We accepted this matter in our original jurisdiction to issue a declaratory judgment as to whether or not certain property owned by the Department of Mental Health (DMH), referred to as the “Bull Street Property,” is held in a charitable trust and, if so, whether and under what conditions it may be sold.
FACTS
The State Lunatic Asylum was created in 1821.
“Bull Street,” as it has become known, is made up of 185.6 acres, excepting approximately 4.5 acres which contain the Mills Building and surrounding grounds. The Mills Building was the initial site of the asylum. The property was originally 14 separate tracts of land, and was acquired by the DMH and its predecessors in a series of transaсtions occurring between the 1820’s and 1905. The record contains deeds evidencing 12 of these transactions; the remaining 2 parcels were acquired prior to the 1860’s, and no deeds are available.
Several of the deeds contain restrictive language requiring the property to be used “for the use and purposes of the State Hosрital for the Insane.” The initial two parcels, conveying a total of 31.5 acres, were conveyed to “The Regents of the Lunatic Asylum of South Carolina, its successors and assigns forever.” The third parcel, comprising 50 acres, was conveyed to “The Regents of the Lunatic Asylum of South Carolina, their successors in office, for their only proper use, benefit, and behoof, forever.” Parcels 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 all grant property to the Regents of the State Hospital “and their successors and assigns forever for the use and purposes of the said State Hospital.” Each of the parcels was sold to the Board of Regents for a stated consideration, ranging from $5.00 (Parcel 15, .59 acrеs) to $24,500.00 (Parcel 8, 108.45 acres). Throughout the years, numerous properties owned by
In 2004, as part of the Appropriations Act, the General .Assembly passed Prоviso 73.18 to “establish a comprehensive central property and office management facility process to plan for the needs of state government agencies and to achieve maximum efficiency and economy in the use of state owned or state leased real property.” Pursuant to the proviso, the Budget and Control Board was directed to identify all state owned properties and title to all such properties, excepting those the Board determined were subject to reverter clauses or other restraints upon transfer of title. The proviso further states that, “[ujpon a determination by the Board that a property should be sold, the аgency is required to sell the property and remit the proceeds as directed herein.”
In the 2005 Appropriations Act, the General Assembly enacted Proviso 63.40, which was vetoed by the Governor, but overridden by the Legislature. Proviso 63.40 provides, in pertinent part:
Up to 50% of the proceeds, net of selling expenses, from the sale of surplus real properties shall be retained by the Budget and Control Board and used for the deferred maintenance of state-owned buildings. The remaining 50% of the net proceeds shall be returned to the agency that the property is owned by, under the control of, or assigned to and shall be used by that agency for non-recurring purposes.
After inquiries as to whether some of the State Hospital properties could be sold for development, the Attorney General requested the Executive Director of the Budget and Control Board (Board) for his advice and conclusions as to whether there were any prohibitions or limitations on the sale of the Bull Street property, and whether it was encumbered by a charitable trust. The Board responded as follows:
*179 The current thinking among experts practicing in the mental health field is that large complexes like the Bull Street site which isolate patients and separate them from their communities is not the best situation for the treatment and successful re-integration of patients into the gеneral population. The thinking is that the Bull Street tract is not specifically needed to house mental health facilities and that it would be more efficient and economical for the State and Department of Mental Health to sell this property, relocate facilities, and reinvest the proceeds that would be derived. ...
The Board noted the property upon which the Mills Building is situated was not included in any plans by the State to sell the property and would remain in State ownership. The Board concluded the property was not encumbered by a charitable trust, such that it believed the General Assembly could authorize a sale of the property. The Board concluded, however, that it would defer to the Attorney General’s opinion on the matter.
In response, the Attorney General issued an opinion on December 9, 2005, concluding as follows:
[A] court would most likely conclude that the Department of Mental Health, as successor to the State Lunatic Asylum and South Carolina State Hospital for the Insane, is a “public charity” and that the Bull Street property is thus impressed with a charitable trust. Accordingly, we recommend that prior to any sale, the Department of Mental Health seek court approval of such sale, consistent with the basic principle that a court of equity must approve, by way of equitable deviation, any such transfer.
The Attorney General stated that as an alternative, the Legislature could protect the charitable trust by requiring the proceeds from any sale to be devoted exclusively to the Department of Mental Health.
In light of the Attorney General’s opinion, the DMH filed a petition for original jurisdiction as to whether the Bull Street
ISSUES
1. Is the Bull Street property held subject to a charitable trust for the benefit of the Department of Mental Health?
2. If Bull Street is subject to a charitable trust, under what circumstances may the property be sold, and to whom are the proceeds disbursed?
1. CHARITABLE TRUST
This Court has recognized the benevolent purposes of the state hospital. See Crouch v. Benet,
A charitable trust is defined as:
[A] fiduciary relationship with respect to property arising as a result of a manifestation of an intention to create it, and subjecting the рerson by whom the property is held to equitable duties to deal with property for a charitable purpose. Restatement (2nd) Trusts § 348 (1959).... The settlor must manifest an intention to create a charitable trust. It is not necessary that any particular words or conduct be manifest to create a trust, and it is possible to create a trust without using the words “trust” or “trustеe.”
Scott on Trusts §§ 24-25 (2d Ed.1956); Restatement (2nd) Trusts § 24. Conversely, the mere fact these words are used,
In the 1922 case of Harter v. Johnson,
Trusts for public charitable purposes, being for objects of permanent interest and benefit to the public, and perhaps being perpetual in their duration, are upheld under circumstances under which private trusts would fail....
No formality in the use of language is necessary in order to create a public charitable trust. The courts look to the purpose for which the gift was made, rather than to the particular words used to designate that purpose. And while a gift cannot be sustained as a charity unless made upon а trust, either express or implied, that it shall be devoted to uses which the law recognizes as charitable, the omission from a bequest of the words in trust is not material, where the intention is clearly manifested that the whole property shall be applied by the legatee for the benefit of other persons than himself... .
[it] is said: The founding and maintenancе of hospitals and asylums of various kinds, and homes for destitute and friendless children, and the aged and infirm, constitute charitable uses or trusts, and bequests, devises, or other gifts for such purposes will be upheld in equity with a strong hand. Trusts for such purposes may be established and carried into effect, when, if not of a charitable nature, they could not be supportеd.
Further, as noted by the Attorney General, properties conveyed to a public charity are also impressed with a charitable trust. See Wellesley College v. Attorney General,
We find the Arizona Supreme Court’s opinion in Goddard v. Coerver,
As in Goddard, the property here was conveyed for the charitable purposes of the State Hospital for the Insane. It was conveyed to the Board of Regents of the Hospital, and the General Assembly enacted enabling legislation specifically for the benevolent purpose of establishing a hospital for the insane. The General Assembly also deemed fit that title to the property vest in the Board of Regents, and has routinely authorized the appropriatiоn of funds for its charitable purposes. We find that the deeds and the legislative acts giving rise to the State Hospital clearly evidence the creation of a charitable trust. Accordingly, we find the property is held in trust for the DMH.
2. SALE OF PROPERTY
Property subject to a charitable trust may not be terminated or altered by the General Assembly, but rather, must be apprоved by the court. Smith v. Moore,
This Court has previously applied the doctrine of equitable deviation, which “permits deviation from a term of the trust if, owing to circumstances not known to the settlor and not anticipated by him, compliance would defeat or substantially impair the accomplishment of the purposes of the trust. Under these circumstances a court may direct or permit a trustee to accomplish acts that are unauthorized or even forbidden by the terms of the trust.” Epworth Children’s Home v. Beasley,
Considerable flexibility will always be allowed in the details of the execution of a trust, so as to adapt it to the changed сonditions. Mars v. Gibert,
It is undisputed that the Bull Street property is no longer necessary to house mentally ill patients. Accordingly, we find the doctrine of equitable deviation should be utilized to allow the property to be sold. However, we hold that the proceeds from any sale of the property must remain in trust for the benefit of DMH for the care and treatment of the mentally ill.
DECLARATORY JUDGMENT ISSUED.
Notes
. The preamble to the Act recognized, "... the benevolent purposes of society require, on the part of the State, a public institution for the reception and cure of lunatics, for the instruction of the deaf and dumb, and for the maintenance of the poor and destitute of either class.”
. No issue is before this Court concerning prior sales of Bull Street properties. However, we note that our opinion today in no way affects or invalidates any prior sales, to which there has never been an objection.
. Pursuant to S.C.Code Ann. § 1-7-130 (1976), the Attorney General is charged with the protection of public charities and is required to enforce the due application of funds given or appropriated to such charities.
. In addition, the Court concluded that the unused portion of these lands could, consistent with the principles of equitable deviation, be approved by the court for reconveyance by the Hospital’s board of directors to the county for construction of a general hospital. The equitable deviation issue will be addressed below.
