OPINION
Case Summary
St. Mary's Medical Center, Inc. ("St. Mary's") appeals the trial court's entry of declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction in favor of Vincent McCarthy. We reverse.
Issue
The sole restated issue we consider is whether the trial court properly concluded that St. Mary's cannot demolish a chapel on its campus constructed in the 1950's with funds provided by the estate of one of McCarthy's relatives.
Facts
In 1950, Cornelia G. Haney executed her last will and testament. Ms. Haney was a member of the prominent Reitz family of southwest Indiana. The will provided in part as follows, after listing several other dispositions:
ITEM SEVEN: I hereby give, bequeath and devise the entire rest, residue and remainder of my entire estate, both real and personal, the real estate in fee simple and the personal property absolutely, in the following proportions to the following named beneficiaries hereof, to-wit:
[[Image here]]
E. Thirty-two (82) per cent thereof to THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK OF EVANSVILLE, of Evansville, Indiana, in trust, nevertheless, for the *1071 use and benefit of ST. MARY'S HOSPIT-TAL, of Evansville, Indiana, upon and subject to the following uses and trusts, to-wit:
*e ote oe ork ok
3. The corpus and income of said trust estate shall be used by said trustee for the purpose of creating at or in connection with said ST. MARY'S HOSPITAL, of Evansville, Indiana, a HANEY MEMORIAL, the exact nature and form of which shall be determined by said committee composed of DANIEL F. McCARTHY, PATRICK J. CORCOR-AN and WILBUR C. CLIPPINGER, or the successor member or members of said committee, and in furtherance of such purpose said trustee shall expend the corpus and income of the trust estate for the use and benefit of said hospital or transfer the same or any part thereof to said hospital, at any time or from time to time, upon such terms and conditions as the members or a majority of the members of said committee in their sole discretion shall determine and direct the trustee.
Appellant's App. pp. 242-44.
Haney died on July 21, 1951. On March 30, 1954, the trust committee decided to use the trust funds to build a chapel at St. Mary's. Construction of the chapel, financed by over $250,000 from Haney's estate, 1 was completed in early 1956. On February 29, 1956, the chapel was consecrated in Catholic fashion and dedicated as the Chapel of Mary, Queen, with a plaque noting it was a memorial to Haney.
In 2003, St. Mary's determined that it would be necessary to expand its facilities, and that such expansion would require demolition of the chapel funded by Haney's estate. In 2004, St. Mary's took steps to deconsecrate and dismantle the chapel, including moving the Eucharist to another chapel at the hospital and removing the stained glass windows. As evidenced by local newspaper coverage that is included in the Appellee's Appendix, the decision to demolish the Chapel of Mary, Queen, was unacceptable to many persons in the Evansville community.
On July 30, 2004, McCarthy filed his complaint for declaratory judgment and a permanent injunction to prevent St. Mary's from demolishing the chapel. McCarthy is the grandson of Daniel McCarthy, one of the trust committee members who voted to use the funds from Haney's estate to build the chapel. He is also a distant relative of Haney; he is her first cousin, three times removed, and was born in 1965, or fourteen years after her death. On September 28, 2004, the trial court entered its judgment, with accompanying findings and conclusions, providing that St. Mary's "is permanently enjoined from destroying the Chapel of Mary, Queen" and requiring St. Mary's to restore the chapel to its original condition. Appellant's App. p. 18. St. Mary's now appeals.
Analysis
McCarthy argued before the trial court and argues on appeal that Haney's bequest to St. Mary's for the creation of a Haney Memorial essentially was intended to cereate a charitable trust, with St. Mary's now trustee for the donated assets that were converted into the Chapel of Mary, Queen. He essentially contends that the first trust created by Haney's will for the benefit of St. Mary's morphed into a second trust with St. Mary's as trustee when it received the funds for construction of the chapel. St. Mary's counters first that McCarthy, who is separated from Haney by seven degrees of consanguinity, lacked standing *1072 to initiate this action, and second that there is no current charitable trust in this case.
The trial court here entered findings of fact and conclusions thereon. "In such a case, we apply the following two-tier standard of review: whether the evidence supports the findings, and whether the findings support the judgment." Olcott Intern. & Co., Inc. v. Micro Data Base Systems, Inc.,
Turning first to McCarthy's standing, the general rule is that only those persons who have a personal stake in the outcome of the litigation and who show that they have suffered or were in immediate danger of suffering a direct injury as a result of the complained-of conduct will be found to have standing. State ex rel. Cittadine v. Indiana Dep't of Transp.,
This court has held,
The law is well settled that inasmuch as the enforcement of public charities are matters of public interest the attorney general appearing as a public officer is the proper party to maintain litigation involving questions of public charitable trusts. And an individual member of the public has no right as such to maintain a suit of such character.
Boice v. Mallers,
Resolution of this case turns on construction of Haney's will. As noted, the interpretation, construction, and legal effect of a will are questions of law. East,
*1073
McCarthy insists that St. Mary's holds the Chapel of Mary, Queen, as trustee for the benefit of those whose use it, such as medical personnel and visitors at the hospital. We note the difference between an absolute devise or gift and one in trust to a charitable institution.
2
"In the former, the property becomes an asset of the corporation to be used in such manner as the corporation deemed best, while in the latter, the property is held by the corporation, not as its own, but in the capacity as a trustee, or as an instrumentality of the settlor in carrying out the directions." Stockton v. Northwestern Branch of Women's Foreign Missionary Soc'y of Methodist Episcopal Church,
The court will examine carefully all the clauses of the instrument and the situation of the parties in order to decide whether the phrases used were intended to be binding upon the donee and to make him trustee for charity, or whether he was to be an absolute owner with only moral obligations by reason of the suggestions or requests from the donor as to the use of the property given.
George Gleason Bogert & George Taylor Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees § 324, pp. 376-77 (1992). "In determining the question of the testator's intention, the generally accepted rules of construction must apply and it will be presumed that he used precatory words in their ordinary and usual sense unless there is something to show that he intended that they be given a different meaning." Lewis v. Atkins,
It has also been noted as a general proposition that charitable trusts are favored by the law, "and the most liberal rules of construction will be employed to sustain and uphold every attempt of a person to donate his property to a charitable use.... The charitable character of the trust being made apparent, all doubts are to be resolved in its favor."
*1074
Hays v. Harmon,
Both McCarthy and the trial court, in concluding that Haney devised her property to St. Mary's in the form of a charitable trust, have relied upon Bible Institute Colportage Ass'n v. St. Joseph Bank & Trust Co.,
Another case in Indiana, besides mezer, that reached the conclusion that a devise in a will was an outright gift, and not a charitable trust, was Stockton. There, a will devised assets to the Methodist Church "to the Northwestern Branch of the Women's Foreign Missionary Society to be used for China, India and Africa ...." Stockton,
We conclude the Colportage case, even if we were to assume it was correctly decided, does not control the outcome here. In the Colportage case, evidently the bequeathed funds had not been used for their stated purpose and funds remained for that use, and could continue being used in that way indefinitely or until the funds ran out. Here, to the extent there was a stated purpose for the funds in this case-i.e. for the creation of a Haney Memorial-that purpose was met when the chapel was constructed and a plaque memorializing Haney was placed there. Additionally, the general rule is that the mere statement of the purpose for a charitable devise does not transform it into a charitable trust. See, e.g., 14 C.J.S. Charities § 31 (1991). Beyond that, Haney's will says nothing as to how long the memorial had to exist in *1075 order for the devise to be valid, or what would happen should St. Mary's no longer want the chapel before the end of its useful life. Additionally, to the extent McCarthy states in his brief, and the trial court found, that the bequest to St. Mary's was "for the construction and maintenance of the Chapel of Mary, Queen," the record does not support such an assertion. Ap-pellee's Br. p. 18 (emphasis added). Haney's will only references the creation of a memorial, not its maintenance, and neither the will nor any extraneous document indicates that the bequest was also intended to provide for its indefinite maintenance.
Other factors also lead us to conclude that St. Mary's did not receive the funds for construction of the chapel as trustee of a charitable trust. Here, Haney's will, which governed the disposition of a sizea-ble estate, was expertly drafted. The drafter clearly knew how to provide for the creation of a trust. Item 7(BE) of the will did in fact establish a trust, expressly naming Citizen's National Bank as trustee and St. Mary's as beneficiary and appointing a trust committee who would decide how to distribute the designated portion of Haney's estate to St. Mary's. The will does not contain any language suggesting that whatever funds were distributed to St. Mary's would form the corpus of a second trust, with St. Mary's as trustee and something or someone else as beneficiaries. The fact that a will reveals the drafter clearly knew how to create a trust in one part of the document tends to demonstrate the testator did not intend elsewhere to create a trust where it was not clearly expressed. See Lewis,
Haney's will also expressly states that the corpus and income of the trust created for the benefit of St. Mary's should be used for creation of the Haney Memorial. It is axiomatic that transferring title and the entire equitable interest in property to one person as sole beneficiary and sole trustee destroys the existing trust. Seq, eg., Ind.Code § 830-4-2-8; Restatement (Third) of Trusts, § 69 (2008). Thus, the trust created by Haney's will clearly was terminated when St. Mary's, that trust's sole named beneficiary, also received the entire corpus of the trust for the creation of the Chapel of Mary, Queen.
We also observe that there is no indication of any second trust document drafted by the trust committee named in Haney's will outlining that St. Mary's was receiving the funds as trustee for the benefit of something or someone else, although the will gave the committee the power to limit distribution of funds "upon such terms and conditions as the members or a majority of the members of said committee in their sole discretion shall determine ...." App. p. 244. The trust committee, evidently, could have expressly provided that it was directing the funds from Haney's estate to St. Mary's to be held in trust, but it did not do so.
Even if Haney's will did not create a charitable trust with St. Mary's as trustee of the funds she bequeathed to it, McCarthy's argument also essentially amounts, in the alternative, to a claim that the bequest/gift was subject to a condition subsequent. That is, he seems to contend that the devise is revocable should St. Mary's want to destroy the chapel at any time before it collapses of its own accord after an indeterminate period of use. "[Allthough no definite or particular form of expression is absolutely essential to the creation of a condition subsequent, it must be manifest from the terms of the will that the devise or bequest was made on condition and the absence of the words usually used for such purpose is significant." Ebenezer,
The clear majority rule is "that nothing short of express provisions for forfeiture and either a reverter, a gift over or a right to retake the property in the donor or his heirs would enable a donor to effectively impose a condition subsequent." Bogert, § 324 p. 392. An application of this rule is apparent in Herron v. Stanton,
Here, Haney's will contains nothing to indicate the required duration of the Haney Memorial, in contrast to John Her-ron's will expressly stating that the art school created by his assets should be named for him in perpetuity. Haney's will also contains no reverter language to indicate what should happen to the chapel, or: the funds used to build it, if St. Mary's no longer wanted the chapel on its premises, again in contrast to Herron's will. The trust committee also placed no minimum time limit for the existence of the chapel or imposed other restrictions on the donation to St. Mary's. It has been said elsewhere "that when the language of an instrument does not clearly indicate the grantor's intention that the property is to revert to him in the event it is diverted from the declared use, the instrument does not operate as a restraint upon alienation of the property, but merely expresses the grant- or's confidence that the grantee will use the property so far as may be reasonable and practicable to effect the purpose of the grant." Gray v. Harriet Lane Home for Invalid Children,
Here, given the disfavor of conditions subsequent and the absence of clear re-verter language or the required length of any Haney Memorial created by Haney's estate, the most that can be said of her devise to St. Mary's through her trust committee was that she and the committee expressed confidence in St. Mary's that it would "use the property so far as may be reasonable and practicable to effect the purpose of the grant." Gray,
In any event, there are Indiana cases suggesting that St. Mary's use of the chapel for nearly fifty years constituted substantial compliance with any charitable trust or condition subsequent imposed by Haney's will. For example, in Higbee v. Rodeman,
In sum, in looking at the four corners of Haney's will there is nothing expressing an intent that St. Mary's was to hold any assets bequeathed to it as a charitable trust. There also is nothing in the will indicating the existence of a valid condition subsequent upon the bequest. There is no indication the trust committee created by Haney's will imposed any such condition or created a second trust with St. Mary's as trustee. Finally, even if there was a charitable trust or valid condition subsequent, St. Mary's use of the chapel for nearly fifty years represents substantial compliance with any such trust or condition.
Conclusion
The trial court erred as a matter of law in concluding that St. Mary's cannot dismantle the Chapel of Mary, Queen. Haney's will neither created a charitable trust with St. Mary's as trustee of the devised assets, nor gave property to St. Mary's as a gift with a condition subsequent. The trust committee also imposed no restrictions on St. Mary's use of the chapel built with funds from Haney's estate, except for having to indicate that it was a memorial to Haney in accordance with her will. We reverse the declaratory judgment and permanent injunction against St. Mary's and *1078 direct that judgment be entered in favor of St. Mary's.
Reversed.
Notes
. It is estimated that this bequest today would be worth approximately $1.8 million.
. We reject St. Mary's assertion that Haney's devise to St. Mary's, whether construed as a gift or a trust, was not a charitable one because it was intended to create a memorial in her family's name. It is well-settled that a gift does not lose its charitable character simply because the donor also wants the gift to be recognized as a personal or family memorial. See Scobey v. Beckman,
. The art school of Indiana University-Purdue University (Indianapolis) still bears John Her-ron's name, 110 years after it was established. See http://www.herron. iupui.edu/. _
. There was evidence presented here that the Chapel of Mary, Queen could stand for another fifty to seventy-five years, if not longer. McCarthy essentially asserts that St. Mary's must allow the chapel to stand for at least that long; the wording of the trial court's order also would seem to require St. Mary's to do nothing that might hasten the chapel's demise and that it would have to wait until the chapel crumbled of its own accord before it could put the property on which it stands to another use. We decline to so hold in the absence of clear evidence that St. Mary's knew it was irrevocably tying up a substantial piece of its grounds for at least 100 to 125 years when it agreed to use the funds from Haney's estate to build the chapel.
