104 N.J. Eq. 271 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1929
On March 7th, 1844, The Trenton Saving Fund Society was incorporated by special act of the legislature (P.L. p. 170) and given power in section 8 of that act to keep a book in which any depositor might name some person to whom, in the event of the depositor's death, the money should be paid, if not otherwise disposed of by will; and that on payment in such manner the society would be discharged of all obligations.
The present Wills act was passed March 12th, 1851 (Comp. Stat.p. 5860), and provides for the legal manner of disposing of personal property by any person upon his decease. An examination of this act discloses no general or special repealer of inconsistent statutes and it appears that there is no like general or special repealer in any subsequent amendments or supplements thereto.
The Trenton Saving Fund Society, pursuant to section 8 of its charter, and pursuant, further, to section 13 of its by-laws, kept a book or books in which appointments were made in form and manner, according to the act, up to the date of the filing of the bill. The society was advised some time since that there was a question concerning the validity of these appointments owing to possible conflict of the Wills act, and, therefore, it has not used the power in question granted in the charter for several years.
The parties defendant in this matter constitute those now living and named in three of the appointments. And the attorney-general of New Jersey has been made a defendant, representing the public, but he has not answered. Nor need he, if the trust is a private one, for if so he is neither a necessary nor a proper party. No defendant has answered.
The purpose of this proceeding is to determine the rights of the complainant and its legal status under these appointments.
This proceeding is brought under the act concerning declaratory judgments and decrees (P.L. 1924 p. 312), whose constitutionality was upheld by our court of errors and appeals in McCrory Stores Corp. v. S.M. Braunstein, Inc., 102 *273 N.J. Law 590. And Vice-Chancellor Backes in Paterson v.Currier,
A preliminary question is, Is this a public or a private trust? A public trust is one for the benefit either of the public at large or some portion of it answering to a particular description, as a public charity; while a private trust is one wherein the beneficial interest is vested absolutely in one or more individuals who are, or may be within a certain time, distinctly ascertained. 3 Bouv. L. Dict. (Rawle's 3d rev.)3330.
In Lanning v. Commissioners of Public Instruction,
Now this trust, within the definition quoted above, is a private trust. Consequently, the attorney-general is not properly here, and is entirely justified in not answering — in fact, there is nothing for him to answer. He could have moved to strike out, now substituted for demurrer.
In Gordon v. Toler,
Counsel for the savings institution argues that the Wills act does not repeal the provisions of the charter of the Saving Fund Society (P.L. 1844 p. 170 § 8); and that, because it contains no repealer, specific or general. I disagree. Without any kind of repealer a later statute repeals a former if they apply to the same subject and are inconsistent with each other.
In Tomlin v. Hildreth,
All consistent statutes, which can stand together, though enacted at different dates, relating to the same subject, and hence, briefly, called in pari materia, are treated prospectively, and construed together, as one act. Farrell v.State,
The act of 1851 was not the first Wills act in New Jersey. There was one of 1714, and Chancellor Green, as ordinary, said inMundy v. Mundy,
Assuming that the charter of the complainant (P.L. 1844 p.170), which in section 8 authorized it to keep a book in which any depositor might name some person to whom, in the event of his death, the money should be paid if not otherwise disposed of by will, amended pro tanto the act of 1714, and other inconsistent provisions of acts concerning wills previously passed, nevertheless, did not the Wills act of March 12th, 1851 (Comp.Stat. p. 5860 § 24), which provides for the manner of disposing of personal property by any person upon his decease, being passed after the act of 1844, repeal that act, so far as it permitted a testamentary disposition to be made of a deposit in the manner indicated therein? The act of 1851 says that all wills and testaments of persons dying after July 1st, 1850, "shall be in writing, and shall be signed by the testator * * * and such writing declared to be his last will, in the presence of two witnesses present at the same time, who shall subscribe their names thereto, as witnesses * * *; and all wills and testaments of persons dying since the date above mentioned made in the manner herein prescribed * * * shall be sufficient to devise, pass, and bequeath all estates and property, real and personal, and all rights of any kind," c. This, it will be seen, is clearly an exclusive requirement with reference to a valid testamentary disposition of personal property, and is therefore necessarily at variance with the provisions of the act of 1844, page 170, *276
section 8, which makes the method of disposing of the bank account of a depositor to take effect after his death — if he makes such an appointment on the books of the society — without his complying with the requirements of the statute of wills in the disposition thereof. In the words of the Tomlin Case
(
Counsel for complainant contends that there is no inconsistency between the provision in the Wills act and the charter of the complainant, and that therefore both may stand together, citingState v. Commissioners of Railroad Taxation,
Now, the Wills act is a general law which provides the only method whereby any person may dispose of land or personal property, to take effect upon his death, and that, within the case of State v. Commissioners of Railroad Taxation, the Wills act, so far as respects bequests, being entirely inconsistent with the provisions of the charter of the complainant, repeals the same so far as testamentary disposition is concerned, by clear implication, that is, legislative intent; without any general or special repealer of the provisions of any inconsistent act. *277 Knorr's Appeal, 89 Pa. St. 93, is cited as being on all fours and directly in point with the case at bar. In that case it appeared that a charter was granted to the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society in 1819, which made provision that a book should be kept in which every depositor should be at liberty to appoint some person or persons to whom, in the event of his death, the money should be paid, if not otherwise disposed of by will. And the Wills act of that state was passed in 1883 (Laws p. 249) and contained a general repealer of inconsistent acts. Mr. Justice Paxson delivered the opinion of the Pennsylvania supreme court and held that the act of incorporation of the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society was within the recognized powers of the legislature and an appointment in pursuance of it was valid. And on the question of the conflict between the special act incorporating the society and the Pennsylvania statute of wills, Mr. Justice Paxson (at p. 96), had this to say: "It is further objected that the writing referred to was a disposition of his property by George Knorrs to take effect after his death and therefore a will, and not being in conformity with the statute of wills, is not valid. This might be so but for the act of assembly which expressly authorized it. Such act being within the recognized powers of the legislature the appointment in pursuance of it is necessarily valid."
Admittedly this Pennsylvania case is on all fours with the present one; but, the decision is flatly opposed to that of our court of errors and appeals in Stevenson v. Earl,
"Our conclusion is that the moneys remaining to the credit of Earl, at his death, in the savings funds of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company did not become the property of his wife, notwithstanding the provision in the agreement between him and the company that such moneys should be paid to her at his death, our reason for so concluding being that such agreement constituted a testamentary disposition of his property, which was invalid because not made in the manner prescribed by the statute of wills. The necessary result of this conclusion is that such moneys passed to his executors, on his death, as part of his estate." Here the appointment was made in virtue of the rules of the company and not by virtue of a statute, but if there had been an act authorizing it, such as in this case, it must necessarily have been swept aside as inconsistent with the statute of wills.
The result reached in this case is that the Wills act of 1851 repealed section 8 of the act of 1844 (P.L. p. 170), and that therefore the complainant is not entitled to a decree that the appointments in pursuance of the complainant's charter (P.L.1844 p. 170 § 8) are valid; but, as the bill prays in the alternative that if such appointments are held to be invalid and contrary to the law of this state, that it be decreed that complainant has no authorization or power to follow said provisions, and that said appointments are invalid and ineffectual trusts for the purposes therein set out; and as the act concerning declaratory judgments and decrees provides that the declaration of the court may be either affirmative or negative in form and effect, the complainant may have a decree adjudging the appointments to be invalid. *279