Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the M. E. Church v. Mitchell

48 A. 737 | Md. | 1901

There are two appeals in this record and both were taken from the same decree. That decree disposed of two cases which had been previously consolidated. One of those cases was instituted on the equity side of the Circuit Court for Garrett County by "The Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church" against John T. Mitchell, administrator, cum testamentoannexo, of Maria A. Sherman; and the other was filed in the same Court by Isaiah M. Sherman and others against John T. Mitchell, administrator, cum testamento annexo, and "The Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church" and others. In each of those proceedings precisely the same questions were presented for adjudication, though they were presented in opposite ways, and the cases were therefore properly consolidated. *201 These questions — and there are two controlling ones — involve the interpretation of Maria A. Sherman's will. One of these inquiries is whether "The Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church" is the devisee and legatee intended to be named and actually described in the residuary clause of the will; and the other is, whether that residuary clause is valid. Its validity is assailed on the ground that it creates a trust whose objects are indefinite and uncertain. By the decree appealed from the bill in the first case, under which the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society claimed the residuary estate, was dismissed; whilst the relief sought in the second, viz., the annulment of the will, was granted. We shall not have occasion to refer to the proceedings any further. We will at once take up and dispose of what we have said are the two controlling questions in the consolidated cases.

The clause of the will which gives rise to the pending controversy is in these words: "I direct that my two houses and lots in Mountain Lake Park, Garrett County, Maryland, and my lots in Covington, Kentucky, and the stock in the Southern Building Association held in care of W.G. Hay, of Hagerstown, Maryland, and all other property, both real and personal, other than that already bequeathed, be sold, and the proceeds, thereof, together with whatever monies I may die possessed, be held in trust by the Board of Managers of the Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church of the United States of America for the following purposes: After all my debts, bequests and provision for my burial, etc., be paid, that sufficient be used to educate as Bible readers in India six girls, one to be named `Dorcas Sherman;' one `Avis Cecil Sherman;' one `Mary Jane Sherman;' one `Sarah Jennie Sherman;' one `Jennie Smith;' one `Grace Mabel Sherman;' the money remaining after that set aside for the education of the aforesaid Bible readers to be applied to the purchase of a building to be used for the education of girls in India to be called the `M. Adelaide Sherman Home,' and the location of said building to be left to the decision of Bishop Thoburn or his succesors." *202

Of late years we have repeatedly had occasion to state the various rules to which resort may be had in the interpretation of wills and they have become so familiar that we need not now reiterate them. The cardinal canon around which all others centre is this, that the intention of the testator when ascertained from the whole instrument, or from the instrument as read in the light of surrounding circumstances existing at the date of its execution, must be given effect if that intention does not antagonize or conflict with some rule of law or of property. At the threshold we are met face to face by the fact which stands out prominently, that the attempt made under the second of the consolidated bills is to strike down the intention of the testatrix, though that intention ought to be gratified if it is legally possible to do so. If the collateral kindred who filed that bill succeed in getting the property disposed of by the residuary clause just quoted, they will get it, not because the testatrix wished them to have it, but in spite of the obvious fact that she did not want them to possess it at all. Her intention would be defeated instead of being respected.

Starting with the indisputable fact that the testatrix did not intend her collateral relations to have the property in question, because she specifically declared that it should go in a totally different direction, let us see whether the body corporate which filed the first of the two consolidated bills, and which claims that it is entitled to the property is the same entity which is misnamed in the will but which was designed by the testatrix to be the object of her bounty. This is a question purely of identification. The misnomer of a corporation will not defeat a devise or a bequest to it if its identity is otherwise sufficiently certain. Adjudged cases on this subject do not help in solving the inquiry now under consideration, though they may illustrate the application of the principle which must in the end determine the controversy. At most they merely hold that under their own peculiar facts there were misnomers which did not obscure the identity of the real beneficiary; or else under other conditions that the *203 misdescriptions were incurably defective and consequently that the attempted gifts were inoperative. All such cases are controlled by the same principle; and to that principle rather than to its application in other judgments resort must be had in these appeals. That principle, distinctly relating to this inquiry, is that the real and actual intention with respect to the identity of the devisee as that intention is gathered from the face of the will, or from the face of the will when viewed in the light of all the circumstances which surrounded the testatrix when the will was made, must be gratified if this can be done consistently with recognized rules of law; for when it is clearwho was intended to take, the accidental miscalling of the beneficiary's name will not invalidate the gift. If it did, then, that accident would defeat the otherwise clear intention.

Now, it cannot admit of a doubt that Miss Sherman intendedsome Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church to be the recipient of her bounty, because she has said so in plain and unambiguous words. But there is no such corporate or other body as the "Board of Managers of the Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church," though there is an organization having a corporate existence and named The Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church. This latter, as the evidence shows, is the only foreign missionary society in the Methodist Church that is engaged in the particular work which the will indicates the intended devisee and legatee was expected to perform with the proceeds of the residuary estate. The identification of the beneficiary depends not wholly on its name. The clause in question whilst calling the beneficiary the Board of Managers of the Foreign Missionary Society has set at rest all doubts as to identity by describing the beneficiary as a society engaged in mission work amongst women and girls in India — a work in which no other organization of the Methodist Episcopal Church is enlisted, in that distant land, save the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society. Of this society the testatrix was a member and she was herself an evangelist. It has been clearly shown by the evidence that she took a deep interest in *204 the benevolent work of this society; that the society is supported by women and that its mission is exclusively amongst women and girls. Its charter, granted under the laws of New York, specifically declares "that the particular business and object of said society is to engage and unite the efforts of Christian women in sending female missionaries to women in foreign mission fields of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and in supporting them and native Christian teachers and Bible readers in those fields." India is one of those fields. Here, then, we have a clear and explicit expression of an intention to give the residuary estate not only to a Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church, but to a particular Foreign Missionary Society of that church, which society is described as engaged in a class of work that no other known organization in that denomination performs or professes to perform, and of which society the testatrix was herself a member; and yet we are asked to disregard all this unerring evidence of identification solely because in the name by which the clearly indicated thing is called the words "Board of Managers" are inaccurately used where the word "Woman's" ought to have been written. This request proceeds upon the hypothesis that the name must control the description, inasmuch as the name is not merely a means of identification, but is the entity itself. This is obviously fallacious. The name of a corporation is no more the corporation than is the name of an individual, the individual. It is the identity of the individual, natural or artificial, that is material, and not the name, for that is simply one of the numerous means by which the identity is ascertained. Theidentity being established the name is of no importance. Consequently when it clearly appears from the will what corporation was meant and intended to be the beneficiary, and there is a sufficient description of that corporation, the gift will not fail merely because the devisee and legatee has not been called by the precise name it may bear. This is fully illustrated by the recent case of Reilly v. Union Protes. Inf.,87 Md. 664. But apart from adjudged cases this proposition is so inherently self-evident as to be perfectly obvious without further discussion. We *205 conclude then, that there is no reasonable ground to suggest a doubt as to what society was intended to be the beneficiary; and that the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society is entitled to the residuary estate if the will is otherwise free from imperfections. This brings us to the consideration of the second inquiry, viz., is the residuary clause void by reason of its creating a trust whose objects are vague, indefinite and uncertain?

Not a great deal need be said in disposing of this inquiry. If there is no trust created, or if none was intended to be created, as to this residuum, then there can be no trust that is void by reason of the objects of it being indefinite and uncertain. So, clearly, the first question to be determined is whether thereis a trust which has been actually created pursuant to an intent to create one? It is true the testatrix declared that the property should "be held in trust by the Board of Managers c. for the following purposes." These purposes, it is alleged are, after the payment of debts, bequests and funeral expenses, "that sufficient be used to educate as Bible readers in India six girls" to be named as directed in the clause, and that "the money remaining after that set aside for the education of the aforesaid Bible readers" should "be applied to the purchase of a building to be used for the education of girls in India to be called the `M. Adelaide Sherman Home,' and the location of said building to be left to the decision of Bishop Thoburn or his successors." Excluding the sums applicable to the payment of debts, legacies and funeral expenses, there is and can be no trust at all. If there be a manifest design not to establish a trust, then no trust will be declared though the words employed would or might, but for the contrary intention, be sufficient to create a trust.Bennett v. Balto. Humane So., 91 Md. 10. Now, perhaps, had the precise phraseology, which is found in the will before us, been used in making a like devise and bequest to a natural person, it might be said that the design was to create a trust, because the purposes indicated are not those ordinarily performed by an individual; but when it is remembered that the very end which the corporation here made the beneficiary was organized to effect is the education *206 of Bible readers and the instruction of girls in foreign lands, it becomes evident that the property was given to the corporation not in trust for indefinite objects, but that it was given to it to be used for its recognized and clearly defined corporate purposes. The specific design of the gift is that the proceeds of the property shall be used, that is spent, by the beneficiary forits chartered ends and not for some one else's benefit. The corporation is not to hold the fund for the use of others, but it is to spend that fund in the prosecution of its missionary work. The declaration by the testatrix that the funds should be used to educate six Indian girls as Bible readers impresses no trust upon the fund, because the education of girls, whether six, or more or less, as Bible readers is precisely the purpose to which the funds would have been applied had the gift been made to the same devisee and legatee without these superadded words. It may and probably would be accurate to say that the provision requiringsix girls to be educated who are to be named as in the will indicated, is a condition annexed to the gift as contradistinguished from a trust impressed upon the gift. The testatrix could have had no object in creating a trust, since without a trust precisely the same application will be made of the funds under the charter of the society as if there had been or could be a valid appropriation of them to these identical ends by means of a trust. If it were held that the words of the will attempted to create a trust which trust when created would be denounced as void for uncertainty, and which, therefore, would be called into existence only for the purpose of being considered asnot in existence, a Court, ought to hesitate before putting such a construction on the words, if another construction which treats them as creating a condition instead of a trust and therefore which upholds the decedent's intention, is equally available and accurate. The whole scheme of the testamentary disposition contemplates imposing upon the beneficiary in declaratory language precisely the duty which its charter would have required it to perform with respect to this property had such declaratory language been omitted; save as to the number and names of the girls to be educated. *207 These exceptions constitute, we think, not evidence of an intention to establish a trust, but they denote simply a condition which has been annexed to the gift; and this condition relates not to the vesting of the property but to theexpenditure of it. Much of the reasoning employed in the recent case of Bennett v. Humane So., supra, is pertinent to this branch of the controversy. As that case was decided less than a year ago we do not deem it necessary to quote from it now.

What has been said in relation to the six Indian girls is also applicable to the remaining portion of the clause respecting the purchase of a building to be used for the education of girls in India. This is a gift to the Society, the property given to be used in the line of that Society's mission work. The use is a corporate use within the limits of its charter powers. In effect the testatrix said by her will to the Society: "You have power under your charter to educate females in far-off lands; in prosecuting this work you have authority to build or buy houses, as houses are necessary in carrying on schools. Now, I give you these funds — the proceeds of this residuary estate — to be used by you for these corporate purposes, but the building you purchase with the money I give you must be called the M. Adelaide Sherman Home." Can it be pretended that such a declaration would create a trust and a trust too that would be void because the objects of it are indefinite? Obviously it amounts merely to a gift for corporate uses coupled with the condition that the building when purchased or constructed should bear the benefactor's name. Without questioning any judgment heretofore pronounced by this Court we say that this will creates no trust because none was intended to be created; and the evidence that none was intended to be created, is furnished by the fact that the gift, whatever the language used in making it, was to a corporation capable of taking for its chartered purposes, some of which purposes are precisely those indicated in the will as the ones to which the funds were to be devoted. The gift is, therefore, not to the Society in trust, but to it for its legitimate corporate uses and is free from restrictions other than the conditions that have been indicated. *208

From these views it follows that there was error in granting the relief prayed in the bill filed by the decedent's collateral kindred, and the entire decree passed in the consolidated cases must be reversed. The cause will be remanded so that a new decree may be passed awarding to the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church so much of the property disposed of by the residuary clause of Miss Sherman's will as may remain after her debts, bequests, funeral expenses and the costs of these two cases, both above and below, have been paid.

Decree in consolidated cases reversed and record remanded thata new decree may be passed awarding to the Woman's ForeignMissionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church so much ofthe proceeds of the residuary estate as may remain after thedebts, bequests and funeral charges of the testatrix, and thecosts in these proceedings, both above and below, have beenpaid.

(Decided March 8th, 1901.)

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