144 N.Y.S. 24 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
Lead Opinion
The plaintiffs invoke the equitable jurisdiction of the court to the end that the laudable purposes of the testator may be perpetuated in as generous a measure as a wise and practical administration of the estate may afford, and that these purposes be not defeated by conditions unforeseen and unforeseeable when the will was executed. In brief, the plaintiffs contend that the residuary clause of the will was a devise to a charitable use; that a charitable use was affixed by the will upon the land; that upon the grant of the charter of 1806 to the trustees, the corporation thus formed acquired the legal title by virtue of the aforesaid devise for the charitable use expressed in the will, and thus through sovereign grace became the agency by means of which the devise was to be executed; that although the State might as parens patries grant the relief sought through the medium of this action, as in fact it theretofore had by the act of 1828 granted similar relief, the Supreme Court had concurrent jurisdiction, which may be invoked either by the corporation, as donee of the charitable use, or by the State through its Attorney-General. Stated substantially in the words of their brief, the plaintiffs claim that upon the passage of the act of 1806, as to this particular charity, the law of charities as formerly applied in England (except in so far as it rested either upon the royal prerogative or upon the statute of 43 Elizabeth, chap. 4) was restored and our then Court of Chancery was reinvested with authority to apply and administer the same, which authority has passed to the Supreme Court; also, that similar jurisdiction and authority were conferred upon the Supreme Court by virtue of the so-called Tilden Act (Laws of 1893, chap. 701, as amd. by Laws of 1901, chap. 291), now contained in section 113 of the Eeal Property Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 50 [Laws of 1909, chap. 52], as amd. by Laws of 1909, chap. 144) and section 12 of the Personal Property Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 41 [Laws of 1909, chap. 45], as amd. by Laws of 1909, chap. 144). I put plaintiffs’ claim in the broad language of them brief, that it may be contrasted with the somewhat narrower limits to which I shall confine myself, because, while not denying the broader jurisdiction, I do not think it necessary for the decision of this case to define the
The position taken by the learned Attorney-General, and in which he has so far been successful, is that neither the corporate nor the individual plaintiffs hold the property subject to any trust under the Randall will or otherwise, but that it is held by the corporation absolutely for the purposes expressed in the act of its incorporation; that the powers of the corporation are to be found in the said act and those supplemental thereto, and in the general statutes of the State, so far as the same are applicable, and that if the corporation lacks power to do the things it seeks by this action authority to do, it must secure such authority from the Legislature, this court being without jurisdiction in the premises. It is also urged as ground for dismissing the complaint that if jurisdiction exists to grant the relief sought for, it may only be exercised in a proceeding initiated by the Attorney-General, or, at least, that plaintiffs’ remedy, if any, is by petition and not by action; also, that to authorize any sale of the property would be to destroy a vested estate.
Before examining the questions thus presented, it is proper to say that I see no reason for the individual trustees being made parties hereto. Ooncededly, the whole legal title to the property is in the corporation, and the trustees, as such, have no interest therein, or, at least, no interest which attaches to the title.
It will facilitate the task before us if we keep in mind the fact that whether we • assume the will to be valid within the doctrine of Burrill v. Boardman (43 N. Y. 254) and kindred cases,
Manifestly the primary question involves an inquiry into the nature and quality of the title thus held by the corporation. This question has been simplified, if not authoritatively settled, by the decision in Inglis v. Trustees of Sailor’s Snug Harbour (3 Pet. 99) in which the demandant Inglis, claiming as heir of Captain Randall, sought to recover all or certain of the premises in question, and in which case the validity of the will was determined. The opinion of the court was by Mr. Justice Thompson, Mr. Justice Story and Chief Justice Marshall dissenting.
Nor do I find anything in the dissenting opinion to lessen the force of the argument that if the will was valid the trust attached to the land in the hands of the devisee.
The argument of the dissentient justices was, that the devise was not to a corporation to be- created in futuro, but was a devise in prcesenti to the trustees, and if they could not execute their powers in the manner prescribed by the testator, they were to apply to the Legislature for an act of incorporation, a situa
In Owens v. Missionary Society of M. E. Church (supra, 385) Judge Selden dwells upon the distinction between an absolute gift and one for a charitable use, saying: “There can be no charitable use without a trust. To deny that this bequest was accompanied by a trust, therefore, is to deny that the law of charitable uses applies to the case.” The same learned judge went so far as to say that a bequest to a distinctly charitable corporation, although unaccompanied by any description of the purposes of the bequest, would afford “some basis ” for the implication of a trust, “because the objects, purposes and powers of the corporation being in all cases more or less clearly defined by its charter, the.bequest may fairly be presumed to have been intended for those specific objects ” (pp. 385, 386). Tudor is to the same effect. (Tudor Char. & Mort. [4th ed.] 175.)
In the Court of Errors one of the minority opinions in the McCartee case was delivered by Stebbins, Sen., whose argument, although it did not prevail as applying to that case, seems to me to express most cogently a line of practical reasoning applicable to the case before us. Speaking of the testator, the learned senator said (p. 524): “his object was not to benefit the
That the incorporation of the trustees did not divest or change the nature of the trust seems clear. The language of the minority of the court in the Inglis case is in accord with this view. On this point Mr. Justice Story said (pp. 153, 154): “It is said that if the trust be valid the Legislature had a perfect right to enforce it, and their act of incorporation amounts to a legal execution of the trusts and vests the estate in the corporation * * *. But I cannot admit that the act of incorporation was intended to have such an effect. It has no terms which divest the legal title of the heirs, it merely incorporates the trustees and their successors, and clothes them with the usual powers to carry the trust into effect. It presupposes that the estate was already vested in them by the will. They are made 'capable in law of holding and disposing of the estate ’ devised by the will. It is true that the
Of a charter granted subsequent to a foundation established by a deed or will, Tudor says (Tudor Char. & Mort. [4th ed.] 185): “ Here the charter is merely machinery for providing an incorporated trustee armed with appropriate powers to carry into effect a pre-existing trust, and the grant of such a charter does not in any way affect the powers of the court to establish and regulate the charity.” (See, also, 2 Perry Trusts [5th ed.], § 743; Attorney-Gen. v. Governors of Free Grammar School, 23 Beav. 350; Matter of Manchester Royal Infirmary, L. R. 43 Ch. Div. 420, 428.) And this coincides with such late expressions as are to be found on the subject in this State. In Dammert v. Osborn (140 N. Y. 30, 42) the court said of an act somewhat similar to the one in question: “It is an expression of the will of the supreme legislative power that the gift in question should be received and administered in the manner and for the objects designated in the will * * *. The Legislature in effect said that * * * this gift shall take effect according to the intention of the donor and be administered by a corporate body of its own creation. ”
In none of the very numerous cases in England and in this country, where the courts have exercised jurisdiction to establish direct or administer charitable trusts, of which corporations were the donees, have I found one where, in the absence of some statutory provision affecting its jurisdiction, it has been sug
In this situation what jurisdiction has our Supreme Court in the premises % If the relief sought is within its ordinary
The practical effect of the act of 1806, incorporating the plaintiffs herein, was to legalize this particular trust, if it was illegal (Inglis v. Trustees of Sailor’s Snug Harbour, supra, 119), or at least to afford statutory means for its execution, .if it was otherwise valid, (Per Rapallo, J., Holland v. Alcock, supra, 336). But in whichever way one views it, whether as the removal of an inhibition against jurisdiction, or the reinvesting of powers theretofore taken away, upon the passage of the act of 1806 the jurisdiction of Chancery attached (See, per Cullen, Ch. J., People ex rel. Swift v. Luce, 204 N. Y. 488, 489), and upon the abolition of that court, the powers and duties, not only of the Court of Chancery but of the chancellor, devolved upon the Supreme Court as such. (Butler v. Jarvis, 51 Hun, 268; People ex rel. Swift v. Luce, supra, 478, 487.) But notwithstanding I deem it clear that jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for herein is inherently vested in this court, it is unnecessary to stand on this inherent jurisdiction alone. The Court of Appeals has several times said that by the Tilden Act the Legislature intended to restore to courts of equity that power to administer charitable trusts which they were declared to have in the Williams Case (supra). (Allen v. Stevens, 161 N. Y. 122, 141; Matter of Griffin, 167 id. 71, 80; Matter of Cunningham, 206 id. 601, 607.)
The 1st section of this act, as amended (now Personal Prop. Law, § 12, as amd. supra; Real Prop. Law, § 113, as amd. supra), is granting, enabling and legalizing in its nature; the 2d (as amd. supra) relates wholly to adminis
As to the right of the plaintiffs to institute this action, making the Attorney-G-eneral the sole party defendant, I have no doubt. The 3d subdivisions of the several sections of the Eeal and Personal Property Laws above referred to expressly provide that the Attorney-General “shall represent the beneficiaries,” and prescribe it to “be his duty to enforce such trusts ” as are covered by subdivision 1 of the several sections.
True, the reported cases are largely ones where the Attorney-General has, by bill or information, proceeded against the trustee, but it is not essential that the trustee should rest inert until the apprehended loss or danger has become so imminent as to bring the situation of the estate to the attention of the Attorney-General, or that the trustee should proceed at its peril upon some questionable course until that official invokes the jurisdiction of the court to restrain it. Many cases support the right of the trustee to assume the initiative-and to come into court for instructions or other proper relief. The following are illustrative of a long line of authorities: McCartee v. Orphan Asylum Society (supra, per Jones, Ch., 437, 482); Governors of Christ's Hospital v. Atty.-General (5 Hare, 257); Wardens, etc., of Clum Hospital v. Powys (6 Jurist, 252); Weeks v. Hobson (150 Mass. 377); Lackland v. Walker (supra); Academy of the Visitation v. Clemens (50 Mo. 167). Under the Tilden Act the proceeding contemplated seems to be by summary petition. But for many reasons this should not be construed as
The objection that to grant the relief prayed for would in effect destroy a vested estate is without weight. The title is vested in the corporation charged with the trust under the will. The heirs of the testator have no interest, reversionary or otherwise. The uncertain beneficiaries of the trust, i. 6., the “aged, decrepit and worn-out sailors,” have no standing in court for any purpose. Their interests are in the care of the State as parens 'patriae and are represented by the Attorney-General. The numerous authorities are uniform in holding that in granting relief similar to that prayed for in this action courts do no more than mould the form of the devise to suit the necessity of changed conditions; no diversion of the gift is either sought or intended. (Stanley v. Colt, supra; Ould v. Washington Hospital, etc., 95 U. S. 303; Lackland v. Walker, supra.)
Having thus disposed of all the objections to jurisdiction, the final question remains: Are the facts alleged prima facie sufficient to justify its exercise ? The situation disclosed is not one of mere expediency but of an existing exigency. A long-continued and progressive deterioration imperils the estate; and while the situation may not justify the fear that, if left to itself, the estate will either be annihilated or its net income be so reduced as to leave it insufficient to care for a number of beneficiaries equal to the original fifty named in the will, it is manifestly one which justifies the trustees ih seeking an opportunity to make proof of the facts and to secure the authority and instructions of the court. (See Lackland v. Walker, supra, 265 et seq., where the authorities are collated.)
The judgment should be reversed, with costs, and the demurrer overruled, with costs, with leave to the defendant to withdraw demurrer and to answer on payment of costs in this court and in the court below.
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Scott and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
See p. 154.—[Rep.
Malim v. Keighley.— [Rep.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with my brother Hotchkiss in his opinion and merely wish to state what I consider to be the real question that is now before us.
What the plaintiff asks for is a construction of the trust under which it holds the real property which was devised by Captain Randall’s will and which from the probate of that will in 1801 has been administered by the trustees named in the will or by the corporation created by the act of 1806, i. e., one of the plaintiffs in this action. As to whether the court will construe this will or give the trustees instruction is not now before us, the sole question being whether upon the facts stated the plaintiffs or either of them have a right to apply to a court of equity for a construction of the will and an adjudication as to the powers of the trustees. I think it clear that the testator intended to convey this real property described in the complaint to the persons that he named in his will as trustees to carry out the trust outlined in the will. If the trust was a valid trust the title to the property vested in the trustees; if it was not a valid trust the trustees took no title and the title vested in the testator’s heirs at law, or, if there were no heirs at law competent to take the real property, then the property escheated to the State.
Of course the question as to whether this was a valid trust is not before us. Certain persons claiming to be heirs at law attacked the validity of this trust and their claim to the property was defeated in the courts, which judgment was subsequently affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States. (Inglis v. Trustees of Sailor’s Snug Harbour, 3 Pet. 137.) However that may be, for more than a hundred years this title has been held and enjoyed by the trustees named in the will or their successors, the corporation created by the Legislature of this State by the act of 1806, and there is no one now before us questioning the validity of the trust or the rightful ownership of the property by the trustee. I do not understand that the Attorney-General claims that by way of escheat or otherwise the title to this property has vested in the State, or that the State has any right to the property as its owner. And thus it seems to me there can be no doubt that the title to the property passed to the original devisees in trust to devote
I think, therefore, that the corporation is a trustee holding the real property in trust for the benefit of a certain class; that there are questions which require the construction of the terms of the trust by the court for the advantageous execution of the trust; that the trustee has the right to apply to the court for the purpose of obtaining such instruction; that there are no parties in existence interested in the maintenance of the trust, except the Attorney-General of the State, who can be made parties to the action; and the only serious question as I view it is whether the Attorney-General is a proper party to be made a defendant. That the Attorney-General is a proper party defendant is, I think, put at rest by the provisions of the Real Property Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 50 [Laws of 1909, chap. 52], § 113, subd. 3), and I agree with what my brother Hotchkiss says upon that point.
It is quite probable that in view of the very satisfactory opinion of my brother Hotchkiss -this concurring memorandum is unnecessary, but the question presented is both unusual and interesting, and I have thought it not amiss that I indicate the process by which I have arrived at the same result.
Laughlin, Scott, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and demurrer overruled, with costs, with leave to defendant to withdraw demurrer and answer on payment of costs.