37 Mich. 264 | Mich. | 1877
Defendants in error brought an action of •ejectment to recover possession of certain lots situate in Ann Arbor. From the facts found by the court the parties •claimed title to this property through Minerva E. Mundy who was owner thereof in fee simple on the 20th day of .June, 1862. Hpon that day she executed a trust deed of this property under which the plaintiff below claimed title; to this deed a number of objections were raised. It also appears that Mrs. Mundy died in April, 1871, and that in •October, 1873, her only surviving heirs conveyed the premises in question by warranty deed to Fanny E. Thatcher, .the wife of Erastus Thatcher; that Erastus Thatcher then ■was an attorney at law, and was at the time of such con■veyance the solicitor for said heirs in a cause then pending .in court. This conveyance plaintiffs below attacked as being •champertous, against public policy and therefore absolutely void; that May 13th, 1875, said heirs, by quit-claim deed, conveyed the premises in question to plaintiffs below. This suffi.ciently shows the claim of title made by each party. If the trust deed was and is a valid instrument, then plaintiffs below would be entitled to recover. Even if invalid they still ■ claim they were entitled to recover, if- the deed from the heirs to Mrs. Thatcher can be held void, and upon this ■theory they recovered in the court below. The argument took a very wide range and the several questions raised were -discussed in this court thoroughly and exhaustively. We have ■ considered it proper to first examine the trust deed of June .20th, 1862, because if we find that a valid, legal instrument, it will render wholly unnecessary any examination of the •other questions discussed.
I. That the facts and circumstances, with reference to delivery and acceptance set forth in detail in the finding, do not show a lawful delivery or acceptance. Reference was made as to the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings, but this question we cannot examine into upon this record. We must take the finding of facts by the court as correct, and dispose of the questions here raised upon that assumption., It appears from the finding of the court that upon executing this deed Mrs. Mundy left it with Mr. Morgan, the attorney who had prepared it, where it remained until after her death, when he left it at the register’s office-for record at the request of one of the trustees therein named; that during this time, between its execution and her death, she remained in possession of the property, exercising exclusive control over the same, and in March, 1871, she conveyed a part of these premises to Wellington D. Smith; that she had no conversation with the trustees named in the deed or any of them, after its execution, nor were any of them, except Lemuel and Ulysses T. Foster, aware of its execution until after her death; the former, when he first learned of its execution, a few days after the date thereof, approved of and assented to what had been done, but did nothing farther in the way of accepting the trust, other than to request Mr. Morgan to retain it as it would probably be safer in his hands than elsewhere. The court also found “that Mrs. Mundy did or said nothing more in the way of delivering said deed, but it was her intention to do whatever was necessary, to make the deed valid- and effectual, and that the delivery to or leaving it with Morgan was intended by her to give it effect as a valid instrument. At the time of the execution, acknowledgment and leaving of said deed with said Morgan by Mrs. Mundy for the grantees, it was explained to her by Mr. Morgan that that was a good and sufficient delivery.of it to make it operative.”
One of the essential requisites to the validity of a deed, so as to pass the title, is delivery. Even although in all
So we have seen, that acceptance by the grantee, if necessary to prove an actual acceptance, may be made in certain cases even after the death of the grantor. And cases which hold that an acceptance, at a time subsequent to that of delivery, would not be sufficient to give validity to the deed, concede, that where the act of delivery is in its nature a continuing one, as leaving the deed on deposit, to be afterwards accepted by the grantee, a subsequent acceptance would be sufficient. Of course the deed where left on deposit this way might before acceptance be recalled, but until recalled might be accepted. Hulick v. Scovil, 4 Gilm., (9 Ill.), 177; Canning v. Pinkham, 1 N. H., 353; Maynard v. Maynard, 10 Mass., 456; Church v. Gilman, 15 Wend., 660.
We are of opinion therefore that under the facts found by the court there was a sufficient delivery and acceptance of this deed to render it, valid and effectual.
Even if an express acceptance by all the trustees could be considered necessary, which we do not understand to be the law, and the court had expressly found no such acceptance, yet it would not follow that the trust thereby had failed. “It is a well settled principle in equity that a trust shall not fail for want of a trustee.” “Equity never suffers a trust to fail on account of the neglect or refusal of the trustee to act, but if necessary will either appoint a new trustee, or treat the holder of the legal title as such.” Adams’ Equity, 164 and n.
II. That no power was contained in the deed under which the trustees could sell and convey the real estate. This objection may be considered with the next, which hinges thereon, viz.: that the trust was void under §§ 4081-4082 of the Compiled Laws, in that it suspended the power of alienation for more than two lives.
We think it is a self-evident proposition that the “absolute power of alienation” is not suspended, where the instrument gives the trustees power to dispose of the property at their option. Where power is given to convey the trust estate, the absolute power of alienation can in no possible way be said to be suspended. If such a power is exercised as it may at any time, the trust is at once and forever, upon the execution and delivery of the conveyance, at an end, and cannot be revived, and that such a power is good when contained in an instrument which without it would be invalid,
Did then the instrument in question in this case con-, tain such a power?
It is generally conceded at the present day that where-apt words are used to create such a power no particular-form is necessary, and it is also a universally recognized rule-in the construction of instruments, that they are to be held valid and effectual, rather than invalid, where such a construction can fairly be J^iven them under the language used and the rules of law applicable thereto. The grantor in. this instrument grants, bargains, sells and conveys unto the-trustees named, the lands therein described, “together with the appurtenances; and does also bargain, sell, assign and transfer to said trustees and the survivors or survivor, or successors of them as such trustees, all my household goods: and personal property of any and every kind, to have, hold,, use and enjoy the same, and lease or dispose of the same, or cause the same 'to be used, and to receive the rents,
Various objections were made to the validity of this
The objection that the reversion to the school district is void does not at present concern the plaintiffs in error in this case. Should the title of the church for any reason cease to exist and the school district claim under this trust deed, then the validity of the grant to the district would properly arise.
Our statute, §§ 3062 and 3074, fully authorizes the conveyance in trust for the purpose mentioned in this deed and vests the title in perpetual succession in the trustees provided for by the statute in trust for the church. We are of opinion that the objections made to the validity of this trust deed are not valid, and that it is unnecessary to discuss the other questions raised.
The judgment must be affirmed with costs and the record remanded for farther proceedings under the statute.