Methodist Protestant Church v. Laws

7 Ohio C.C. 211
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Ohio C.C. 211 (Methodist Protestant Church v. Laws) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Methodist Protestant Church v. Laws, 7 Ohio C.C. 211 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Swing, J.

This case is here on appeal. It is an action by plaintiff for an injunction to restrain defendant from obstructing the roadway which plaintiff claims the right to have over defendant’s land. Defendants in an answer and cross-petition ask that plaintiff’s right to said roadway may be declared abandoned, and for damages.

The material facts are substantially these : The plaintiff is a corporation under a special act of the legislature of the state of Ohio. On January 27,1833, Peter H. Kemper conveyed to plaintiff certain lands, as follows: Peter H. Kemper, in consideration of two thousand dollars, by D. Horn and others paid, hereby grants, bargains, sells and conveys unto the said Horn and others, trustees, and their successors and assigns forever, in trust for the use and benefit of the Methodist Protestant Church of Cincinnati, for a place of burial and other purposes. Then follows a description of the premises conveyed, being about nine acres-, after which follows this: Together with the use forever of a road thirty feet wide, to be opened from opposite the center of the above described tract or piece of land, through eastward, to the. Cincinnati and [213]*213Springfield turnpike.” The habendum clause of the deed is same as the granting clause. Afterwards follows covenants of general warranty. Kemper, at the time, was owner of the lands conveyed' mid the lands over which the road was granted. The plaintiff has ever since owned said land. The defendant, Florenpe N. Laws, is the owner of the land in fee upon -whieh the rdad is, and Harry L. Laws is her husband. Said land was used by said plaintiff from the time of its purchase, -the — dajy of---, as a cemetery, since which time the bodies have been removed. The plaintiff has laid off said premises i.ntb lots and streets, .and is now offering sa'id lots for sale, one of the streets, called Maxwell avenue, commencing at thé end of said road, and running to another of said streets, called Vernon Place, whieh street connects with the streets of Cincinnati on the south and of the village of Avondale on the north. At the time of the conveyance fey^ Kqmper to plaintiff, this land was quité a distance ontside of said city of Cincinnati, and the vieinity was not used for residente purposes; but at .the present time it is witbin the city limits, and s|!me off the most elegant residences of the city are in ■proximity, one óf which is that of the d'efendmits, which adjoin this tract and roadwqy. In thíé year-, the city of Cincinnati prohibited any further interments 'in said cemetery, aud by reason of this atod .the great valufe off the land undoubtedly, it1 was .discontinued as a cemetery, an.d laid off into lots and streets; and having procured a decree of court authorizing the sale of said premises, said plaintiff is now-celling and offering for sale said lots. Shortly after the purchase from Kemper, the plaintiff erected a fence around said cemetery, placing a g'ate or bar at the end of this roadway, which remained untiVrepIaeed by the defendant. In the year 1885 plaintiff brought an action against defendant, alleging that said defendant Há'rry -L. Laws was removing the fenee and gate near said roadway, cutting away said roadway, and asking that he be enjoined from interfering with the same, the following being the prayer of said petition : “ ^Therefore [214]*214plaintiff prays that said defendant Harry L. Laws may be forever enjoined from cutting away said road, apd from excavating the same, and from obstructing said road by gates or otherwise, and from cutting off the means of access of plaintiff to said property, and from interfering with the use and occupation of said road by plaintiff, and for other and proper relief.” No trial was had on the merits of said petition, but the controversy was settled by the parties by the following agreement :

Hamilton County Common Ppeas Court.
73024. The Methodist Potestant, Church of Cincinnati v. Harry L. Laws; agreement.
It is hereby understood and agreed by and between the above named parties, as follows: That said defendant will grade tlie road referred to in the petition herein, so that it will slope continuously upward from the pike, back to the east line of plaintiff’s property, and will put the same in good order and condition as a roadway, by macadamizing or graveling or otherwise; that the depth of the cut in said road shall not exceed three fee and eight inches below the present surface at the east line of plaintiff’s property. That defendant will cut the road thirty feet wide into plaintiff’s property, from its east line as far as may be necessary or required to connect by easy grade with the first named road, and will slope the sides of the cut, and will gravel or macadamize said road, and place the dirt from said cut where desired by plaintiff, and that he will reset the posts, and replace the gate at the entrance to plaintiff’s property. All of said work on plaintiff’s property to be done to .the satisfaction of plaintiff. In consideration of said agreement, and the performance thereof by defendant, said plaintiff will dismiss the above entitled action at defendant’s cost.
May 13th, 1885.
(Signed,)
S. H. Beard,
President of the Board of Trustees.
W. F. Lamman,
H. M. Harbaugii,
Harry L. Laws.

[215]*215The case was fully and ably argued by either side, both orally and by brief, and we have examined the questions presented with a good deal of interest. While we have gone over the authorities cited and others, it will not be our purpose in deciding the case to review the authorities, but rather to state what we deem the law to be gathered from them.

Plaintiff’s right is founded in a grant, and what that right is must be determined by the intention of .the parties as gathered from the terms of the grant, taken in connection with the circumstances that surrounded the parties at the time. We think it well to consider first what the plaintiff took by the grant. We see no room to doubt but Avhat plaintiff took a fee simple title to the premises conveyed by Kemper.

In the case of Watterson, Trustee v. Theresa Ury et al., in the 5th C. C. R. 355, the court makes the following statements:

“It is to be observed that no condition in terms is annexed to this grant, nor is there any clause providing for forfeiture to re-enter, nor any stipulation that the deed shall be Amid in any event, nor does the deed on its face purport to have been made solely in consideration of anything to be done, or for the-accomplishment of a specific purpose, on the fulfilment of which the grant is made to depend, and as no condition, the the violation of which would operate as a forfeiture, and result in a reversion, can be fairly implied from the terms of the deed, the claims of defendant in that behalf must fail.” Citing Ayer v. Emery, 14 Allen, 70.

These Avords, Ave think, may be appropriately used in connection with this deed, and while this deed contains words indicating the purpose for which the premises are to be used,there are no words indicating that the grant is to be void and the property is to revert if the declared purpose is not carried out.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Fisher v. McNutt
597 N.E.2d 539 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Ohio C.C. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/methodist-protestant-church-v-laws-ohiocirct-1893.