Attorney General ex rel. Bailey v. Moore's Executors

19 N.J. Eq. 503
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 19 N.J. Eq. 503 (Attorney General ex rel. Bailey v. Moore's Executors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General ex rel. Bailey v. Moore's Executors, 19 N.J. Eq. 503 (N.J. 1868).

Opinions

The opinion of the dOurt was delivered by

. Depue, J\

The bequest being for the establishment of an orphan asylum, and a hospital for sick and infirm persons, is a be•quest to a charitable use, and the objedt of this suit, as stated •in the prayer of the bill, is to obtain from this court a con■struction of the will, and directions to the executors how best to carry out the design of the testator in regard to these charities.

• The right of an executor, or trustee, or of any other person interested in the execution of a trust, to come into the Court of Chancery to have the trust established and the Construction of the instrument by which it is created authoritatively settled, is a familiar doctrine of this court. The Court of Chancery has also an extensive jurisdiction over the subject of charitable uses, to uphold, protect, and enforce their execution. But this jurisdiction is not so universal as to include the execution by the court of all trusts, or to authorize its interference in all cases of bequests to charitable uses. Its authority can only be invoked in exceptional cases, where no trustee is interposed, or where there is no person in esse capable of taking, or where the charity is of an indefinite nature, or its execution according to the original purpose is, or has become, impracticable. Where the charity is definite in its objects, and lawful in its [507]*507creation, and capable of being executed according to the directions of the donor, and it is to be executed and regulated by trustees, whether they are private individuals or a corporation, the administration properly belongs to such trustees, and the king as parens patries has no general authority to regulate or control the administration of the funds. In all such cases, however, if there be any abuse or misuse of the funds by the trustees, the Court of Chancery will interpose, at the instance of the Attorney General, or the parties in interest, to correct such abuse or misuse of the funds. But in such cases the interposition of the court is properly referable to its general jurisdiction as a court of equity to prevent abuse of a trust, and not to any original right to direct the management of a charity or the conduct of the trustees. 2 Story’s Eq., § 1191. I have been thus particular in stating the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery in matters of this kind, because we are asked by the prayer of the bill to direct the executors how best to carry out the design of the testator in regard to his charity; and much of the argument'which was addressed to this court bore upon the question as to how the charitable institutions, proposed to be founded by the testator, might be most efficiently managed to effectuate the benevolent objects he htid in view. Unless, by reason of the incomplete testamentary disposition of the testator, or the existence of the defects in, or difficulties in the execution of, the trusts above indicated, this court is called upon to fraiqe a scheme for its execution in order to prevent a failure of the trust, we have no jurisdiction to inquire how the testator’s bounty might be most judiciously administered, or to advise the executors how they shall exercise that discretion, which, to a certain extent, must be vested in every trustee in the management and administration of a trust. The jurisdiction qf the court extends no further than to ascertain the intent of the testator, from the language he has used ; and when such intent is ascertained, if the trust does not fall within the class of incomplete trusts, that require the aid of the Court of Chancery to sustain or [508]*508execute them, we have no jurisdiction to interpose, unless1 it ‘be to restrain the executors from any proposed abuse of' the trust or misuse of the trust funds.:' ;

" In this case the charity is definite in its objects, and1 is capable of being executed according to the directions of the donor ; and trustees for the establishment of the institutions are appointed, and provision is made for a corporation for the complete management of the trusts. It does not therefore come within the jurisdiction of chancery, by reason' of ■any inefficiency of the scheme of the donor, or practical difficulty in its execution according to his' directions, or for the want of competent trustees to carry it into effect.

‘ It was admitted on the argument, and is not charged otherwise in the bill, that the executors are properly proceeding'with the administration'of the estate, and that they propose and intend with the residue of the estate, as soon as, practicable, to establish in the fifth ward of the city 'of Newark an orphan asylum, which they propose to call St. James Roman .Catholic Orphan Asylum, and also a hospital ■for sick and infirm persons; and that they propose and intend as soon as said institutions'shall have been established, to-cause them to be incorporated in one corporation, and upon such incorporation to convey to it the funds appropriated to those institutions, taking upon themselves the management of the institutions until such corporation is effected. This enumeration of acts proposed and intended to be done by the executors, comprises all the duties to be performed in the literal and complete- execution of the trusts declared in the will. But it is said that the1 executors, while they propose to carry into effect all the directions of the will in their literal terms, meditate a violation of their duties as trustees, in that they propose with the trust funds to establish ah orphan asylum and hospital purely charitable and of a general nature, in the management of which protestante will not be excluded, and in which the tenets of the Román Catholic church will not be taught, or the forms of worship of said church be adopted-, either exclusively or in preference [509]*509.to those of any other religious denomination. And the charge in the bill is, that the intent of the testator was to create the two .specified institutions for general charity, and for the reception and benefit of persons, without regard.to religious belief, but to be under the control and management exclusively of the Roman Catholic church; in both of which,.religious services shonld be bad and religious instruction, given, according to the tenets and form of worship of,the Roman Catholic church; and that, in order to secure that result, the trustees managing said institutions, when incorporated, should be members of the Roman Catholic church, and the institutions should each he subject to the right of visitation for spiritual purposes, hy the bishops and clergy of said church.

The intent to make these institutions denominational in their management, is sought to be deduced from the fact that the testator was, for a long while prior to his death, an earnest Roman Catholic, and a large contributor in the building of St. James Roman Catholic church in the fifth ward, in Newark, in which ho was a stated worshipper; and that the charity cannot he rightly administered, as regards the asylum, without sectarian instruction ; and that the hospital, to be properly carried on, requires the presence of nurses and religious ministers who may give consolation to the sick and dying. These considerations, it is urged, indicate that the testator, when he designated the name of the institution as St. James Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum, had reference to similar institutions which the Roman Catholic church had under its care, and manifested his intention that the asylum and hospital should be under Roman Catholic management, governed and carried oil as Roman Catholics ordinarily govern apd carry on like institutions.

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19 N.J. Eq. 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-ex-rel-bailey-v-moores-executors-nj-1868.