147 N.Y. 104 | NY | 1895
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *107 This action was brought to compel the defendant Powers to account for the estate of Martha Dunlap in his hands, and that he, as executor and trustee, be adjudged to pay over to the five defendant corporations, and to such others as may come in and duly establish their claims, all the estate which, upon such accounting, shall be found applicable thereto under the provisions of the will of Martha Dunlap, etc. Powers interposed a demurrer to the complaint upon the grounds, first, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and, second, that there is a defect of parties because it is not alleged that "all the charitable and benevolent institutions or corporations in the city of Rochester," *108 referred to in the complaint, are plaintiffs or defendants in the action.
It appears from the complaint that Martha Dunlap died on the 15th day of May, 1882, at the city of Rochester, leaving an estate of real and personal property amounting to $100,000; that on the 22d day of March, 1882, she made her last will and testament, in and by which she bequeathed certain specific legacies to certain persons named, and created a trust for the benefit of her sisters, Mary Dunlap and Nancy Dunlap, during their lives, and then, by the 12th clause of the will, provided as follows: "I give, bequeath and devise unto Daniel W. Powers, of Rochester, N.Y., all the property given and devised by the 11th clause of this will which shall remain after the execution and termination of the said trust at the death of the said Nancy and Mary Dunlap. This gift and devise is made upon the trust and confidence reposed in the said Daniel W. Powers, that he will dispose of the said property among the charitable and benevolent institutions or corporations in the city of Rochester as he shall choose, and such sums and proportions as he shall deem proper." Upon her death the will was duly admitted to probate by the surrogate of Monroe county as a will of real and personal property, and letters testamentary were issued to Powers. Mary Dunlap and Nancy Dunlap have since died. It is alleged that each of the five corporations are domestic corporations organized and incorporated under the laws of the state of New York for charitable and benevolent purposes, located in the city of Rochester; that Powers had neglected and refused to distribute the estate of Martha Dunlap or any part thereof among them, and that notwithstanding such neglect and refusal, the defendant corporations have hitherto neglected or refused to institute any proceedings in the Surrogate's Court of Monroe county or elsewhere for the establishment and enforcement of the trust.
For the purposes of this case we shall assume that the testatrix in and by the 12th clause of her will undertook to create a trust, and that she had no intention of devising or bequeathing *109
any part of her estate to Powers individually. The question is thus presented as to whether the trust is enforcible, or void for indefiniteness. In the consideration of this question certain general principles must be borne in mind. The provisions of the will must be considered as of the time of the testatrix's death, and under the law as it then existed. The Law of 1893, chapter 701, has no application, for it was not within the province or power of the legislature to change vested rights of persons or parties in property. (White v. Howard,
As we have seen, the trust is that Powers will dispose of the property among "the charitable and benevolent institutions or corporations in the city of Rochester as he shall choose and such sums and proportions as he shall deem proper." Charity means one thing, benevolence quite another. Benevolence includes all acts or gifts prompted by good will or kind feelings, and may be entirely independent of any thought or intention of charity. The recipient or beneficiary may be well-to-do and in no need of charity. In England, under the law of charitable uses, bequests for charity have been sustained, whilst benevolent gifts without a designated beneficiary have been held to be too indefinite, and, therefore, void. (Norris v. Thomson's Exrs.,
The Special and General Terms appear to have considered the case of Power v. Cassidy (
In the Levy case (supra) a testator devised a farm, together with the residue of his real and personal property, to the people of the United States, or such persons as Congress should appoint to receive it in trust for the purpose of establishing and maintaining on the farm so devised an agricultural school for the purpose of educating children of warrant officers of the United States navy, whose fathers were dead, as practical farmers; that if the United States refused to accept the bequest, he devised the same to the people of the state of Virginia for a like purpose, and if the legislature of Virginia declined to accept the trust he then gave it to certain Hebrew societies, naming them, in New York, Philadelphia and Richmond, with directions for them to carry out the trust for the benefit of the children of such societies who were between the ages of 12 and 16 years whose fathers were dead, etc. It was held that the bequest was too indefinite to be valid. WRIGHT, J., in delivering the opinion of the court, says with regard to the trust to the Hebrew societies: "It is so utterly vague and indefinite that it could not be executed in the English chancery without invoking its cy pres power, a power in case of charity, as has been held by this court, having no existence in the jurisprudence of this state."
In Holmes v. Mead (supra) a certain parcel of land was devised to Mead and others to have and to hold the same during *113 the lifetime of two persons, naming them, and the survivor of them, upon a trust that the same should be used as a place of public worship for the performance of religious offices according to the doctrine and discipline of the Protestant Episcopal church in the United States of America, and upon the death of the longest liver of the two persons named then to convey the same to any trustee who may be authorized by any act of the legislature of the state to take and hold such church and premises as a place of public worship, and in case no such act of the legislature is then in force, to convey the same to the rector, wardens and vestrymen of St. Mary's Church, Beachwood, if such church shall be incorporated under any act of the legislature, and if there be no such incorporation then the said premises to go to his heirs. $5,000 was also bequeathed to the trustees to be invested and the income thereof paid annually for the support of the rector for the time being of St. Mary's Church, or for the support of the clergyman of the Protestant Episcopal church employed as a missionary, or otherwise, and who shall officiate therein, with the principal and income to be paid and transferred or disposed of in like manner as the lot of land devised to the trustees is directed to be conveyed or disposed of. It was held that the trust was invalid and could not be executed.
In Prichard v. Thompson (
In Holland v. Alcock (
In Read v. Williams (
In Fosdick v. Town of Hempstead (
In the Tilden case (
Applying the rule of these cases to that under consideration, it appears to us that the conclusion is inevitable that the trust attempted to be created is unenforceable, for the reason of a failure to designate a beneficiary, or to designate or describe a class or kind of beneficiary to whom distribution is practicable, or that can with reasonable certainty be identified and ascertained.
Upon the argument it was contended that the attorney-general or the people had no standing in court to enforce a trust for the benefit of others, but the view taken by us with reference to the validity of the trust renders it unnecessary to consider this question.
The interlocutory judgment should be reversed and the demurrer sustained, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment accordingly. *117