Proprietors of the Church in Brattle Square v. Grant

69 Mass. 142
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 69 Mass. 142 (Proprietors of the Church in Brattle Square v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Proprietors of the Church in Brattle Square v. Grant, 69 Mass. 142 (Mass. 1855).

Opinion

Bigelow, J.

The interesting and important questions in» valved in the present case are now for the first time brought to our consideration. In a suit in equity between the same parties, which was pending several years ago in this court, we were not called upon to give any construction to the clause in the will of Lydia Hancock, under which the deacons of the church in Brattle Square and their successors hold the estate now in controversy. The object of that suit was widely different from that of the present. The plaintiffs then assumed, by implication, that they were bound by the “ condition and limitation ” annexed to the devise, and the validity of the gift over on breach of the condition was not called in question by them. The single purpose then sought to be accomplished was to obtain authority to sell the estate, solely on the ground that, from various causes, the occupation and use of the premises for a private dwelling, and especially for a parsonage, in the manner prescribed in the will, had become onerous and impracticable; and the prayer of the bill was that, if a sale was authorized, the proceeds might be invested in other real estate, to be held on the same trusts and upon the like condition and limitation as are set out and prescribed in the will of the testatrix, relative to the estate therein devised to the deacons and their successors. It is quite obvious that, on a bill thus framed, no question could arise concerning the respective titles of the parties to the suit, under the devise. They were not put in issue by the pleadings, and no decision was in fact made in regard to them. That suit was determined solely upon the ground that the case made by the plaintiffs was not such as to warrant the court in making a decree for a sale of the premises upon the reasons and for the causes alleged in that bill, and above stated.

The case is now brought before us upon allegations and denials which directly involve the construction of the devise, and render it necessary to determine the respective rights of the devisees and heirs at law to the estate in controversy. In order to [146]*146decide the questions thus raised, it is material to ascertain, in the outset, the legal nature and quality of the estate which is created by the terms of the devise to Timothy Newell and others, deacons of the church in Brattle Street. If the gift had been solely to the deacons of the church in Brattle Street and their successors forever, without any condition annexed thereto concerning its use and occupation, it would, without doubt, have vested in them the absolute legal estate in fee. By the provincial statute of 28 G. 2, which was in force at the time of the death of the testatrix, the deacons of all Protestant churches were made bodies corporate, with power to take in succession all grants and donations, both of real and personal estate. Anc. Chart. 605. The words of the devise were apt and sufficient to create a fee in the deacons and their successors, and they were legally competent to take and hold such an estate. It therefore becomes necessary to consider the nature and effect of the condition annexed to the gift; how far it qualifies the fee devised to the deacons and their successors ; and what was the interest or estate devised over to John Hancock and his heirs forever, upon a failure to comply with and perform the condition. It will aid in the solution of these questions, if we are able in the first place to determine, with clearness and accuracy, within what class or division of conditional and contingent estates the devise in question falls.

Strictly speaking, and using words in their precise legal import, the devise in question does not create simply an estate on condition. By the common law, a condition annexed to real estate could be reserved only to the grantor or devisor, and his heirs. Upon a breach of the condition, the estate of the grantee or devisee was not ipso facto terminated, but the law permitted it to continue beyond the time when the contingency upon which it was given or granted happened, and until an entry or claim was made by the grantor or his heirs, or the heirs of the devisor, who alone had the right to take advantage of a breach. 2 Bl. Com. 156. 4 Kent Com. (6th ed.) 122, 127.' Hence arose the distinction between a condition and a conditional limitation. A condition, followed by a limitation over to a third person in cas [147]*147the condition be not fulfilled, or there be a breach of it, is termed a conditional limitation. A condition determines an estate after breach, upon entry or claim by the grantor or bis heirs, or the heirs of the devisor. A limitation marks the period which determines the estate, without any act on the part of him who has the next expectant interest. Upon the happening of the prescribed contingency, the estate first limited comes at once to an end, and the subsequent estate arises. If it were otherwise, it would be in the power of the heir to defeat the limitation over, by neglecting or refusing to enter for breach of the condition. This distinction was originally introduced in the case of wills, to get rid of the embarrassment arising from the rule of the ancient common law, that an estate could not be limited to a stranger, upon an event which went to abridge or destroy an estate previously limited. A conditional limitation is therefore of a mixed nature, partaking both of a condition and of a limitation; of a condition, because it defeats the estate previously limited; and of a limitation, because, upon the happening of the contingency, the estate passes to the person having the next expectant interest, without entry or claim.

There is a further distinction in the nature of estates on condition, and those created by conditional limitation, which it may be material to notice. Where an estate in fee is created on condition, the entire interest does not pass out of the grantor by the same instrument or conveyance. All that remains, after the gift or grant takes effect, continues in the grantor, and goes to his heirs. This is the right of entry, as we have already seen, which, from the nature of the grant, is reserved to the grantor and his heirs only, and which gives them the right to enter as of their old estate, upon the breach of the condition. This possibility of reverter, as it is termed, arises in the grantor or devisor immediately on the creation of the conditional estate. It is otherwise where the estate in fee is limited over to a third person in case of a breach of the condition. Then the entire estate, by the same instrument, passes out of the grantor or devisor. The first estate vests immediately, but the expectant interest does not take effect until the happening of the [148]*148contingency upon which it was limited to arise. But both owe their existence to the same grant or gift; they are created uno flatu; and being an ultimate disposition of the entire fee, as well after as before the breach of the condition, there is nothing left in the grantor or devisor or his heirs. The right or possibility of reverter, which, on the creation of an estate in fee on condition merely, would remain in him, is given over by the limitation which is to take effect on the breach of the condition.

One material difference therefore, between an estate in fee on condition and on a conditional limitation, is briefly this; that the former leaves in the grantor a vested right, which, by it's very nature, is reserved to him, as a present existing interest, transmissible to his heirs; while the latter passes the whole interest of the grantor at once, and creates an estate to arise and vest in a third person, upon a contingency, at a future and uncertain period of time.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

E-470 Public Highway Authority v. Argus Real Estate Partners, Inc.
70 P.3d 481 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2002)
Tolland Enter. v. Comm'r of Transp., No. Cv 92 0508172 (Apr. 28, 1993)
1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 4166 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1993)
Williams v. Watt
668 P.2d 620 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1983)
Storke v. Penn Mutual Life Insurance
61 N.E.2d 552 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1945)
Betts v. Snyder
19 A.2d 82 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1941)
Beverlin v. First National Bank
98 P.2d 200 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1940)
City National Bank v. City of Bridgeport
147 A. 181 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1929)
Alexander v. Morris Company
270 S.W. 88 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1925)
Loud v. St. Louis Union Trust Co.
249 S.W. 629 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society v. Craig
87 A. 678 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
Hanby v. Bailey
51 Pa. Super. 244 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 Mass. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/proprietors-of-the-church-in-brattle-square-v-grant-mass-1855.