104 Ky. 621 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1898
delivered the opinion oe the coubt.
Plaintiffs allege that they are the trustees of the Gallatin Academy, by appointment of the Carroll County Court; that their corporation was the owner of a lot of ground in the town of Carrollton, which was unimproved by suitable buildings, and that in the year 1859 they conveyed this lot to the defendant, for a nominal consideration, upon condition that it should erect thereon suitable buildings for a high school, and that it should always thereafter be deA'oted to school purposes, whether retained by defendant, or be passed into other hands; that the deed was accepted, and suitable buildings erected on the lot for school purposes, by the defendant, and that a school was maintained there for many years; but that the defendant had abandoned the property for school purposes, and had failed for more than two years before the institution of their suit to have a school kept in the building, and it is claimed that they thereby violated the conditions of the trust. And they further allege that the charter of the defendant com
By the acceptance of the deed from the Gallatin Academy, defendant obligated itself to erect on the lot conveyed therein suitable buildings for a seminary of learning, and covenanted with the grantors that the property should always be devoted to school purposes; and the petition alleges that defendant, in conformity with this condition of the deed, did erect the buildings required. And the only question left for the determination of the court, •under the averments of the petition, is, has the property been abandoned for school purposes, and used by the defendant for other purposes inconsistent with the terms of, the deed? And, if so, are the plaintiffs entitled to have the property restored to them, as the successors of the trustees of the Gallatin Academy, who executed the deed to defendant in 1859?
The clause of the deed upon which appellees must rely to work the forfeiture asked for herein, even it it be conceded that they are entitled to maintain this action, is not a subsequent condition of ownership, but a mere covenant on the part of the defendant that the property should not be diverted from school purposes, and for the breach of which forfeiture does not lie. It is a rule of law that conditions subsequent are not favored, because they tend to destroy estates; and, if it be doubtful whether a clause in a deed be a condition or a covenant courts will incline to the latter construction. See 4 Kent, Comm. (12th Ed.), pp. 129, 130; 3 Rap. Dig., sections 1095, 1096; and Rawson v.
Nor can- the judgment appealed from be upheld upon the theory that the plaintiffs are the legitimate successors of the donors of a charity -which has failed. They do not seek to recover upon such a theory, as they do not allege that they gave the lot as a charity, but, on the contrary, aver that they sold it for a valuable and presumptively commensurable consideration, without any condition as to reversion to them. This is clearly shown by the habendum of the deed, quoted supra. There is no testimony in the record which conduces to show that the defendant has abandoned the property in question for school purposes, or made any use thereof inconsistent with the terms of the deed. The mere facts that the buildings had become somewhat out of repair, and that no' school had been taught therein for a few years, do not amount to an abandonment of the property under the covenant of the deed under which defendant holds. And if, as a matter of fact, the defendant has abused its trust, and appropriated the
In view of the conclusions we have reached on this question, it will be unnecessary for us to express an opinion upon the validity of the appointment by the County Court of Carroll county of plaintiffs as trustees of the Gallatin Academy, or of their prayer for a dissolution of defendant’s charter. But for the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the petition.