Thompson v. Green River Power Co.

69 S.E. 756, 154 N.C. 13, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 14, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 756 (Thompson v. Green River Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Green River Power Co., 69 S.E. 756, 154 N.C. 13, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 152 (N.C. 1910).

Opinion

MANNING, J.

The decision of this case and the determination of the rights of the parties depend upon the proper construction *17 of certain deeds of record in tbe county in wbicb tbe land involved is situate, and wbicb were offered in evidence at tbe trial.

On 8 March, 1830, Isaac Bronson and G-oold Hoyt, of tbe city of New York, tben being owners of large bodies of land (locally known, it seems, as speculation lands) in Mecklenburg, Eutberford (and in that area now Henderson), and Buncombe counties, in this State, conveyed the same to James Hoyt, John N. Ward, and William G. Ward, as trustees. The trusts upon which they were to bold said lands are drawn and declared with great care and particularity. The grantors therein defined a scheme for the management and disposal of said lands which involved the appointment of a special or local agent to make leases and contracts of sale, and a superintending agent, whose approval and indorsement was indispensable to the validity of any conveyance by the trustees. On this point this deed provided: “But no deed, lease, or conveyance whatsoever of the premises or any part thereof shall, if made by said parties of the second part (the trustees), or any one of them, be of any validity or effect whatsoever unless the same be approved and indorsed by Arthur Bronson, esquire, who bath been duly empowered for that purpose.” Joshua Forman was named as the local agent, and the instrument by which be was appointed and bis powers limited is therein expressly referred to. The deed also contained carefully drawn directions as to the method of appointment of the successor trustees, superintending agent, and local agent; and these several deeds successively made contained the same requirement as to the indorsement and approval of the superintending agent to give validity to deeds or conveyances by the trustees. Frederick Bronson succeeded Arthur Bronson as superintending agent, and was in turn succeeded in 1869 by Willett Bronson, who has been since then and is now the superintending agent. T. B. Justice succeeded Joshua For-man as local agent, and was in turn succeeded, 1 November, 1872, by C. Baylis Justice. All these appointments were ma.de in tbe manner prescribed by tbe original deed of 1830. In 1859 and again in 1871 and in 1901, new trustees were ap *18 pointed in tbe prescribed maimer, and these later deeds refer expressly to the previous deeds by dates and books of record.

The deed of 1871, one of the deeds in which new trustees are appointed, after reciting the previous deeds, contains the following provisions: “And the said parties of the second part (the trustees) or such of them as survive, shall at all times, at the proper cost and charges of the said heirs and assigns of the said Isaac Bronson, Goold Hoyt, and Archibald McIntyre (who had purchased an interest), make and execute such deeds, leases, and conveyances of the premises as shall be required or directed by said heirs . . . and especially when required by Thomas B. Justice, the special agent of the parties of the first part for managing, leasing, and selling the lands aforesaid, thereunto authorized by a special and limited authority . . . but no lease, deed, or conveyance of said premises or any part thereof shall, if made by the said' parties of the second part or any of them, be of any validity or effect whatever, unless the same be approved by Willett Bronson, who hath been fully empowered for that purpose.” And it further therein provided: “which deeds, leases, and conveyances, to be lawful, are to be indorsed and approved in manner aforesaid.”

Thomas B. Justice having ceased to act as the local agent, C. Baylis Justice, as hereinbefore stated, 'was duly appointed on 1 November, 1872, by a written power of attorney, in which the deed of 1871, from which we have quoted, was expressly referred to. This power of attorney undoubtedly confers large powers upon the attorney in fact, but no larger than are expressly authorized by the deeds of trust, and in no provision of that instrument is the requirement of the approval by indorsement of the superintending agent dispensed with, nor could it be. The method and manner of his appointment, as prescribed in the deed of trust, is carefully followed, and the deed authorizing his appointment referred to. The precise questions presented, therefore, are:

(1) Is a conveyance or deed valid without the indorsed approval of the superintending agent ?

(2) Can the local agent make a contract absolutely binding and enforcible against the trustees, under the provisions of these deeds ?

*19 The requirement of the approving indorsement of the superintending agent to give validity to the exercise of the power of sale by the trustees is clearly a limitation upon their power and clearly within the right of the creators of the trust to annex. In 2 Perry on Trusts, sec. 784 (5 Ed.), it is said: “If the sale is directed to be made with the consent of the tenant for life, or any other person, such consent is indispensable to a valid exercise of the powers.” In Sugden on Powers, star page 319, this writer says: “Where the consent of any person is required to the execution of the power, that, like every other condition, must be strictly complied with.” In 4 Kent’s Commentaries, 330, the learned author says: “But it is the plain and settled rule that the conditions annexed to the exercise of the power must be strictly complied with, however unessential they might have been if no such precise directions had been given. They are incapable of admitting any equivalent or substitution; for the person who creates the power has the undoubted right to create what checks he pleases to impose, to guard against a tendency to abuse. The courts have been uniformly and severely exact on this point.” And at p. 333 he further says: “In all other respects the intention of the grantor of a power, as to the mode, time, and conditions of its execution, must be observed, subject to the power of the court of chancery to supply defective executions. When the consent of a third person to the execution of a power is requisite, the consent shall be expressed in the instrument by which the power is executed, or shall be certified in writing thereon.” So this Court held in Haslin v. Kean, 6 N. C., 309: “The main question in this case is whether John Haslin, by the deed which he executed to Kean, completely and in due form executed his power. If he did, there is an end to the wife’s power; if he did not, she was entitled to appoint. The present controversy is between volunteers, and the wife is entitled, unless there has been not only an intention to appoint, but an actual appointment, and that made in the precise form required by the power.” See, also, Phifer v. Phifer, 41 N. C., 155. So in Pippen v. Wesson, 74 N. C., 437, and Hardy v. Holly, 84 N. C., 661, it was held by this Court that, “One who contracts by virtue of a power, statutory *20 or otherwise, and wlio, except by such power, is incapable of contracting, must pursue the power, or such contract will be void.”

Under these authorities we must, therefore, conclude that the approval of Willett Bronson, the superintending agent, indorsed on the deed, was necessary to give it validity.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 756, 154 N.C. 13, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-green-river-power-co-nc-1910.