95 Ky. 436 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1894
delivered the opinion op the court.
In the year 1798 the Legislature of this State, with a view of affording greater facilities for education and to establish seminaries of learning in each county throughout the entire Commonwealth, donated to each county six thousand acres of its vacant and unappropriated lands, located south of Green River, for that purpose.
The original act of December 19, 1798, specified many of the counties to which the donation ivas made, and designated the trustees in whom was vested the title and control of the fund or subject donated, subject to legisla
Bracken was one of the counties to which the donation was expressly made, and Philip Buckner,'Nathaniel Patterson, Samuel Brooks and others were constituted -a body-politic and incorporate, and styled by the name of the trustees of the Bracken Academy. This was under the act of 1798, and these trustees and their successors have continued to hold the possession and title as a corporate body of the thing donated, or its proceeds, as well . as the control of the seminary property, until the 5th of September, 1888, when, as trustees, they leased the seminary to P. B. Powell and others, who were the trustees ■of Graded Free School District No. 2, in the town of Augusta, for one year, and by an indorsement on the written lease tlie time was extended one year longer and ended the 1st of September, 1890. After the lease had expired the trustees of the Bracken Academy, the .original lessors, demanded possession of their seminary and its grounds, and the appellants refused to deliver posses•sion, denying tlie title of their landlord and claiming that the Legislature of Kentucky, by an act passed on the 24th day of May, 1890, had deprived them of their corporate existence and vested the right and title to the academy and its grounds in the trustees of Common School District No. 2, in Bracken County.
The appellees, trustees of Bracken Academy, sued out this writ of forcible detainer against their lessees, and
It is desired by all the parties to this appeal that the" case should be decided on its merits, and we will not therefore take notice of the refusal of the lessees to-regard the title of their lessors, or the surrender of the possession by them to the trustees of Common School District No. 2, with the knowledge on the part of the latter as to the manner in which the lessees of appelleesentered. The question then arises, did the act of May-24, 1890, deprive these appellees, who were the legitimate-successors of the original trustees of Bracken Academy,, of their right and title to the seminary and its grounds.
By the provisions of the second section of the act of 1798 there was donated to the original trustees and their successors six thousand acres of these vacant lands for the benefit of the academy, and it was then stipulated that the land should not be leased by these trustees for a longer period than twenty years; and further stipulated that the lands should revert to the-State if the trustees, did not, within ten years, establish a school with at least twelve scholars.
It was also provided “ that the several grants and appropriations of land shall be subject to any future order of the Legislature; but no act shall be passed to impair any contract which may be made by the trustees of any of the seminaries established by this act by virtue of the powers herein delegated to them. And provided always, that the donation herein made shall forever continue-
Under this section, providing that the “ several grants and appropriations of lands shall be subject to any future order of the Legislature,” it is claimed the Legislature derived its power to take this land from Bracken Academy or its trustees, and vest the title in the trustees of Common School District No. 2.
In the mouth of December, 1804, the Legislature, exercising its power and control over these lands, authorized the trustees to sell one-half of the land to erect buildings, etc.; and in the year 1815 empowered the trustees to sell all the land donated to them, and in December, 1822, Augusta College having been incorporated, the trustees of Bracken Academy appropriated $10,000 of the funds in their hands to this seminary, with the approval of the Legislature (Session Acts 1822, page 163), and in 1834 the trustees of Bracken Academy were authorized to transfer to the trustees of Augusta College $10,000 in their hands, to be managed by the'trustees of that college, and in case the college was not’kept up, the money to he refunded to the trustees of Bracken Academy. It is said, and a fact not disputed, that the college no longer exists, except as the Bracken Academy, the trustees of the academy having full possession of the grounds and buildings at the time the lease to the graded school was made. This exercise of power by the Legislature is alluded to for the purpose of construing that portion of the act in which the Legislature reserved the right to make orders as to the grants of the lands donated.
There was only one condition upon which the land was to revert to the State, and that was upon the failure of
It is not contended that the State has the power to make an endowment or donation to a particular county or college for educational purposes, and then, by subsequent legislation, recall it. Here was a plain and certain donation, to these trustees and their successors forever, of this six thousand acres of land to Bracken Academy, and the proceeds (the land having been sold) were appropriated as directed by the Legislature, and so long as the seminary exists the fund belongs to these trustees, and the Legislature has no power to devote the building to common school purposes, or to vest in any common school district the title to this property.
Here was a contract with these trustees for a special purpose, and that'was to enable them to have a seminary of learning in the County of Bracken. It was in fact designed to benefit the county, a like appropriation having been made to other counties, and to hold that the Legislature had the power to make this building and its grounds a part of the common school fund would be a perversion of the purpose of the original donation, and what is still more objectionable, would be giving this
These trustees and their successors, having been holding this fund as donors, for the purpose contemplated, for nearly a century, -were authorized to add to the original gift by obtaining private subscriptions and otherwise, .and after a control for so long a period are told that the Legislature has divested them of title by transferring the right, use and title of the college and grounds to a school district. The act is clearly unconstitutional, and if the trustees are recreant to their duty, tlieir conduct may he made the subject of judicial investigation. (Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheaton, 518; City of Louisville v. President, &c., University, 15 B. M., 671; Anderson v. Holland, &c., 14 Bush, 147; Trustees of Vincennes University v. State of Indiana, 14 Howard, 271.)
Judgment affirmed.