34 Vt. 243 | Vt. | 1861
It is true as claimed by the counsel for the plaintiffs that a deed to a corporation aggregate will convey a fee simple though the word “ successor” is not used in the deed. As such a corporation never dies, it is immaterial whether such a deed is construed as granting to them an estate for life, or a fee, for in their case the one is the same as the other. Hence the deed of McCrillis to the Halifax society vested in them in fee simple the lands conveyed.
It is further claimed as a necessary consequence that the clause in the habendum of the deed is repugnant to the premises, and therefore void. The habendum is in these words : — “To have and to hold the premises during the time the said society or their heirs shall meet on said land for public worship, or have a meeting house standing on said land and appropriate'the use of the same to the Congregational or Presbyterian public worship.” ■
It is the proper office of the habenduxn to determine’what estate or interest is granted by the deed, and to limit, qualify or explain the words used in the granting part of the deed. Where the estate or interest is set forth in the premises the habendum cannot by the use of words repugnant to such estate defeat it. Where therefore the habendum is contradictory to the premises, the habendum is void, and the words in the premises stand. Co.
But where the habendum is not so contradictory to the premises, but only limits, explains or qualifies the words there used, it performs it proper othce. It may lessen, enlarge, limit and qualify the use of the land convoyed so long as it does not defeat the estate granted.
Here the deed in the premises does not describe the estate or interest conveyed, but only the land by its name and boundaries. A deed to a corporation would describe them in the same way whatever was the estate conveyed, whether in fee or for life. Hence in such a deed the description of the estate or interest conveyed would naturally be, and ought to be, in the habendum. A deed to a natural person and his heirs necessarily causes a fee and not an estate for life — not so with a corporation. Hence this deed to them in the premises describes the land and not the estate or duration of the interest conveyed. The word successors is not used, still without it they may take a fee, and would if there were no limitation or description of a less estate in the fob lowing parts of the deed. But in a deed to a natural person the word “ heirs” would carry a fee, and its absence would show a less estate for life. The habendum proceeds to explain the use which the grantee is to have of the land, and limit its extent and duration. It may be a fee simple, the use may last forever if the grantees see fit to occupy it for the purpose for which it is conveyed. There is no repugnancy between the premises and the habendum.
We do not deem it very material to decide whether the clause in the habendum shall be held to be a condition or a limitation. The clause in question well illustrates what is said in Sheppard’s Touchstone, p. 121, that, “conditions at all times have in their drawing so much affinity with limitations that it is hard to discern and distinguish them.” But Che legal effect of this language clearly is, that when the grantees cease to meet on said land for public worship, and fail to h ive a meeting house on the land and to appropriate its use to Congregational or Presbyterian public worship, then their title ceases, and the grantor or his heirs may re-enter and hold the land.
II. This leads us to inquire what is the true construction of the condition, (if we may so call it,) in the habendum of the deed. It may be divided into two clauses, and is in these words : “ To hold the premises during the time,” (1st,) “the said society or their heirs shall meet on said land for public worship (2d,) “ or have a meeting house standing on said land, and appropriate the use of the same to the Congregational or Presbyterian public worship.
Let us consider the meaning of the first clause. The words “ their heirs” we think the same as their successors and mean their corporate successors. “ The said society” must mean the grantees in the deed — the original Halifax society. They are to have and to hold the land “ during the time” — equivalent to only so long as “ the said society or their successors shall meet on said land for public worship.” The grant clearly contemplated'the confining of the use of the land to that particular Congregational society and for that particular use, public worship and at that very place. “ Meet on said land.” Hence if any other society met on the land, or this society used it for other use and not for public worship, or this society abandoned meeting on this land for public worship though they continued to meet elsewhere, they forfeited their right to this land.
When therefore “the said society” went to West Halifax, built a meeting housá there and met for public worship there, and ceased meeting “ on said land for public worship,” they no longer complied with the terms of this first clause of the condition. It is said that the minority of the original Halifax society who remained at East Halifax, who organized a new congregational society there, and occupied the meeting house for public worship, may be considered dn law as the successors of the grantees in the deed. We think not. The terms of the deed are plain and
As it appears in the case that the original society removed wholly to West Halifax in 1844, and have ever since abandoned meeting on said land for public worship — removed indeed with the intent of meeting elsewhere to worship, and with no intent to return to meet there for worship, we think this was a forfeiture of their rights under this clause of the condition. This appears to have been the view taken of the case in the court below. The exceptions state, “ the court ruled that the heirs of McCrillis had a reversionary interest in the land which passed to the defendants ; that the plaintiffs are not in a legal sense the successors of the grantees in the McCrillis deed ; that consequently the house ceased to be occupied for the purposes specified in the deed when the old society erected a new house for public worship and removed to another part of the town, and that after so great a lapse of time it was competent for the defendants to enter the house,” &c. The court below construed the meaning of the whole condition to be that the original society must meet on the land for public worship. They do not appear to have considered that the society had any greater or other rights under the second clause of the
It is very obvious to us that this second clause of the condition was inserted in the deed with the intention of enlarging the rights of the grantees in the use of the land beyond the strict provisions of the first clause. It was the intention of the grantor to have Congregational public worship kept up in a meeting house on the land. This was the main object. This particular society might remove elsewhere and build a house of worship, (as they have since done,) but if they kept a meeting house on this land and appropriated it to Congregational worship the great purpose of the grant was secured. This is a more liberal and a more reasonable condition. It looks to the great end — the worship of Grod and the promoting of the cause of religion — it is consistent with what we may well presume to have been the spirit and religious sentiment of the grantor, and the purposes sought to be accomplished by the grantees.
In this view the grantees might authorize the plaintiffs to use-the meeting house for Congregational public worship, and so long as they so used it, it was an appropriation of it according to the meaning of the second clause in the condition.
The award, (whatever may have been its exact legal effect between the parties,) the subsequent use by the plaintiffs, and the assent of the original society to such use, as shown by the evidence in the case, clearly prove that the old society authorized the new one to have the exclusive use and possession of the church ; and the case shows that they so continued having public worship there till about three or four years before the defendants’ entry upon the premises, and that they were in possession of the house at the time of such entry. While public worship was thus kept up by the plaintiffs there could have been no forfeiture.
Now this preservation of the rights of the grantees through the use of the house by the plaintiffs, is wholly ignored by the county court. They seem to have given to the second clause of the condition the same construction and meaning as the first. In this we think there was error.
As to the stove and pipe. These were articles of personal property belonging to the old society, and the evidence seemed to establish that by the award and what would seem to be the subsequent assent of the old society, they were given to and transferred to the exclusive possession of the new society. A forfeiture of the house would not work any forfeiture of the stove. It would still be personal property, and belong to the plaintiffs. As the case must be remanded for a new trial upon the question of the forfeiture of the land, and as our decision settles the question of the right to the stove, we do not deem it necessary to set-
Judgment reversed.