Town of South Kingstown v. Wakefield Trust Co.

134 A. 815, 48 R.I. 27, 48 A.L.R. 1122, 1926 R.I. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 27, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 134 A. 815 (Town of South Kingstown v. Wakefield Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of South Kingstown v. Wakefield Trust Co., 134 A. 815, 48 R.I. 27, 48 A.L.R. 1122, 1926 R.I. LEXIS 8 (R.I. 1926).

Opinion

*28 Sweetland, C. J.

The above entitled cause is a bill in equity praying that the respondent Trust Company may be compelled specifically to perform its agreement to purchase a certain lot of land of which, it is alleged, the complainant is seized in fee simple. The Attorney-General, representing the State of Rhode Island, has been joined as a party respondent.

It is alleged in the bill and appears in the copy of a deed made a part thereof that in 1847 said lot of land was conveyed by Elisha Watson to School District No. 6 of the town of South Kingstown. The sole consideration named in the deed was the grantor’s “desire to aid and assist in diffusing the-benefits of a good common school education among the inhabitants of School District No. 6 in the town of South Kingstown,” and it is further recited in the deed that the lot was given and granted to “said school district for the' purpose of maintaining thereon a district school house and its appurtenances for the benefit of the district school of said district and for no other use or purpose whatever.” It is further alleged in said bill as follows: School District No. 6 embraced the village of Wakefield in the town of South Kingstown. From the date of the conveyance by Watson down to the year 1902 School District No. 6 maintained a good common school upon said lot. In 1902, in conformity with the statutes, the town of South Kingstown, abolished the district system and adopted the town system of common public schools, and thereupon by force of the statute the title to all school properties in the town became vested in the complainant. The complainant continued to maintain a good common public school upon said lot until 1908, when by reason of changed conditions in the village of Wakefield *29 it became desirable and necessary for the town to build a new school building upon a different lot of land. The new school thus erected has since been maintained by the town for the purpose of giving to the inhabitants of Wakefield' and what was formerly School District No. 6 a good common school éducation. 1 hereaf ter the complainant has remained in possession of the lot in question in this suit. Before the filing of this bill the respondent Trust Company entered into an agreement with the complainant to purchase said lot, but now refuses to perform its agreement on the ground that the complainant can not give a marketable title to the property. Thereupon the complainant began this suit to compel specific performance of said agreement.

When in the Superior Court the cause was ready for hearing for final decree certain questions of law arose which have been certified to this court as of such doubt and importance as to require our determination before further proceedings are had in the Superior Court. The questions are as follows:

“1. Did the Town of South Kingstown acquire under the deed from Elisha Watson a fee simple absolute in and to the property described in the bill of complaint?
“2. Did the proceedings taken in the Superior Court in the case entitled ‘Town of South Kingstown vs. William B. Greenough, Attorney-General/ which proceedings are set out in the record in this case, affect or limit the fee of the Town of South Kingstown in and to said property?
“3. Has the Town of South Kingstown a marketable title in and to the property described in the bill of complaint?”

It should be said at the outset that by force of the statute, under which the school system of the complainant was changed, the complainant acquired no greater title to the tract in question than that possessed by School District No. 6.

In answer to the first question certified we say that under the deed from Elisha Watson the school district did not acquire a fee simple absolute in and to the tract of land in *30 question, nor did the district have a determinable or qualified fee in the land, with the right of reverter and of reentry remaining in the donor and his heirs, to be exercised in the event that the land shall cease to be used for the purpose specified in the deed.

The gift of Watson was for the purpose of promoting free public school education among the inhabitants of School District No. 6 and he plainly intended that his benefaction should continue to be employed in aid of that purpose. Such a gift is one for a public charitable use highly favored in law and, when possible, supported by the courts. The school district received the gift in trust to carry out the charitable intent of the donor. The town, as successor to' the district, now holds the land impressed with the same trust. The omission of the words “trust” and “trustee” is of little consequence, as the intent is clear that the school district should receive and hold the gift for the public use specified in the deed. This court has held a gift, though absolute in form, to be upon a charitable trust if, as in this case, such appears to have been the donor’s intention. Guild v. Allen, 28 R. I. 430, at 435, with reference to “the legacy given by the fourth paragraph of the will” under consideration in that case; Tillinghast v. Council at Narragansett Pier, 47 R. I. 406; City of Providence v. Payne, 47 R. I. 444; see also Washburn v. Sewall, 9 Metc. 280; Missionary Society v. Chapman, 128 Mass. 265; White v. Mayor of Newark, 89 N. J. Eq. 5.

As to the second question certified no answer is necessary in view of our answer to the first question that under the deed from Elisha Watson the town has not a fee simple absolute or a qualified fee in the tract of land in question but holds that property upon a public trust. The parties and the Superior Court, however, appear to be in doubt as to the effect of the decree entered by the Superior Court in the proceedings referred to in the second question, and we will pass upon the matter involved in the question. A copy of those proceedings are part of the record before us. The *31 suit purports to be a bill in equity and is of an anomalous character. We are somewhat in doubt as to whether the bill should be regarded as one asking for the construction of the trust deed from Watson and for instructions with reference thereto or as one in the nature of a petition of the trustee for instructions as to the administration of the trust. In either case, however, the decree is without effect upon the parties to this suit. If those proceedings be regarded as a petition for instructions as to the administration of the trust property the decree should now be vacated as it has never been acted upon by the trustee and the circumstances have so changed that a compliance with the instruction contained in the decree is clearly undesirable now, if at any time such instructions were practicable. The fact that a court of equity has in a decree given instructions to a trustee as to the administration of a trust does not prevent that court from subsequently vacating such decree, if the same has not been acted upon, and entering a new decree giving further and different instructions.

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Bluebook (online)
134 A. 815, 48 R.I. 27, 48 A.L.R. 1122, 1926 R.I. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-south-kingstown-v-wakefield-trust-co-ri-1926.