Common Council of Richmond v. State ex rel. Mendenhall

5 Ind. 334 | Ind. | 1854

Hovey, J.

Rhamar Warner died in 1835, leaving a last will and. testament, by which, among other things, he declared that it was his intention to dispose of all his property, real and personal, and devised as follows: “ And I will that my brick house shall be finished and rented; and I bequeath the proceeds or rent to my sister, Sarah Warner, during her lifetime; and after her death, I will that the rents of said brick house shall forever be appropriated to the education of-children of this town.”

The will was regularly proven, and letters testamentary granted. The house referred to in the devise, is on lot twenty-eight in that part of the city of Richmond, Indiana, which was laid off by Jeremiah Cox. The lot is one hundred and thirty-two feet long by eighty-two and a half feet broad, and the house is situate on the south-west corner of the same, seventy-three and a half feet long by twenty feet broad. Two doors and a cellar are entered from the interior of the lot, and can not be reached from any street or alley on the outside.

After the death of Sarah Warner, the city of Richmond purchased the house and lot from the heirs of Ithamar Warner, with a full knowledge of the foregoing facts. The relators, Mendenhall, Elder and Valle, are the school trustees for the city, and have children residing in the *336same, who are yet to be educated. The city has never appropriated the rents of said house for the education of the children within its limits.

All of the above facts are set forth in the petition, which prayS tha,t said house and lot may be applied to the education of the children of Richmond, and that trustees may be appointed to manage the trust.

The city, by her attorneys, demurred to the petition; the demurrer was overruled, and upon her refusal to answer over, the petition was taken as confessed, and a judgment entered in conformity with the prayer of the petition, as to the rents of said house and lot, and the appointment of trustees. From that judgment the city appeals.

The only question raised, is as to the construction of the devise of the house.

In the case of McCord v. Ochiltree, 8 Blackf. 16, this Court decided that the statute of 43 Elizabeth, c. 4, commonly called the statute of charitable uses, is in force in this state; and among the uses enumerated in that act are gifts “for maintenance of sick and maimed soldiers and marines, schools of learning, free schools, and scholars of universities.” Courts of equity in Engiand and this country have gone great lengths in construing gifts as being within the spirit of this statute, and probably no act has ever been more liberally construed. See 2 Story’s Eq. Jurisp. ss. 1164 to 1168 inclusive, and 1 Jarman on Wills 192-3, and the cases there cited.

In sec. 1169, Story says: “ Another principle equally well established is, that if the bequest be for charity, it matters not how uncertain the persons or objects may be; or whether the persons who are to take are in esse or not; or whether the legatee be a corporation capable in law of taking or not; or whether the bequest can be carried into exact execution or not; for in all these and like cases, the Court will sustain the legacy and give it effect, according to its own principles. And where a literal execution becomes inexpedient or impracticable, the Court will execute it as nearly as it can according to the original purpose.” *337Numerous cases are cited by him as sustaining this section, and others might be added, did we not regard the law as thus laid down, settled beyond all doubt.

We think these authorities fully show that the devise of the house is clearly within the statute of charitable uses, and not void for uncertainty.

The executors in the will having been discharged from their trust, the Court did right in appointing trustees to take charge of the property devised.

The only remaining question for our consideration, is, as to the meaning of the word “ house,” as used in the devise. Does it include the whole lot, or the ground only upon which it is erected?

Lord Coke says, that “by the grant of a messuage or house, the orchard, garden and curtilages do pass, without the word ‘ appurtenances,’ and an acre or more may pass by the name of house.” Coke Litt. 5 b., 56 a. b.— 2 Saund. R. 401, note 2.—Bouv. Dic., title “house.” See also Doe v. Collins, 2 Term R. 498. The syllabus in the case of Saltonstall v. Brown, 3 Metcalf’s R. 423, quoted in several elementary works, and referred to by counsel, is inaccurate, and is not supported by the case. The devise was of “my house and lands in Salem,” and the meaning of the word “house” was not defined by the Court.

The testator in this case, by the first part of his will,' manifests the intention of disposing of all of his property, real and personal; and as no disposition of the remainder of the lot was made, after taking off the portion occupied .by the house, the inference is that he intended that the whole lot should pass by the word “house.” This construction is strengthened by the fact that the house could not be fully used without passing over the lot, as two doors and a cellar were accessible only from the interior of the lot.

The blank before the word children in the devise, is of no importance. If Courts should attempt to give meaning to blank spaces in written instruments, where the sentence is complete and the meaning clear, it might become necessary to furnish themselves with measuring instruments to aid them in the labor of construction.

J. S. Newman and J. P. Siddall, for the appellants. J. Perry, for the state.

Per Curiam. — The judgment is affirmed with costs.

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