delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 17th day of August, 1912 / the appellee, who is one of the heirs at law of Charles Carroll of Carrollton, instituted an action of ejectment in the Circuit Court for Howard County against the Trustees of Saint Charles College, a body corporate, to recover a tract of land lying in that county containing two hundred and fifty-four and a half acres of land. The case was tried before a jury in that Court and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for a one-eleventh undivided interest in the land sued for, and from that judgment the defendant has appealed.
The appellant was incorporated by the Act of 1829, Chapter SO, by the name of the Trustees of Saint Charles College, and the purpose of its creation was the education of young men of the Roman Catholic religion for the ministry of the Gospel. The preamble to the Act recited that Charles Carroll of Carrollton, having it in contemplation to found a seminary to prosecute such work, had applied to the General Assembly for leave to convey to certain named persons and their successors forever a tract of land in trust for the purposes aforesaid. The first section of the Act declared the persons named to be a body corporate, and that they and their successors should have perpetual succession. Power was granted to the corporation “to receive and hold the said donation, deed and gift of the said Charles Carroll of Carrollton, as designated in the preamble of this Act, and to receive and *467 hold any property, real and personal, acquired either hy purchase, gift, grant or devise, not exceeding the whole yearly value of six thousand dollars, in trust for the purpose designated in the preamble hereto.”
By the fifth section of the Act it was provided: “That all property which shall be received, and held by the said corporation, as well real as personal, and whether derived by gift, devise, bequest, purchase or otherwise, shall be held by
them, to and for the only purpose, and in trust exclusively for the education of pious young men of the Catholic persuasion for the ministry of the Gospel.”
Section eight provided that the corporation should have full and perfect control over all the property belonging to it for the purpose of the trust aforesaid; provided, that none of its funds or property, of which it should become possessed, should be appropriated otherwise than for the trust declared in the Act.
On the 27th of March, 1830, Charles Carroll of Carrollton executed a deed to the Trustees of Saint Charles College by which he granted and conveyed to it the land which is the subject-matter of this suit. The deed referred to the Act of Incorporation and recited its power to receive and hold in trust for the purpose therein declared and to the extent and amount therein limited, any property, real or personal. It
then, in consideration of the trust therein mentioned to be performed and of the sum of five dollars, granted and conveyed unto the Trustees of Saint Charles College the tract of land containing two hundred and fifty-four and a half acres and which is described by metes and bounds, courses and distances. This is the same land described in the declaration. The land in express terms was granted to the Trustees of Saint Charles College and their successors forever in trust and for the uses and objects set forth in the Act of Incorporation.
The deed contained a proviso which is here transcribed:
“Provided always that the tract of land and premises hereby conveyed shall never be sold or aliened by *468 the said Trustees of Saint Charles College, or their successors, hut that they shall forever faithfully apply the proceeds of said land to the uses, objects and trusts in said Act of Assembly before referred to specified and set forth, and also that the said Trustees of Saint Charles College shall as soon after they come into possession of said tract of land as their funds will allow cause to be erected on the premises hereby conveyed such buildings as may be proper and necessary to the purposes of this trust; and also that said Trustees of Saint Charles College and their successors shall continue the .seat and location of said College upon the premises hereby conveyed forever; and provided lastly that upon the breach of any of the conditions above stated it shall and may be lawful to and for the said Charles Carroll of Carrollton, his heirs and assigns, into the premises hereby conveyed or unto any part thereof in the name of the whole to re-enter and the same to have again, possess, occupy and enjoy as in his former estate, and then and in such case this deed and clause, matter and thing therein contained shall from thenceforth be utterly void and non-effect in law and equity.”
The appellant took possession of the property under the deed in 1830, and has ever since remained in possession of it. It erected a fine college building, chapel, and other valuable improvements upon the property. The teachers and the entire body of students resided permanently at the college from about the year 1848 until March 16th, 1911, on which date the college was destroyed by fire.
The questions of rebuilding and the cost of construction were taken up by the college authorities, and the matter was referred to his Eminence Cardinal Gibbons. He was at first decidedly in favor of rebuilding upon the old location, but when it was pointed out to him that the cost of transportation of material to the old site would be so great and the greater length of time it would require to complete the work *469 in Howard County, he concluded not to insist upon his preference to relocate the college upon its former site, and remitted the question of a new location to the judgment of the trustees, and they decided to locate the college at Cloud Cap, in Baltimore County, which place is about ten miles distant from its original location. The reason which induced the location at Cloud Cap is thus tersely stated by Mr. O’Connor, the builder: “Upon estimates being made, we found that the cost of rebuilding there (the old location) would really be prohibitive, and under the most favorable conditions it would cost at least $60,000.00 more to build a college there instead of at Cloud Cap near Catonsville. It would take two or three times as long to get there, it would take a great deal longer to build there, and the desirable help would have to be paid more to go there to work. It really would have cost about $100,000.00 more to build there than at Cloud Cap.”
There is no question in this case of any breach of trust on the part of the Trustees of Saint Charles College. They have faithfully and scrupulously applied all its funds, property and income to the trust declared in its charter and in the deed mentioned. But the evidence is clear and full to the point that,_ because of the prohibitive cost of erecting the new building on the old location in Howard County, they have permanently abandoned “the seat and location of said college upon the premises” granted by the deed of March 27th, 1830. Does this fact by a true construction of that deed cause a forfeiture of said land whereby it has reverted to the heirs of the grantor ? If it does, then the plaintiff had a right to recover his undivided interest in the property.
We think it perfectly clear, upon the authority of
Bennett
v.
Humane Imp. Society,
• In Woman's Foreign Missionary Society v. Mitchell, supra, the Court had under consideration the construction of the will of Maria A. Sherman. Two questions were presented for decision: first, whether the appellant society was the devisee and legatee intended to be named and actually described in the residuary clause of the will; and secondly, whether that clause was valid. That clause was in these words: “I direct that my two houses and lots in Mountain Lake Park, Garrett County, Maryland, and my lots in Covington, Kentucky, and the stock in the Southern Building-Association held in care of W. G. Hay, of Hagerstown, Maryland, and all other property, both -real and personal, other than that already bequeathed, be sold, and the proceeds thereof, together with whatever monies I may die possessed of, be held in trust by the Board of Managers of the Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States of America for the following purposes: After all my debts, bequests and provision for my burial, etc., be paid, that sufficient be used to educate as Bible readers in India six girls, one to be named “Dorcas Sherman”; one “Avis Cecil Sherman”; one “Mary Jane Sherman”; one “Sarah Jennie Sherman”; one “Jennie Smith”; one “Grace Mabel Sherman”; the money remaining after that set aside for the education of the aforesaid Bible readers to be applied to the purchase of a building to be used for the education of girls in India to be called the “M. Adelaide Sherman Home” and the location of said building to be left to the decision of Bishop Thoburn or his successors.”
This clause was assailed upon the ground that it created a trust whose objects were indefinite and uncertain. The Court decided, upon the facts before it, that there had been a misnomer of the devisee and legatee, and that “the Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church” was the corporation intended by the testatrix, though misnamed in her will, to take the residuary estate. It then *471 consulted the charter powers of the society, and found “that the particular business and object of said society is to engage and unite the efforts of Christian women in sending female missionaries to women in foreign mission fields of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and in supporting them and native Christian teachers and Bible readers in those fields,” and that India was one of those fields. Judge McSherry, speaking for the Court then propounds this question: Is the residuary clause void by reason of its creating a trust whose objects are vague, indefinite and uncertain?
“Hot a great deal need be said in disposing of this inquiry. If there is no trust created, or if none was intended to be created, as to this
residuum,
then there can be no trust that is void by reason of the objects of it being indefinite and uncertain. So, clearly, the first question to be determined is whether there
is
a trust which has been actually created pursuant to an intent to create one? It is true the testatrix declared that the property should ‘be held in trust by the Board of Managers, etc., for the following purposes.’ These purposes, it is alleged are, after the payment of debts, bequests and funeral expenses, ‘that sufficient be used to educate as Bible readers in India six girls’ to be named as directed in the clause, and that ‘the money remaining after that set aside for the education of the aforesaid Bible readers’ should ‘be applied to the purchase of a building to be used for the education of girls in India to be called the “M. Adelaide Sherman Home,” and the location of said building to be left to the decision of Bishop Thoburn or his successors.’ Excluding the sums applicable to the payment of debts, legacies and funeral expenses, there is and can be no trust at all. If there be a manifest design
not
to establish a trust, then no trust will be declared though the words employed would or might but for the contrary intention, be sufficient to create a trust.
Bennett
v.
Balto. Humane So.,
“What has been said in relation to the six Indian girls is also applicable to the remaining portion of the clause respecting the purchase of a building to be used for the education of girls in India. This is a gift to the society, the property given to be used in the line of that society’s mission work. The use is a corporate use within the limits of its charter powers. In effect, the testatrix said by her will to the society: ‘You have power under your charter to educate females in far-off lands; in prosecuting this work you have authority to build or buy houses, as houses are necessary in carrying on schools. Row, I give you these funds; — the proceeds of this resdiuary estate — to be used by you for these corporate purposes, but the building you purchase with the money I give you must be called the M. Adelaide Sherman Home.’ Can it be pretended that such a declaration would create a trust, and a trust too that would be void because the objects of it are indefinite? Obviously it amounts merely to a gift for corporate uses coupled with the condition that the building when purchased or constructed should bear the benefactor’s name. Without questioning any judgment heretofore pronounced by this Court, we say that this will create no trust because none was intended to be created; and the evidence that none was intended to be created is furnished by the *474 fact that the gift, whatever the language used in malting it, was to a corporation capable of taking for its chartered purposes, some of which purposes are precisely those indicated in the will as the ones to which the funds were to be devoted. The gift is, therefore, not to the society in trust, but to it for its legitimate corporate uses and is free from restrictions other than the conditions that have been indicated.”
The case before us falls within the principle of the above case, which sustains the validity of the deed of March 27th, 1830, to the appellant as a deed to. the corporation for its chartered and corporate purposes.
The crucial question in the case is the legal effect, under the facts in evidence, of the third proviso, or condition, contained in the deed. The plaintiff’s case rests upon the breach cf this condition. There has been no breach of either of the other conditions, and it may well be conceded that the restraint upon alienation imposed by the first condition would be held void, if the case depended upon the validity of that restraint. But it does not. It evidently was not the intention of the parties that the third proviso should be treated as a mere restraint on alienation. They had already provided for that contingency, and the third condition was introduced for an entirely different purpose for reasons which the grantor deemed sufficient. That provision not only imposed a positive duty and obligation upon the corporation “to continue the seat and location of said college upon the premises hereby granted,” but in clear and unmistakable language declared that upon a breach of the condition the grantor, his heirs and assigns might re-enter and take possession of the granted premises “as in his former estate,” and “in such case this deed and clause, matter and thing herein contained shall from thenceforth be utterly void and non-effect in law and equity
It is impossible to escape the plain meaning and force of this language. The parties to the deed must have understood — for they have so declared — what would be the effect upon the grantee’s title of a breach of this condition. The *475 grantor had a right to dispose of the property upon any terms he pleased which did not contravene some principle of public policy or positive rule of law. The corporation had the power to receive and hold the property, and was not prohibited from accepting it upon such lawful conditions as the grantor might impose.
In
Austin
v.
Cambridgeport Parish,
“These conditions will not, in our opinion, save the breach of the condition annexed to the deed. An actual removal without any present intention'of returning, and accompanied as it is by the strong presumptive evidence as to proposed future course, by the erecting on a different site an edifice designed to be used as a substitute for the old one, and a dedication and an actual adoption of it as such, are facts too significant in their character to be controlled by the circumstances relied upon by the tenants in their defense. Their vote “reserving the lot for the erection of a meeting house at *477 some period hereafter, when said parish may deem it expedient, “leaves the event altogether too contingent. Such a vote might be but a dead letter, and cannot avail to save the forfeiture of an estate given on the express conditions of applying the profits of it to the use and support of a minister who should preach in a meeting house to be placed on the lot thus in effect abandoned.”
It is said in
Blanchard
v.
Detroit, Lansing & Lake Michigan Railroad Company,
The question whether there is a limitation or a condition, or whether there is a condition precedent or subsequent, or whether what is to be expounded is a condition or covenant, or something capable of operating both ways, frequently becomes very perplexing in consequence of the uncertain, ambiguous, or conflicting terms and circumstances involved; and the books contain a great many cases of the kind, and not a few of which are marked by refinements and distinctions which the sense of the present day would hardly tolerate.
Where, however, the terms are distinctly and plainly terms of condition, where the whole provision precisely satisfies the requirements of the definition, and where the transaction has nothing in its nature to create an incongruity, there is no room for refinement, and no ground for refusing to assign to the subject its predetermined legal character. In such a case the law attaches to the act and ascribes to it a definite significance, and the parties cannot be heard to say, where there is no imposition, no’ fraud, no mistake, that, although they de *478 liberately made a condition and nothing but a condition, yet they meant that it should be exactly as a covenant.
It is stated in sec. 2, Wash. on Real Prop. (5 ed., page 3), that: “Among the forms of expression which imply a condition in a grant the writers give the following: ‘On Condition’ ■ — ‘Provided Always’ — -‘If It Shall So Happen’ — or ‘So long that be the grantee pay, etc., within a specified time’; and grants made upon any of these terms vest a conditional estate in the grantee. And it is said other words malee it a condition, if there be added a conclusion with a clause of re-entry, or without such clause, if they declare that, if the feoffee does or does not do such an act, his estate shall cease or be void. If a covenant be followed by a clause of forfeiture, and it is broken, it will be construed to be a condition.”
Conditions subsequent are not favored in the law, because on the breach thereof there is a forfeiture of the estate, and the law is adverse to forfeitures. But they may be annexed to grants, and when the intention of the parties is clear the Court is bound to respect it.
The language employed in the proviso we are dealing with is so plain and mandatory that we are constrained to hold that it created a condition subsequent and that the appellant, by abandoning the premises as the seat and location of the college, has committed a breach of the covenant, and that the heirs of the grantor have a right to re-enter and take possession of the property under the deed of 1830.
The prayers granted at the instance of the plaintiff are in harmony with the Hews we have expressed and were properly granted and there was no error in rejecting the defendant’s prayers.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to the appellee.
