The demanded premises were granted to the tenants by Daniel French, by deed dated April 19, 1844, upon the following condition : “ Always however upon this condition, that the parcel of land shall not be used for any other purpose than as a place for a town-house for said inhabitants; and upon any breach of this condition, this conveyance shall be void to all intents and purposes.” The grantor died in 1857, and the demandant, his devisee, contends that she is entitled to the land, because the tenants have forfeited their estate by breach of the condition.
The tenants erected a town-house upon the lot soon after the conveyance; it does not appear in what year. Its material was
The alleged breach of the condition consists in the uses to which the town-house has been put. In the second story there is a hall. The entrance is in the middle of the front side. On either side of this entrance is a room. One room was rented for a clothing-store and tailoring establishment, from the completion of the building till about 1852. The other was rented for two or three years for an apothecary’s shop and refreshment saloon, and afterwards for a bank. It was also used for a time for a post-office, and for a short time for a daguerreotype saloon. A part of the lower story has also been fitted up for a lock-up, and used more or less for that purpose for six or seven years. The hall has been used for lectures, theatrical entertainments, dances and exhibitions. These are the breaches complained of.
There are two general principles to guide us in the decision of the question presented to us: 1. It is sufficient if a condition is performed in substance. Com. Dig. Condition, G. 14. 2. This being a claim for a forfeiture for an alleged breach of a condition subsequent, “ the words of the deed are to be taken most strongly against the grantor, and in favor of the grantee.” Per Shaw, C. J., in Canal Bridge v. Methodist Religious Society,
No case is found in which a condition similar to the present lias received a construction. From the nature of the case, such a similarity could not be expected; for in every instance, the language of a condition must be adapted to the peculiar circumstances of the case, and the particular intent of the parties.
The definition of “ town-house ” cited by the demandant as “ a house or building in which is transacted the public business of a town ” is broad enough to include all the business for which a town is authorized to erect a building. It is not limited to a hall for town-meetings, but may include offices for all the town-officers, and for the keeping of all the records and documents of the town. And as towns increase in population and in business, it becomes necessary that separate rooms shall
One further question remains. The town having erected and maintained on the premises a structure suitable for a townhouse, and not in any particular unsuitable for such a house, has it broken the condition by any of the uses to which it has allowed the house to be put?
It must be admitted that a town has no authority to erect buildings for the purpose of renting them as tailors’ shops, or apothecaries’ shops, or daguerreotype or refreshment saloons, or banks, or dancing halls; and if a principal object in the erection
To hold that any use of any part of the building, except for the transaction of the business of the town, is illegal, would exclude from the hall the meetings of political parties, agricultural societies, and conventions of every kind; and would be unreasonably strict. Such a position is not contended for. It is admitted that the use of the hall for lectures, &c., is not a violation of the condition. But this is a concession that the building may be used for some purposes that are not municipal. It is necessary therefore to establish some reasonable doctrine that should include these cases, and determine what other uses the town-house may be appropriated to without breach of the condition.
The court are of opinion that a town, having in its townhouse rooms which it had authority to construct, as part of such building, and not having occasion to use them for the time being, is not obliged to keep them unoccupied, but may derive a revenue from them by renting them, or may allow them to be used gratuitously. Such a use of the property is within its legal authority. And if this be so, the condition of the deed is not broken. For it cannot be construed more strictly than to require of the town to maintain a town-house on the land which shall not be put to any illegal and unauthorized use.
It is suggested that as the facts proved show that the grantee owned and kept a tavern, and the premises were part of the tavern estate, one of the objects of the condition was to prevent such occupation of the premises as would interfere with the profits of the tavern. And the fact is also stated that, when dances and entertainments have been held in the hall,
Judgment for the tenants.
Notes
Bigelow, C. J. did not sit in this case.
