190 Ky. 565 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1921
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
By an act of the General Assembly, approved March 10, 1873, Henry Shoudy and fifteen others were constituted a body politic and corporate, to be known and designated by the name and style of the Trustees of the Baptist Female College of Liberty Association, with all the powers, privileges and rights which are exercised by the trustees of any academy of learning in this state. Chapter 344, Acts 1873, adjourned session, page 436. A majority of two-thirds of the trustees remaining in office were authorized to fill vacancies until the regular annual meeting of the liberty association, which was given the-power to fill such vacancies by a majority vote. The liberty association was also authorized at each annual session to elect one-fourth of the trustees. In adcli
“That it shall and may be lawful for the said trustees, and their successors in office, and they are hereby invested with full power and authority in their corporate capacity, to purchase or receive by donation, devise, or bequest, any lands, tenements, hereditaments,' rents, goods, and chattels, and to hold the «ame by the name aforesaid, to them and their successors forever, for the use and benefit of said institution, and according to the intention of the donor or donors of any such lands, tenements, hereditaments, moneys, rents, goods and chattels, and not otherwise, and to sell, transfer, and convey the same, by a majority of said trustees, unless prohibited by the terms of any such donation. ’ ’
After the creation of the corporation, certain donations were received for the purpose of purchasing land, erecting buildings thereon and conducting the school. While these donations came principally from Baptists, many of them were received from members of other churches. The school became indebted from time to time and it was necessary to mortgage the property in order to meet this indebtedness. The school was conducted with varying degrees ,of success until the year 1912, when the trustees reported to the liberty association that the school was heavily in debt, and that there was no way of paying the .debts except to sell the property. Thereupon, the liberty association passed a resolution empowering the board of trustees to sell the college and grounds for the best price obtainable. The trustees then sold the property to the Barren County Board of Educa-’ tion for the sum of $19,400.00, or more than enough to discharge the outstanding indebtedness.
This suit was brought for the purpose of having the court determine who was entitled to the surplus proceeds. The claimants were the donors, the county court for the use and benefit of the county schools of Barren county, and the liberty association. The chancellor held that the surplus belonged to the common schools of ’the county. To reverse that judgment, this appeal is prosecuted.
There is no ground whatever for holding that the proceeds of the sale, after discharging the school’s indebt
The next question for decision is whether the judgment awarding the surplus proceeds to the county court for the benefit of the common schools was proper. The judgment was based .on section 323, Kentucky Statutes, which is as follows:
“If any society holding land shall dissolve, the title to such land and appurtenances shall vest in the trustees of the county seminary in which the land may lie, for the use of such seminary; and if there be no such seminary, then in the county court, for' the benefit of common schools in the county. The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to the society called Shakers, who shall have the same right to acquire and hold real estate as they have had prior to the passage of this law. ’ ’
The statute of 43rd Elizabeth in reference to charitable uses was in force in Kentucky.
In the year 1814, the General Assembly passed an act for the benefit of religious societies in this commonwealth. 5 Lift. 131; Digest Statute Laws Kentucky of Morehead & Brown, 1834, Vol. 2, p. 1347. Said act is as follows:
“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky: That if any society or sect of Christians in any part of this Commonwealth, shall heretofore have associated, or hereafter shall associate themselves together, in congregational form, and shall have acquired, or hereafter ‘shall acquire, a piece or lot of ’ground, for the purpose of erecting thereon a house or houses of worship, graveyard, and pound for horses; and shall have heretofore received, or shall hereafter
“ Provided, however, that if any schism or division shall take place in said congregation or church, from any other cause than the immorality of its members, nothing in this act shall be so construed as to authorize -said trustees to prevent either of the parties so divided, from using the house or houses of worship, for the purposes of devotion, a part of the time, proportioned to the numbers of each party:
“Provided, that the quantity of real estate hereafter acquired by any religious- society, and vested in trustees alnd their successors under this act, shall not exceed (four acres of land): Provided, that nothing in this act shall be construed to authorize the minority of any church having seceded from, or been expelled, or excommunicated from the church or congregation, from interfering in any manner, in their appointments for preaching or worship, with any appointment for similar purposes, which may have been made by the body or the major part of such church or congregation. ”
In the year 1824, the legislature passed an act to amend an act entitled “An A,ct for the benefit of religious societies in this Commonwealth,” approved February 1,1814. This act was approved January 7,1824, and
“Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky: That any religious society heretofore formed, or which may hereafter be formed, may acquire by purchase or donation any number of acres of ground not exceeding ten, in .one or more lot or lots, under the same rules, regulations and restrictions contained in the above recited act, and for the purposes therein mentioned; and so much of the above recited act as restricts any religious society from holding more than one lot of ground, be and the same is hereby repealed; Provided, however, that this act shall not be construed to authorize any society to hold more than ten acres.
“Sec. 2. Be it further enacted: That if any society so holding lands shall dissolve, the said land and appurtenances shall be vested in the trustees of the seminary of learning of the county where such land may be, for the use and benefit of said seminary; and if there be no seminary in said county, then and in that case the land and appurtenances shall be vested in the county court, for the use of common schools in said county.”
The statute of 43rd Elizabeth and the foregoing acts were subsequently revised and embraced in one chapter by the commissioners appointed for that purpose, and constitute chapter 14, Revised Statutes of Kentucky, 1852, by Wicldiffe, Turner and Nicholas, which chapter is as follows:
“Sec. 1. All grants, conveyances, devises, gifts, appointments, and assignments, heretofore made, or which shall be hereafter made, in due form of law, of any lands, tenements, rents, annuities, profits, hereditaments, goods, chattels, moneys, stocks, or choses in action, for the relief or benefit of aged or impotent and poor people, sick and maimed soldiers and mariners, schools of learning, seminaries, colleges, universities, navigation, bridges, ports, havens, causeways, public highways, churches, houses of correction, hospitals, asylums, idiots, lunatics, deaf and dumb persons, the blind, or in aid of young tradesmen, orphans, or for the redemption of prisoners or captives, setting out of soldiers, or for any other charitable or humane purpose, shall be valid, except as hereinafter restricted.
“Sec. 3. No church or society of Christians shall be capable ,of taking- or holding the title, legal or equitable, to exceeding fifty acres of ground; but may acquire and hold that quantity for the purpose of erecting thereon houses of public worship, public instruction, a parsonage, a graveyard and a horse pound.
“1. The society may, before or after the creation of the charity, appoint not exceeding three trustees, who and their successors, shall be vested with the title, legal or equitable, to such property, for the use'of such society.
“2. The society shall enter such appointment on its record book, a majority concurring therein, and may fill vacancies in like manner.
“3. The trustees, or a majority of them, may, in their own names, for the use of the society, institute and prosecute suits to recover any property, real .or personal, to which society has right, and may. defend any suit that shall be instituted against the trustees, or society, for or touching its temporalities.
“4. In case a schism or division shall take place in a society, the- trustees shall permit each party to use the church and appurtenances for divine worship a part of the time, proportioned to the members of each partju
“5. The excommunication of one party by the other, shall not impair such right, except it be done, bona ficle, on the grounds of immorality.
“Sec. 4. If any society holding lands shall dissolve, the title to such land and appurtenances shall vest in the trustees of the county seminary in which the land may lie, for the use of such seminary; and if there be no such seminary, then in the county court, for the benefit of common schools in the county. The provisions of this section shall not apply to the society called Shakers, who shall have the same right to acquire and hold real estate, as they have had prior to the passage of this act. ’ ’ '
The present statute was enacted May 12, 1893, and embraces sections 317 to 324, inclusive, Kentucky Stats. Section 317 is the same as section 1, Bevised Statutes of 1852, with the exception that the words, “if the grant,
Manifestly, if the corporation, “Trustees of the Baptist Female College of Liberty Association,” is not a society within the meaning of section 323, supra, then its real estate, upon the dissolution of the corporation, would not vest in the county court for the benefit of 'the common schools. That being true, the case turns on the proper meaning of the word, “society.” Of course, if its meaning in the present statute, which is a substantial re-enactment of the revision of 1852, is plain and unam- ' biguous, our inquiry should stop there, but if the matter is left in doubt and uncertainty, we may properly resort to the original acts from which the present statute was derived. United States v. Bowen, 100 U. S. 508, 25 L. Ed. 631; Doyle v. Wisconsin, 94 U. S. 50, 24 L. Ed. 64. Looking at the present act we find that section 319 (section 3 of the revision) provides that “no church or society of Christians shall be capable of taking or holding the title, legal or equitable, exceeding fifty acres of ground, etc.” That section, of course, is limited to a society of Christians. Following this section we find other sections relating to schisms and excommunications which could only occur in churches or religious societies. Then follows section 323, providing that “if any society holding land shall dissolve, the title to such land or appurtenances shall vest, etc.” In view of these provisions, it would seem that section 323 was limited to religious societies. However, if the matter be regarded as doubtful, the original acts, from which the present statute was derived, show very plainly what was the purpose of the
The case of Stanford College v. Board of Education, 145 Ky. 838, 141 S. W. 386, in so far as it announces a contrary doctrine, is hereby overruled.
Wherefore the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.