112 So. 846 | Fla. | 1927
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The pertinent portions of the bill are as follows: "That the Roman Catholic Church is and has been from time immemorial an unincorporated religious organization, and that for the purpose of carrying on its religious work the country has been divided into dioceses and a bishop appointed for each diocese from time to time, with charge over the territory contained within his respective diocese, over which he has charge of the churches belonging to the said religious organization; that the State of Florida, except a small piece of territory in West Florida, which lies within the limits of the diocese of Mobile, composes the diocese which is under the management and control of the Bishop of St. Augustine, and has been since territorial days. Your orator further shows unto your Honor that it is and has been the custom of the said church since long before the years 1881, and up to the present time, to take the title to property it acquires in Diocese of St. Augustine, in the name of the Bishop of St. Augustine for the time being, and his successors in office.
"Your orator further shows unto your Honor that where property is bought by or for the use of the church within the Diocese of St. Augustine, agreeable to such custom, the title is taken in the name of the Bishop and his successors in office, for the use and benefit of the church and its members, in accordance with the custom of the church organization, with power to the Bishop, whenever he sees fit, to sell and dispose of the same for the benefit of the said church organization.
"And your orator further shows unto your Honor that by deed dated May 20, 1881, one Robert R. Reid and Mary C. Reid his wife conveyed unto the Right Reverend John *857 Moore, Bishop of St. Augustine, Florida, and his successors in office and assigns forever, that certain tract of land situate in the City of Orlando, County of Orange and State of Florida, known as
Block Thirty-three of Robert R. Reid's Addition to Orlando.
which deed contained full covenants and general warranty of title, and that the said John Moore thereupon entered into possession of the said premises and erected a church, a rectory and a schoolhouse, and that the said John Moore and his successors as Bishop of St. Augustine have been ever since in actual possession of the said premises, using them for church, rectory and school purposes ever since, and that your orator is now in actual possession of the same.
"Your orator further shows unto your Honor that the said Robert R. Reid died in or about the year 1900, leaving his Last Will and Testament, wherein and whereby he devised his estate to the defendants Robert R. Reid and Jessie C. Ireland, and to his other heirs, as more fully appears from a copy of his said will hereto attached, marked 'Exhibit A,' which your orator prays may be taken as part of his bill.
"Your orator further shows unto your Honor that the defendants or some of them claim some interest in the said premises by reason of the fact that the said deed was made to the Bishop of St. Augustine, his successors and assigns, and that the word 'heirs' was omitted, and that the said claim of the said heirs of Robert R. Reid constitutes a cloud on your orator's title and tends to render the same unmarketable in his hands.
"Your orator further shows unto your Honor that if the said deed did not operate by way of grant to convey the fee title to the Bishop of St. Augustine and his successors because the word 'heirs' does not appear in the deed, yet *858 the covenant of general warranty in the said deed binding the grantors and their heirs forever and warranting the title unto the said John Moore, Bishop of St. Augustine, and his successors forever, should, and your orator believes does, operate by way of estoppel to convey to the church and its privies the perpetual and beneficial estate in the land.
"Your orator further shows unto your Honor that the said John Moore, Bishop of St. Augustine, died on July 30, 1901, and that he was succeeded as Bishop by William J. Kenny, who afterwards died and was in turn succeeded by Michael J. Curley, who afterwards became Archbishop of Baltimore, and that your orator succeeded him as Bishop of St. Augustine and that he is now Bishop of St Augustine, and successor in title to the said John Moore and as such is the owner in fee of the said premises for the use and benefit of the Roman Catholic Church and its members."
The deed, which was made an exhibit to the bill, made by Robert R. Reid and his wife, Mary C. Reid, and dated May 20, 1881, purported to grant Block 33 of Robert R. Reid's Addition to the Town of Orlando, as shown by recorded plat therein referred to, to "Right Rev.'s John Moore, Bishop of St. Augustine, Florida, of the County of St. Johns," and "his successors in office and assigns forever," together with all the estate, right, title, interest, dower, right of dower, claim and demand whatsoever, as well in law as in equity, of the said grantors in and to the same; and the habendum clause was in these words: "To have and to hold the above granted, bargained and described premises, with the appurtenances, unto the said party of the second part his successors and assigns to their own proper use, benefit and behoof forever." The deed further contained full covenants of seisin, and title in fee simple of an absolute and indefeasible estate of inheritance, and *859 of right to convey; also covenant for quiet enjoyment and possession of the property without suit or molestation of the grantors or assigns; also against encumbrances, and full covenant of warranty. The deed was signed and attested by two witnesses and acknowledged by the parties on the day of its date, but was not recorded until July 20, 1923.
BROWN, J., after stating the facts:
The appellants contend that the deed to Bishop Moore, not containing the word "heirs," vested only a life estate in the grantee. If this contention be valid, the life estate was in Bishop Moore with a vested reversionary interest in the grantor, Robert R. Reid, Sr., which passed under his will to his residuary divisees, the grantor having died in 1900 and Bishop Moore the following year, at which time the rights of the reversion so claimed would have accrued. As the bill was filed on September 19, 1924, more than twenty-three years after the death of the alleged life tenant and the accrual of the alleged right of the appellants, and as the bill shows that during this period the property had been in the actual possession of the original grantee and his successors as Bishop of St. Augustine, using the same for church, rectory and school purposes, under color of title, it is contended on behalf of appellee that the facts alleged in the bill show that appellants are barred by the statute of limitations and also show good title in the appellee by adverse possession, (citing 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 388), rendering this alleged defect in the deed immaterial to the equity of the bill and showing that the court below was without error in overruling the demurrer to the appellee's bill. But the bill, instead of alleging or claiming title by adverse possession, claims title through and under Robert R. Reid, Sr., the ancestor of appellants, by virtue of his deed to Bishop Moore, claiming that such deed conveyed the fee. Such is the gravamen of the bill. Nor can it be said merely *860 from the facts alleged in the bill that the rights, if any, of the appellants were barred by the statute of limitations, as the bill does not show the age of appellants, or either of them, at the time of the death of their ancestor, or of Bishop Moore, and therefore does not show that more than seven years had elapsed at the time the bill was filed after such possible disability from nonage had ceased. In this state of the pleadings, it becomes necessary for us to consider the contention of appellants above referred to.
Appellants cite the case of Ivey v. Peacock,
In the Ivey case it was further said in the opinion: " The plaintiffs in error rely upon the statement of the law as given in 13 Cyc. 642. The author of the Article on Deeds there asserts that it is generally held essential that the deed read to the grantee and his heirs, but adds, 'It has, however, been held in a large number of decisions that the language of the whole instrument should be considered in order to discover the intent, and that where there is a clear intention to pass a fee simple, the deed will be construed so as to effectuate such intention, although, the word heirs or technical words of inheritance are omitted.' An examination of the cases cited in support of the text will disclose, however, that they are founded upon statutes which come within some of the exceptions mentioned above or cases construing wills not deeds.
"The general rule of construction obtaining here as elsewhere that all parts of an instrument will be looked to and that construction adopted that carries out most clearly the evident intent of the parties does not authorize us to *862 convert a life estate into a fee simple by construction."
This case was cited with approval in Tyler v. Triesback,
The use of the word heirs in the granting clause of deeds originated in feudal times, when there was a real reason for so using it, and it finally became a rule of the common law that the use of such word was indispensable in order to convey an estate of inheritance, or in fee simple, for which no synonym could be substituted. I Washburn on Real Property, Secs. 84, 85. As, by statute, the State of Florida adopted the common and statute laws of England of a general and not of a local nature, so far as the same were not inconsistent with the Federal or State Constitution or statutes (Sec. 71, Rev. Gen. Stats.), the rule above referred to remained in full force and effect in this State *863
until the statute of 1903, dispensing therewith, and hence was in effect at the time the deed here in question was made and also at the time of Bishop Moore's death. Most of the States by statute, and some of them by judicial construction, have long since departed from this rule, and the rule generally adopted has been to consider the language of the entire instrument in order to discover the intent of the grantor, both as to the character of estate and the property attempted to be conveyed, and to so construe the instrument as, if possible, to effectuate such intent. 8 R. C. L. 1037-8; 18 C. J. 253, etseq; Sanders v. Ransom,
Appellee contends, however, that even though the absence of the word "heirs" from the deed made it ineffective to convey a fee simple estate, yet the covenants for quiet enjoyment and of warranty will stop the defendants from asserting title to the land, citing Terrett v. Taylor, 9 Cranch 43, and Mason v. Muncaster, 9 Wheat, p. 454. It was there held that although the deed to the "church wardens" and their successors could not convey to them the fee, inasmuch as there was neither statutory nor common law authority for their capacity to hold lands as church wardens, and they could not take the fee in their natural capacity by reason of the absence of the word"heirs" from the deed, yet "the covenant of general warranty in the deed binding the grantors and their heirs forever, and warranting the land to the church wardens and their successors forever, may well operate by way of estoppel to confirm to the church and its privies, the perpetual and beneficial estate in the land." But an examination of these cases shows that the deed in question in both cases was a trust deed, by its terms, having been made to certain church wardens for the use and benefit of the church in that parish. Under the laws of Virginia, where those cases *864 arose, the vestry and the parson of the church were a corporation and the title to all church property was vested in them. It further appears that the land in question was purchased by the vestry of the parish and church for the benefit and use of the church, but in making out the deed the grantors conveyed to certain persons as church wardens for the use and benefit of the church, and it was held that the error in designating the trustees to hold for the use and benefit of the church did not defeat the title of the church. It will have been observed that the deed here in question was not, by its terms, made to Bishop Moore and his successors for the use andbenefit of the church.
Appellee further contends that the deed here in question was a trust deed, creating a trust in Bishop Moore which passed to his successors in a fee simple estate, rendering the absence of the word heirs immaterial; the rule being that a trustee takes a legal estate commensurate with the duties of the trust and the equitable estate vested in the cestui que trust, without regard to the words of limitation used. In other words, the trustee will be held to take whatever legal estate is necessary to enable him to carry out the trust. Washburn on Real Property, 6th Ed. Secs. 149, 162; Taylor v. Triesback, supra;
Christopher v. Mungen,
Sec. 3791 of the Revised General Statutes, taken from the Florida statute adopted in 1828, and which seems to have come down from the old English statute adopted during the reign of Charles II, provides that all declarations and creations of trust and confidence of or in lands, tenements and hereditaments, shall be manifested and proved by some writing, signed by the party authorized by law to declare or create such trust or confidence, or by his last will *868 and testament, or else they shall be utterly void and of none effect; but with a proviso to the effect that the statute shall not apply to trusts arising by implication or construction of law. The following section of the Revised General Statutes, 3792, provides that all grants, conveyances, or assignments of trusts or confidences of or in any lands, tenements or hereditaments, or of any estate or interest therein, shall be by deed signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, by the party granting, conveying or assigning, or his attorney or agent thereunto lawfully authorized, or by last will and testament duly made and executed, or else the same shall be void and of none effect.
An interesting treatment of the effect of these statutes is found in Sections 78 to 111 of the 6th ed. of Perry on Trusts.
In the case of Byrne Realty Co. v. South Florida Farms Co.,
Another pertinent doctrine of the law of trusts upon which this Court has made a clear announcement will be found in the case of Axtell v. Coons,
It is well established that there must be found within the four corners of written instruments creating or declaring a trust a cestui que trust. "It is not necessary to name the beneficiary, but he must be so designated or described that he can be identified." 26 R. C. L. 1189. In Sec. 95 of Perry on Trusts it is said, "Wherever a valuable consideration is paid, a contract will be executed as near to the intention of the parties as possible; as where for a valuable consideration a man executed a deed of land purporting to be under his hand and seal, but no seal was affixed, by reason of which defect the legal title did not pass, the Court held that the defective deed might be used as a declaration of trust, and that the holder of the legal title should hold it in trust for the grantee in the deed and that he should be ordered to convey; and where a husband for a meritorious consideration conveyed personal property directly to his wife, by deed, which could not operate, because a husband cannot convey directly to his wife, the Court ordered the deed to stand as a declaration of trust for the wife, and the husband's representatives to hold the legal title in trust for her. The authorities establish this proposition; that where there is a valuable consideration the Court will enforce the trust, though it is not perfectly created, and though the instruments do not pass the title to the property, if from the documents the Court can clearly perceive the terms and conditions of the trust, and the parties to be benefited. In such cases, effect is given to the *871
consideration to carry out the intentions of the parties, though informally expressed. But if no cestui que trust is named, or so designated that he can be identified, the Court cannot carry a trust into effect, however clearly it may be created in other respects." And in Sec. 151 of the same work, this language occurs: "If a conveyance has been made upon a valuable consideration, there can be no resulting trust to the grantor, as the payment of valuable consideration imports an intention to benefit the grantee in case the trusts declared fail, or are imperfectly declared, or do not take effect for any other reason. See also, to like effect, Sec. 158, id., where it is said: "But if the conveyance is by deed for a valuable consideration, the grantee will take the beneficial interest if the trust fail to be declared, or fail in any way; for there can be no resulting trusts (to the grantor) where the grantee pays a valuable consideration for the estate." And in Sec. 162, id., we find: "A fortiori a trust deed cannot be turned into a resulting trust for the grantor by proof that it was without consideration. And when a deed contains covenants of warranty, no use can result to the grantor, for such covenants estop him from claiming any legal or beneficial interest in the estate." As was said in Semple v. Semple,
Of course, in this and other jurisdictions having statutes substantially similar to ours, trusts in realty cannot be proved by parol, and hence cannot be enforced against a party who denies the existence of such a trust; nor will oral proof be heard to engraft an express trust on a conveyance absolute in terms. Perry on Trusts, Sections 76 and 79; *872
26 R. C. L. 1202, et seq.; 39 Cyc. 46, 81, et seq.; note to Jackson v. Cleveland, 90 Am. Dec. 270, 277. But a parol trust is not in all cases an absolute nullity. The party sought to be charged may admit it, even in cases where the cestui que trust
could not enforce it, and the Courts will usually protect the trustee in the execution of the trust, if he chooses so to do, and as far as possible protect the beneficiaries in the enjoyment of the fruits of its execution. Secs. 76 to 85, id. And in Sec. 82, it appears that "if there is competent written evidence that the party holding the legal title is only a trustee, that will open the door for the admission of parol evidence to explain the position of the parties." The text of 26 R. C. L. 1197, lays down the rule that "the defense that a trust is void under a statute of frauds must be left to the party charged with the trust, and those holding under such party." But whatever may be the rule as between the trustees,cestui que trust, when there is a dispute concerning the existence of the trust or where its existence is shown by competent written proof and the dispute is as to the meaning or scope of the trust (see Secs. 82, 85, id.), we apprehend that when the question of the existence of the trust arises between the cestui que trust or alleged trustee and other parties, the mere admission of the trust by the trustee would not, in the absence of proper written evidence, be sufficient to establish its legal existence. Our statutes (3791-2, Rev. Gen. Stats.) construed together constitute something more than a mere rule of evidence. As to such cases as come within their letter and spirit, they in effect go to the existence — or at least to the enforceable existence — of the trust itself. While parol evidence will not be admissible to vary or contradict or add to the terms of the written instrument relied on to create or prove a trust, in construing such an instrument the usual rules as to the admissibility of extrinsic evidence to affect *873
writings apply. That is, where the instrument is free from ambiguity, the donor's grantor's intention is to be collected from the words used by him. But, it is said by some of the text writers on this subject that where it is impossible to ascertain the intention of the trustor from the language used, the Court will consider all the surrounding circumstances of the case, and, when proper and necessary, it will receive parol evidence for the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the parties (26 R. C. L. 1180, 1202, 1252, 1256); applying the familiar parol evidence rule sometimes resorted to in the construction of the language used in deeds, i. e., that they will when necessary be construed in the light of the surrounding circumstances and attendant existing state of facts, the relationship of the parties, etc. (18 C. J. 261; 8 R. C. L. 1041), never to vary or contradict the plain intent of the language used, but, where it is ambiguous, to enable the Court to understand and determine the meaning and intention of the grantor when he employed it. Horn v. Gartman,
No particular form of words is necessary to create a trust, and whether one exists is to be ascertained from the intention of the parties as manifested by the words used and the circumstances of the particular case. Colton v. Colton,
It has been held in a number of cases that "a deed to a bishop for the benefit of the church and to his successors and assigns forever" vests a fee simple title in such bishop *874
in trust for the church, in the absence of any condition subsequent, express or implied; but that the trust attaches to the office of bishop, and not to the person, and therefore passes to his successor. Doan v. Vestry, etc.,
In Mannix v. Purcell,
On the other hand, it was held in McHugh v. McCloe,
In the case at bar, if the deed had read merely to "Right Rev. John Moore, Bishop of St. Augustine," the words "Bishop of St. Augustine" not being preceded by word "as," might have been merely descriptio personae (see State v. Gray,
As to the trust feature, in the light of our own statutes and decisions and those of other jurisdictions, and the comments of the text writers, we are clearly of the opinion that this deed does not create, or "manifest," an express trust. Neither the terms, nor the purposes, of a trust are stated, and no beneficiary is "named or so designated as that he can be identified." It is true that under the decisions, and the allegations of the bill, as well as the familiar maxim, idcertum est quod certum reddi protest, we might construe this deed as if it had been expressly made to "Right Rev. John Moore, Bishop of the diocese of St. Augustine, Fla., of the Roman Catholic Church, and his successors in office and assigns forever"; that therefore the grantee and his successors could only take, hold and use the property rightfully in their official capacity as bishops respectively of the diocese, and that Orlando was in that diocese. It might also be admitted that, as such bishops, the probabilities are that they could only hold, use or dispose of the property for church purposes — their official station being itself a church purpose, and their just powers as bishops being to act for and on behalf of the church. So the resulting effect of the instrument is in the nature of a trust, though by its words no trust is mentioned. This is not enough to create an *877
express trust. It cannot be said from the deed whether the trust, if any, was for the benefit of the existing church at Orlando, or one to be formed there, or for the benefit of the church throughout the diocese, or for the benefit of the schools or charities of the church, or for the benefit of the Roman Catholic Church in general, or for the special benefit of the then bishop and his successors in their official capacity — such as to provide a residence for the bishop. The subsequent use of the property for a church, school and rectory of the Roman Catholic Church in Orlando cannot be looked to, to supply the omission of the deed to state the object or purpose of the trust, or to name, or designate so as to identify, the beneficiary of the trust, in order to make the instrument itself manifest an express trust. Whatever may be the rules that might be applicable in case of a contest between the church and the bishop with regard to this property, construed in the light of the laws and customs of the church, etc., or with regard to the question of a resulting trust, if such had been here alleged or relied upon, we are clear in our conclusion that this deed, under the allegations of the bill, does not create or prove the existence of an express trust for the benefit either of the Roman Catholic Church, in general, or the church in Orlando, or in or for the diocese of St. Augustine; or for any other purpose. In addition to the authorities cited, see also Wardens and Vestry v. Bagley,
There is no ambiguity on the face of the deed which could properly be explained by parol, so as to make it an express trust. It is merely a deed, for a valuable consideration, absolute on its face, to the then Bishop of St. Augustine and "his successors in office and assigns forever," in their *878
official capacity; and both the habendum and covenants show that the full legal title was intended to be conveyed, not to the church, but to the then Bishop and his successors in office. United Brethren Church v. First M. E. Church,
Nor does the language of the deed create an implied trust. Trusts of this nature are said to arise from the construction of wills or settlement inter vivos. Implied trust arise "when a testator employs words precatory, or recommendative, orexpressing a belief." Thus, if he "desire," "will," "request," "will and desire," etc. Lewin on Trust, 148; Perry, Sec. 112. "As ordinarily classified and defined, implied trusts are subdivided into the two classes, resulting and constructive; but by some authorities the term 'implied trust' is used in a sense exclusive of these two classes. Where the term is so used, four distinct classes of trusts are recognized, namely, express, implied, resulting and constructive; and under this classification implied trusts are defined as trusts that the court imply from the words of an instrument, where no express trust is declared, but such words are used that the court infers or implies that it was the purpose or intention of the parties to create a trust." See 39 Cyc. 25, 26, and cases cited. Some authorities doubt that implied trusts of this nature are excepted from the operation of the statute of frauds. Garrell v. Alspaugh,
Now, as to the capacity of the grantee to take legal title under the deed, the first consideration which presents itself is, can the defendants, claiming under and in privity with the grantor, raise this question? "When a deed shows by a recital or covenant that there was an actual intention to grant and receive a certain estate, the parties are estopped from denying the effect of the deed as so intended." Devlin on Deeds, Sec. 944, citing a number of cases. And in Sec. 952 of the same work it is said, "an estoppel of course, will arise from a covenant of warranty." And in 21 C. J. 1067, this appears: "A person who assumes to convey an estate by deed is estopped, as against the grantee, to assert anything in derogation of the deed. He will not be heard for the purpose of defeating the title of the grantee, to say that at the time of the conveyance he had no title, or that none passed by the deed, nor can he deny to the deed its full operation and effect as a conveyance." And in 10 R. C. L. 676-7, it is said: "A grantor is generally estopped from denying the title of his grantee, or his authority to sell. * * * A grantor of lands with full covenants of warranty is estopped to claim any interest in the granted premises." But, it is added, a covenant of warranty "cannot enlarge the estate granted or pass by estoppel a greater estate than that expressly conveyed."
However, as above shown, this deed, independent of the warranty, expressly purported to convey the fee, and all of the estate in the property held by the grantor of any nature whatsoever. One of the headnotes to Horn v. Gartman,
But aside from the question of estoppel by deed to deny the capacity of the grantee, we are of the opinion that Bishop Moore and his successors in their official capacity had the capacity to take and hold in fee under this deed — not in the technical sense of an estate of inheritance which was capable of descending to the heirs of Bishop Moore, or any of his successors, but a fee simple in the sense of the character of estate which a corporation takes when a deed is made to it, its successors and assigns. On reason and common sense, we think this holding is correct, and we find nothing in the books to the contrary. It is true, that ordinarily an estate in fee simple is an estate of inheritance, one that will descend to the grantee's heirs if he die before alienation thereof. Washburn Real Prop., 137. But "from the nature of corporations," a conveyance to them "will be understood as a fee without words of limitation." And, "if it be a corporation sole, it must be limited to such corporator and 'his successors,' which in case of corporations, answers to 'heirs' in cases of grants to natural persons, or it would be an estate only for life of such corporator." Washburn, Real Prop. 153. "Most persons, natural and *881 artificial, may be parties to deeds. The chief exceptions that the law has found have arisen from the disabilities of infants, persons insane or mentally incapable, married women, aliens and corporations." Reeves on Real Prop., Sec. 1088; Jones Real Prop., Sec. 156, et seq. And the author goes on to show that practically all of the disabilities referred to apply to the grantor's capacity to make, rather than to the grantee's capacity to take. As is said by Devlin, Sec. 116, "The capacity of a grantee is less restricted than that of a grantor." See also Sec. 120a of Devlin on Deeds.
In the case of United Brethren Church v. First M. E. Church,
In the case of Beckwith v. Rector, Wardens, etc.,
But even if the deed in question here could not be sustained upon any of the grounds above mentioned, it would appear to be sustainable upon an old doctrine of the common law, namely, that of the "corporation sole." As hereinabove referred to, in another connection, the State of Florida adopted, by statute, the common law, in so far as the same is not inconsistent with our Constitution and statutes. Both our Constitution and our statutes provide means for the formation of corporations aggregate, but we find nothing in either Constitution or statutes which either expressly or impliedly repeals the ancient common law institution of the "corporation sole." Blackstone, in Book I, p. 470, tells us. "The first division of corporations is into aggregate and sole. Corporations aggregate consist of many persons united together into one society, and are kept up by a perpetual succession of members, so as to continue forever; of which kind are the mayor and commonalty of a city, the head and fellows of a college, the dean and chapter of a cathedral church. Corporations sole consist of one person only and his successors, in some particular station, who are incorporated by law, in order to give them some legal capacities and advantages, particularly that of perpetuity, which in their natural persons they could not have had. In this sense, the king is a sole *885 corporation; so is a Bishop; so are some deans, and prebendaries, distinct from their several chapters; and so is every parson and vicar." And on page 472 he further says: "But, with us in England, the King's consent is absolutely necessary to the erection of any corporation, either impliedly or expressly given. The king's implied consent is to be found in corporations which exist by force of the common law, to which our former kings are supposed to have given their concurrence; common law being nothing else but custom, arising from the universal agreement of the whole community. Of this sort are the king himself, all Bishops, parsons, vicars, church-wardens, and some others; who by common law have ever been held as far as our books can show us, to have been corporations, virtuteofficii; and this incorporation is so inseparably annexed to their offices, that we cannot frame a complete legal idea of any of these persons, but we must also have an idea of a corporation, capable to transmit his rights to his successors at the same time." In Vol II, pp. 273-4 of Kent's Commentaries, 13th Ed., we find the following: "Corporations are divided intoaggregate and sole. A Corporation sole consists of a single person, who is made a body corporate and politic, in order to give him some legal capacities and advantages, and especially that of perpetuity, which, as a natural person, he cannot have. A Bishop, dean, parson, and vicar are given in the English books as instances of sole corporations; and they and their successors in perpetuity take the corporate property and privileges; and the word 'successors' is generally as necessary for the succession of property in a corporation sole, as the word 'heirs' is to create an estate of inheritance in a private individual. A fee will pass to a corporation aggregate, without the word successors in the grant, because it is a body which, in its nature, is perpetual; but, as a general rule, a fee will not pass to a corporation sole, without *886 the word 'successors,' and it will continue for the life only of the individual clothed with the corporate character. There are very few points of corporation law applicable to a corporation sole. They cannot, according to the English law, take personal property in succession, and their corporate capacity, in that respect, is confined to real property." See also Coke's Littleton 8b, 9b, 46b, 94b; 1 Kyd on Corporations, 76-77; Angel and Ames on Corporations, 11th Ed., Sec. 27; 7 R. C. L. 43; 7 Am. Eng. Encyc. of Law, 635.
It is true that the doctrine of a sole corporation has never received much recognition in America. However, it was held in Western v. Hunt,
The existence of the corporation sole is also recognized in the following cases; Santillan v. Moses,
That the common law, corporation sole is, under our statute adopting the common law, the law in Florida today, seldom as it may be called into operation, there can be no doubt; and its application to this case is inescapable, and removes all doubt as to the capacity of the grantee and his successors to take the fee simple title. But whether we recognize the appellee, complainant in the court below, in his capacity as bishop, as a corporation sole or not, the analogy to the common law corporation sole is so complete as to bring him within the spirit and reason of the doctrine relating thereto, and indicate our conclusion on the other grounds mentioned. For the reasons above pointed out, we find no error in the action of the court below in overruling the demurrer to the bill, and the order appealed from will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.
ELLIS, C. J., AND STRUM, J., concur.
WHITFIELD, P. J., AND TERRELL AND BUFORD, J. J., concur in the opinion. *888