— Joe Ditz, a resident of Cedar County, died testate on May 29, 1961. His last will and testament, with one codicil, was admitted to probate on June 15, 1961. Mr. Ditz had apparently been a thrifty citizen. The inventory in his estate shows that he left real estate valued at $365,400 and personalty in the amount of $441,280.53. He left no spouse surviving him and no immediate relatives; his closest next of kin apparеntly being nieces and nephews and grandnieces and grandnephews.. Several specific bequests were set up in his last will and the codicil thereto; and there were certain trusts provided.
The only part of the will under attack here is Paragraph Thirteenth. This is in the nature of a residuary clause, and attempts to set up a charitable trust. It is lengthy, but a consideration of it is essential to a discussion of the legal questions raised, and we set it out in full:
“Thirteenth: All the rest, residue and remainder of the property, real or personal, of which I shall die seized or possessed, or to which I may be entitled at the time of my death, I give, devise and bequeath unto Otto L. Sehluter, Fred Feddersen and Lloyd Hasselbusch, in trust, for the following uses, objеcts and purposes:
“I direct that my said Trustees distribute and contribute my said property to such organizations and institutions organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable and educational purposes.
“I hereby grant unto my said Trustees, full and complete power and authority to perform all acts and duties necessary or required to carry out and put into effect the expressed purposes
“That upon payment of expenses and that upon full distribution of the contributions herein authorized, this trust shall terminate and be at an end, and the Trustees shall be discharged upon final approval of their accounting by the court.”
This paragraph is said by the plaintiffs to be void because the purposеs and beneficiaries are impossible of ascertainment by the court; there is no ascertainable class; it is too indefinite and uncertain as to any class which is to partake of the trust; the intention of the testator is not expressed and it is impossible for the trustees to carry out the terms; the trust does not specify how much of the income or prinсipal is to be devoted to religious, educational or charitable purposes; no one can say what the testator meant by “religious”, “charitable” or “educational” purposes; discretionary trusts without purpose, objective, direction or intent shown are contrary to public policy; there is no provision for appointment of a successor trustee or trustees in ease of death or incapacity of those appointed; and the absolute and uncontrolled discretion lodged in the trustees is illegal and repugnant to the laws of the State of Iowa.
The petition was attacked by the defendants by motion to
The plaintiffs’ case depends on two major contentions: first, the language of the second complete paragraph of that part of the will labeled “Thirteenth” does not makes a complete sentence, there is clearly something lacking and the intention of the testator cannot be known from what is said and so there is a fatal defect in the express purposes of the trust; and second, there is a fatal indefiniteness in designation of the beneficiaries. These are the questions argued and so to which we give attention.
I. It will be observed by the second pаragraph of Thirteenth set out above that the Trustees are directed to distribute and contribute the property to “such organizations and institutions organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable and educational purposes.” It is the plaintiffs’ thought that there is clearly something lacking. In effect they say “Such as what? Such as those loсated in Cedar County, or some other place? or such as those devoted to a certain kind of charity, or religion, or educational purpose?” At the very least, they contend, there should be evidence taken as to what was meant by this language; although they do not admit the defect could be cured by evidence.
We are not impressеd by these contentions. It requires a strained interpretation of the language and the whole language of the will to arrive at any other conclusion than that the testator meant to designate such organizations and institutions as are operated solely for religious, charitable and educational purposes, and might be selected by his trustees as the beneficiaries of the trust. It is only necessary to take the meaning of Thirteenth from its four corners to arrive at this construction. We have said that to ascertain the meaning of the testator it is
II. Nor do we think the designation of the trust beneficiaries is so vague and indefinite that the trust must fail. Perhaps the exact point at issue here has not been decided in Iowa; but it has been closely approached in several cases. The question may be stated thus: Is а general bequest to charity, that is to say, for charitable purposes, with the power lodged in named trustees to select the beneficiaries, so indefinite and uncertain that it must be held to be void ? The plaintiffs urge strongly that we have never gone so far as to approve such a trust.
Here the shadow of our many previous pronouncements hangs dаrkly over the plaintiffs. If we have never said that such a trust is valid as applied to the facts of the several cases which have come before us, there are cei’tainly many near misses. Iowa is among those jurisdictions which go to considerable lengths in upholding charitable trusts. As recently as in Eckles v. Lounsberry,
“Charitable gifts are strongly favored by the courts and will be upheld wherever possible. [Citing authorities]
“In considering a charitable bequest we have approved this statement of Lord Hardwicke, ‘There is no authority to construe it to be void, if by law it can possibly be made good’ [citations]
So in In re Estate of Small,
More specifically, we have many times used language which fits the identical situation here. In Gray v. Watters,
It is difficult to follow the distinction which the plaintiffs attempt to make. It is true the trustee in Quinn v. Shields,
At least two other jurisdictions have cоnsidered the question directly involved here, and have upheld charitable bequests identical in substance with that set up in the will now before us. In re Estate of Planck,
The Texas Supreme Court had the identical question before it in Boyd v. Frost National Bank,
To the same effect are Scott, Trusts, Volume 3, section 396; 10 Am. Jur., Charities, section 83, page 644; and 14 C. J. S., Charities, section 17, page 449. The plaintiffs cite to the contrary Hoenig v. Newmark, Ky.,
The bequest here is to “organizations and institutions organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable and educational purposes.” By this language, the testаtor devoted the residue of his estate to the broad field of charitable institutions. Is it possible that we should say that because he did not select certain specific charities, but embraced all charities, he was not sufficient^ definite? The words used are exact in meaning, in that they cover all institutions organized for charitable purposes. They estаblish a charity universal rather than limited and parochial. The whole embraces all of its component parts. The testator was evidently unwilling to limit his charities to any particular organization or institution; and he appointed trustees in whose good judgment and discretion he reposed confidence that they would administer the trust property wisely. If he chose to embrace all mankind in his charitable purposes rather than a
III. By way of illustration of the supposed evils which might flow from the unlimited power to devote the trust property to such charitable institutions as their judgment might dictate, the plaintiffs say the trustees might decide to support some institution in Algiers, where the funds would be entirely out of the control of the Iowa courts and might be sequestered or confiscated —exproрriated seems now the popular word for this form of governmental larceny — by the authorities there. We do not share the apprehension felt by the plaintiffs at this point. In these days of Marshall Plans, Peace Corps, vast governmental appropriations for foreign aid, shrinking of distances between the various parts of the world, and a vast gaggle оf new nations springing up in Africa and elsewhere, an application of a fund to a foreign charity is not unthinkable. We found no such danger in Beidler v. Dehner, supra, where the trust was expressly for the benefit of the poor of Luxemburg’, the specific beneficiaries to be determined by a curate of that country.
The real answer is, of course, that the testаtor relied upon his appointed trustees and their good judgment to use the property wisely and to the best advantage. We may think it unlikely that Mr. Otto L. Schluter and his fellow trustees will be found appropriating the trust property to the beneficial interests of the Arabs of Algiers; but this is a matter for their decision under the supervision of the court.
IY. It is well settled that the courts hаve jurisdiction to supervise the uses of the funds in charitable trusts. Section 604.4, Code of 1962. For a discussion of the power of courts of equity to supervise charitable trusts, even when there is no governing statute, see Boyd v. Frost National Bank, supra, loc. cit.
We find no error, and conclude that the decree and judgment of the trial court were right. — Affirmed.
