63 Tenn. 99 | Tenn. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This bill is brought in the name of the State of Tennessee on the relation of C. A. Elliott, against the defendants, as President and Trustees of the corporation known as President and Directors of the Nashville Female Academy. It is somewhat difficult, applying the ordinary rules of construction to the bill before us, to say, from its language, what is its precise object. After careful reading, and sifting the facts as best we can from ifs rhetoric, giving a liberal
The leading question raised by the demurrer, is, that the bill, on its face, shows that defendants are not the Directors, Trustees or managers of funds given for a public or charitable purpose, but that the institution of which they are Trustees, is but a private enterprise, in which the stockholders are joint owners of the property, and such owners have such vested legal rights as a Court of Equity cannot interfere with. There are other grounds of demurrer stated, but we have cited enough to raise the main question involved for discussion at present.
By §§3409 and 3410 of the Code, an action lies in the name of the State, under the terms prescribed in that chapter, “ to bring the Directors, Managers and officers of a corporation, or the Trustees of funds given for a public or charitable purpose, to an account, for the
This bill is filed under this provision, and in order to sustain it, the funds, which may be held to include property, must be given or appropriated to a “ public, or charitable purpose.” If the objects of the trust are for private benefit, or the property or funds, by the tenure of the trust, are appropriated to private uses or private ends, the property private property, and not given or dedicated „ to public or charitable purposes, then the Court of Chancery, under these provisions, has no right to interfere' with its administration. "Whatever may be the rights of the parties interested as corporators, to come into that Court, to enforce their individual rights against the Trustees or Directors of the corporation for the maintenance of their own individual rights.
The facts on which this question is to be determined, are substantianlly as follows: “ On the 4th of July, 1816, Robert White and Thomas Claiborne, citizens of Nashv-ille, purchased of David McGavock, a lot of ground situated on the south-west side of said city, as it then existed, of about three acres, for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars.” The deed recites that the above parties, “ and the members who at present
It is pretty clear, too, from the above deed, (and certain) from after events, that it was contemplated that this Association was to assume a more permanent form, by an Act of incorporation, and the property be put under the control of that body in this new form of existence, and such is the case. On the 3d of October, 1817, the Legislature passed an Act of incorporation, entitled “An Act to incorporate the President, Trustees and Company of the Nashville Female Academy.
This Act, by §1, makes a corporate body of “ every person or persons, or the legal representatives of such persons, who are, or shall become, subscribers to the Association or Company, formed at Nashville, for the purpose of establishing a female academy,” and are, or shall be, proprietors of the real or personal property belonging to said Company, together with their successors and assigns. The usual powers, such as to sue and be sued, to purchase and hold real estate, and to sell and dispose of the same, are conferred on the corporators. In addition, it is authorized to make such by-laws and regulations as may be deemed necessary for the transaction of the business of the Association or Company, and conducting and governing a seminary for the education of females.
The rules prescribed for the government of the Company in this Act, provide in substance, (so far as
The eighth section provides, that the stock or shares of the Company shall be transferable on the Books of the Company, and in no other manner; provided, the President and Trustees are willing to accept the as-signee as a memher of the Company, of which an entry shall be made on record; and then adds, the share of any deceased person shall pass by devise, or descend to the legal heir of such deceased person.
By §14, it is provided, that, “the profits of said Company shall be applied, as far as shall be adjudged necessary and proper, to the purposes of furthering and promoting female education, any additional profits which it may not be adjudged by the President and Trustees, necessary to apply to that purpose, shall be paid over in equal portions to the members of the Company, for the time being, every six months.”
These are all the provisions of the charter that need be noticed for the purposes of this opinion.
We need not undertake, from the various authorities and decisions cn this question, to define with certainty, what is charity. The true idea is, perhaps, as well put by the Chancellor in the case of Potter v. Chapin, 6 Paige, 650, as it can or need be done for all practical purposes. In that case, Chapin and Wells, with various other parties resident in a school district, and some who were not, by voluntary donations of money and labor, raised a fund for the erection of a school-house for the use of themselves and other inhabitants of that neighborhood or district. The school-honse had been burned down by the British army in 1813, and the United States, by Act of Congress, paid its value by way of compensation for its loss. Chapin & Wells, on behalf of themselves and the other contributors, claimed this money as their individual property. The Court say, “the object of the donation to the common fund was for the purpose of having a school-house for the general benefit of the inhabitants of the village, and not to create interest in the building for the exclusive benefit of the donors, as tenants in common, which should thereafter be subject to partition among the original contributors to the fund, or their assignees or personal representatives. The school-house, therefore, at the time of its destruction,
It 'will be seen in this statement, that there was a donation to a public use, and the intention was clear, that the property was not to be held by the parties ■as tenants in common or joint owners.
But in the case before us, there is no donation. The parties subscribe, and, thereby, become liable to pay, and do pay the amount required to become stockholders in the Association or incorporation, and then by Article 2nd of the Act, they become joint proprietors with all the members in the stock or property of the Company.
In the next place, each subscriber is by fair construction of the Act, a stockholder in the Company to the extent of his subscription, thus acquiring a distinct property right by virtue of his subscription. It is true, the transfer of this stock is only to be made on the books of the Company, but this does not in any way, change its character as stock or property, nor give the subscription the aspect of a donation for a public use. But what brings out the distinguishing feature of this Company from a charity or public use, with still more clearness than anything else, is §14, “that the profits of the Company, after appropriating so much as may be judged necessary for promoting female education, (the object for which the Association is formed) shall be divided in equal portions, to the members of the Company.”
This feature unquestionably stamps the incorpora
We cannot conceive of an institution or corporation having these features, being either a charity or a
The case of Franklin v. Armfield, 2 Sneed, 305, was a case of a devise of property to Trustees, for the erection in Tennessee, of proper buildings, and the establishment therein, of a seminary of learning, for the permanent support of which, provision was made, in which was to be educated, and supported during pupil-age, the children of the testator and their descendants, the children of his brothers and sisters and their descendants, and such other of the poor children of Sumner County, as the Trustees might select. This last was held a valid gift to a charity. So, in the ease of Gass, ex’r, v. Ross, et als., 3 Sneed, 213, the gift, by will, was of so much money, to be invested in bank, and_ other stocks, the interest to be applied annualty to the schooling of the children in the bounds of Gass’s school district forever, it was held this was a valid charity; .and so we might go on through all of our cases, and find this essential element of a gift, a donation for' benevolent or public purpose, but in none the element of profit, or use of the fund for the benefit
The cases referred to from other States, do not differ in these features from our own, when carefully scrutinized. They all have this idea either of a gift., donation or dedication to a charitable or public use— or when conveyed by the original owner to others, for a valuable consideration, a holding, or agreement to hold by the party to whom conveyed, for the purpose of some public or charitable use, and none have the element of profit to be derived from the property to the proprietors of the fund or capital stock. In some, it is a conveyance to Trustees, for the use of a church, as the case of Gibson et als. v. Armstrong, 7 B. Monroe, 488, in which the church was the beneficiary, and entitled to the enjoyment of the property, free of charge. So, in the case of Gass & Bonta v. Wilhite, et als., 2 Dana, 171, which was the case of an association of stockholders, where the members who were allowed to come into the society, brought in their property, and devoted it to the general interest of the body — it all being a freewill offering on their part — and were entitled, as members of the society, to equal privileges in the use of the common property, in accordance with the rules and regulations adopted by the body. The fact, that the parties were entitled to equal enjoyment of the common property, with others, was held not to detract from its character as a charitable use; and so, we might go on, through the large mass of cases on this subject, and find that in none of them, is the element of personal indi
We need not go further into these cases, as we are perfectly satisfied that in no aspect of the case before us, can it be held to be a charity or public use, subject to the control of the public. What the rights of the individual stockholders are, or may be, as against the Trustees, for misuse or improper management of the trust pi’op-erty, is a question not involved in this case, and need not be discussed. Suffice it to say, that in any aspect of the case, we are satisfied with the decree of the Chancellor sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the bill, and affirm the same, with costs.