The plaintiffs must recover upon the strength of their own title, and not upon defects, if any, in the title of the defendants. The conveyance by their ancestor, Henderson Wilson, was in fee simple to trustees "to convey to Oriental Lodge, No. 24, I. O. O. F., when the same shall have been incorporated by the Legislature of North Carolina." It was subsequently incorporated. Though no conveyance by such trustees to the Lodge is shown, the learned counsel for the plaintiffs admitted that the Statute of Uses, 27 Henry VIII, in force in this State by virtue of our statute, executed the use without the execution of a deed. The grant to the trustees being in fee simple, the cestui que trust took in fee. Holmes v. Holmes,
The plaintiff's counsel insist, however, that at the time of the conveyance, the Revised Statutes (chap. 26, sec. 17) provided that a *Page 62 corporation, unless otherwise specially stated in its charter, had existence for only thirty years, and as there was no special provision in this charter, the grantor only parted with the property for thirty years and held a resulting trust. But the conveyance was in fee, and a corporation (92) limited in duration can take a fee simple conveyance just as a natural being, whose existence is also limited. Either may convey away the property, and upon the death of either, without having disposed of it, the property will go to pay creditors, to heirs, to stockholders, or as an escheat, according to the circumstances, but in neither case is there any reverter to the grantors. On the death of a corporation the property is usually administered by a receiver, and on the death of a natural person, by the personal representative, or passes to the heirs.
By the Constitution of North Carolina (Art. VIII, sec. 1) all corporations (if chartered since 1868) are subject to extinction at any time, or their duration can be abridged or extended, at the will of the Legislature. It would now be a startling doctrine that upon the repeal of a charter, all real estate, though conveyed to the corporation absolutely in fee simple, reverts as at common law to the original grantors, to the total exclusion and loss of creditors and stockholders. On the contrary, such property, when not held on a base or qualified fee, as was the case inS. v. Rives,
It is true, it was held in an opinion by Gaston, J., Fox v. (93) Horah,
Reversed.
Cited: Broadfoot v. Fayetteville,