under tbe law, and tbe title vested in tbe [829]*829Louisville School Board. After the filing of this answer the appellee, by an amended petition, made the Louisville School Board a party defendant- to the action. The Louisville School Board and the Commonwealth of Kentucky, for the use of the school board, then filed an answer, cross-petition, and counterclaim, relying upon the same facts set up in the answer of Mrs. McMichael, and alleging that by reason thereof the title to the property in controversy had by escheat become vested in the Louisville School Board. Appellee by reply denied that the school board had acquired title to the property by escheat or otherwise, and averred that each of the conveyances referred to in the answers was made in good faith and for a valuable consideration. Appellants McMichael, Louisville School Board, and Commonwealth, for the use of the school board, filed demurrers to the reply, which were overruled. Appellants refused to plead further. Thereupon the circuit court entered judgment in accordance with the prayer of the petition, and of this judgment appellants complain.

It is apparent from the record that the property in controversy was held by the Louisville Banking Company more than five years, and admitted by appellants that at the expiration of the five years no claim was asserted to it, on the ground of escheat, by the Louisville School Board or the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Indeed, it is conceded that no such claim was made until the beginning of this action, instituted nearly two years after the Louisville Banking Company had bona fide and for a valuable consideration sold and conveyed the property to an admittedly innocent purchaser. It cannot be doubted that the holding by a corporation of property not [830]*830necessary to its business for more than five years is by the Constitution made a ground of escheat. But the question as to when and under what circumstances the escheat shall take place, instead of being declared by the Constitution, was left by that instrument to legislative discretion. Const, section 192, provides: “No corporation shall engage in business other than expressly authorized by its charter, or the law under which it may have been or hereafter may be organized. Nor shall it hold any real estate, except such as may be proper and necessary for carrying on its legitimate business, for a longer period than five years, under penalty of escheat.” The power impliedly conferred by this section of the Constitution upon the Legislature of - determining when and in what manner the real estate of a corporation not proper or necessary for carrying on its legitimate business shall escheat to the Commonwealth seems to have been exercised by that body in the enactment of section 2971, Ky. St. 1903, which declares: “So much real, personal ór mixed property in the city which from alienage, defect of heirs, failure of kindred, or other causes, shall escheat to the Commonwealth of Kentucky, shall vest- in the board for the use and benefit of the schools. Said board may, in the name of the Commonwealth, for the use and benefit of the public schools of the city, by its president or other officer to be designated by it, enter upon and take possession of said property, or sue for and recover the same by an action at law or in equity, and without office found.. The board may sell and convey any such property by warranty deed or otherwise.”

To properly construe and arrive at the meaning of - the provisions of the Constitution and statute above quoted, it will be necessary to ascertain what [831]*831evil they were intended to remedy; for all organic and statutory laws should be so interpreted as to subserve the purpose for which they were enacted. We will not impute to the makers of the Constitution or to the Legislature the degrading motive of intending by the provisions in question to enrich the State at the expense of its citizens; nor will we assume that it was merely their purpose to punish offending corporations. The true purpose of these constitutional and statutory provisions was correctly announced by this court in the case of Louisville School Board v. C., St. L. & N. O. Ry. Co., 99 S. W. 596, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 673, in the opinion of which it is said: “In the exercise of the police power of the State, it is declared by the section (2971) to be inimical to the public good that corporations, which may live always and grow ever so powerful, should be at liberty to hold any quantity of land, or engage promiscuously in business in this State. It was deemed safe and wise that they should be restricted in the first place to that business for which they were created, and in the next place that they should not be allowed to hold more land than was proper and needful in their legitimate business. Perpetual estates in land are deemed in this State to be impolitic and are strictly prohibited. If however, corporations might hold any quantity of land for any length of time, this important principle which regulates the holding of title to real estate in this State would be set at naught. Inattention to this restriction as to corporations would open the widest door to a danger which has already begun to create real apprehension in some minds, and which is undoubtedly an actual danger, whether or not there may now exist grounds for its apprehension/

[832]*832Accepting the above conclusion as declaratory of the meaning of the constitutional and statutory provisions under consideration, the further conclusion is inevitable that it is the duty of the State to compel the corporation, after five years’ holding thereof, to relinquish title to lands not necessary to its legitimate business, and thereby prevent the retention by it of a “perpetual estate,” in such lands.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.W. 247, 127 Ky. 824, 1908 Ky. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-school-board-v-king-kyctapp-1908.