235 Pa. 206 | Pa. | 1912
Opinion by
The Centennial and Memorial Association of Valley Forge having been formally dissolved, the question is raised as to the proper distribution of its assets; and this depends upon whether or not the association was a public charity. The fund consists of moneys in the treasury of the corporation paid into Court after its dissolution.. The association was a corporation of the first class created by a decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery county, July 5, 1878, under the .act of April 29, 1874, P..L. 73, the charter purpose .being, “To purchase, improve and preserve the lands
By the act of April 13, 1887, P. L. 52, the State appropriated to the Centennial and Memorial Association $5,000 “for the improvement, extension and preservation” of the lands and buildings occupied by Washington as his headquarters at Valley Forge, and this sum was expended in the purchase of additional grounds and improvements. By the act of May 30, 1893, P. L. 183, the Commonwealth appointed a commission (the appellee), “For the purpose of perpetuating and preserving the site on which the Continental Army under General George Washington was encamped in winter quarters at Valley Forge,” and directed the lands and entrenchments to be secured and laid out, preserved and maintained forever as a public place or park by the name of “Valley Forge;” by act of April 7, 1905, P. L. 117, the Commonwealth was given authority to secure the “Headquarters” by the exercise of the right of eminent domain, which they did in that year, and the fund in question arose primarily from the award made to the Centennial and Memorial Association in this condemnation proceeding. Subsequently, upon its petition to the Court of Common
The act of April 9, 1856, P. L. 293, under which the Centennial and Memorial Association was dissolved, directs that “no property devoted to religious, literary or charitable uses, shall be diverted from the objects for which they were given or granted.” The act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 328, provides that, “No disposition of property hereafter made for any.....charitable use shall fail for want of a trustee;” and the act of May 9, 1889, P. L. 173, provides that no such public trust or “charitable use shall fail for want of a trustee...... but it shall be the duty of any court having equity jurisdiction in the proper county to supply a trustee.” The decree of the court below was in pursuance of these statutes, and the question is, was the Centennial and Memorial Association of Valley Forge a public charity whose charter created a trust which it was the duty of the court to maintain by the appointment of a new trustee to hold the trust fund after the dissolution of that corporation.
As well stated in the opinion of the learned court below, “The attempt to formulate a definition that is so specific as to cover every public charity, is sure to prove
We feel that the Centennial and Memorial Association of Valley Forge was engaged in a public work, and that the moneys given to it were in relief of a burden that might properly have been assumed by the public. Its charter purpose comprehended a public charity, and the formal public notice of the application for such charter declared the purpose of the association to be “to purchase, hold and improve the Washington Headquarters at Valley Forge and lands adjacent thereto and appropriate them to historical and humane purposes.” There was no provision in the charter or bylaws of the association looking to pecuniary returns to its members, and no dividends were ever paid or com templated. In fact the appellant testified that it was never expected that any moneys would be divided
The facts should not be overlooked that the $5,000 appropriated by the State were expended by the Association in the purchase of grounds and improvements, that a large proportion of the funds to be distributed came indirectly from this source, and that one of the avowed purposes of this appropriation was the “preservation of the lands and buildings occupied by General George Washington as his Headquarters at Valley Forge.” We have declared, “A public charity is but a trust and is bound to apply its funds in furtherance of the charity and not otherwise:” Fire Ins. Patrol v. Boyd, supra. “On dissolution the property of a charitable association does not revert to the donors nor may it be divided among the members of the association, but it should be appropriated to the purposes most nearly
The assignments of error are overruled and the decree of the court below is affirmed, the costs to be paid out of the fund.