31 W. Va. 810 | W. Va. | 1888
Angus MacDonald and wife and A. S. Trowbridge by deed dated September 8,1856, in consideration of $1,790.00 conveyed with general warranty to James Sheets, James Car-skadon and others, trustees of -the Methodist Episcopal Church in the South Branch circuit, a house and two adjoining lots in the town of Romney, Hampshire county, designated as lots Nos. 23 and 24 in the plan of said town, “in trust, that they (the said trustees and their successors) shall hold the same and cause the buildings to be put and kept in repair as a parsonage or place of residence for the use of the ministers or preachers of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America according to the rules ” etc. ; and “in further trust and confidence, that they shall at all times forever hereafter permit such ministers and preachers belonging to said church, as shall from time to time be duly authorized by the general conferences of the ministers and preachers of the said Methodist Episcopal Church or shall by the annual conferences authorized by the said general conferences be from time to time stationed on the circuit, within the bounds of which said house and lots are situated, to use and occupy said house and lots as a parsonage or place of residence ” ete.
In a suit in equity commenced in January, 1866, by James Carskadon and others, the surviving trustees and grantees in said deed, against C. L. Torreyson, Isaac N. Heiskell and others, this Court by a final decree pronounced November 13,1880, adjudged and decided, that the trusts expressed in the aforesaid deed “ because of their vagueness and indefiniteness as to the cestui que trust or cestuis que trust therein referred to are under the law, as it is with us, inoperative and in effect void ; and that therefore no trustees as to said
This Court in its opinion, at pages 110 and 111, says : “ The said trusts specified in said deed being inoperative and in effect void from the beginning, as hereinbefore determined, is the deed void at law as a grant of the property to the persons therein named, it (the deed) appearing to have been made to said persons for a valuable consideration and being a deed of general warranty ?” The Court waived this question, and then further said : “ It does not appear in the case distinctly, with whose money the house and lots were purchased of Trowbridge and paid for; whether it was the money of the persons named in the deed as trustees or the money of other persons. If it was the money of other persons, it is not necessary now to consider the question whether, as the trusts specified in said deed are inoperative and in effect void for the reasons aforesaid, the persons, whose money paid for the property have the equitable right to claim the property, or have a resulting trust against the said property in the hands of the persons named in said deed as trustees who are living, and the heirs of those who are dead, as the question does not arise in this case.”
In respect to the first of the above queries, it is certain, that, there can be no reverter of the property in this case to the grantors or their heirs or assigns, inasmuch as the deed recites, that it is founded upon a valuable consideration paid to them, and contains a general warranty against the claims of the grantors, their heirs, and all other persons. Brooke v. Shacklett, 13 Gratt. 301, 310. Immediately after the final decision made by this Court as aforesaid holding the trusts in said deed inoperative and void, Ann Vanmeter and many others constituting the persons, who had contributed the greater part of the money for the purchase, and which was used for the payment of the purchase-money for said house and lots, conveyed and assigned to Isaac N. Heiskell, John JB. Combs, Alexander Saunders, John W. Marshall, Isaac V. Parker, John W. Vandiver, Alfred Moore, John P. Rod wick, and Frederick Bane, trustees, all their right, title and interest in the aforesaid house and lots, also all their
At the June rules, 1883, the aforesaid trustees, Isaac N. Heiskell and others, filed their bill in the Circuit Court of Hampshire county against Henry Trout, James Carskadon, Isaac Carskadon and others, some of whom were the surviving grantees, trustees in the aforesaid deed of September 8,1856, and the others heirs of deceased trustees and contributors to the purchase of said property, or their personal representatives to compel such of the defendants as have had the use and control of said property, to account for the rents and profits thereof, to have said property sold, and the proceeds arising from such sale distributed and paid to the plaintiffs, so far as they may be entitled thereto, and for general relief.
The defendants, Isaac P. Carskadon and others, demurred generally to the bill, and filed their joint and several answer to the same, in which they rely on the lapse of time and the statute of limitations as a bar to the right of the plaintiffs to maintain their suit, and deny, that the plaintiffs have any claim or interest in the property or right to subject the same to any claim or charge it with any lien or trust upon any account or for any purpose. The court overruled said demurrer, and the plaintiffs filed the depositions of a number of witnesses, by which they proved that -their grantors or assignors and those, whom they represent, contributed more than five sixths of the money, which was used for the purchase of said lots, and that the defendants, the Oarskadons and others, contributed the residue of the money for said purchase. The plaintiffs represent those of the contributors
The Circuit Court of Berkeley county, to which the cause had been removed, by its decree of February 4,1888, ascertained, that the plaintiffs, by reason of the assignments made to them by the original contributors and their representatives were the owners of $1;120.00 of the $1,790.00 paid for the purchase of the said house and lots in the year 1856, that $350.00 of the said purchase-money was the proceeds of the sale of a house and lot belonging to the congregation of Methodist Episcopal Church at Romney, and that certain of the defendants contributed the residue, giving the names of the contributors, and the sum contributed by each. In respect to the said $350.00 the court held that as the proof showed that the Romney congregation of the Methodist Episcopal Church had used and occupied the property in controversy for many years since the late war, and that the rents and profits thus used were worth more than the said $350.00 it set off said sum against said use, rents and profits, directed a sale of said house and lots, and decreed, that the proceeds thereof should be distributed and paid to the plaintiffs and those of the defendants named in the decree as contributors, to the extent of the amounts contributed by them respectively, and the interest thereon from the date of said deed; but in the event such proceeds, after paying the proper costs chargeable thereon, should not be sufficient to pay said contributions in full, then the same should be paid to the plaintiff’s and the other named contributors pari passu, in proportion to their respective claims; and that the plaintiffs should recover from the defendants, who demurred to and answered the bill, all the costs accrued since the filing of said demurrer, except the costs of the depositions taken prior to that time.'
From this decree the said defendants, who demurred and filed their answer to the bill, the said Isaac P. Oarskadon and others, have appealed.
The appellants have assigned ten grounds of error, but they have failed to argue the cause before this Court or file
The first ground I shall notice is the alleged error in overruling the demurrer to the bill. That part of this ground, which claims that there was a defect of parties, was in my jungment sufficiently met by the amended bills filed in the cause, bringing before the court all the parties interested or affected by the final decree in the cause.
The other grounds of the demurrer go to the foundation of this suit, and involve the merits of this controversy.
The theory of the bill is, that the deed of September 8, 1856, by its terms showed a purpose to create a trust and negatives any intention to confer any beneficial title or interest in the property therein conveyed upon the grantees named therein as trustees; that said conveyance having been made by the grantors upon a full consideration paid to them and containing a general warranty against any right or claim on their part, they can under no circumstances have anjr claim or assert any right to the property; that the assignors of the plaintiff's and others having contributed and paid the whole of said purchase-money for an express purpose and upon express trusts declared in the deed, which trusts this Court has declared to be inoperative and void, the grantees in said deed can have no beneficial right to or interest in the property, and therefore it must be true, that the contributors, who thus paid for the property, have an equitable right to the same or a resulting trust or claim against the grantees for the money paid by them.'
The right thus asserted by the plaintiffs is in some respects anomalous, but it seems to be consonant with reason and justice. In 2 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence in the chapter on “ Implied Trusts,” the author, in section 1,196a, says : “Another form in which a resulting trust may appear is where there are certain trusts created either by will or deed, which fail in whole or in part, or which are of such an indefinite nature that courts of equity will not carry them
If there had been no warranty or consideration expressed' in this deed, there would undoubtedly have been a resulting trust in favor of the grantors, and the grantees could not hold the property for their own use; the trusts being illegal and void. Here, however, the contributors who paid the consideration were the real purchasers and owners of the property. They were in fact the grantors of the property though in form not parties to the deed. When they paid the purchase-money, they had the legal right to have the property conveyed to them. If they had done this and then conveyed it to trustees for the church, there could be no question, that the trustees would hold it for them upon the failure of the trusts. The fact, that instead of this circumlocution they caused their vendors, MacDonald and Trow-bridge, to convey the property to trustees directly, can not in a court of equity alter or change the effect of the transaction. The grantors in the deed do not and could not, as we have seen, assert any right. The only claim set up by any of the parties is that made by a part of the grantees in the deed and a small portion of the contributors. The trusts having been declared void, the only claim, the grantees could assert, would be, that the conveyance operated as an absolute vesting of the title in them for their own personal use and benefit. To sanction such a claim would be to disappoint the whole purpose of all the parties and perpetrate a fraud upon those, who paid for the property and caused the conveyance to be made. The property is, as the proof shows, incapable of partition, and therefore, even if a part of the contributors — that is, a part of the real owners of the property — are willing, that the grantees shall retain it, they can not control the interests of the others, who do not so desire. Those, who wish thus to leave their interests in the possession of the grantees, can return it to them, when they receive their proportion of the proceeds of the sale, but they
It is, however, claimed by the appellants, that the rights asserted by the plaintiffs were barred by the lapse of time and the statute of limitations. There never has been any hostile or adverse holding of the property by the grantees in the deed. They never have, so far as the record discloses, set up any claim in their own right, but on the contrary they expressly aver in their answer, that they have always held said property for the use of the Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States, and that said church has always had the use and enjoyment of it, together with the rents and profits arising therefrom. The church, as before shown, being incapable of holding the property, and the trusts, under which it claims, having been declared illegal and void, no lapse of time, however long, could confer upon it any title of right either legal or equitable. In order to obtain a title by an adverse possession or the lapse of time, the adverse claimant must be capable of a legal ownership of the property. Here the church, the alleged claimant, is incapable of holding the property under its claim, and therefore no possession or adverse claim by it could by the lapse of time or the statute of limitations confer upon it any title or defeat the claims of the rightful owners. Mong v. Roush, 29 W. Va. 119.
It is further contended that the Circuit. Court erred in setting off the $350.00, the proceeds of the sale of the house and lot owned by the Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States, against the rents and profits of the property in controversy during the time the said property was in the use and occupation of said church. The proofs show that the annual rental value of the property was at least $125.00 and
It is claimed, that the court failed to pass upon the defendant’s exceptions to the plaintiff’s depositions or improperly overruled said exceptions. According to my view it is wholly immaterial, what action the court took in respect to these exceptions,.because, if all the valid exceptions were sustained, and the improper evidence excluded, enough legal evidence would remain to sustain the bill and warrant the relief granted by the decree.
It is further claimed, that there should have been an order of reference to ascertain the contributoi’s of the fund by which the property was purchased. Technically it would have been more regular and the better practice to have had such order of reference. But as the proof shows all the contributors for the whole sum paid for the property, and the court itself having ascertained from the evidence and set forth in its decree the name and amount paid by each contributor, no substantial ground exists for the reversal of the decree on account of this irregularity.
The last ground of error assigned by the appellants, which I deem it necessary to notice, is, that the court improperly decreed, that the appellants should pay the costs incurred after they appeared and demurred to the bill. The result of this suit shows, that the appellants interposed a futile and groundless defence and thereby to some extent at least caused delay and additional costs, while they, or those they represent, reaped the benefit of that delay by retaining possession of the property in controversy and enjoying its profits. I can not say, that under the circumstances there was in this respect any error in the decree. Lemmond v. Peoples, 6 Ired. Eq. 127, 143. But, be this as it may, the appellate court can not look into the question of costs, where no other ground exists for the reversal of the decree. Franklin v. Geho, 30 W. Va. 27, 41, (3 S. E. Rep. 168.)
While it may be that the bill in this cause is to some extent anomalous, and the proceedings not in all respects en
Affirmed.