22 A. 447 | Conn. | 1891
The complainant seeks to ascertain its rights in a trust fund created by the will of Philip Marett, dated August 30th, 1867. Marett died in New Haven March 20th, 1869. By his will the bulk of his estate was given to trustees of his appointment, to hold for the benefit of his wife and daughter during their lives, and upon the survivor's death, (in the words of the will,) "to be appropriated, distributed and disposed of as follows, namely:
"One fifth part to the Connecticut Hospital Society, in trust, the income to be applied to the support of free beds for the benefit of poor patients in said institution, giving preference to those incurably afflicted, if such are admissible.
"One fifth part to the city of New Haven, to be held in trust by the proper authorities, and the income to be applied through such agencies as they see fit, for the supply of fuel and other necessaries to deserving indigent persons not paupers, preferring such as are aged or infirm.
"One fifth to the President and Fellows of Yale College in trust, the income to be applied to the support of scholarships, or such other purposes in the academical department as they may judge expedient.
"One tenth part to the New Haven Orphan Asylum, to be held in trust, and the income applied to the support of poor inmates therein.
"One tenth part to the St. Francis (Catholic) Orphan Asylum in New Haven, to be held in trust, and the income to be applied to the support of poor inmates therein.
"One tenth part to the city of New Haven, in trust, the income to be applied by the proper authorities for the purchase of books for the Young Men's Institute, or any public library which may from time to time exist in said city.
"One tenth part to the state of Connecticut, in trust, the income to be applied towards the maintenance of any institution *36 for the cure or relief of idiots, imbeciles and feebleminded persons."
The contention of the parties relates to the question whether the intention of the testator was to make the New Haven Young Men's Institute the primary object of his bounty or to vest in the city of New Haven a discretion to exclude the plaintiff altogether and to bestow the legacy upon another public library in the same city.
In arriving at a just conclusion upon this subject both parties concede that force and effect must be given to all the language employed by the testator to express his intention in the premises. But in applying the principle the parties reach very different results. The language to be construed is — "One tenth part to the city of New Haven, in trust, the income to be applied by the proper authorities for the purchase of books for the Young Men's Institute, or any public library which may from time to time exist in said city."
The plaintiff contends that the defendant's construction would erase the Young Men's Institute as a beneficiary, while the defendant contends, on the other hand, that the plaintiff's construction practically erases the alternative provision for the benefit of any public library which may from time to time exist. There is some color of truth in both these claims, and yet both cannot be equally correct. Such different conclusions can only be reached by attaching a different meaning to the same words, or by reading something between the lines that the testator did not express.
The plaintiff has the advantage of being a named beneficiary, but to dispose of the alternative clause requires, not only that the fact just named should be specially emphasized, but that there should be also inserted a contingency upon which alone the alternative beneficiary may take, namely, that the Institute shall have ceased to exist prior to the testator's death. The defendant says: — "The words The Young Men's Institute' were placed in the will for a purpose. It was not then a public library. It could not therefore be a beneficiary under the clause `any public *37 library.' But it might agree to throw open its doors to the public, provided the trustees saw fit in their discretion to purchase books for it. Or the public library might not accommodate the public to the satisfaction of the trustees. In these events the testator was willing that, although the Institute was a private library, the trustees should purchase books for it." We will not stop to discuss whether or not there is adequate foundation for this statement. We prefer to adhere very closely to the language and provisions actually contained in the will, and to such natural and necessary inferences as may fairly be deduced therefrom, when considered in connection with all the surrounding circumstances.
Does the provision then, that requires the city to purchase Looks for the Institute, or any public library that may from time to time exist, mean that it shall purchase the books exclusively for the Institute provided it continues in existence?
The question cannot even be stated without implying a negative answer, for it requires the use of important additional words and provisions of which no hint is given in the will. Had it been in the mind of the testator to make the Institute the sole beneficiary, except upon the remote and and improbable contingency of its non-existence, it would have been most natural to have made a direct and absolute gift to it, with at most a proviso for some other ulterior disposition of it founded upon such contingency. It seems unnatural that the testator should have anticipated the non-existence of a corporation which in law never dies, and which the testator personally had known for twenty years as existing in New Haven; and had this been a controlling consideration, as the plaintiff assumes, it would most naturally have found expression in the will as we have before suggested. But we have been referred to decided cases where an alternative provision following the word "or," has been given a secondary and substitutional meaning. We think the cases are distinguishable from this.
In 1 Redfield on Wills, 487, it is said that the question has arisen most commonly in cases of devises to A "or his heirs," *38 where it has been held that the word "or," being inter posed between the name of the first devisee or legatee and his heirs, indicated the intention of substituting the latter in place of the ancestor.
It seems to us that all these cases may well rest upon the implication derived from the phrase "or heirs," that the first named donee is dead, otherwise in contemplation of the law he could have no heirs.
Since the argument of this case our attention has been called to the case of O'Rourke v. Beard,
In the other cases to which our attention has been called, the gift was direct and absolute in form to one personor another, where, if the gift had not been held to be substitutional, the whole would have been void for uncertainty, and in none of those cases was there a discretionary power in a trustee to select the beneficiaries from those named, as we think there is in the case at bar.
In this case the entire language of the alternative bequest points to a discretion in the trustee. Although the word "or" may mean "and," or may have the meaning attributed to it in the cases referred to, yet its more natural meaning when used as a connective is to mark an alternative, and present a choice, implying an election to do one of two things. But here, in addition to the force of the word "or," the words which immediately follow are peculiarly significant and make our construction much more reasonable than *39 the opposing one. The word "any," used as an adjective, means "one out of several or many." When the city as trustee is directed to buy books for the Institute or for any public library, a selection is necessarily implied, and it is the city that is to determine and select the one among the others. The same idea is strongly reinforced and supported by the phrase "from time to time." This greatly enlarges the field for discretion and at the same time implies its existence. If then there is clearly a discretion to select one public library from those that may from time to time exist, it would seem unreasonable to confine it to one side only of the alternative presented by the word "or." We think the testator intended his trustee to exercise a discretion and make a choice as between the Institute and some public library that might after the making of the will come into existence. The fact that the Institute was specially mentioned does not necessarily indicate a preference, although the suggestion has considerable force. The mention of it with an "or" attached, presenting a choice, is very different from an exclusive mention. The Institute had the only library existing in New Haven, when the will was executed, in any sense public, and although it had doubtless been of great benefit to its patrons, yet it was a public library only in a somewhat limited sense. We will not stop to discuss the question whether the restrictions were too great to prevent its being a public library or not. It does not seem to us of great importance. The testator was willing and desired it to be the recipient of his bounty in case no better one should come into existence, but the alternative clause which he inserted justifies the inference that, with the future growth of the city, he anticipated that other libraries might be established which might prove more widely beneficial to the people of the city. Instead therefore of restricting his bounty to the Institute alone, he preferred to leave it open to the city to make the best possible selection. It is doubtless true that the same result might have been reached without special mention of the Institute. It was however not unnatural for him to mention the only existing institution *40 which could in any manner accomplish his beneficent purpose, and he may have thought that the omission of the name would involve an implication against the Institute which would prevent the trustees from duly considering its claim.
But we are confronted with an objection that lies back of all our reasoning, and will render it futile if it is to prevail, namely, that a discretionary power in the trustee to exclude the Institute from participating in the bequest cannot be implied. We do not think this position is correct. The contrary doctrine seems well established by repeated decisions of this court, and of the courts in other jurisdictions also. In Storm Agricultural School v.Whitney,
So in Bronson v. Strouse,
In 3 Jarman on Wills, page 704, it is said — "Discretionary power in a trustee must and will be implied from the terms of the will when necessary." In Clement v.Hyde, 50 Vermont, 715, the court says: — "There is no discretion placed upon the trustee in this case, but the application of the income implies the exercise of it. If the trustee had applied the income arising from the trust fund in good faith and in the exercise of ordinary discretion, there could be no doubt about the testator's intention being accomplished." In Pickering v. Shotwell, 10 Penn. St., 23, it is said: — "But we certainly will not let a charitable bequest fail where there is a discretion or an option given to the trustee, and if he cannot apply it to all the contemplated objects it will be sufficient if he can apply it to any of them. But power to act at discretion need not be expressly given if it can be implied from the nature of the trust. Now this residue may be applied, by the very words of the bequest, either to a supply of good books, or the support of a school. What school? Any free-school or institution that the monthly meeting (the trustees) may select, provided it answer the description in the bequest. It is thus capable of being reduced to certainty, and as the monthly meeting has the option of applying the fund to the one object or the other, an uncertainty in one of them would not vitiate both. But both are sufficiently certain." The construction adopted will render unnecessary any discussion of the objection that *42 the bequest is void for uncertainty. The class is sufficiently certain and the exercise of the trustees' discretion will render the beneficiary certain.
But it is further contended that, under the discretionary power to select any public library that may from time to time exist, it is not certain that a selection will be made so as to vest the equitable estate before the statute of perpetuities would apply, and the case is likened to that ofJocelyn v. Nott,
But it is finally contended that it is a perversion of the trust for the city to select the Free Public Library in New Haven, which was established by the city and has become a department of its new government, and so, it is said, proposes to appropriate the trust income to its own purposes. The establishment of a public library under the provisions of our statute is not, in the sense which the objection assumed, a part of the city government. It is not mandatory on the city, but purely optional and charitable. Section 144 of the General Statutes expressly authorizes any town, borough or city to "receive, hold and manage any devise, bequest or donation for the establishment, increase or maintenance *43 of a public library within the same," and in view of such paramount authority that the city may take the gift, it would seem quite futile to appeal to any general principles to show that it cannot take.
But such gifts are neither made nor accepted in order to reduce taxation, and they do not necessarily or even usually have that effect. Taxation for such purpose is limited by sections 144 and 145 of the General Statutes. The effect of a gift for this charitable object most likely will be to enlarge the scope and benefit of the charity. The city is of course under the same restrictions as any other trustee would be, and can be equally restrained from any perversion of the trust.
The Superior Court is advised to render judgment in favor of the defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.