192 Iowa 579 | Iowa | 1921
This will having been filed for probate very soon after the testator’s decease, the plaintiffs in the present action, or some of them, claiming to be his heirs at law, appeared to contest its admission to probate, alleging the testator’s want of testamentary capacity, and asserting that the will and codicils had been executed under undue influence. The litigation thus beginning in 1909 ran its weary way through the courts until 1913, when the will and codicils were admitted to probate. An appeal therefrom was taken by the contestants to this court, and the judg
Answering the petition, Lenox College and the executor of the will admit the failure of the city of Monticello to accept the devise in its favor, but specifically deny that the college has failed to perform the condition of the devise made for its benefit, and allege that it has complied therewith, and has formally accepted the gift. They aver that the devise to the college was an absolute and completed gift of the entire estate, and not in trust, subject only to the conditions expressed in the will, which conditions have been complied with by raising the required amount of $25,000, and by filing in the probate proceedings its written acceptance of such devise, and agreeing to carry out its provisions. The answer pleads, in further bar of this action, that, in the proceedings contesting the will of the testator, and after the expiration of three years from his death, the con
The trial court heard the evidence offered by the respective parties, and under date of November 5, 1919, entered a decree to the effect that Lenox College is the “sole legatee of the entire estate of Archibald Livingston, deceased;” that said “Lenox College has fully complied with the terms specified by the testator upon which the legacy to it was conditioned,” and thereby became entitled to its benefits; and that said college is “adjudged and decreed to be fully and irrevocably vested with the title in fee to all the real estate of which the testator died seized, together with all right of property therein and of all personalty belonging to said estate, subject only to its proper administration.” It was further adjudged that the plaintiffs have no right, title, or interest in the estate, and are therefore barred and estopped from having or making any claim thereto adverse to Lenox College.
I. The abstract of the evidence in the case is too voluminous to justify us in embodying any considerable part of it in this opinion. It tends fairly to show that, when informed of the devise, and that Monticello would not accept it, Lenox College began an organized effort to secure the offered benefits of the Livingston will. To that end, its officers and faculty inaugurated what is called in the record the “Livingston Drive,” to raise a fund sufficient, not only to meet the conditions of the Livingston devise, but for several other purposes connected with the support of the college, and for improvement of the college buildings. The time for raising the fund to meet the condition named in the will was to expire on March 19, 1912. The campaign to secure the fund closed on March 15, 1912; and on that date, the trustees of the college found that the pledges and subscriptions obtained, including the Livingston estate, of the value of $30,000, aggregated $105,830.92. This being determined, the
The foregoing statement is sufficient to bring us to the question which counsel for appellant say “is the decisive issue in this case.” Was the sum of $25,000 in fact “raised,” within the true meaning of the will? This the appellants answer in the negative.
Before taking up this discussion, it is well to explain in some detail the method or plan pursued. Subscriptions were sought from friends and liberally disposed persons, payable on condition that an aggregate of such pledges to the amount of $75,000 should be obtained by March 18, 1912. In a large part, these subscriptions were made in the form of promissory notes, payable to Lenox College at varying dates in the future, and most of them drawing interest. Each note was, in terms, made payable on condition “that $75,000 are subscribed to Lenox College, and the conditions of the Archibald Livingston legacy (estimated at $30,000) are met by March 18, 1912.” Much the greater proportion of the larger pledges were time subscriptions, and at no time within the prescribed period for complying with the conditions of the will did the college or its trustees have on hand in money an amount of $25,000 applicable to that purpose. It satisfactorily appears, however, that, before March 19, 1912, the college did receive good subscriptions of the character above indicated very considerably in excess of $25,000, and that the college trustees, by formal action, appropriated therefrom the amount required to meet the condition imposed upon the gift.
But, say counsel, this testamentary condition calls for the raising of $25,000, and this call for “dollars” cannot be satisfied by subscriptions or pledges, no matter how good, or by obtaining the required sum in the form of mere promises or choses in action. But this proposition, we think, is entirely too sweeping. The testator’s language is to be construed according to its usual or popular signification, taking into consideration the subject-matter of the devise which he was then framing. The man who is sent out to “raise” $1,000 or any other given sum by popular subscription, in support of a named charity, or for
It is objected, however, that, in several instances, the college granted scholarships in consideration of notes given in aid of the drive. If this be a good reason for refusing to count such subscriptions, there is still left a safe margin without them; but-we see no good reason why they should be rejected.
The trial court, therefore, did not err in its conclusion that the sum needed to meet the condition attached to the devise
Conceding, for the purposes of this case, that the college, having accepted and received the benefits of the devise in its favor, is in duty bound to apply the property and funds so acquired to -the uses prescribed by the will, we have first to inquire whether the appellants have any such interest in the subject-matter as will enable them to maintain this action. The devise has but one condition precedent to a vesting of the gift in the college, and that is that “Lenox College shall [within the time prescribed] raise $25,000 to equip said Archibald Livingston Home and to be added to the gift herein given. ’ ’ When that condition was met, as we hold it was, the estate so devised vested at once in Lenox College. The will neither provides nor attaches to such devise any condition subsequent, upon failure of which the college may be divested of the estate, in favor of the heirs o'f the testator. The devise over to the heirs was made contingent upon the failure of the college to perform the condition precedent, — the raising of. additional aid to the amount of $25,000; and when that condition was performed, the possibility that the devise over would ever be effective was extinguished. It did not, of course, relieve the college of its legal and moral obligation to apply the estate so received to its intended purpose. If it shall fail in this duty, it is not answerable for such failure to the appellants, whose only possible interest in the Livingston estate was eliminated by its vesting in the college. The wrong, if one is done, is to the educational charity to the use of which the testator dedicated it, and the law is not without an appropriate, remedy for its protection, if needed.
It is to be said in this connection that, while Archibald
This conclusion renders unnecessary specific reference to other questions which have had more or less discussion in argument. Since what counsel designate as the “decisive issue in the case,” the question whether the required sum was “raised,” within the meaning of that phrase in the will, has been decided against the appellants’ contention, little more is left to be considered. The issues generally seem to have been carefully and fairly tried, and we are persuaded that they were correctly determined by the trial court. The decree appealed from is— Affirmed.