Downen v. Rayburn

214 Ill. 342 | Ill. | 1905

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

The contention of the appellant in this case is, that the title to the lot in controversy reverted to the appellant, as the heir of William R. Downen, when said lot ceased to be used as a church location, and when the church building thereon erected, and used for church purposes for a number of years, was removed therefrom by the appellee, as grantee of the trustees of the church.

The contention of the appellant is based upon the use of two expressions in the deed from William R. Downen to the original trustees of the Industry Congregation of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Those two expressions, as shown in the portion of the deed quoted in the statement preceding this-opinion, are as follows, to-wit: First, “to be used as a church locationand, second, “the said premises as above described.” So far as the words, “as above described,” are concerned, they refer back to the description of the lot, and do not refer to the words, “to be used as a church location.” The deed uses the words, “particularly described as follows: Lot No. 16 in block No. 5 in town of Industry,” and when subsequently the said premises are referred to “as above described,” the latter words refer only to the description of the lot as lot No. 16, etc. It follows that the claim of the appellant, if it can be sustained, rests entirely and exclusively upon the use of the words, “to be used as a church location,” as they appear in the deed.

The appellant contends that these words operated as a condition or restriction, limiting the use of the premises by the grantees from William R. Downen to a use for the purposes of a church location. If the words in question can be regarded as in any sense a condition, they must constitute a condition subsequent, and not a condition precedent. “A subsequent condition is one which operates upon an estate already created and vested, and renders it liable to be defeated.” (Star Brewery Co. v. Primas, 163 Ill. 652.) “A precedent condition is one, which must take place before the estate can vest or be enlarged, and if land is conveyed upon a precedent condition, the title will not pass until the condition is performed.” (Ibid.) In the case at bar, the title vested in the trustees as the grantees in the deed, and if the words in question operated as a restriction upon the use of the premises, they would have the effect of rendering the estate already vested liable to be defeated; but we are of the opinion that the words in controversy do not constitute a condition subsequent within the strict meaning of that term.

It is well settled that, where real property is conveyed in fee, restrictions in the use are not favored, although courts will enforce such restrictions where the intention of the parties is clear in the creation of restrictions or limitations upon the use of a grantee. It is also well settled that “in the construction of deeds containing restrictions and prohibitions as to the use of property by a grantee, all doubts should, as a general rule, be resolved in favor of a free use of property, and against restrictions.” (Hutchinson v. Ulrich, 145 Ill. 336; Ewertsen v. Gerstcnberg, 186 id. 344; Hays v. St.Paul M. E. Church, 196 id. 633). It will be noticed that the words in question, “to be used as a church location,” stand alone, and that the words, “upon condition,” are not used in connection therewith. That is to say, it is not stated in the deed that the premises are conveyed upon condition that they are to be used as a church location. Nor is there any provision in the deed for re-entry by the grantor in case of a breach of the covenant, if it be a covenant, that the premises are to be used as a church location. (Kew v. Trainor, 150 Ill. 150; Star Brewery Co. v. Primas, supra; Gallaher v. Herbert, 117 id. 160). In Gallaher v. Herbert, supra, we said (p. 169) : “In the construction of deeds, courts will always incline to interpret the language .as a covenant, rather than as a condition. (Board of Education v. Trustees, 63 Ill. 204). There is nothing in the form of the language here employed to indicate that it was intended the conveyance was upon a condition subsequent. The words, ‘upon condition,’ do not occur, and there are no other words of equivalent meaning. There is no clause, providing that the grantor shall re-enter in any event, and these are the usual indications of an intent to create a condition subsequent.”

In'6 American and English Encyclopedia of Law, (2d ed. pp. 501, 502,) it is said: “Certain words, namely, ‘upon condition,’ ‘so that,’ and ‘provided,’ or their Latin equivalents, are recognized as apt and customary. * * * If a condition is not created by one of the recognized terms, it should be followed by a clause of re-entry, or a provision for forfeiture. * * * Words declaratory of the consideration for, and the purpose of the conveyance, and the limitation of the use of the property, * * * do not, of themselves, render an estate conditional.” Here, the words in question, “to be used as a church location,” are merely declaratory of “the purpose of the conveyance.” It cannot be said, therefore, that they render the estate conditional.

It has also been held that, where the declared purpose for which the property shall be used, is a matter that will inure to the special benefit of the grantor, the courts are more inclined to treat the conveyance as conditional, than when the use is for the benefit of a special class of persons, or of the public at large. (Olcott v. Gabert, 86 Tex. 125 ; 6 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—pp. 501, 502, note 9; Hutchinson v. Ulrich, supra). In the case at bar, there is nothing either upon the face of the deed itself, or in the agreed statement of facts, upon which the case was tried below, to indicate that the property was conveyed to the trustees "of the church for the special benefit of the grantor, William R. Downen, and, therefore, the conveyance made by him cannot be regarded as conditional for this reason.

There is nothing in the words in question to indicate that the premises conveyed were to be used as a church location for any particular length of time. As matter of fact, a church building was erected upon the lot, and was used for church purposes for many years. In Harris v. Shaw, 13 111. 456, where land was conveyed to the county commissioners of Tazewell county, and their successors in office, by a deed absolute in its terms, for the use of the county, and the county seat was located thereon, this court said in regard to the 'grantor in the deed to the county commissioners, who brought an action to recover back the property when it ceased to be used as a county seat (p. 465) : “He now seeks to recover back the twenty acres upon the ground that the county seat, after remaining for fifteen years, as located in 1835, was in 1850 removed to the town of Pekin, under the act of the legislature, passed February 2, 1849. I* was no Part the contract, made between Harris and the county in 1835, that the county seat should forever remain as then located; on the contrary, he must have known when he made the deed, that the legislature-at that time possessed the power to change the location of county seats at pleasure. He must, therefore, be considered in legal contemplation as having made the deed in view of the liability, at least, of a change of the county seat at some future time. Had the land been granted upon condition that it should be used for a particular purpose, it would unquestionably have reverted to the donor when it ceased to be thus used.” So, here, the deed must have been made by William R. Downen with knowledge of the fact, that the location or vicinage of the lot in question might at some future time undergo such changes, as to make it undesirable to use the lot for church purposes, and to make it desirable to remove the church to some other location. It has been held that a restriction in a deed will not be enforced, where the neighborhood or vicinage, where the property is located, has so changed in its character and environment, and in the uses to which it may be put, as to make it unfit or unprofitable for the use, to which it is restricted. (Star Brewery Co. v. Primas, supra; Ewertsen v. Gerstenberg, supra).

In Supervisors of Warren County v. Patterson, 56 Ill. hi, where land was sold to a county, the agreement for the sale contained this clause, “the party of the first part agrees to sell to said party of the second part, block No. 16, in the city of Monmouth, in said county of Warren, with appurtenances thereunto belonging, for court house and other county buildings.” This clause in the agreement was also contained in the deed executed to the county. It is not materially different from the clause here under consideration. The property was conveyed “for court house and other county buildings.” The property in the case at bar was conveyed “to be used as a church location.” Although the words, “to be used,” are not in the clause, referred to in the Patterson case, yet they are evidently implied by the statement that the property was conveyed or sold “for court house and other county buildings.” If they were conveyed “for court house and other county buildings,” they were conveyed to be used for such purposes. The case of Supervisors of Warren County v. Patterson, supra, is, therefore, substantially on all-fours with the case at bar; and in that case this court said (p. 119) : “The deed conveys the absolute fee, without any conditions or restrictions whatsoever. The power of. alienation is not limited or confined in any way. Had the grantors in the deed imposed as a condition of the sale, that the block should be used for county buildings and for no other purpose, they, perhaps, might invoke the power of a court of chancery to restrain a threatened sale of it. * * * It, no doubt, was the intention of appellants, when the purchase was made, to devote it as expressed in the deed, but that formed no part of the consideration, nor was it the inducement to the grant. Subsequent events may have admonished those authorities, that the financial condition of the county did not justify an expenditure such as contemplated when the purchase was made, and that the best interests of the county required a sale of the property. We fail to see anything in the transaction to take from them the power, expressly conferred upon them by statute, to sell the land. There is no covenant in the deed that the land shall be devoted to a particular purpose, but by its terms the county became possessed of an absolute estate in fee simple to the land, uncontrolled by any condition, restriction, limitation or reservation whatever. If A buys a lot of ground of B, and it is declared in the deed that he purchases it as a site for a mill, or other operative establishment, the fee being conveyed to him, he has the undoubted right to dispose of it without carrying out his intention. But if a grant be made by A to B, on condition B erects on the land granted a certain structure, and he fails so to do, the land might revert to the grantor.”

AVe are of the opinion that the case was properly decided by the trial court. Accordingly, the judgment of the circuit court of McDonough county is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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