St. Paul Division No. 1 v. Brown

11 Minn. 356
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 11 Minn. 356 (St. Paul Division No. 1 v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Paul Division No. 1 v. Brown, 11 Minn. 356 (Mich. 1866).

Opinions

By the Court

Wilson, Oh. J.

The reieree in this case, finds among other things, as matter of fact, that in May, 1849, there was organized at St. Paul, a branch or subordinate division of the Sons of Temperance, which was known and styled “ St. Paul Division, No. 1, Sons of Temperancethat said division continued to exist until after the passage of the act of the Legislature 'hereinafter mentioned.

That on the 25th of March, 1851, the Legislature of the Territory of Minnesota passed an act entitled “An act to incorporate the St. Paul Division, No. 1, Sons of Temperance,” which was duly approved, and provides “ that from and after the passage of this act, Comfort Barnes, J. J. Dewey, J. R. Brown, Wm. H. Tinker, George H. Oakes, C. P. V. Lull, W. P. Murray, A. R. French, Wm. Henry Forbes, B. F. Hoyt, and their associates, of the county of Ramsey, town of St. Paul, and their successors, be and they are hereby constituted, ordained and declared, a body corporate and politic, under the name of the St. Paul Division, No. 1, Sons of Temperance, and by that name they and their succesors shall and may have perpetual succession, and shall be a person in law, capable of suing and being sued; * * and that they and their successors, by the name of the St. Paul Division No. 1, Sons of Temperance, shall be, in law, capable of acquiring and holding * * property,” &c.

[358]*358The referee further finds, that at the date of the passage of said act, the persons therein named, were with others, members of said branch or subordinate division first named. That said division did not apply, as an association, to the Legislature for the passage of said bill, but the same was applied for by some of the members thereof, and that after the passage of the act, the division did not, previous to the transaction with Brown, pass any resolution or take any action expressive of their willingness to accept of, or of their assent to, the incorporation provided by said act, nor did the persons therein named take any such action; that prior to the 20th of December, 1852, the west half of lot 10, block 23, in St. Paul, had been purchased with* the money of, and for the use of, said division, and the title thereto taken and held in the name of Comfort Barnes, ¥m. IT. Tinker, and Joseph B. Brown, and said division had commenced and partly completed a building theron, to be used in part as a hall for its meetings; that prior to said date, said division, having become involved in debt and unable to complete said building, entered into negotiations with the defendant Joseph B. Brown, then a member and one of the trustees of said division, for the puipose. of effecting a loan to enable it to clear itself from debt, and to finish its building; that in the course of the negotiation, the defendant Brown offered to loan the division the sum of $800, upon interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, to be repaid on the first day of May, 1853, or upon any first day of May, until the first day of May, 1858, upon the division causing its trustees, in whom the title of such real estate then was, to convey the same to him, and that he would execute a bond to convey said premises to said “ Saint Paul Division, No. 1, Sons of Temperance,” upon being paid by said division through its trustees or agents, the said sum according to said terms; that afterwards, on the 17th day of December, 1852, at a regular meeting of said division, a resolution was duly passed by the division, instructing its trustees (said [359]*359Barnes, Tinker and Brown,) to accept said proposition, and to convey said real estate to said Brown in pursuance thereof, and afterwards, on the 20th day of December, 1852, said trustees did accept the proposition, and thereupon Brown loaned to the division the sum of $800, and as security tor the repayment of the same, Barnes, Tinker and Brown, describing themselves as trustees of St. Paul Division, No. 1, Sons of Temperanee, of th^ county of Bamsey and territory of Minnesota, conveyed to said Joseph B. Brown said real estate, and at the same time Brown executed and delivered to said trustees for the division, his bond conditioned to reconvey on the payment of said sum and interest as aforesaid; that thereupon Brown went into possession of said real estate, and has remained in possession, himself and his assigns until the present time; that at the time of the conveyance and execution of said bond, said real estate was of the value of $1,500; * * that at the time of said negotiations, and of the passage of said resolution, and of the execution of said bond, all of the persons named in the said act of the Legislature, except ¥m. P. Murray, were members of said division; that the passage of said resolution with said negotiations, and the execution of said conveyance and bond, were the only associated acts of said division, or of the persons named in said act of the Legislature, or their associates, up to that time, evincing any intention to accept or act under the grant contained in said act of the Legislature; that on the 10th day of May, 1853, said Brown, with his wife, conveyed said real estate, by warranty deed, to the c^fendant, Jacob W. Bass, who, at the time of the conveyance to him, had full knowledge of the execution of said bond, and that the same was in full force; that on the 22d of April, 1856, said division, at the meeting held on that day, appointed B. P. Hoyt, ¥m. H. Tinker and Comfort Barnes, its agents to obtain a re-conveyance of said real estate, by a tender of the money then due J. B. Brown or his assigns, according to the conditions of said bond; that pursu[360]*360ant thereto, said Tinker did, on the 1st day of May, 1856, in behalf of the division, tender, produce and offer to said Bass, in payment of said debt and interest, and upon said bond, the sum of $1069 (being the full amount then due) in gold and silver coin of the United States, which money, so tendered, the said Bass refused to accept; that on or about the first of November, 1859, Bass, by quit claim deed, conveyed to the defendant Prince; that said conveyance w^s not made upon a sale in good faith of said real estate, or for a valuable or any consideration; that the deed from Brown to Bass, and the deed from Bass to Prince, have been recorded.

As conclusions of law, the referee finds: (1) That said Saint Paul Division, No. 1, Sons of Temperance, so formed and organized in May, 1819, and the members composing the same, were the persons intended to be incorporated by the said act of the Legislature of the 25th of March, 1851, and that thereby said division was enabled to become a corporation upon at any time accepting the grant in such act contained. (2.) That the resolution of said division to accept the proposition of Brown, and to receive said bond, amounted in law to an acceptance of the grant contained in said act of the Legislature, and that thereupon said division became a corporation, with all the powers and privileges conferred by said act. * * (3) That the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment that the defendants, Jacob W. Bass and John S. Prince, convey to the plaintiff by deed with covenants of warranty, the said west half of lot No. 10, in block 23, in the town of St. Paul, with the buildings and appurtenances thereunto pertaining^

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11 Minn. 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-paul-division-no-1-v-brown-minn-1866.