St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chicago Railroad v. Mathers

71 Ill. 592
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 71 Ill. 592 (St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chicago Railroad v. Mathers) 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
St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chicago Railroad v. Mathers, 71 Ill. 592 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The deed for the property, which is the subject of this litigation, professes, upon its face, to have been executed in consideration of the benefits to be derived by the grantors from the construction of the Tónica and Petersburg railroad, and of $1. It purports to invest the trustees therein named, and their successors, with the fee simple title to the property, which is to be sold and conveyed by them “at either public or private sale, in such parcels, at such times and upon such terms as to them shall seem meet.” It will be observed that there is nothing in the language of the deed, nor in anywise connected with the title of record, whereby a bona fide purchaser from the trustees would have been charged with constructive notice of the condition subsequent upon which it is now claimed the deed was executed, and that the relief sought is based upon evidence of facts entirely independent of the deed.

Under these circumstances, the burden was upon appellee to show such facts as render it inequitable for the title to remain where it was vested by the operation of the deed, and, until this was done, the appellant was justified in relying alone upon the deed.

The contract with the board of directors of the Tónica and Petersburg Railroad Company, which is alleged to have been the real and only consideration for the execution of the deed, is in the nature of a condition subsequent. At the time the preamble and resolution of the board of directors, which constitute the alleged contract, were adopted, as well as at the time the deed was executed, the road was not completed, nor were all of its depots and stations established. The condition that no depot or station shall be established within three miles of either of said towns, on the line of said road, is unlimited in point of time, and, if valid, might be enforced as readily after the expiration of fifty years as one year. There is no evidence of fraud or mistake, the proof showing that the deed was drawn by appellee, and that the condition stated in the preamble and resolution of .the board of directors was purposely omitted from the deed by the request of the secretary of the company ; and the only ground upon which the relief prayed is asked, is, the failure of the railroad company to observe the condition in the preamble and resolution.

In the view that we take of this case, we do not deem it necessary to discuss whether the evidence introduced for the purpose of showing a different consideration from that expressed in the deed should have been excluded for the reason that it tended to affect the validity of the deed, as we think tiie evidence was clearly inadmissible upon another ground.

The validity of a condition subsequent depends upon its being such as the law will allow to divest an estate, for if the law deems the condition void as against its own policy, then the estate will be absolute and free from the condition. 1 Story’s Equity, § 288; 4 Kent’s Coms. (8th ed.) 134; 1 Washburn on Real Estate (2d ed.) 469.

Nor is the rule different if we shall regard this as a proceeding to require a re-conveyance of the property, on account of a want or failure of consideration. A court of equity will not lend its aid to enforce the performance of a contract which appears to have been entered into by both the contracting parties for the express purpose of doing that which is illegal ; and where such a contract has been executed by one of the parties by conveying real estate, a court of equity will not, in general, interfere, but will leave the title to the property where the parties have placed it. Swain v. Bussell, 10 Ind. 438; Inhabitants, etc. v. Eaton, 11 Mass. 368; Hoover v. Pierce, 26 Mississippi, 627; Cushwa v. Cushwa, 5 Maryland, 44; White v. Hunter, 3 Foster, 128; Murphy v. Hubert, 4 Harris, 50; Barton v. Morris, 15 Ohio, 408; Wright v. Wright, 6 Littell, 8, 12.

It is said, in 1 Story’s Equity, § 296, a: ' “ But where a party to an illegal or immoral contract comes himself to be relieved from that contract, or its obligations, he must distinctly and exclusively state such grounds of relief as the court can legally attend to ; and he must not accompany his claim to relief, which may be legitimate, with other claims and complaints which are contaminated with the original immoral purpose; for if he sets up, as a ground of relief, the non-fulfilment of the illegal contract on the other side, and thereby he is released from his obligation to perform it, that shows that he still relies upon the immoral contract and its terms for relief, and therefore the court will refuse it.”

The alleged agreement or condition, on account of the non-performance of which relief is here sought, was, that a railroad company, chartered by an act of the legislature, and invested with the power of condemning private property, upon the ground that its road is for the public use, shall not establish a depot or station within three miles of Ashland. It can not be pretended, for a moment, that the board of directors had authority to make such an agreement or condition. They were trustees both for the public and the stockholders of the company, and in the discharge of their two-fold duty, were required to act with reference to the public convenience, on the one hand, and the private interests of the stockholders upon the other. Between these there was no conflict, for the greater the local conveniences for the use of the road by the public, the greater would be its local business, and, of consequence, the profits of the stockholders. The interests, therefore, both of the stockholders and the public, forbid that there should be a positive prohibition against the establishing of stations at any points on the line of the road. Whenever the public convenience requires that a station on a railroad should be established at a particular point, and it can be done without detriment to the interests of the stockholders of the company, the law authorizes it to be established there, and no contract between a board of directors and individuals can be allowed to prohibit it.

If the present contract could be sustained, then, upon the same principle, a board of directors, and individuals desiring to remove all competition in the sale of town lots, might-contract so that upon the entire line of a great railway there would be no stations, save where the parties contracting should be interested in the sale of town lots; and thus practically exclude the mass of the public from any beneficial use of the road.

In Bestor et al. v. Wathen et al. 60 Ill. 138, a contract between the officers of a railroad company and certain private parties, to secure the location of a railroad at a particular point, was held void, as being contrary to public policy, and not susceptible of being enforced in a court of equity. It was there said : “ When the people, through the legislature,

grant to a company the right of eminent domain for the purpose of constructing a railway, the grant is made because it is supposed the road will bring certain benefits to the public. When the company is incorporated, and subscriptions are made to the stock, the money is subscribed upon the understanding that the officers intrusted with the construction of the road will so locate its line and establish its depots as to bring the highest pecuniary profit to the stockholders, compatible with a proper regard to the public convenience.

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71 Ill. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-jacksonville-chicago-railroad-v-mathers-ill-1874.