Petition of Van Horne

28 A. 341, 18 R.I. 389, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 26, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 A. 341 (Petition of Van Horne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of Van Horne, 28 A. 341, 18 R.I. 389, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 71 (R.I. 1893).

Opinion

Matteson, O. J.

This is a petition for an opinion. The case stated is as follows: —

The Second Baptist Church and Society in Newport has entered into a contract in writing with Mahlon Van Horne to sell and convey to him, by a good and sufficient deed to vest in him a good and clear title, free from all incumbrances, a certain parcel of land, with the dwelling house and other buildings and improvements thereon, situated in Newport and particularly described in the petition. Van Horne by the same agreement binds himself to purchase the property, provided the vendor can make a good and clear title to it. Both parties are ready to carry out the agreement, but the purchaser has doubts as to the validity of the title.

The facts on which the validity of the title depends are these: Constant Taber, formerly of Newport, deceased, died seized of the estate. His last will and testament, dated November 19, 1819, which with a codicil thereto was duly admitted to probate, contains a clause as follows:

*391 ‘c Item. After the decease of my wife, I give, devise and bequeath unto the above named Ohurch and Society the mansion house wherein I now live, together with the lot and all the buildings thereon standing, and the privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging, or in any wise appertaining, for a parsonage house, and I direct that the corporation of said Society keep the said house and premises in good tenantable repair, suitable for the Minister whom they shall appoint and set over them and his family to live in, —1the occupying of said house shall be considered to be to the said Minister free and clear from all incumbrances' whatever beside the six hundred dollars, as his salary which the said corporation or Society is to make up without any deduction whatever; but in case that the said Ohurch or Society shall suffer said premises so to go to decay as not to be fit for their Minister and family to live in for one year, then and in that case my will is that the town council of the town of Newport take possession of said house, lot and buildings thereon, and dispose of the same in such a way and manner as they may think proper for the support and comfort of the poor of said town of Newport.”

The Second Baptist Church and Society derives its title under this devise. The wife of the testator died before him, and on his decease the Second Baptist Church and Society entered into possession of the property and has since kept the dwelling house and premises in good tenantable repair; of late years, however, the minister of the church has not resided there on account of the remoteness of its situation and the change which has taken place in its surroundings; but the church and society have let the property from time to time and applied the rents for the benefit of the minister, in accordance with the trust.

The church and society, wishing to buy a lot and to erect a new parsonage nearer to its church and more eligibly located, applied to the General Assembly, by petition, for leave to sell the land devised to it as stated, and the city council of Newport, (the town of Newport having been incorporated as the city of Newport), by a resolution passed March 2G, 1881, *392 concurred in the prayer of this petition, with the proviso, ‘ ‘ that the proceeds of sale be invested in another estate for a parsonage, to be held for the' same purpose,' and on the same trusts, and the same conditions as those which relate to, affect and limit the estate sold.”

The General Assembly, at its January Session, 1892, passed an act as follows:—

“An Act Authorizing the Second Baptist Church and Society in Newport to sell certain Real Estate in Newport.
“It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
“Section 1. The Second Baptist Church and Society in Newport is, with the concurrence of the Board of Aldermen óf the city of Newport, fully authorized and empowered to make sale of and to convey by good and sufficient deed the estate given and devised to the said Society by Constant Taber in his last will and testament, situate on the south side of John Street in said city of Newport, for a parsonage, and with the like concurrence of the said Board of Aldermen, to invest.the proceeds of the said sale in a house lot more eligibly situated for a parsonage for the said church and society, to be held by said church and society for the same purpose and upon the same trusts and conditions which they held the estate hereby authorized to be sold.
“Sec. 2. This act shall take effect upon its passage.”

The question submitted is, whether the Second Baptist Church and Society can, with the concurrence of the Board of Aldermen, convey a good title to the property to a purchaser, free and clear from all trusts. It maintains that it can; while Van Horne insists that a purchaser would take the property charged with the equity of seeing that the purchase money is invested in a house lot more eligibly situated for a parsonage for the said church and society; and also that the title to such lot is taken for the same purpose and held on the same trusts and conditions as the estate sold is held under the will' of Constant Taber; and further, that inasmuch as the limitation in the will by which the town council of New *393 port is authorized to take possession of and dispose of the property was, in case that the said church or society and corporation shall suffer the premises so to go to decay as not to be fit for their minister and his family to live in for the space of one year, that the General Assembly cannot change the trusts in the will so as to apply the same to a house lot; and further, that as the principal purpose and trust disclosed in the will was to keep the mansion house in tenantable repair suitable for the minister and his family to live in,- the General Assembly could not authorize a sale and alter the provisions of the trust to apply it to a house lot, even if there was a building purchased with the lot suitable for a parsonage for .the minister of the church and society.’

The first question thus made is whether or not a purchaser would take the title subject to the equities suggested. We think the question must be answered in the negative. The act provides that the sale and conveyance and the reinvestment of the proceeds shall be with the concurrence of the Board of Aldermen, the successor of the town council. The Second Baptist Church and Society and the Board of Aider-men, as trustees, represent all persons interested in the trusts. The General Assembly very properly left the protection of the interest of their respective cestuis to the trustees. The effect of the act, assuming it to have been a valid exercise of legislative power, in case of a sale in accordance with its terms, then, is to divest the land sold of. all trusts, and, consequently, to absolve the purchaser from all obligation with reference to the reinvestment of the proceeds, — such reinvestment being left entirely to the Second Baptist Church, with the concurrence of the Board of Aldermen. This brings us to the question, — Was the act a valid exercise of legislative power ? We think it was. ■

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 A. 341, 18 R.I. 389, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-van-horne-ri-1893.