Schoolcraft Community School District No. 50 v. Burson

99 N.W.2d 353, 357 Mich. 682, 1959 Mich. LEXIS 345
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1959
DocketDocket 40, Calendar 48,014
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 N.W.2d 353 (Schoolcraft Community School District No. 50 v. Burson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoolcraft Community School District No. 50 v. Burson, 99 N.W.2d 353, 357 Mich. 682, 1959 Mich. LEXIS 345 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

Carr, J.

This is a suit in equity to quiet title to a parcel of land, 6 rods square, located in Schoolcraft township, Kalamazoo county. None of the defendants named in the suit contested plaintiff’s right to the relief sought other than appellants Lee B. Co-burn and Lucille M. Coburn. It is agreed by counsel that the material facts are set forth correctly in the bill of complaint.

Plaintiff school district is a consolidation of a number of districts, including School District No. 1 of Schoolcraft to the property interests of which plaintiff has succeeded. Under date of September 28, 1837, Joseph and Ann Burson, husband and wife, conveyed by quitclaim deed to said School District No. 1 the land in question here. Inserted in said deed was the following language:

*684 “To have and to hold the rights, privileges, possession and occupancy of the said 6 rods square, together with the appurtenances thereunto belonging for the proper use and benefit of sd. school district so long as such district desire or wish to occupy the same for the use of a school in behalf of sd. district, and no longer. And should sd. district at any future period change the site of its school it shall hereby be entitled to remove from said lot of 6 rods square all the improvements thereon put by said district.”

Following the death of Joseph Burson his widow conveyed to the school district additional land containing 27 square rods, so that the school lot was then 7x9 rods in extent. The latter conveyance contained no provision similar to that above quoted from the 1837 deed. Mrs. Burson’s ownership of the parcel conveyed by her is not in dispute. The land conveyed to the district was used for school purposes until 1951, during which year plaintiff’s board of education concluded that, under changed conditions then existing, it was no longer feasible to maintain a school on said premises. Attempts to sell the property followed.

Following the conveyance by Mr. and Mrs. Bur-son in 1837, and after Mr. Burson’s death, the widow and heirs at law, by conveyances of record, undertook to convey their rights in the premises without excepting any possible reversionary interest. Through mesne conveyances appellants Coburn acquired the record title to the land in which the school lot was contained and asserted reversionary rights in the parcel conveyed by Mr. and Mrs. Burson. Plaintiff’s claims as set forth in its bill of complaint were predicated on the theory that the subsequent conveyances referred to, apparently made in 1861, terminated the possibility of reverter which counsel concede was created by the original conveyance to the school district. Apparently the claim made by *685 appellants interfered with the desired disposition of the property. Plaintiff alleged that snch claim was made without merit, and that it constituted a cloud on the title which equity should remove.

The plaintiff also asked for authority to sell the property pursuant to statute, * claimed applicable on the ground that changing conditions had rendered it inexpedient to continue to hold the land or to use it for educational purposes. The circuit judge before whom the case was heard found it unnecessary to pass on this question, basing his decree in plaintiff’s favor on the ground that, construing the language of the 1837 deed as creating a condition subsequent, the right of re-entry and reversionary interest of the original grantors, in the event of a breach of said condition, was terminated by the subsequent conveyances by the record owners of the property.

In Halpin v. Rural Agricultural School District No. 9, Gaines Township, 224 Mich 308, the facts were analogous to those in the case at bar. There land was conveyed to the defendant school district in November, 1855, by the then owner, to be used as a site for a school house. The deed expressly provided that if the land ceased to be used for such purposes then the right and title thereto should revert to the party of the first part, his heirs and assigns. Thereafter the grantor and his wife, in 1861, conveyed their interest to another party whose devisees, in 1919, quitclaimed their interest to plaintiff Halpin. As in the case at bar, it was agreed that the conveyance by the original owner created a possibility of reverter. In considering the situation presented the Court concluded that a condition subsequent had been created, that the possibility of a reverter to *686 the grantor and his heirs was of such character that it could not be conveyed or assigned, and that under the pertinent rule of real property law the attempt on the part of the grantor to convey such possibility before breach of condition extinguished the right ta re-enter. In support of the conclusion cases from other States were cited. In accordance with the opinion a decree was entered dismissing the bill of complaint filed by plaintiff Halpin.

The holding in the Halpin Case has been followed in subsequent decisions by this Court. In County of Oakland v. Mack, 243 Mich 279, property was conveyed, under date of June 30, 1823, to the county commissioners of Oakland county for the use of said county, subject to a provision that if the property was otherwise used, it should revert to the grantor. In a suit to quiet title it was held that the subsequent conveyance by successors to the interest of the grantor operated to extinguish the right of reverter, no breach of the condition subsequent having previously taken place. The Court (p 286) cited the Halpin Case with approval, and also quoted from 1 Tiffany on the Modern Law of Real Property (1903 ed), §75, as follows:

“ ‘The right to take advantage of a condition subsequent belongs, at common law, exclusively to the grantor or lessor and his heirs, and he cannot reserve such right to others, even by express stipulation. Nor can the right to enforce a forfeiture, or, as it is usually called, the right of re-entry, be, at common law, assigned or transferred by the grantor to a third person before entry for the breach; this being in conformity with the common-law rule that “nothing in action, entry, or re-entry can be granted over.” These restrictions as to the persons able to take advantage of a breach, and the inability to assign the right, have been generally recognized in this country, and. not only will an *687 attempted assignment of the right of re-entry be void, but it will have the effect of destroying the grantor’s right to enforce the condition, which is thereafter in effect nonexistent.’ ”

In accord with the above case is Fractional School District No. 9, Waterford and Pontiac Townships, v. Beardslee, 248 Mich 112, where it was held that:

“Where land was conveyed to school district subject to reversion to grantor, his heirs, and assigns in case it ceased to be used for school purposes, a right of reverter dependent upon breach of condition subsequent was reserved, which was extinguished by grantor’s conveyance thereof before breach of condition subsequent, leaving title in school district without qualification.” (Syllabus 3.)

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Bluebook (online)
99 N.W.2d 353, 357 Mich. 682, 1959 Mich. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoolcraft-community-school-district-no-50-v-burson-mich-1959.