Oakland Cemetery Co. v. Peoples Cemetery Ass'n

55 L.R.A. 503, 57 S.W. 27, 93 Tex. 569, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 185
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1900
DocketNo. 902.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 55 L.R.A. 503 (Oakland Cemetery Co. v. Peoples Cemetery Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oakland Cemetery Co. v. Peoples Cemetery Ass'n, 55 L.R.A. 503, 57 S.W. 27, 93 Tex. 569, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 185 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District has certified to this court the following statement and question:

“The Oakland Cemetery Company was duly chartered by the State of Texas on June 6, 1891. Said charter provides that said corporation was formed for the maintenance of a public cemetery and shall exist for fifty years unless sooner dissolved. After the organization of such corporation, under its charter, it purchased the land in controversy, which said land on the 8th day of December, 1892, was dedicated by said Oakland Cemetery Company to the public by a written deed of dedication *572 executed by virtue of and pursuant to resolutions of the board of directors of said company duly passed. Said deed of dedication is as follows:

\ “ 'Know all men by these presents, that whereas, the Oakland Cemetery Company, of Dallas, Texas, a private corporation created under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Texas, and having its principal ,office of business in the city of Dallas, in said State, has, by purchase, secured for a cemetery the tract of land hereinafter described, and ¡whereas, it is desirous of permanently devoting said cemetery to burial purposes and of placing the care and keep of the grounds, graves, etc., on a firm and lasting basis in order that those who shall purchase lots therein may do so with full assurance that the graves will never, throughout the future, be disturbed, and will for all time to come be taken care of, regardless of the time, place or circumstances of such purchasers.

" 'Now, therefore, the said Oakland Cemetery Company, of Dallas, Texas, does hereby dedicate as a cemetery for burial purposes forever the said lands described as follows, to wit: [Field notes which embrace the land in controversy omitted].

" 'Provided, however, and it is hereby expressly understood, that the use and benefit of said grounds shall be limited exclusively to the purchasers respectively of lots therein, and that 25 per cent of the sum received in the sale of each lot, in all time to come, shall be and is hereby set apart and made a perpetual fund to be loaned upon the best securities, by three trustees, one to be selected by the company and two by the lot owners, and the interest received therefrom devoted to the care and keep of the grounds, graves, etc., in said cemetery, under the rules and regulations of said company.

" 'In testimony whereof, the said company has this day caused its president to subscribe its name and its secretary to attest the same with its seal, this 8th day of December, 1892.

" 'O. B. G-illespie, Secretary. " 'J. P. Murphy, President/

''Said deed was duly acknowledged and recorded on December 8, 1892.

•"Said land was duly laid off into lots and platted and recorded in the record book of the office of the clerk of the County Court of Dallas County. There was no certificate of acknowledgment to the map, and it was recorded by pasting a lithograph copy of the map on page one of the record book No. 176. Said book was a large record book for deeds, and was made expressly to record conveyances of lots in said cemetery. The blanks in the deeds are printed and bound in the book, and deeds are recorded therein by simply filling up the blanks. Each deed described lot conveyed by its number and designated on the map, and refers to the map as the map of the Oakland Cemetery recorded on page one of said record book. Said cemetery company issued pamphlets descriptive of said cemetery and contains the deed of dedication, the resolution by which it was executed, and a general description of the cerne *573 tery and the rules for its government. About $30,000 was expended by said company in laying out and embellishing the grounds. And that prior to the sales under executions hereinafter mentioned, a great many lots had been sold in the cemetery for the purpose of sepulture, and a great many bodies buried there and a large number of monmnents and tombstones erected. The cemetery was a public cemetery and burying ground. It is located contiguous to the city of Dallas, and a fine gravel street opens to it. As an inducement to purchase lots therein, a great number of the pamphlets above referred to were distributed and a great number of the purchasers of lots were given copies of the pamphlet. The cemetery was used as a burying ground and was open to' the public at the time of the sales under executions hereinafter mentioned.

“The object of said company was to make a profit by the sale of lots for sepulture in said cemetery. Several executions were issued by virtue of certain money judgments recovered against the said Oakland Cemetery Company and levied on thirty acres of said land, a part of said cemetery tract. And on May 1, 1894, said thirty acres was sold under said executions. The same was bid in by E. 0. Tenison and Guy Sumpter, who, on December 10, 1894, conveyed the same to the defendant, the Peoples Cemetery Association, which association was formed, as stated in its charter, for the purpose of owning, conducting, and maintaining a cemeter-y adjacent to the city of Dallas and selling lots therein for burial purposes.

“Said association ousted the Oakland Cemetery Company from the possession of said land, and said association was in possession at the •institution and trial of this suit.

“Question: Did the sale of the land in controversy under the executions convey title to the purchasers at the sale? In other words, was the land, at the time of the levy of said executions and sale thereunder, subject to levy and sale under execution ?”

The sale of the cemetery property under executions issued upon judgments rendered against the Oakland Cemetery corporation conveyed no title to Tenison and Sumpter.

The validity of this sale depends upon the proper construction of our statute concerning the creation of and prescribing the powers and duties of cemetery corporations. Article 642, subdivision 5, Revised Statutes, authorizes the creation of a corporation “for the maintenance of a public or private cemetery or crematory.” The rights, powers, and duties of such a corporation, when created, are prescribed by the following articles of the Revised Statutes:

“Article 715. Cemetery corporations shall have power to divide the land of the cemetery into lots and subdivisions for the purposes of the cemetery, and to. tax the property for the purpose of its general improvement.'

“Article 716. Such corporation -shall have power to convey, by deed or otherwise, any lot or lots of the cemetery for purposes of sepulture. When such lots shall have been surveyed and planted, the survey and *574 plat shall be recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court of the county wherein the same are situated, and shall not afterward be changed or altered. Ho lots shall be sold or disposed of until such plat shall have been recorded.

“Article 717. All owners of lots purchased of any such corporation shall become members thereof, and be entitled to vote in the election of its officers and upon any other matters to the same extent as stockholders in other corporations.”

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Bluebook (online)
55 L.R.A. 503, 57 S.W. 27, 93 Tex. 569, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakland-cemetery-co-v-peoples-cemetery-assn-tex-1900.