Moseley v. Smiley

55 So. 143 | Ala. | 1911

SAYRE, J.

In 1891 J. J. Moseley, on a valuable consideration, conveyed the parcel of land in controversy to himself and two others, “trustees for Tabernacle Alliance Hall and Schoolhouse, and to their successors' in office.” Tabernacle Alliance was a voluntary unincorporated association, whose members were admitted by ballot. In 1895 it died for lack of sustaining interest. Since then a school has been kept on the premises under the direction and control, as. we gather, of the district school trustees. In 1909 Hoppin Murrell procured a conveyance of the property to himself from J. J. Moseley, who had executed the deed to Tabernacle Alliance, and went into exclusive possession.- Thereafter Smiley and others, describing themselves as citizens of the community and patrons of the school, filed this bill to have the deed to Murrell cancelled, and trustees appointed to take possession and administer the property in accordance with the trust created by Moseley’s deed to Tabernacle Alliance.

The bill is in effect an equitable ejectment. Before submission for final decree, it was thought proper to amend the bill by eliminating -all parties complainant except Walter Tarver and William Crowley. These parties are not shown to be interested otherwise, and we have inferred that, the bill in its final shape was prosecuted in their name, on the theory that they, in virtue of their' offices as trustees of the public school *596district in which the property is located, were entitled to assert a public interest. It may be that the deed created a public trust for the members of the Alliance; but the nature of a “charity,” as that term is used in courts of equity, requires that its beneficiaries should be an uncertain bo,dy or class. Its purposes must be public.—Johnson v. Holifield, 97 Ala. 423, 58 Am. Rep. 596.

A charitable trust contemplates perpetuity, ■ too. “Indeed, it is always hoped, where funds are given in trust, the income to be applied to some church, almshouse, hospital, or school, that such institution will exist indefinitely, and that the donor’s bounty will be a perennial spring for generations.” Perry on Trusts, .§ 737. On the other hand, a perpetual trust cannot be created for individuals.—Lyons v. Bradley, 168 Ala. 505, 53 South. 244.

It appears in the evidence that the alliance acted in concert with the public school authorities of the district in furnishing the school with a teacher after the land had been purchased and the building erected, and the children from the neighborhood, whose parents were not members of the alliance, were permitted to attend the school, and that after the disintegration of the alliance the property fell by common consent under the control of the district school trustees; but, on consideration of the terms of the deed, to which alone we may look to ascertain the nature and extent of the interests created, we think it is impossible to say that the alliance may not have used the school property for the exclusive benefit of its own members or that it may not have caused the trustees to alien its interest in the. property at its will. “The qestion is, not whether he may not apply it upon purposes strictly, charitable, but whether he is bound to so apply it.”—Morice v. Bishop *597of Durham, 9 Ves. 399. “If it might, consistently with the bill, be applied to other than strictly charitable purposes, the trust is too indefinite for the court to execute.”—James v. Allen, 3 Mer. 17; Attorney General v. Soule, 28 Mich. 153.

We do not consider either the legal or eqitable status of the ownership of this property since the dissolution of the alliance, for the opinion which we have formed of the case is that complainants, whether as private citizens or as school trustees, have no such relation to the subiect-matter as will authorize them to maintain this bill.

The decree will therefore be reversed, and a decree here rendered dismissing the bill, at complainant’s cost.

Reversed and rendered.

Simps'on, McClellan, and Mayfield, JJ., concur.
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