The court did not err in overruling the demurrers to the petition. The right to seek the direction of a court of equity in the circumstances of this case is clearly afforded by the Code, § 37-404 as follows: “In cases of difficulty-in construing wills, or in distributing estates, in ascertaining the persons entitled, or in determining under what law property should be divided, the representative may 'ask the’ direction of the court, but not on imaginary difficulties or from excessive caution.” Item 15 of the will as written is of doubtful meaning, the amount of the bequest therein being stated as twenty dollars in words and $20,000 •in figures. As to Item 21, it is alleged in the petition: “In view
In the motion for new trial error is assigned on the admission of the testimony of Hon. William II. Barrett, to wit: “I prepared the will of Mrs. Mary W. Pope, and also two or three preceding wills. The testatrix by describing the legatee in item twenty-first of the will as ‘the University Hospital of Augusta, Georgia/ intended to designate the hospital operated by the City Council of Augusta under the name of the University Hospital. ’ At one time in a discussion with Mrs. Pope the question was raised of including the Medical College as well as the University Hospital, and the connection between the two was discussed and understood by Mrs. Pope.” The objections were that the witness could not testify as to the intention of the testatrix, other than as expressed in the will, or as to what was discussed and understood by the testatrix in regard to the connection between the University Hospital and the Medical College. It was not urged as a ground of objection to the admission of this testimony that such was harmful to the movants. The'bequest in item 21 was to the University Hospital of Augusta, Georgia, and the agreed statement of facts showed that such institution was a branch or department of the City Council of Augusta. The testimony of Judge Barrett' that the testatrix, “by describing the legatee in item twenty-first of the
“A devise or bequest to a charitable use will be sustained and carried out in this State.55 Code, § 113-815. /‘Equity has jurisdiction to carry into effect the charitable bequests of a testator, or founder, or donor, where the same are definite and specific in their objects, and capable of being executed.55 § 108-201. “The following subjects are proper matters of charity for the jurisdiction of equity: 1. Eelief of aged, impotent, diseased, or poor people. 2. Every educational purpose.55 § 108-203. “It is a cardinal rule in the construction of wills to give effect to the in-ten-lion of the testator, when the same can be done without violating any settled principle of the law. The authorities cited at the bar, in our judgment, establish the following propositions: that in the construction of charitable bequests, the court will be liberal, so as to carry into effect the intention of the testator; that where the charitable intent can be discovered from the will, a court of equity will carry such intent into execution, and support the charitable purpose; that the court will not suffer an equitable interest to fail for want of a trustee to support it; that it never has been considered as an objection to a charitable use, because it was general,
In Bolick v. Cox, 145 Ga. 888 (
In Goree v. Georgia Industrial Home, 187 Ga. 368 (
We think it manifest from the above authorities that bequests for charitable purposes are looked upon with great favor by the courts of this State, and that every means will be resorted to which can legally be used to carry out a charitable intent manifested by a testator in his will. Item 21 names as the legatee the “University Hospital of Augusta, Georgia,” and specifies that the bequest is to be used “for the further development and more efficient service of such institution.” “A hospital, however, is not, any more than a drug-store, a charitable institution per se; and in order for a devise or gift establishing a hospital to come within the classification of a charitable institution, the terms of the gift must themselves require that it be operated in whole or at least in substantial part for the gratuitous relief of its inmates.” Trust Co. of Ga. v. Williams, 184 Ga. 706, 708 (
Under the authorities heretofore referred to, the judge was authorized to find that under the will and the agreed statement of facts the hospital owned and maintained by the City of Augusta, commonly known as the “University Hospital of Augusta, Georgia,” and thus designated in item 21 of the will here involved, was a charitable institution, owned by said city and maintained pri
As stated in
Since,, under what is ruled in the preceding division, item 21 provided a valid bequest for charitable purposes, the City Council of Augusta was competent to receive the fund under the Code, which declares: “All incorporated towns and cities are authorized to receive any donations or gifts of real or personal property which may be made to them by deed of gift, will, or otherwise, and subject to such conditions as may be specified in the instrument
The bequest contained in item 21 does not fail because there is no legal entity of the name used therein to designate the beneficiary. In 69 C. J. 152, § 1182, it is said: “Where a beneficiary under a will is not designated with precision, parol evidence is generally admissible to aid the court in identifying him, and for this purpose evidence of the circumstances surrounding the testator is competent. Likewise where the will contains a latent ambiguity as to the person intended as the object of the testator’s bounty, arising, for example, by reason of the fact that the designation of the beneficiary is applicable either in whole or in part to two or more persons, or from the fact that the name or description of no claimant exactly corresponds to that given in the will, but one or more imperfectly do correspond, extrinsic evidence is admissible to show who was intended. Thus extrinsic evidence is admissible to point out the person or persons intended by showing that the designation used by the testator was claimant’s nickname, or assumed name, or that it was the name by which testator always' referred to claimantIt appears from the agreed statement that the hospital owned and maintained by the City Council of Augusta was referred to by all as the “University Hospital of Augusta,” and that there was no other hospital by that name in Augusta. In Page on Wills (2 ed.), § 916, it is stated: “A more difficult question is presented where the name given in the will is not the name of any existing corporation. If such corporation can be identified by its location the misnomer will not invalidate the gift. A devise to the ‘Congregational Seminary at Forest Grove in Washington County, State of Oregon,’ was held to mean the ‘President and Trustees of Tuslatin Academy and Pacific University,’ where sucb institution had established a Congregational Seminary at • Forest Grove and there was no other seminary there. A bequest to the ‘Presbyterian Infirmary’ situated on a certain street was held to mean the ‘Union Protestant Infirmary’ situated on the named street. But there was no other organization which could have taken under this bequest. . . In some of these cases the location as
In view of the ruling heretofore made, that the disposition made by the testatrix in item 21 as to the residuum of the estate after the death of the life-tenant is valid, it is unnecessary to determine the correctness of the court’s construction of the bequest to William Youngblood, contained in item 15. Had a contrary conclusion been reached by this court as to item 21, the plaintiffs in error would have been benefited by a reversal of the construction placed on item 15 by the trial court; but since item 21 has been held valid, the plaintiffs in error take no part of the estate. Had the court construed item 15 to bequeath $20 instead of $20,000, the $19,980 difference would have added to the income of the life-tenant, and to the corpus of the estate to be paid the remainder
Judgment affirmed.
