75 Wis. 431 | Wis. | 1890
Was the appellant entitled to the fund in question, to invest and apply the same according to the will, or, if not entitled to have the fund paid over to it, should it have been appointed trustee to execute the trust?' Its claim to one or the other kind of relief is founded on the eighth clause of the will, which reads as follows: “I further give to my beloved wife, Achsa A., the rest and remainder of my property, whether real or personal, during-her natural life, and whatever may remain at her decease I give in trust to the deacons of the First Baptist Church of Janesville, Wisconsin, and their successors in office, to be-funded with good security on improved land, and the interest to be paid annually to the American Baptist Publication Society, located at Philadelphia, Pa., to aid in the support of a Baptist colporteur and (or) missionary in the state of Wisconsin. The said dehcons may have a voice in the nomination and appointment of sd. colporteur and missionary, if they wish.” The original will was sent up with the record for our inspection. It is admitted that it is in the-handwriting of the testator, but on examination we are in doubt whether the character connecting the words “col-porteur ” and “ missionary,” where they first occur in the-clause, is “and” or “or.” This appears to be one of the many serious objections urged against, the validity of the clause. But the more formidable objection is that the clause is void for uncertainty, and is incapable of being-carried out under the laws of this state.
It may be proper to remark, before we proceed to a consideration .of the objections to the validity of the bequest, that the testator died at Janesville in 1865, and the will was admitted to probate in August of that year. Mrs. Achsa A. Fuller, named in the will, survived her husband, and died in February, 1888. In April, 1888, the executor filed in the county court his account, showing that the estate of the testator has been fully settled, and the residue
It is claimed that the bequest is void on the ground that the scheme of the charity is uncertain and incapable of execution. "We think this objection well taken, and that it must prevail. At the outset it may be observed that the doctrine of cy pres, so called, is not recognized and acted upon by the courts of this state. That doctrine is enforced by the English court of chancery, and by some courts in this country. Rut this court has held that the doctrine of cy pres rested upon prerogative or sovereign power, and was not strictly a judicial power, and consequently the courts of this state could not enforce it. Ruth v. Oberbrunner, 40 Wis. 238; Heiss v. Murphey, 40 Wis. 276. This consideration renders some of the decisions relied on by appellant’s counsel, where a different rule prevails, inapplicable, as was justly observed by the respondent’s counsel upon the argument of the cause.
It will be seen that the will gives the residue of the. estate in trust to the deacons of "the First Baptist Church of Janesville, and their successors in office, to be loaned on good security on improved land, and the interest to be paid annually to the American Baptist Publication Society of
It may be assumed that the testator intended that the deacons of the First Baptist Church should receive the residue of his estate, loan it upon good real-estate security, collect the interest, and pay it over annually to the appellant, to aid in the support of a Baptist colporteur and missionary, whose duty it would or should be to travel in Wisconsin, and distribute gratuitously or sell Bibles and various religious publications, or labor to extend religion among the people of the state. The deacons were also" to have a voice or some agency in the nomination and appointment of the colporteur and missionary. Further than this, we
It seems to us there is a fatal uncertainty as to the charitable scheme in this will, and that it cannot be executed. It follows, from this view, that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed. The taxable costs of both of the parties in this court will be paid out of the estate.
By the Court.— Ordered accordingly.