THE HOWARD SAVINGS INSTITUTION OF NEWARK, NEW JERSEY, EXECUTOR UNDER THE WILL OF C. EDWARD MCKINNEY, JR., DECEASED, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT, v. FLORENCE PEEP AND ALBERT HUGHEY, DEFENDANTS-CROSS-APPELLANTS, AND THE TRUSTEES OF AMHERST COLLEGE, ALICE J. STEVENS AND THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.
Supreme Court of New Jersey
Argued December 19, 1960 — Decided April 10, 1961.
34 N.J. 494
For affirmance—None.
Mr. Irving Riker and Mr. Eustace Seligman, the latter of the New York Bar, argued the cause for the defendant-respondent, The Trustees of Amherst College (Messrs. Riker, Danzig, Marsh & Scherer, attorneys; Messrs. Irving Riker, Austin W. Scott, of the Massachusetts Bar, and Eustace Seligman, of counsel).
The Attorney General filed a statement in lieu of brief.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
PROCTOR, J. This appeal and cross appeal from a judgment of the Chancery Division primarily involve the question of whether that court properly applied the doctrine of cy pres to the terms of a trust established by the will of C. Edward McKinney, Jr. Mr. McKinney, a resident of the City of East Orange, died on October 21, 1957. His will, admitted to probate by the Surrogate of Essex County on November 6, 1957, designates the plaintiff, the Howard Savings Institution, as executor and provides in part as follows:
“Thirtieth: I give and bequeath the sum of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000) to Amherst College, an institution of learning, situate at Amherst, Massachusetts, to be held in trust to be used as a scholarship loan fund for deserving American born, Protestant, Gentile boys of good moral repute, not given to gambling, smoking, drinking or similar acts. (It being my thought that if a young man has enough funds to allow the waste of smoking, he certainly does not need help.) The money loaned from said fund is to be repaid to the fund at the earliest moment so that others may benefit from its use.
* * * * * * * *
Thirty-third: All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real, personal and mixed, of whatsoever kind and wheresoever
The charter of Amherst College provides that “no student shall be refused admission to, or denied any of the privileges, honors, or degrees of said College, on account of the religious opinions he may entertain.” On June 7, 1958 the Board of Trustees of Amherst College adopted a resolution stating that it believed acceptance of a trust discriminating among students on religious grounds would contravene the letter and spirit of the charter and the policy of the college. Accordingly, the Board declined to accept the trust funds unless the Protestant-Gentile restriction was eliminated from the terms of the trust. Plaintiff-executor thereupon instituted this action to obtain judicial construction of paragraphs Thirty and Thirty-three of Mr. McKinney‘s will and conformable instructions. It joined as defendants the Board of Trustees of Amherst, the Attorney General of New Jersey, and the next-of-kin of the testator.
The Chancery Division, applying the doctrine of cy pres, entered a judgment excluding the words “Protestant” and “Gentile” from paragraph Thirty of the will and ordering the executor to turn the trust funds over to Amherst to be administered in accordance with the remaining terms and conditions of the will. 61 N. J. Super. 119 (1960). We certified the appeal of the executor and the cross appeal of the next-of-kin before argument in the Appellate Division.
At the outset, the Board of Trustees of Amherst disputes the executor‘s standing to appeal. In a sense the Board‘s argument is moot, since all parties concede that the next-of-kin have standing to cross-appeal, and to resolve the issues raised by the next-of-kin we must consider whether, as the executor argues, the Chancery Division should have appointed a substituted trustee. Nevertheless, the argument raises a point of law which should be resolved for the future guidance of the bench and bar.
An executor has the duty to see that the estate is distributed in accordance with what he believes are the wishes of the testator. Pursuant to that duty, he may in appropriate circumstances ask a court to construe the will. But there is no reason why the executor should be bound by the decision of a lower court if it believes that that court‘s decision will not accurately effectuate the testator‘s intent. As expressed by the New York Appellate Division: “the fact they [the executors] asked for a construction does not bind them to accept any construction they get, right or wrong.” In re Smith‘s Will, 9 A. D. 2d 583, 584, 189 N. Y. S. 2d 331, 332 (App. Div. 1959). We think that under the circumstances the executor is entitled to a definitive judgment by an appellate court, and we therefore hold that it has standing to prosecute this appeal as the representative of the testator. See Drewen v. Bank of Manhattan Co. of City of N. Y., 31 N. J. 110 (1959); 7 New Jersey Practice, Clapp, Wills & Administration § 981, p. 585 (1950).
This brings us to the merits of the case. No one urges on this appeal that the Protestant-Gentile restriction or its enforcement by the court offends public policy or the
We first consider whether the Chancery Division should have applied the doctrine of cy pres to the terms of the trust. The doctrine of cy pres is a judicial mechanism for the preservation of a charitable trust when accomplishment of the particular purpose of the trust becomes impossible, impracticable or illegal. In such a situation if the settlor manifested an intent to devote the trust to a
With the above principles in mind, we return to the question of whether the Chancery Division should have disposed of the trust funds in the present case as it did.
We first consider the next-of-kin‘s contention that the doctrines of cy pres and deviation are inapplicable to the trust established by Mr. McKinney‘s will and that therefore the Chancery Division should have declared an intestacy. The next-of-kin‘s initial argument is that the bequest provided for in paragraphs Thirty and Thirty-three is not a charitable trust. They do not quarrel with the well-settled proposition that a trust for the advancement of learning is charitable. Wilber v. Owens, supra, 2 N. J., at p. 174; MacKenzie v. Trustees of Presbytery of Jersey City, 67 N. J. Eq. 652, 665 (E. & A. 1905). Instead, they rely on
The next-of-kin also argue that the Chancery Division erred in applying the doctrine of cy pres because the testator
As mentioned above, in ascertaining the existence of a general charitable intent the court must determine whether the testator would have wanted the trust funds to remain devoted to a charitable purpose similar to, but not the same as, he provided, or to go to his next-of-kin. For the answer, we must first look to the will. A provision for reverter or gift over upon failure of the particular trust purpose or the designation of heirs or other persons as residuary legatees may evidence absence of a general charitable intent. Cf. Bankers Trust Co. v. N. Y. etc., Animals, 23 N. J. Super. 170 (App. Div. 1952); see also 6 New Jersey Practice, Clapp, Wills & Administration, § 275, p. 34 (1950). On the other hand, if there are no such provisions or if he has specifically provided for all his heirs and indicated that was all he wanted to bestow upon them, or if he has expressly declared he is not interested in his heirs, then it would seem that he had no desire to withdraw the trust funds from charitable channels. Comment, 39 Yale L. J., supra, at p. 318.
The will in the present case strongly indicates that Mr. McKinney would not have wanted his next-of-kin to receive the trust funds. There is no provision in paragraphs Thirty and Thirty-three for reverter or a gift over if the trust bequest cannot be carried out in its exact terms. By contrast, the testator provided in paragraph Ninth of the will that if a trust bequest to the Town of Wolfeboro established therein could not be carried out in accordance with its exact terms, it should fail. A comparison of the charitable bequests to Amherst and the Town of Wolfeboro suggests a wholly different intent of the testator as to his willingness to accept some modification of their exact terms. If he had been opposed to any modification in the terms of the bequest
Evidence extrinsic to the will confirms the foregoing conclusion. The testator had no close relatives. He left no spouse or descendants or parents or brothers or sisters. His surviving kin are two cousins and a cousin of his mother. These persons lived distant from testator‘s home, and there is no evidence that he had any personal contact with them. Indeed, he expressly said that they were not to share in his estate. In a memorandum of instructions for the use of his scrivener in the preparation of the will the testator states in four separate places: “I have no immediate relatives, and any others omitted are either well-fixed financially or deliberately omitted for reasons very well known to themselves.”
The aforementioned facts in and out of the will compel the conclusion that the Chancery Division properly found that the testator had a general charitable intent in the sense that he would have preferred to retain the charitable bequest—though in modified form—rather than leave the money to his cousins.
This brings us to the question of whether the Chancery Division correctly applied the doctrine of cy pres. First, we consider the executor‘s argument that the testator‘s intent can be fully effectuated by turning the funds over to another educational institution willing to honor the Protestant-Gentile restriction. This argument is based on the premise that the testator‘s intent was to benefit needy Protestant students, and that Amherst was designated trustee
The very nature of the bequest indicates that the testator was interested in benefiting Amherst as well as the recipients of scholarship loans. A donor interested in benefiting only students presumably would make funds available to them regardless of what institution they wished to attend. But Mr. McKinney‘s will envisions as recipients only those students, who, meeting the other qualifications of the trust, are present or prospective members of the Amherst student body. A scholarship loan program, identified with a particular institution, inevitably benefits that institution by making available to it funds to attract and hold outstanding students. Cf. Deubel v. Kervick, 33 N. J. 568, 576 (1960). It is reasonable to conclude, therefore, that the creator of such a program intended to benefit the college identified therewith. That Mr. McKinney also intended to benefit the unknown student recipients of loans does not diminish at all his purpose of advancing the interests of Amherst. The foregoing shows, we think, that Amherst was designated trustee for more than mere administrative reasons. But this conclusion does not alone answer the executor‘s argument. Amherst will not accept the trust if it must enforce the Protestant-Gentile restriction. The question therefore is, would Mr. McKinney rather have the trust remain at Amherst with the restriction eliminated, or would he have preferred that the funds be turned over to another institution with the restriction? The facts indicate that Mr. McKinney was more interested in benefiting Amherst and its needy students than he was in Protestantism.
Mr. McKinney was a graduate of Amherst who continuously manifested an interest in the college. According to the records of contributions to the Alumni Fund which begin with the year 1932, the testator contributed to such fund in 1932 and every succeeding year until his death. In addition, he attended the 50th, 55th and 60th reunions of his graduating class in 1946, 1951 and 1956 respectively.
The executor further argues that Mr. McKinney‘s intent can be best effectuated by appointing a substituted trustee to administer the scholarship loan fund for Amherst students. We disagree because we find that it would be impracticable in the circumstances of this case to have a substituted trustee administer the trust for Amherst. In response to an inquiry from this court as to whether the college could cooperate with a substituted trustee, the Board of Trustees of Amherst adopted and forwarded to us, without objection from any party to this appeal, a resolution which states in pertinent part:
“the policy of Amherst College would be to avoid any involvement whatsoever in the administration of the trust in question. Specifically, the College would in no way participate in identifying, evaluating, or selecting persons who might be beneficiaries of the trust; the College would not use its facilities to publicize the
It is clear from the above-cited resolution that Amherst believes it cannot under its charter cooperate in the administration of the trust if its benefits are confined to Protestant-Gentile students.
Without Amherst‘s cooperation the administration of this trust would be so impracticable as to defeat the general purpose of the testator. The substituted trustee would have to be a qualified educator with experience in the allocation of scholarship funds. Even if such a willing trustee could be found, the practical disadvantages are numerous. There would be no feasible way in which the scholarship fund could be used to aid students who are seeking to enter Amherst. Often, the availability of scholarship aid will affect the decision of a needy student to attend a particular college. It would be most difficult for a substituted trustee to know who was applying or considering applying for entrance to Amherst without the cooperation of the college. Thus a class of students and the college would be denied the benefit of what must have been one of the purposes of the trust. If the funds are made available only to matriculated students, the trustee would still face well-nigh insuperable obstacles. He would have to obtain detailed information about a scholarship applicant. Whether an applicant was being considered
The executor argues that to apply cy pres because Amherst will not cooperate with a substituted trustee would be to allow the college by its own action to vary the testator‘s intent. It cites the rule that a trustee cannot by his own act produce changed conditions which frustrate the donor‘s intention and still claim the gift. But the cases so holding are distinguishable from the present case. Typical, is Con-
In view of the fact that Mr. McKinney had a general charitable intent, we hold that the bequest does not fail and the funds do not pass to the next-of-kin. And, in view of the additional facts that Amherst conceives it to be inconsistent with its charter to administer or assist in the administration of the trust so long as its funds are available only to Protestants, and that it would be impracticable for
HANEMAN, J. (dissenting). I agree that the executor has a standing to prosecute this appeal and that the testator created a trust of charitable nature which should not fail because of the refusal of the designated trustee to accept and carry out his express directions. I as well agree that the purpose of the testator was to provide scholarship loans for students of Amherst College. However, I conceive that the application of the cy pres doctrine to delete so much of testator‘s expressed objectives as are allegedly repugnant to the charter of the named corporate trustee is not here warranted. Instead, the court should appoint a substituted trustee to administer the trust in strict accordance with the directions of the testator. To that extent I dissent.
Cy pres has been called the theory of approximation and is applied only to prevent a charitable trust from failing. The phrase literally means “as near as.” It is the principle under which courts save a charitable trust from failure by reason of the stated charitable objectives being or becoming impossible, impracticable or illegal of fulfillment. This result is accomplished through the instrumentality of carrying out the more general charitable purposes of the testator by substituting, for the object which would otherwise fail, another charitable object which is believed to approximate the originally stated purpose. 2A Bogert, Trusts and Trustees (1953), § 431; IV Scott on Trusts 2d, § 399 (1956);
Impossibility or impracticability of fulfillment may arise as a result of a variety of circumstances. We are here concerned with only one of such set of facts, i. e., whether the refusal of the designated corporate trustee to accept the administration of the trust, for the stated reason that the acceptance for the declared charitable objectives is repugnant to its charter, would cause a failure of the trust absent the interposition of the cy pres doctrine.
Only where the testator intended that the method of applying property to a charitable purpose should lie wholly and solely within the discretion of the named trustee will a trust fail upon the refusal or inability of such trustee to function. For such a resulting failure to occur the trustee must be an essential part of the testatorial scheme. Where property is left to a corporation for designated charitable purposes and the corporation is unwilling or unable to assume the administration for the designated purposes, the trust will not fail unless the gift to the corporation was testator‘s primary or general intention. If the testator manifested his primary intention to devote the property to certain specific charitable purposes and the designation of a trustee was a secondary or particular object, the secondary object must be sacrificed to accomplish the primary object. The choice of the donee trustee then is not of the essence of the gift but merely incidental thereto. In MacKenzie v. Trustees of Presbytery of Jersey City, supra, the court said, at p. 674:
“* * * Where the testator or donor had two objects in view—one primary or general, and the other secondary or particular—and these are, literally speaking, incompatible, the particular object must be sacrificed in order that effect may be given to the general object, according to law, and ‘as near as may be’ to the testator‘s or donor‘s intention. Again, the principle may be more briefly stated as that of applying property, as nearly as possible, according to the donor‘s intentions, when those intentions cannot be exactly carried out.”
“* * * The sound rule now is—at least in America—that courts will not execute charitable trusts in a manner different from that intended, unless the intent cannot in the original mode be literally carried out; that they will preserve the substance, although the mode be departed from, and that they will not presume or invent an intention which the testator or donor has not fairly indicated.”
In In re Young Women‘s Christian Ass‘n, 96 N. J. Eq. 568, 574 (Ch. 1924), the court said, at p. 574:
“Where a testator has two objects in view, one primary or general and the other secondary or particular, and these are, literally speaking, incompatible, the secondary object must be sacrificed in order that effect may be given to the general object. Where the will exhibits an intention that the donation shall be devoted to a specific charitable purpose and prescribes a particular mode or means by which the purpose shall be carried out, the failure of the mode or means, after the donation has taken effect, will not defeat the charitable purpose.”
IV Scott, supra, § 397.3 states:
“Where a testator devises or bequeaths property to a charitable corporation to be applied to a particular charitable purpose, it is to be inferred that the application of the property to the designated purpose is the testator‘s primary intention, and that the choice of the organization to make the application is secondary. In such a case the fact that the corporation named is unwilling or unable to accept the gift and to apply the property to the designated purpose does not cause the disposition to fail. Even though the gift is to a corporation for its general purposes, the disposition does not fail if the primary intention of the testator was that the property should be applied to those purposes, and the choice of the particular donee was merely incidental and not of the essence.”
See also Mirinda v. King, supra; Litcher v. Trust Co. of N. J., 18 N. J. Super. 101 (Ch. Div. 1952), affirmed 11 N. J. 64 (1952); Brown v. Condit, 70 N. J. Eq. 440 (Ch. 1905); Levin v. Attorney-General, 136 N. J. Eq. 568 (Ch. 1945); Martin v. Haycock, 140 N. J. Eq. 450 (Ch. 1947); Restatement of the Law, Trusts, supra, § 397, comment g;
The line of demarcation between impossibility and impracticability is most difficult to draw. It is one of degree rather than of kind. IV Scott, supra, § 399.4; Bogert, supra, § 439.
“Impracticability” does not connote that the objects of the trust could be attained by some method of administration other than provided by the creator with greater facility or less trouble, but rather that to carry out the literal directions of the testator would, in effect, result in a failure to accomplish his general charitable intent, or in a frustration thereof. Restatement of the Law, Trusts, supra, § 399, comment q; cf. St. James Church v. Wilson, 82 N. J. Eq. 546 (Ch. 1913), affirmed sub nom. West v. Rector, etc. of St. James Episcopal Church, 83 N. J. Eq. 324 (E. & A. 1914); MacKenzie v. Trustees of Presbytery of Jersey City, supra; Guaranty Trust Co. of N. Y. v. The N. Y. Community Trust, 139 N. J. Eq. 144 (Ch. 1946); In re Young Women‘s Christian Ass‘n, 96 N. J. Eq. 568 (Ch. 1924).
Related to but distinct from the cy pres doctrine is the doctrine of deviation which concerns the administrative provisions of a trust. Under this doctrine a trust will not fail for want of a trustee. IV Scott, supra, § 397, § 397.1; Mirinda v. King, supra; Restatement of the Law, Trusts, supra, § 388, § 397; Martin v. Haycock, supra. This is sometimes confused with the cy pres doctrine.
We should therefore proceed to analyze the McKinney will and the extrinsic testimony adduced in the light of the foregoing basic legal concepts, in order to determine whether the refusal by Amherst to serve as a trustee would normally cause a failure of the trust and hence warrant the invoking of the cy pres doctrine.
This is not a holographic will prepared by an unlettered layman but rather a will prepared for the testator by a member of the bar of this State. A perusal of the entire
“I give and bequeath unto American Board of Congregational Foreign Missions, of Boston, Massachusetts, the sum of Two Thousand Dollars ($2,000.) in memory of my father who was born at Amensomtote, Umlazi River, Natal, South Africa, Adams Mission.”
And so, had testator intended either an outright gift to Amherst‘s general purposes or for student loans to any needy student, in Amherst‘s discretion, it would have been a simple matter for a member of the bar to express that intent. The fact that testator was an Amherst alumnus; had attended various class reunions; had contributed amounts varying from $5 in 1932 to $50 in 1947 to the Amherst College Alumni Fund served to prove only that he was interested in his alma mater and not in all needy students at Amherst. The bequest to the Board of Congregational Missions displays an interest in that Protestant church. The so-called modesty of the bequest does not detract from that conclusion. The absence of any further bequest to a church and of any evidence that he was a regular church attendant or active in any church activities raised at best only an inference that he was not a regular church communicant, not that he was not a practicing and convinced Protestant. The totality of the facts fails to give rise to any legitimate inference that he was not primarily interested in student loans to the class described in his will, i. e., “Protestant, Gentile boys” rather than to any needy student at Amherst.
The description of the cestuis que trust is so exact that a substituted trustee could easily select persons meeting the qualifications. The element of discretion is reduced to
There is a multitude of possible means for publicizing the existence and availability of this fund for scholarship loans to “deserving American born, Protestant, Gentile boys of good moral repute, not given to gambling, smoking, drinking or similar acts” attending Amherst College. A simple medium to employ would be the insertion of a paid advertisement in the college newspaper. After application by a student, the essential relevant information for qualifica-
I would therefore reverse and remand with directions to the trial court to appoint a substituted trustee to administer the trust under the exact terms of the will.
For affirmance—Chief Justice WEINTRAUB, and Justices JACOBS, FRANCIS, PROCTOR and HALL—5.
For reversal—Justice HANEMAN—1.
