27 N.E.2d 984 | NY | 1940
Mary Gertrude Abbey, the settlor of the trust with which we are concerned upon this appeal, was the widow of Edwin Austin Abbey, an American artist of distinction in the field of mural painting. After the death of her husband in England in 1911, Mrs. Abbey continued to live there until her death on June 20, 1931. She never relinquished her American domicile.
On April 28, 1931, less than two months prior to her death, she executed two instruments by which she provided for the disposition of her entire estate. One instrument was a deed of trust by which she conveyed to the plaintiff, as trustee, the major portion of her property, reserving the income to herself for life and directing that upon her death the principal of the fund be paid to certain charitable institutions and to individuals named as donees, some of which donees were "preferred." The second instrument was her will by which she disposed of the remaining minor portion of her estate, including her residence in England, the devise of which has become an important factor in the present controversy.
Mrs. Abbey was survived by no children or descendants, father or mother, or by any brother or sister. Her nearest surviving kin were first cousins. By her will, which was admitted to probate in Surrogate's Court, New York *191 county, she devised her English residence, Chelsea Lodge at No. 42 Tite Street, S.W. 3, Chelsea, London, to the Trustees of the Royal Academy of Arts, an English corporation, in trust for the purpose of establishing a museum of art for the benefit of the public. She also bequeathed to the Royal Academy of Arts the contents of Chelsea Lodge, including books and works of art, chief among which were her husband's paintings, drawings, studies and sketch books. In describing the use to which this property was to be put the will provided: "This house is to be used for the purpose of displaying to the best advantage the works of art and other objects of interest therein, my husband's works to take precedence of all others."
In connection with this testamentary disposition of Chelsea Lodge and its contents the testatrix provided by paragraph (j) of the deed of trust, executed simultaneously with her will, that "If upon the death of the Settlor, under the provisions of her * * * will * * * the title to * * * `Chelsea Lodge' * * * and the contents [thereof] * * * shall pass to the Trustees of the Royal Academy of Arts in London, England, then to pay over out of the principal of said trust fund to the said Trustees of the Royal Academy of Arts the sum of Thirty thousand Pounds Sterling (£ 30,000) in trust, * * * and the income shall be used for the safe custody, upkeep, maintenance, payment of rates and taxes, if any, on the said house and land, insurance and repair of said house and its contents, including the provision of such appurtenances as may be deemed necessary by the said Trustees for the proper display of the works of art or other objects therein and for the payment of a Curator and servants for cleaning, for the proper maintenance of the house as a Museum of Art, and its contents and the making and printing of catalogues and descriptive booklets. * * * In the event that by reason of fire or other accident the continuance of the said house and its contents as a Museum, as aforesaid, shall become impossible, the above mentioned fund of Thirty thousand pounds sterling (£ 30,000) shall be added *192 to `The Edwin Austin Abbey Memorial Trust Fund for Mural Painting in the United States of America' above mentioned in paragraph (f) of this Agreement and shall be paid over to the National Academy of Design in the City of New York, State of New York, as Trustee of the last mentioned fund."
After the death of Mrs. Abbey circumstances unforeseen occurred to thwart her plans thus laid. In the course of administration proceedings Chelsea Lodge was sold to raise funds sufficient to pay English death taxes. In consequence the title to Chelsea Lodge never passed to the Royal Academy of Arts. Lacking facilities for exhibiting the works of art and other contents of Chelsea Lodge bequeathed to the Royal Academy of Arts, its trustees found it impracticable to take possession of the bequest and accordingly joined with the Attorney-General of England in giving formal consent to the transfer by the English administrator to the plaintiff trust company, as executor of Mrs. Abbey's will, of the paintings, drawings, studies and sketch books of Edwin Austin Abbey and other articles among the contents of Chelsea Lodge. The plaintiff executor thereupon applied to Surrogate's Court, New York county, under section 12 of the Personal Property Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 41) for a decree determining that the works of art and related articles received from the English administrator be administered cy pres in a manner which the Surrogate should determine would accomplish the general purpose of the bequest. Then followed, without objection, a Surrogate's decree applying to the bequest the doctrine of cypres and directing the plaintiff executor to transfer the art collection to Yale University, there to be used for exhibitional and educational purposes.
No party to this appeal objects to the decree by which the respondent Yale University was given possession and control of the works of art which had been originally bequeathed to the Royal Academy of Arts. Upon this accounting by the plaintiff trustee the controversy concerns chiefly the distribution to be made of the settlor's gift of thirty thousand *193 pounds sterling under paragraph (j) of the deed of trust. The challenge by the appellants goes to the propriety of the order by Special Term, affirmed by the Appellate Division, one justice dissenting, which directs the plaintiff trustee to administer that gift cy pres by paying it to Yale University.
We agree with the disposition made of the gift in question. On a prior occasion, when the same deed of trust, executed by Mrs. Abbey, was before this court for consideration, it was said in the opinion by Judge CROUCH that "* * * upon her death by far the larger part of the principal was, in a manner intended to perpetuate the name and fame of her husband, devoted to purposesbroadly educational and benevolent." (City Bank Farmers TrustCo. v. Arnold,
We are not unmindful of the rule in Matter of Fletcher
(
It has been suggested that the gift provided by paragraph (j) — the amount of which has been reduced one-third by abatement and by administrative charges — is excessive and that a portion should go to other "preferred" donees to lessen the abatement they have suffered. We cannot say in the circumstances disclosed by the record that the cost of the custody, maintenance and exhibition of three thousand objects of art by any institution which might have been designated by the application of the cypres doctrine, is so at variance with the income available from the gift as to negative an intent by the settlor that the entire gift should be used as the source of income with which to maintain the collection for public benefit.
The recital in the decision at Special Term that the fund created by paragraph (j) is not a trust but an outright gift does not make inapplicable the doctrine of cy pres. (Pers. Prop. Law, § 12; Matter of Neher, supra; Matter of Gary, supra;Sherman v. Richmond Hose Co.,
Nor does the language of paragraph (j), as we read it, violate the rule against perpetuities. The trust indenture expresses the settlor's intent that the gift of thirty thousand pounds sterling should vest in the donee at her death — not at some later date. The language is: "If upon the death of the Settlor" the title to Chelsea Lodge and its contents should pass to the Royal Academy of Arts, then the gift of thirty thousand pounds should be paid to that institution. The gift thus intended being, as we believe, *195
for a general charitable purpose, there was implicit in the settlor's language the legal inference that if for any reason not mentioned in the deed of trust, title to Chelsea Lodge should not pass to the Trustees of the Royal Academy of Arts, then the gift of thirty thousand pounds should be paid over upon her death to an institution appropriately designated by a court, upon the application of the cy pres doctrine. In either event the gift vests "upon the death of the Settlor." (Matter of Potts,
"The exercise of the cy pres doctrine always involves a large measure of discretion." (Sherman v. Richmond Hose Co., supra, p. 473.) We find in the record nothing to indicate an abuse of that discretion by Special Term. As to any questions of law argued by the appellants severally and not discussed herein, our views accord with the decision at Special Term, affirmed by the Appellate Division.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs to all parties appearing by separate counsel and filing separate briefs, payable out of the fund.
LEHMAN, Ch. J., LOUGHRAN, FINCH, RIPPEY, SEARS and CONWAY, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, etc. *196