13 A.2d 862 | Conn. | 1940
Charles Fable died in 1934, leaving a will in which, after giving certain legacies, he gave, devised and bequeathed the residue of his property to the plaintiff bank to be held in trust for his wife and a nephew and he directed that at their death the balance remaining in the fund "be distributed by said trustee to such charitable and educational purposes as it may deem wise and prudent." The principal question presented upon this reservation is whether this gift constituted a valid charitable trust.
In Shannon v. Eno,
This statute was enacted in 1925. Public Acts, 1925, Chap. 160. In determining the legislative intent expressed in it, we must have recourse to our previous decisions in order to ascertain what change, if any, it was intended to make in our law. In White v. Fisk,
Under our law as it existed previous to the enactment of 4825 of the General Statutes, while a testator might expressly or impliedly authorize a trustee to select the beneficiaries who came within a particular charitable purpose or purposes designated by him, he was required, in order to create a valid charitable trust, to designate, with some degree of certainty at least, the charitable purpose or purposes intended. It was evidently to remove this requirement that the statute was enacted. As passed by the Legislature, Chapter 160 of the Public Acts of 1925 included not only the provisions found in 4825 of the General Statutes, but also those now in 4826 and 4827. Section 4826 authorizes the incorporation into a will by reference of any resolution, declaration or deed of trust establishing a charitable community trust, validates a gift made to such a trust and authorizes the use of the property given in accordance with the instrument establishing it. Section 4827 requires an annual accounting to the Probate Court as regards any such community trust. The broad provisions of 4825 were clearly intended to pave the way for the later authorization of gifts to charitable community trusts. As to the purpose of these, the statute contains no restrictions; they are left to be determined by the resolution, declaration or deed by which they are established; *671 and they may, therefore, so long as restricted to charitable uses, be in the broadest terms. See 2 Bogert, Trusts Trustees, 330. The legislative intent was evidently to make it possible to create a charitable use which did not meet the requirements of our previous decisions that the testator must designate the particular charity or class of charities to which he desired his property to be devoted.
This interpretation of the statute is supported by the clause: "provided the donor or testator shall give to the trustee or trustees thereof or to any other person or persons, the power to select, from time to time and in such manner as such donor or testator may direct, the charitable purpose or purposes to which such property or the income thereof shall apply." Nor does the phrase in this clause "and in such manner as such donor or testator may direct" have the effect of limiting the statute to cases where the testator or donor has directed the manner in which the selection shall be made. The whole purpose of the statute was to broaden the rules as to certainty necessary to make charitable trusts valid and such a requirement would be more restrictive than that established by our decisions previous to the enactment of the statute. Shannon v. Eno, supra, and cases therein cited. The phrase merely means that if the testator gave directions as to the manner of selection, his intention should be given effect.
In Cheshire Bank Trust Co. v. Doolittle, supra, we sustained a gift of the residue of an estate to a relative of the testatrix to be used by her "for either Home or Foreign Missions, trusting she will see that it will go where the need is greatest." We pointed out that under our previous decisions this gift would not be invalid for uncertainty, but, referring to 4825 of the General Statutes, we added (p. 235): "Under *672
the provisions of this statute a testator is not required to designate the particular charitable purpose for which the property is used. The gift is valid if the testator gives the trustee power to select such purpose, and no gift accompanied by such power of selection is void for uncertainty." In Mitchell v. Reeves,
The construction thus placed on the statute makes our law correspond with the modern trend to uphold charitable gifts in trusts where the trustee is given an unlimited right of selection. Kirwin v. Attorney General,
While trusts for education often redound to the personal profit of the beneficiaries they are sustained as for a charitable purpose upon the broad ground that the education of individuals forwards the cause of civilization and humanity. Washburn College v. O'Hara,
It is true that in Mitchell v. Reeves,
The testator made provision for his wife and nephew during their lives in these terms: "All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal and wherever situated, I give, devise and bequeath to The Westport Bank Trust Company, hereinafter named, to be held in trust for the benefit of my said wife as long as she shall live, with the power to use the income and any part of the principal, at its discretion, for the care and support of my said wife." "After the death of my said wife, or in case of her incompetency, I charge said trustee with the care and support of her nephew, H. Leslie Perry, with power to use at its discretion the income and any part of the principal for his support." Mrs. Fable survived the *676
testator for about three years. She made no written election to accept or refuse the provisions made for her in the will, but she did receive certain personal property specifically bequeathed to her in it, as well as a widow's allowance. She has been paid no portion of the income of the trust fund which accrued during her life. We are asked whether her executor is now entitled to such income. The provision in the gift to her that the residue of the testator's estate is to be held in trust "for the benefit of my said wife" must be read in conjunction with the rest of the paragraph. Bridgeport-City Trust Co. v. Beach,
The only remaining question is whether the Superior *677
Court has jurisdiction to approve the beneficiaries to whom the trustee proposes to distribute the fund. While the court will not interfere with a discretionary power vested in a trustee, in the absence of a showing of fraud, bad faith or an abuse of discretion, a trustee may properly seek its advice as to the legality of action which it proposes to take. McCarthy v. Tierney,
To the first question propounded, asking whether the provision of the will empowering the trustee to distribute the balance of the trust fund to charitable and educational purposes is valid, we answer "Yes." To the second question, asking whether the Superior Court has jurisdiction upon the application of the trustee to approve the proposed beneficiaries selected by it, we answer that the court has jurisdiction to advise the trustee whether the beneficiaries selected by it are within the class of beneficiaries to whom the fund may legally be distributed. To the fifth question, asking whether the executor of Mrs. Fable is entitled to receive the income of the fund accruing during her lifetime, we answer "No." The other questions require no answer.
No costs will be taxed in this court to any party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.