Judges: Clark
Filed Date: 3/13/1906
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On 11 March, 1870, S. P. Arrington conveyed to trustees named in the deed a certain lot in Warrenton "in trust, nevertheless, for the purposes of a site for a schoolhouse (499) to be used for the education of freedmen and children, irrespective of race or color." On 9 September, 1874, a majority of the trustees named in the aforesaid deed executed a lease of said premises for 200 years to Lem Thornton and six others, as trustees, in consideration of twenty dollars, ten dollars thereof payable at the end of 100 years and the other ten dollars to be paid at the termination of lease, the rent to be "applied to school purposes" and the property "to be used as a Baptist church and for the education of the youths of the colored race." The property has ever since been so used. The three surviving trustees named in the deed of 1874 have filled the four vacancies caused by death, and these seven are the plaintiffs. The Baptist congregation (colored) which has been using the premises, in March, 1905, filled the four vacancies by an election by the congregation, and took possession of the property, and on 17 April, 1905, the congregation removed the three surviving trustees named in the lease of 1870, and elected three others in their stead. The seven trustees thus elected by the congregation are the defendants. The defendants claim the right of the congregation to thus fill vacancies and remove trustees at will under authority of Revisal, secs. 2670, 2671, which confer upon any church the right to appoint trustees to hold its property, and to fill vacancies and remove trustees at will. The plaintiffs contend that such provisions apply only to church property and not to property held in trust "for the Baptist church and for the education of the youths of the colored race," and that for such purposes, it being not exclusively church property, the trustees appointed in the conveyance of 1874 should hold the property. This was correctly so held by his Honor.
It is true that in an action of ejectment the plaintiff must recover upon the strength of his own title. But, here, the title does not come into controversy. As was said in the similar case ofSimmons v. Allison,
But it may well be inquired into, upon proper proceedings and by the proper parties, whether the plaintiffs have any claim to hold the possession, upon their own showing, except against mere trespassers. The deed of 1870 conveyed the property "in trust for purposes of a schoolhouse for the education of freedmen and children, irrespective of race." The lease of 1874 of the property for 200 years (at a rental of ten dollars, payable respectively one hundred and two hundred years after date), "to be used as a Baptist church and for the education of the youths of the colored race," is wholly unauthorized, and in violation of the power conferred by the deed of 1870. What effect, if any, the statute of limitations will have, and who are entitled to bring proceedings to enforce the trust, we need not now decide.
No Error.
(501)