Opinion
In 1908 and 1916 respectively, Mrs. Elizabeth Kraft and her son, Edward Kraft, granted to the City of Red Bluff certain properties to be used as a library. In 1986, the books were removed from the library building. Herbert Kraft Walton, a descendant and heir of the donors, filed suit seeking reconveyance of the property to him pursuant to the original grants which provided for reversion to the grantors or their heirs if the property ceased to be used for library purposes.
Red Bluff cross-complained, contending it owned the land free of any use restrictions. The trial court mled the transfer was not in trust but on condition, that the condition was not triggered by temporary abandonment by Red Bluff and the condition was still valid. The trial court found the land could be used for a library or certain related purposes.
On appeal Walton urges the land was transferred by a trust instmment and, as the trust terms were violated, the land reverts to him as the successor of
The transfer was by fee simple determinable, leaving the heirs of the grantors with a possibility of reverter, also called a right of entry or reentry. By statute such interests are now powers of termination. We requested supplemental briefing on the effect of the marketable record title statutes (Civ. Code, § 880.020 et seq.) on this case. 1 We conclude the issue of Walton’s failure to record his claimed power of termination pursuant to the marketable record title statutes cannot be raised for the first time on appeal. On the undisputed facts below Red Bluff violated the condition of the grants. We shall reverse the judgment with directions to the trial court to quiet title in favor of Walton.
Factual and Procedural Background
The parties stipulated that trial by the court would be conducted on the pleadings, trial briefs and certain declarations submitted by Red Bluff to which Walton preserved objections.
Elizabeth and Edward Kraft, the wife and son of Herbert Kraft, wished to provide for a public library in Red Bluff. The library was to be free, open to all races, and dedicated to the memory of Herbert Kraft. 2 Each gave land for the library by inter vivos transfer and each left money for library purposes by bequests in their wills. 3 The Krafts transferred the land by separate but similar documents, denominated indentures, the pertinent provisions of which are recited in the appendix. It is not disputed that in September 1986, the books were removed from the library.
On February 18, 1988, Walton filed a complaint for declaratory relief, to terminate a trust, and to quiet title as against Red Bluff. The complaint
Red Bluff answered, admitting the allegations of the complaint except for denying it held the property in violation of Walton’s rights and denying Walton was entitled to possession or title. Red Bluff cross-complained for declaratory relief and to quiet title. Red Bluff alleged the books were moved to a new building because of a lack of space, the lack of access for handicapped and elderly persons and the lack of parking. 4
The trial court issued a statement of decision in which the court stated the “indentures” were “not an attempt to create a trust in the classic sense.” Citing two cases, discussed below, the court treated the conveyance as a grant in fee, subject to a condition, and found the condition of abandonment had not yet occurred. 5
Judgment was entered that Red Bluff had not breached the “condition of conveyances,” but its request to quiet title was denied and it was ordered that Red Bluff “does not have the right or the power to dispose of the property, or to use it otherwise than in accordance with this judgment. [ft| 4. It is further adjudged that [Red Bluff] must use the Kraft Building for library purposes, but is not restricted to that use alone, and may use said building consistent with the terms of the grant. . . .”
Both parties appeal. We shall reverse.
The first determination is the nature of the grants made by the Krafts. We conclude the trial court correctly ruled no trust was created. Though Walton originally had a possibility of reverter, his interest was converted by statute into a power of termination. Next we consider the effect of Walton’s failure to record his power of termination in compliance with the marketable Record Title statute and Red Bluff’s failure to raise this issue below; we conclude Red Bluff’s failure to raise this issue below operates as a waiver. As the agreed facts establish a breach of the condition of conveyance, we shall remand with directions to the trial court to quiet title to the library in Walton.
I. The Nature of the Grants
A. No trust was created by the indentures at issue.
Walton has based his claim entirely on the existence of a trust. 6 The trial court found no trust was created by the indentures, a finding with which we agree.
Elizabeth Kraft’s indenture provides the grantor “does hereby give, grant and convey” the property “To have and to hold the said premises in trust for the uses and purposes of a public library. No portion of said property shall be used for any other purpose[.]” “If the property herein conveyed shall at any time, be abandoned by the said Town of Red Bluff, or if the said property shall cease to be used, for library purposes, by said Town, or shall be put to [any] use other [than] the uses and purposes, herein specifically referred to . . . then the grant and conveyance herein made shall cease and terminate, and the title to the said property and all the improvements thereon shall at once revert to the party of the first part or to her heirs or assigns.”
Edward Kraft’s indenture refers to “further carrying out the ideas of his Mother in making the gift above mentioned . . . the said party of the first part does hereby give, grant and convey” additional property “To Have and to Hold the said premises in trust for the uses and purposes of the [Herbert Kraft Free Public Library] on the same terms and conditions and for the same purposes and uses that the rest of said Library property is held, the same being . . . [incorporating the restrictions contained in his mother’s indenture].”
A reverter is a type of forfeiture, abhorrent to the law. (§ 1442; Simes,
Restricting Land Use in Cal. by Rights of Entry and Possibilities of Reverter
(1962) 13 Hastings L.J. 293, 298-301 [noting techniques used to avoid permitting reverter].) Because “the law views reversion as an anomalous doctrine, an exception to the general aversion to forfeiture” “the law requires clear expression of the grantor’s intent.”
(Springmeyer
v.
City of South Lake Tahoe
(1982)
The use of the word “trust” in a grant does not without more make a trust. 8 To constitute a trust there must be trust intent, trust property, trust purpose and a beneficiary. (Prob. Code, §§ 15201-15205 [applicable to all trusts as of July 1, 1987, and trust proceedings begun on or after that date]; 11 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1990) Trusts, § 27, p. 912.) The intention to create a trust must be shown by more than an expression of intent to establish a moral obligation: “The problem is one of construction, but ordinarily words of desire, hope or recommendation that a devisee or legatee use the property given him for the benefit of another do not create a trust. The direction must be imperative. [Citations.]” (Id. at § 34, p. 919.)
In the instant case “the grant and conveyance herein made shall cease and terminate, and the title to the said property . . . shall at once revert to the party of the first part or to her heirs or assigns.” This is the language of a fee grant, not a trust.
(Mareck, supra,
Walton urges Red Bluff cannot deny the existence of a trust as it did not deny allegations in the complaint which refer to a “trust.” The complaint
B. The interest of Walton is now a power of termination.
Either a fee simple determinable or a fee simple on condition subsequent was created by the indentures herein. The former ends upon the happening of a stated condition, resulting in a reverter, while the latter gives the grantor or successor the power of termination over the fee, often called a right of reentry. (5 Miller & Starr, Current Law of Cal. Real Estate (2d ed. 1989) Estates, §§ 11:5-11:6, pp. 8-11.)
The language of the grant suggests a fee simple determinable was created.
10
This construction of a grant is disfavored
(Mountain Brow Lodge, I.O.O.F.
v.
Toscano
(1967)
The trial court treated Walton’s interest under the grants as a power of termination. Irrespective of the accuracy of this characterization from a reading of the indentures, the trial court was correct in its assessment for a different reason.
Section 885.020, enacted in 1982, provides: “Fees simple determinable and possibilities of reverter are abolished. Every estate that would be at
Walton makes an undeveloped argument that the conversion of his interest into a right of reentry following a fee simple on condition subsequent violates due process: “The provision is declared to be retrospective, subject to a grace period .... [ft] Due process questions are thus raised which cannot be briefed in the prescribed time frame, [ft] Could the Legislature, for example, enact that estates in fee simple will be ‘deemed’ to be tenancies at will, or licenses to enter, after five years?” Walton misconstrues the import of the statute. Walton’s possibility of reverter was not abolished; it was transformed into a power of termination. Walton does not explain how this has harmed him. As the Law Review Commission explained, the two are essentially the same. “The possibility of reverter is an unnecessary estate in property law. It serves the same functions as the right of entry and there is no practical difference of any substance between the two.” (Recommendations Relating to Marketable Title of Real Property (Nov. 1981) 16 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. p. 416. See Cal. Law Revision Com. com., Deering’s Ann. Civ. Code, § 885.020 (1990) p. 111.) Walton does not articulate how his interest has been harmed by what is essentially a name change; we therefore reject his contention.
II. The Marketable Record Title Statute
A.
In 1982 the Legislature passed a comprehensive statute designed “to simplify and facilitate real property title transactions in furtherance of public policy by enabling persons to rely on record title .... This title shall be liberally construed to effect the legislative purpose.” (§ 880.020, subd. (b).) The public policy declared by the Legislature is that realty is a basic resource which should be freely alienable (§ 880.020, subd. (a)(1)), “Interests in real property and defects in titles created at remote times, whether or not of record, often constitute unreasonable restraints on alienation and marketability. . . .” (§ 880.020, subd. (a)(2)), these remote interests foment litigation to quiet title and accurate title “should be determinable to the extent practicable from an examination of recent records only.” (§ 880.020, subd. (a)(4).)
An interest may be preserved by the timely recordation of a notice of intent to preserve the interest and these notices may be given consecutively: Perpetuity of interest is not prohibited. (Cal. Law Revision Com. com., Deering’s Ann. Civ. Code, § 880.310 (1990) p. 88.) Any person who claims an interest may record the notice, a form of which is provided in the statute. (§§ 880.320, 880.340.)
If the period to record the notice expires within five years after the operative date of the statute, the period is extended until five years after the operative date. (§ 880.370.) A power of termination expires at the later of: (1) 30 years after recordation of the instrument evidencing the power; (2) 30 years after recordation of the last notice of intent to preserve the power. 11 (§ 885.030.)
“An interest . . . does not expire . . . and is not unenforceable pursuant to this title at the time prescribed in this title if within the time an action is commenced to enforce ... the interest and a notice of the pendency of the action is recorded as provided by law.” (§ 880.260.) “A power of termination shall be exercised only by notice or by civil action and, if the power of termination is of record, the exercise shall be of record.” (§ 885.050.) Here the power of termination was exercised by civil action commenced in February 1988. The action was not filed timely.
Since the 30-year period for recordation of intent to preserve the power would have expired long before the passage of the statute, Walton was entitled to the 5-year grace period provided by section 880.370. The statute was passed in 1982. (Stats. 1982, ch. 1268, § 1, p. 4671.) The operative date of the statute was January 1, 1983. (Gov. Code, § 9600, subd. (a).) Thus Walton (and all such holders of powers of termination) had until January 1, 1988, to record a notice of intent to preserve the interest or to exercise the power. (10 Hagman & Maxwell, Cal. Real Estate Law & Practice (1991) Estates in Real Property, § 340.62[5], p. 340-61.) As noted, Walton did not
Section 885.060 provides in part: “(a) Expiration of a power of termination . . . makes the power unenforceable and is equivalent for all purposes to a termination of the power of record and a quitclaim of the power to the owner of the fee simple estate, and execution and recording of a termination and quitclaim is not necessary to terminate or evidence the termination of the power. [1] (b) Expiration of a power of termination pursuant to this chapter terminates the restriction to which the fee simple estate is subject and makes the restriction unenforceable by any other means, including, but not limited to, injunction and damages.”
Walton brought suit on an unenforceable power of termination. As neither party discussed this point below or on appeal we requested supplemental briefing on this issue.
Walton’s supplemental brief makes the preliminary points that (1) this court is bound by the issues as presented by the parties, (2) this court did not afford him sufficient time to brief the issue and (3) “Unless this court is prepared to subordinate equitable principles which have been accepted for 500 years ... to effectuate the vague and suspect objective of lubricating a wide and unrelated congeries of transactions which would be benefitted by ‘mark[et]able title’, the sections should not be considered in this case.”
We quickly dispose of the first two points. An appellate court has the power to raise issues on its own motion. (E.g.,
County of Colusa
v.
Charter
(1989)
The third preliminary point urged by Walton is irrelevant. We do not decide whether the objectives of a statute are good or bad as that is a matter “properly resolved on the other side of Tenth Street, in the halls of the Legislature.”
(Osborn
v.
Hertz Corp.
(1988)
B.
Walton urges substantively that Red Bluff’s failure to raise in the trial court the issue of failure to record under the marketable record title statutes precludes consideration of that issue on appeal. Whether Red Bluff is precluded from raising the issue on appeal depends on whether compliance with the statute is a part of Walton’s cause of action, which requires an allegation that the statute has been satisfied. “If the party against whom a complaint or a cross-complaint has been filed fails to object to the pleading, either by demurrer or answer, that party is deemed to have waived the objection unless it is ... an objection that the pleading does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 430.80, subd. (a);
Buford
v.
State of California, supra,
If compliance with the record title act is part of a cause of action for enforcement of a power of termination, Red Bluff’s failure to demur is irrelevant. If lack of such compliance is in the nature of an affirmative defense, Red Bluff’s failure to raise the issue below constitutes a waiver of that issue and bars consideration of the issue on appeal. Though the statutory scheme renders Walton’s interest “expired” and “unenforceable,” the statute
We do not perceive the statute in question as one which extinguishes the right of an owner of a reversionary interest, or what is now termed a right of reentry or a power of termination. Therefore, pleading compliance with the statute is not required as such compliance is not an element of the cause of action to reenter property or quiet title thereto.
This statute was the product of years of research and debate. It adds a comprehensive set of rules for the preservation of interests in ancient mortgages, mineral rights, unexercised options, powers of termination, unperformed land-sale contracts and abandoned easements. Nowhere in the statute or even the Law Revision Commission notes is there any mention of a pleading requirement. (But see Cal. Law Revision Com. com., Deering’s Ann. Civ. Code, § 880.250 (1990) p. 85 [no off-record waivers].) This simple device could easily have been adopted to ensure any holder would be required to plead and prove compliance with the statute. It was not. Nor did the Legislature see fit to amend Code of Civil Procedure section 761.020, which sets forth the elements of a quiet title action, a normal method of exercising a power of termination.
14
(See
Thornton
v.
Middletown E. Corp.
(1937)
In analogous cases where a claim is unenforceable the burden is on the defense to demonstrate unenforceability. When a claim is barred by the statute of limitations the issue must be pleaded as an affirmative defense. (3 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (1985) Actions, § 314, p. 345.) Other claims of unenforceability must be raised by affirmative defense, such as a claim a contract is barred by the statute of frauds
(Howard
v.
Adams
(1940)
Marketable title acts in various forms have been enacted in other states. In some, absolute limits are set on the duration of certain interests; others abolish certain interests completely. Those like the California statute require periodic recording of some interests. (See generally, 6a Powell on Real Property (1991 rev.) Recording Acts and Priorities, ¶ 907[2][b], pp. 82:103-108.) New York has held such a latter statute unconstitutional on the theory it impairs contractual obligations.
(Board of Education of Central Sch. Dist. No. 1
v.
Miles
(1965)
“[W]e have recognized certain very limited circumstances in which a State’s reliance on the maxim that a man may be presumed to know the law is not consistent with the restrictions imposed by the Constitution on legislative action. . . .
“. . . The State’s power to impose sanctions on individuals is to be tested in part against the rationality of the proposition that those individuals were or could have been aware of their legal obligations. The present cases, like [Lambert v. California (1957)355 U.S. 225 [2 L.Ed.2d 228 ]], involve the necessity of notice in the context of a registration statute sufficiently unusual in character, and triggered in circumstances so commonplace, that an average citizen would have no reason to regard the triggering event as calling for a heightened awareness of one’s legal obligations.
“. . . The Court would appear to treat property owners as businessmen, of whom we do indeed expect the greatest attentiveness to regulatory obligations in the conduct of their business affairs. But neither our cases nor our experience supports the Court’s supposition about the diligence reasonably expected of property owners. Property owners have historically been allowed to rest easy in the knowledge that their holding is secure, absent some affirmative indication to the contrary; . . . Surely no contrary understanding of the obligations of property ownership could be attributed to the mineral interest owners of Indiana. It was their historic complacency, heretofore undisturbed by statutory obligation, that prompted the State of Indiana to install the regulatory regime at issue here.” (454 U.S. at pp. 545-548 [70 L.Ed.2d at pp. 761-763].)
A holder of a reversionary interest is even less like a businessperson than the holder of a mining claim. The effectiveness of the notice provided by the
As between the two owners, Red Bluff, as the owner of the major interest in the property and the possessor of the property, should bear the consequences of ignorance of the law. Red Bluff’s failure to raise the recording issue below precludes consideration of the issue here. 17
III. Abandonment
Based on the undisputed facts before the trial court Red Bluff violated the express condition of the grant that unless the property be used for “uses and purposes of a public library,” the property should be returned to the Kraft family.
The grants provide in part: “If the property herein conveyed shall at any time, be abandoned by the said Town of Red Bluff, ... or if the said property shall cease to be used, for library purposes, by said Town, ... or shall be put to [any] use other [than] the uses and purposes herein specifically referred to, . . . then the grant and conveyance herein made shall cease and terminate, and the title to the said property and all the improvements thereon shall at once revert to the party of the first part, or to her heirs or assigns.”
Red Bluff admits all the books were removed from the library as of September 1986. The trial court framed the issue as one of abandonment. But the grantors specified that “if the said property shall cease to be used, for library purposes” the grants terminate. There is no question but that the property is no longer used for library purposes. The trial court stated
Savanna School Dist.
v.
McLeod
(1955)
Whether Red Bluff intended to “abandon” the use purpose of the property or not, it removed the books and stopped using the premises for library purposes. (See
Concord & Bay Point Land Co., supra,
229 Cal.App.3d at pp. 297-298 [statute of limitations on exercise of power began running when railroad tracks removed].) The grants defined library purposes broadly to include various educational endeavors, but there is no evidence any of these other activities took place. (See e.g.,
Save the Welwood Murray Memorial Library Com.
v.
City Council
(1989)
At oral argument Red Bluff focussed on the “changed conditions” doctrine. Section 885.040 provides that a power of termination expires when it becomes “obsolete” and states in part that a power of termination is obsolete when it would be “inequitable to enforce the power because of changed conditions or circumstances.” (§ 885.040, subd. (b)(3).) This codifies prior law.
(Letteau
v.
Ellis
(1932)
Disposition
The judgment is reversed with directions to the trial court to enter a judgment quieting title in favor of Walton. Costs to Walton.
Puglia, P. J., and Davis, J„ concurred.
The petition of appellant City of Red Bluff for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 19, 1992.
Elizabeth Kraft’s document reads in part as follows:
“This indenture made this 27th day of November, 1908, between Elizabeth Kraft... the party of the first part, and the City (or town) of Red Bluff. . . party of the second part, Witnesseth: That the party of the first part, does hereby give, grant and convey unto the party of the second part, all of that certain real property, situate in the Town of Red Bluff. . . described ... as lots numbered 1, 2, 3, and 4, in Block 47.
“To have and to hold the said premises in trust for the uses and purposes of a public library. No portion of said property shall be used for any other purposed] The grounds shall not be conveyed or otherwise disposed of, but shall be retained by [Red Bluff] for such uses and purposes, as shall be deemed proper in connection with said library.
“The building or buildings that [are] now or shall hereafter be [constructed] on the said premises shall be used exclusively for library purposes. But by this grant it is not intended to restrict such use so that the term library or library purposes [shall] be understood to be used in a narrow or restrictive sense, but in its broadest terms, so as to include the use of said property . . . only for books, but for statuary, paintings and all other purposes, consistent with its use, for the purpose of which this grant is made, as above stated. Any portion . . . may be used for library schools, or lectures or other entertainment[s] conducted for the benefit of the library which shall be maintained on the said premises.
“The building[s and the books and other things therein] shall forever be known ... as the ‘Herbert Kraft Free Public Library’ and shall at all time during reasonable hours be kept open for the free use of the public, under such reasonable regulations, as shall be from time to time made . . . but there shall be no restriction of any kind, based on racial lines, color, or religion.
“If the property herein conveyed shall at any time, be abandoned by the said Town of Red Bluff, or if the said property shall cease to be used, for library purposes, by said Town, or shall be put to [any] use other [than] the uses and purposes, herein specifically referred to, or, if the library shall at any time be placed or attempted to be placed upon any basis, other than for the free use, and benefit of the inhabitants of the town, and such other
Edward Kraft’s document reads in part:
“This Indenture, made this 17th day of July, 1916, between Edward F. Kraft ... the party of the first part, and the City of Red Bluff ... the party of the second part,-
“Witnesseth: That whereas, formerly, Elizabeth Kraft, Mother of the party of the first part herein . . . conveyed unto said City of Red Bluff Lots One, Two, Three and Four, of Block Forty-seven, of said City, with the building thereon, for a Public Free Library,
“Now, further carrying out the ideas of his Mother in making the gift above mentioned ... the said party of the first part does hereby give, grant and convey unto the said party of the second part, [Lot Five and part of Lot 6 of Block Forty-seven],
“To Have and to Hold the said premises in trust for the uses and purposes of the [Herbert Kraft Free Public Library] on the same terms and conditions and for the same purposes and uses that the rest of said Library property is held, the same being . . . [incorporating the restrictions contained in his mother’s indenture].”
Notes
Further unspecified references are to the Civil Code.
Herbert Kraft was a prominent settler of Red Bluff (Elliott & Moore, Tehama County, California (1880) Herbert Kraft, pp. 148-149), and his business ventures figure in some early cases.
(Herbert Kraft Co.
v.
Bryan
(1903)
Exhibit C to Red Bluff’s exhibit A is the library agreement whereby Tehama County took over operation of the library effective July 1, 1962. The agreement makes reference to extracts of the wills of Elizabeth and Edward, who left $5,000 and $10,000 respectively in trust for the Herbert Kraft Fund. The bequests “cease and determine” if Red Bluff fails to appropriate money for the library (see
City of Hermosa Beach
v.
Superior Court
(1964)
The declarations established the following: Elizabeth Kraft paid construction costs. The population of Red Bluff was 3,522 in 1909 and 11,100 in 1986. Red Bluff and the County of Tehama merged their library functions and effective July 1, 1962, the county operated the library. Red Bluff intends “to continue to use the Kraft Building for public, educational, and entertainment purposes. . . . It is not possible ... to give firm commitments . . . until title to the Kraft Building and types of permitted uses are ascertained by the Court. All such uses should be by non-profit organizations free to the public, or at nominal cost. . . .” The physical inadequacies of the Kraft building were detailed.
The court found Red Bluff “is bound by the description of the use of the premises and must devote the use of the building for public purposes consistent with the conditions of the grant. Those conditions ... are reasonably liberad and are not restricted to library purposes, . . . [J] In other words, the County can carry some historical books in the library and use the balance of the building, if there is any space available, for all those matters implied in the [third paragraph of the grant], [1] The evidence further develops that it is not the intention of [Red Bluff] to cease use of the library building and property for public purposes consistent with the grant. [J] The Court finds that [Red Bluff] has not breached the condition or has a consideration for this conveyance failed [s/c] and that [Red Bluff] still owns the property subject to the conditions of the grant.”
Walton’s brief does not comply with California Rules of Court, rule 15(a), in that it does not separately head his legal arguments. Instead, his brief contains the heading “Appellant’s Legal Contentions,” followed by four pages of disjointed points.
(In re David L.
(1991)
The evidence taken regarding the closure of the library is not relevant to the meaning of the documents.
Other states applying trust principles similar to those of California have so held in factual situations akin to the instant case. In
Connecticut Junior Republic Ass’n
v.
Litchfield
(1934)
In
Application of Mareck
(1960)
But see Turrentine,
Suggestions for Revision of Provisions of the California Civil Code Regarding Future Interests
(1932) 21 Cal.L.Rev. 1, 5-6, questioning existence of reverters in California; Ferrier,
Determinable Fees and Fees Upon Conditions Subsequent in California
(1936) 24 Cal.L.Rev. 512, 523. In
Springmeyer
v.
City of South Lake Tahoe, supra,
A power of termination also expires when it becomes “obsolete” (§ 885.040), an issue discussed, post.
Exhibit C to the complaint is a letter from Walton’s attorney to Red Bluff’s attorney, dated January 29, 1987. It refers to the library “trust” and states “since the use for which the property was entrusted has been discontinued, it appears to be in order for the city to reconvey the property to Mr. Walton, who is the heir of the trustor.” The letter invites negotiations. It does not meet the requirements of an exercise of a power of termination as it was not recorded. (§ 885.050. See 4 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (1987) Real Property, § 14, subd. (6), p. 230; 5 Miller & Starr, op. cit. supra, p. 16.)
We note, however, that this comprehensive statute was the product of years of research by the Law Revision Commission. (Recommendations Relating to Marketable Title of Real Property, supra, 16 Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep., at p. 403.)
That section requires, inter alia, the verification of a complaint to quiet title, a requirement not met in this case.
At least one practice manual supplies a form for pleading as an affirmative defense a plaintiff’s lack of compliance with the statute. (4A Cal. Forms of Pleading & Practice Annoti (Matthew Bender 1991) Deeds, Form No. 39, pp. 156-157.)
As noted above (fn. 12,
ante,
at p. 129), Walton’s attorney informally sought reconveyance of the property. Red Bluff’s duty to reconvey arose on breach of the condition. (§ 1109;
Lincoln
v.
Narom Development Co.
(1970)
As a determination of the constitutionality of the statute is unnecessary to our decision, we express no opinion on that issue but note that there are proper concerns of notice.
In his brief and at oral argument, counsel for Red Bluff urged that the present uses of the building were within the library grant (that “The Kraft building is now leased, at no cost, to the Tehama County Literacy Council, a nonprofit corporation. The Council teaches reading skills to illiterate adults. This is done in conjunction with the Tehama County Library. These students are referrals from the ‘Immigration Program; G.A.I.N. (welfare)’ and individuals seeking reading assistance. There are approximately 120 students and 55 tutors in the program any given day.”) These are only unsupported assertions of counsel. The record is barren and exhibits are barren of any such uses of the Kraft building.
