200 P. 417 | Cal. | 1921
The city of Oceanside is attempting by this action to have a certain fund set aside to its use under the last will of one George W. Houk.
The will under which the plaintiff claims, after making certain personal bequests, gives, devises, and bequeaths the residue of the estate to a trustee "to have and to hold in trust for the uses and purposes and with the powers hereinafter stated."
Among the subsequent provisions is the following:
"My said Trustee shall, subject to the conditions hereinafter mentioned, pay to the city of Oceanside, county of San Diego, State of California, such sum that may be necessary, up to, but not in excess of, the sum of One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000.00) providing said city of Oceanside donates a like sum, and providing further that said city builds within three years after my death with said money, a pleasure pier, the site to be selected by my Trustee. Upon the failure of the said city to perform said conditions, then the said sum shall be distributed with the residue of the trust property."
Without having taken any steps to perform or guarantee the conditions imposed upon the municipality precedent to the enjoyment of this fund, the city of Oceanside brings this action to obtain an order of court distributing to the trustee *645 for the purposes of this use the sum of one hundred thousand dollars.
The appeal is from the order of court denying this application.
The grounds of objection interposed by the defendants, representing the estate, are: (1) That the attempted bequest is invalid under the provision of section 1313 of the Civil Code that "no estate, real or personal, shall be bequeathed or devised to any charitable or benevolent society or corporation, or to any person in trust for charitable uses, except the same be done by will duly executed at least thirty days before the decease of the testator"; (2) That if valid in its creation, the trust was not effective or operative for any purpose until the city of Oceanside had qualified to receive the benefits by providing a like fund as specified in the will; (3) That the bequest is void for uncertainty in that it cannot be determined therefrom the amount necessary for the purpose designated; (4) That the trust is not one that is authorized under section 857 of the Civil Code or any other provision of said code.
The testator died within thirty days of the execution of this will and it is conceded by appellant that the trust declared is for a charitable use.
[1] Appellant, however, relies upon the amendment of section 1313 by the legislature of 1917 (Stats. 1917, p. 272), to take this bequest out of the thirty days' limitation of the statute. The provision of the amendment is "that bequests and devises to the state, or to any state institution, or for the use or benefit of the state or any state institution, are excepted from the restrictions of this section."
It would require an unjustifiable exercise of construction by implication to extend this proviso to cover a bequest to the use of a municipality of the state for the erection of a purely municipal improvement.
The city of Oceanside, or the city of San Francisco, or the city of Los Angeles, is not the state nor a state institution.
It is true that cities and counties are agencies of the state, and for certain purposes branches of the state government, and they are state institutions in the general sense that they are organized by state authority and for state purposes.
We have, however, agencies of the state for certain limited and specific purposes, such as prisons, hospitals, asylums, *646
and similar establishments, which are officially known as state institutions, both under the constitution and the statutes. (Const., art. X; art. IV, sec. 22; Pol. Code, tit. V.) InChalfant v. State,
Municipalities are under the law classified by themselves and we doubt if an instance can be found where a municipal corporation is defined or classified by statutory enactment or judicial construction under the term "state institution."
Counsel for appellant places special stress upon the clause of the amendment referring to bequests "for the use or benefit of the state." It cannot be disputed that anything in the way of municipal improvement which benefits the municipality benefits the state as a whole. This would be the case were the beneficiary of that aid a private hospital, or charity of any kind which helped to carry the public burden, but that is obviously not what is meant by this provision of section 1313 When it is read with its context it will be apparent that the words "state" and "state institution" are to be read in the clause referred to precisely in the sense used in the preceding clause as referring to bequests directly to the state or in trust for the benefit of the state; directly to, or in trust for the benefit of, any state institution.
It may be admitted that every reason of public policy would seem to favor applying the same exception of the statute against this thirty days' limitation to bequests to municipalities and municipal institutions as to the state and state institutions, but the very obviousness of this implication makes it unlikely that the legislature, if it had any such purpose in mind, would have failed to put it in the language which would be so naturally suggested. It can hardly be imagined if the legislature had intended to include municipalities in this amendment that it would have failed to say so, by the addition of the simple word "municipality," which would have fairly obtruded itself upon them in framing this statute.
[2] In any event, we see no escape from the second objection interposed by respondent, namely, the admitted fact that the city of Oceanside at the time of bringing this proceeding had taken no steps to perform the condition precedent *647 to any claim on this bequest. Under the terms of the will the city could only become entitled to this fund or any part of it upon performance of the condition that it raise a like amount to be devoted to the same purpose. That the bequest was to fail entirely if this was not done is shown by the last clause of the provision fixing a time limit within which the bequest could be made available. It is provided that upon failure of the city to perform the conditions, then the sum shall be distributed with the residue of the trust property. This clearly indicates that it was not to be severed from the balance of the residuary estate left to the trustee, unless or until these conditions were met.
It could not even be determined what sum the appellant would be entitled to until it had in some way signified the amount it would subscribe to the building of a pier, and what amount would be necessary for that purpose.
The trust fund provided by the will was not the fixed sum of one hundred thousand dollars, but an amount necessary for such construction not to exceed one hundred thousand dollars, and that, only to the extent that the city of Oceanside duplicated the amount claimed from the estate by its own contribution.
While it is true the petitioner was not asking in this proceeding for a distribution of the fund to itself, but only that it be placed in the hands of the trustee subject to said use, we are satisfied that until some steps had been taken to fix the amount to which the city would be entitled, and to perform the conditions without which it would not be entitled to anything, that no right existed to require any sequestration of this fund in its behalf.
In view of the conclusions reached as to the points discussed, it is unnecessary to consider the other matters of defense presented by respondents.
The judgment is affirmed.
Lennon, J., Angellotti, C. J., Shaw, J., Lawlor, J., and Shurtleff, J., concurred. *648