88 So. 835 | Ala. | 1921
The report of this cause on a former appeal (Birmingham Trust Savings Co. v. Cannon,
One effect of the decree in the trial court was to assert the proposition that on the facts shown in the pleading appellants, who are the children and grandchildren of L. W. Johns by a prior marriage — two of them, the Ramseurs, representing the interest of their deceased mother, a daughter of L. W. Johns — have no reversionary interest in the trust fund in controversy after the beneficial life estate of Rose Johns, widow of the deceased, now by a second marriage Rose Johns Cannon, shall have fallen in, and of this appellants complain.
It is urged that the charitable use shown by the settlement of December, 1911, is so indefinite as to be incapable of execution by judicial decree and hence void. We quote the language of so much of the settlement as purports to designate the use to which the trust fund in question shall be devoted:
"At the end of the first year of this trust, or within a reasonable time thereafter, said Birmingham Trust Savings Company [trustee named in the agreement] shall select an association, organization, society, or corporation, then existing and maintaining an institution in Jefferson county, Ala., which cares for, supports, and maintains and educates, where needed, orphan children, indigent persons, and needy old people, one, any, or all of them, or which cares for and supports, when needed, indigent, injured, or helpless miners, their wives or children, any, one, or all of them, in the state of Alabama, and shall pay to the association, organization, society, or corporation so selected by it the income derived each year from the trust estate, upon the conditions, limitations, and directions contained, and for the purposes herein declared, the said sum so received to be used solely for the care, support, maintenance, and education, where needed, of orphan children, indigent persons, and needy old people, one, any, or all of them, in Jefferson county, Ala., or for the care and support of any needy, indigent, injured, or helpless miners, their wives or children, any or all of them, in the state of Alabama. The said Birmingham Trust Savings Company, as said trustee, shall have the right to change the beneficiary so selected by it as above directed at the end of any year, but the same beneficiary may be selected from year to year, and a beneficiary, when once selected, shall remain as such beneficiary until another is selected and designated in its place by said trustee; provided that always the beneficiary shall be an association, organization, society, or corporation caring for, supporting, and maintaining and educating, when needed, orphan children, indigent persons, and needy old people, one, any, or all of them, in Jefferson county, Ala., or caring for and supporting, when needed, indigent, injured, or helpless miners, their wives or children, one, any, or all of them, in the state of Alabama. The purpose herein being that only one such association, organization, society, or corporation shall be a beneficiary under this trust for any one year, and that the said association, organization, society, or corporation must be for the care, support, maintenance, and education, where needed, of orphan children, indigent persons, and needy old people, one, any, or all of them, in Jefferson county, Ala., or for the care and support, when needed, of indigent, injured, or helpless miners, their wives or children, any, one, or all of them, in the state of Alabama."
It is commonly and correctly held that it is essential to the constitution of a valid trust that its objects be so designated or described that they may be definitely known or ascertained from the provisions of the instrument purporting to create it. But uncertainty as to the individual whom the benefit may reach will not defeat a gift to charity — that character of uncertainty is one thing that distinguishes a public from a private trust. Jackson v. Phillips, 14 Allen (Mass.) 539, quoted in Johnson v. Holifield,
The conclusion noted above brings us to the other question litigated in this cause. The trust settlement heretofore considered undertook to annul and supersede a prior settlement, of date July 4, 1908, executed by the same parties and dealing with the same fund, which at that time was invested in the stock of the American Cities Railway Light Company. That settlement created a trust in favor of the original complainant, Rose Johns, for her natural life, with provision over as follows: Upon the death of Rose Johns, the trustee should transfer one-half of the trust property to L. W. Johns, if living — he is now dead, as has appeared — "otherwise, to his legal representatives, distributees, or legatees." Appellants contend that by this settlement they took a vested estate in remainder in the property, which it was beyond the power of the parties to the settlement to change without their consent. The language quoted above, in our judgment, means nothing more than that, in the absence of a bequest to legatees, the trust property should, at the death of the beneficiary for life, revert to his personal representative or to his distributees appointed by the law subsisting at that time, in other words, to the settlor's estate; and, such being the meaning of the terms — which, indeed, were superfluous, since they purported to do no more than the law would do without them — they, of course, created no vested interests in anybody. The cases cited by appellants (Goldney v. Crabb, 19 Beavan, 338; Robinson v. Le Grand,
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.