Perry v. . Tupper

74 N.C. 722
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 74 N.C. 722 (Perry v. . Tupper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. . Tupper, 74 N.C. 722 (N.C. 1876).

Opinion

The complaint alleges substantially the following facts:

That the plaintiffs, Gideon Perry, Joel Evans, Abram Nichols, Hilliard Williams and Ed. Jones, are the trustees of the Second Baptist Church of the City of Raleigh, duly elected according to the usage of said church. *Page 540

The plaintiffs, Gideon Perry and Abram Nichols, together with Beverly Stanly, Merritt Williams and Frederick Dunn, were on the 31st day of March, 1866, the predecessors of the plaintiffs as said trustees.

As such trustees, at the time last aforesaid, they entered into a contract in writing, (in which the said Beverly Stanly is by mistake called Beverly Stewart) with the defendant Henry M. Tupper, for the purchase of the lot of land on which the Second Baptist Church of the city of Raleigh, is now located.

On or before the 27th day of December, 1869, the said contract (723) having been complied with upon the part of the said trustees and their successors, the defendant Henry M. Tupper, and his wife Sarah B. Tupper, executed a deed conveying said lot of land to Joel Evans, Robert Hinton, Hardy Cross, Alexander Chapman, and Ed. Jones; the said Evans, Cross and Jones being plaintiffs in this action.

Said deed was made to the persons aforesaid, as "Trustees of the Raleigh Institute and Second Baptist Church of the city of Raleigh," whereas it should have been made to them only as trustees of the Second Baptist Church.

Under said deed, the plaintiffs and their predecessors have continued to hold said property as trustees, except as hereinafter stated, and have never pretended to hold the same as trustees of the Raleigh Institute.

It is pretended by the defendant that on or about the 11th day of March, 1871, Joel Evans, Robert Hinton, Chapman Alexander and Hardy Cross, representing themselves to be the trustees of the Second Baptist Church, executed to him a paper writing, purporting to be a lease of said premises, or a part thereof, for the term of nine hundred and ninety-nine years, the said instrument being without consideration, and having no seal attached thereto.

The plaintiffs have been informed and aver that said paper writing was not executed by the said Joel Evans and Hardy Cross, and that if their names were placed thereto by their consent, it was under a misapprehension as to the nature and terms of said instrument, and from the confidence they had in the defendant.

The plaintiffs are not acquainted with any person of the name of Chapman Alexander, and aver that no person of that name has ever been a trustee of said church. Said persons did not constitute the entire Board of Trustees of said church, at the time aforesaid, and had no authority to lease said property; and if said instrument had been executed by all the trustees of said church, the same would have been void.

(724) After said contract of purchase, the Second Baptist Church erected their church edifice upon said lot, and for a considerable length of time, the defendant was pastor thereof, and continued to exercise *Page 541 the duties of his office until the 20th day of October, 1872, when, by regular proceedings and action of said church, he was dismissed from his office. Until the defendant was so dismissed, the existence of the said paper writing of the 11th of March, 1871, was entirely unknown and unsuspected by the said church. Some time in the year 1871, a proposition to lease the back room of the church to the defendant, for school purposes, was made, and rejected by a large majority of the members of said church.

About 1873, the defendant and a small faction of the church obtained possession of said church edifice without authority, and held the same without regard to the rights of said church.

On or about the 5th day of January, 1874, the plaintiffs caused to be issued a summons against the defendant as a trespasser, which was heard before W. Whitaker, J. P., who decided that the plaintiffs were entitled to possession, and thereupon they were put into possession of said edifice by the process of the court.

That an appeal was taken thence to the Supreme Court of North Carolina, and under the order and decree of said court they have been required to restore to the defendant the possession of said land and church edifice since the commencement of this action. Said writ of restitution was ordered, not upon the merits of the case, but because the plaintiffs had obtained possession thereof under the judgment of a Justice of the Peace, which was, in the opinion of said court, improperly rendered.

The complaint demanded judgment:

1. That the defendant, H. M. Tupper, be required to restore said land to the plaintiffs.

2. For a reasonable rent of said premises.

3. For costs, etc.

The defendant filed an answer, of which the following are the (725) material parts:

That it is not true that the plaintiffs are the trustees of said church, nor have any of them been such trustees since the year 1872.

It is not true that the conditions of the first mentioned deed had been complied with, nor that the entire purchase money had been paid. One of the five notes mentioned in said deed and part of another had been paid.

A church meeting was held on the 28th day of December, 1867, at which the defendant made a proposition to cancel the notes outstanding for the residue of the purchase money, and to convey the title to a Board of Trustees known as the "Trustees of the Raleigh Institute and Second Baptist Church," so as to obtain funds from the Freedman's Bureau, which could only be used for the purposes of education and *Page 542 thus aid in the construction of the building. This proposition was accepted; a new Board of Trustees elected; and the deed was made to them the next day according to said agreement.

That the deed made to the Trustees of the Raleigh Institute and Second Baptist Church of the city of Raleigh was drawn in proper form.

It is not true that the plaintiffs and their predecessors have continued to hold said property as Trustees of the Second Baptist Church, and have never pretended to hold the same as Trustees of the Raleigh Institute.

The said land and premises have been held by proper trustees, chosen from time to time, according to the rules and usage of the Baptist denomination, and acting as well for the Raleigh Institute as for said Church, and in recognition of the trusts for each.

Funds amounting to about two thousand dollars were received from the Freedman's Bureau, to be, and which were, expended in the construction of a proper building to be used for a school and the construction of proper rooms therefor. These funds could not have been (726) obtained except on the condition of being used for school purposes. When the last deed was given, a school for the education of colored people was kept up in the same story and a part of the upper story was used for sleeping apartment. Said school was continued in the lower story until the forcible expulsion of the defendants from the premises.

On the 11th day of March, 1871, the said Joel Evans, Robert Hinton, Alexander Chapman, (or Chapman Alexander, his true name as he is therein called,) and Hardy Cross, being the rightful trustees of said church, leased to the defendant and his successors as "Agt. missionaries of the Am. Bap.

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94 N.C. 472 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1886)

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Bluebook (online)
74 N.C. 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-tupper-nc-1876.