Santa Clara Female Academy v. Sullivan

6 N.E. 183, 116 Ill. 375
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 6 N.E. 183 (Santa Clara Female Academy v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Santa Clara Female Academy v. Sullivan, 6 N.E. 183, 116 Ill. 375 (Ill. 1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Sheldon

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The bill in this case seeks partition among the legal owners, the complainants alleging that they and one Frank Braley are such owners, of what remains of the real estate of Judd Braley, at the time of his death a citizen of Chicago, who died testate in March, 1863, leaving him surviving, his widow, Johanna Braley, and three children, Ellen 0., Mary A., and Frank, his only next of kin and heirs at law. By his will he devised to his widow a life interest in the real estate, with remainder over to his children, in equal parts, at the death of the widow. His widow died on the 29th of April, 1883, and prior to the commencement of this suit. His daughter, Ellen C. Braley, intermarried with one Michael J. Sullivan, and died February 15, 1875, intestate, leaving her surviving two children, the complainants, Francis Joseph and Mary Elegius Sullivan, her heirs at law. The daughter, Mary A. Braley, died in Grant county, Wisconsin, on the 19th of September, 1874, single and without issue, leaving a will whereby she devised all her interest in this estate to the “Saint Clara Female Academy, ” a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Wisconsin, solely for educational purposes. The bill treats this will of Mary A. Braley as insufficient to pass the title to the real estate sought to be partitioned, alleging that as to such real estate she died intestate. The decree found that by virtue of the laws of Illinois the Saint Clara Female Academy could not take any interest in real estate in this State under the will of Mary A. Braley, and that the complainants and Frank Braley were the sole owners of the real estate, and made partition of it between them. The Saint Clara Female Academy appeals from the decree.

The charter of the Saint Clara Female Academy gives to the corporation the power to acquire and hold real estate not to exceed the value of' $500,000. The decree finds that at no time since the making of the will of Mary A. Braley has the Saint Clara Female Academy owned or possessed property, real and personal, to exceed the sum of $50,000, and that the interest of Mary A. Braley in the premises sought to be partitioned, at the time of her death or since, did not exceed in value $35,000.

The principal question presented for determination is, whether a corporation created by the laws of Wisconsin for educational purposes, with power to acquire and hold real estate to the extent of $500,000 in value, is capable of taking, by devise, lands in Illinois. It is the well settled doctrine that a corporation created in one State may, upon the principle of comity, exercise within another State the general powers conferred by its own charter and permitted by the law of its own State, provided the doing so be not inconsistent with the laws or public policy of such other State. We need to do no more than make reference to some of the numerous authorities in support of this rule: Lumbard v. Aldrich, 8 N. H. 31; State v. B. C. and M. R. R. Co. 25 Vt. 433; White v. Howard, 38 Conn. 342; Thompson v. Waters, 25 Mich. 214; Thompson v. Swoope, 44 Pa. St. 474; Lathrop v. Commercial Bank of Sciota, 8 Dana, 114; Hollis v. Drew Theological Semi nary, 95 N. Y. 166; Cowell v. Sprinys Co. 100 U. S. 55; Christian Union v. Yount, 101 id. 224; Stevens v. Pratt, 101 Ill. 224.

The public- policy of the State is made manifest by its legislation. In order, then, to the solution of the question in hand, we have but to look to the laws of this State, and see whether they be adverse to a corporation for the purposes of education, taking and holding land in this State by devise, and if they are found not to be so, then the title of the appellant, under the will, must be sustained.

By section 4 of “An act to incorporate academies and seminaries of learning, ” in force March 6, 1843, (Laws 1842-3, p. 6,) the corporate bodies formed under the act are given power to take or receive any estate, real or personal, by the gift, grant and will of any persons whatsoever, and to sell, convey, demise, place at interest, or otherwise dispose of the same, for the benefit of the academy or seminary whose interests they represent. This act of 1843 was reenacted in the revision of 1845. (Div. 2, chap. 25, on Corporations, Rev. Stat. 1845, p. 117.) By section 4 of “An act for the incorporation of institutions of learning, ” approved January 26, 1849, (Laws 1849, p. 84,) the corporations formed thereunder are given the like power as by the said section 4 of the act of 1843. By an act entitled “An act to amend chapter 25 of the Revised Statutes, entitled ‘Corporations,’ ” approved February 13, 1851, (Laws 1851, p. 85,) five sections of the act of 1843 reenacted in said chapter, containing certain conditions in order to become incorporated, one being that as to one hundred and sixty acres of land, are repealed, and the provision in said section 4 of the act of 1843, as to taking and holding real estate, is made to apply to all the corporations formed under such amendatory act. These statutory provisions continued in force down to July 1, 1874, when the following, being section 1, chapter 144, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, page 1090, went in force, the act being entitled “An act to revise the law in relation to universities, colleges, academies and other institutions of learning:”

“Sec. 1. That any corporation which has been or may be incorporated under any general law of this State for the purpose of establishing or conducting a university, college, academy or other institution of learning, in addition to the powers granted by such law, shall have power to take, by purchase, gift, grant, devise or bequest, and to hold for the use of such corporation, any real or personal property whatever, and to sell, convey, mortgage or otherwise use the same, as may be considered most conducive to the interests of such institution. But such corporation shall have no power to divert any gift, grant, devise or bequest from the specific purpose designated by the donor. ”

This was the law of Illinois on September 19, 1874, when Mary A. Braley’s will took effect by her death. These laws which have been referred to are not special and private, but general public laws of the State. In addition, appellant’s counsel append to their brief a schedule, containing a list of some eighty corporations, for educational and similar purposes, created by private or special laws of this State, with the statement, of which there is no contradiction, that a reading of these special charters will show that in the large majority of cases the capacity was given to the corporations to take and hold lands, unlimited as to quantity or value.

It is thus seen that the general laws of Illinois, before and at the time this will took effect, were not only not prohibitory of corporations for educational purposes holding land in this State, but that they expressly empowered such corporations to take and hold real estate by grant and devise, and without limit in quantity and value. There is in the law of this State no discrimination against foreign corporations, but they are given a hospitable reception, and placed upon an equal footing with our own domestic corporations. Section 26 of chapter 32, on Corporations, (Rev. Stat. 1874, p.

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6 N.E. 183, 116 Ill. 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santa-clara-female-academy-v-sullivan-ill-1886.