Baker v. Converse

2 Balt. C. Rep. 83
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 83 (Baker v. Converse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Converse, 2 Balt. C. Rep. 83 (Md. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

STOCKBRIDGE, J.—

By her will. Melissa Baker, after sundry bequests to relatives, made or endeavored to give numerous religious and charitable legacies. The present proceeding, instituted by the executors, is for the purpose of having a determination of the validity, vel non, of certain of these legacies. The issues involved in no way raise any question of testamentary capacity, but only the legal propositions incident to the proper construction of the will, and in respect to certain of them whether the attempted disposition of the testatrix is in conflict with established legal principles.

It is not necessary in such a case to rehearse the cardinal principles of construction applicable ro all rwills, though many of them are necessarily involved in the solution of one or another of the questions presented. Every one recognizes and admits that the plain, manifest intent of a testator is to be followed and given effect in every instance where it does not contravene some established legal doctrine, and that this intent is to be gathered not from a casual expression here and there, but from the instrument, taken in its entirety. At the same time, in connection with all bequests of a religious or charitable nature it is to be borne in mind, that, unlike many of the States in this country the Statute of 43 Elizabeth is not in force here, nor have we any similar statute, and whenever the attempt has been made to have Courts of Chancery exercise such powers as a part of their ordinary jurisdiction, it has been uniformly denied and repudiated ; and even adjudicated cases which at first sight might seem to have in a measure recognized and enforced the doctrine, will not bear out this claim when closely scrutinized.

The case has been presented with great ability upon both sides, and with a voluminous citation of authorities, but for the determination of the issues involved it does not seem necessary to go outside of our own State, for reason that each point has, with more or less exactness, been passed upon by our own Court of Appeals, and for the further reasons that the decisions of courts in States where the Statute of 43 Elizabeth, or a kindred statute is in force, can have but little weight in this State, where the law is so radically different.

By the eighteenth item of the will Miss Baker gave the sum of $800 to the Women’s College located at the City of Lynchburg for the education of one or more worthy girls, and by the ninth item of the second codicil she gave the sum of $4,200 to the trustees of Randolph-Macon College to be applied to aid deserving and promising young women, especially such as expect to enter upon mission work, to attend che Randolph-Macon Women's College at Lynchburg. These two legacies are claimed by one, and by but one corporation. That there has been a misnomer of the intended legatee in this case is claimed, and upon the part of the heirs at law it is insisted that such misnomer invalidates the legacy, and further, that the effect of the devise is to create a trust, in which the beneficiary or beneficiaries are so uncertain and indefinite that the bequest is void.

As to the misnomer, it is sufficient to say that it clearly appears from the proof what the intended legatee was. In any such case the same is simply descriptive of the legatee, it is not the legatee, and all that is requisite is that [84]*84the person or corporation, intended be made apparent, which has been done in this ease.

Vansant vs. Roberts, 3 Md. 128.

Reilly vs. Union Prot. Infirmary, 87 Md. 664.

As to the other objection, the answer is equally apparent. Of course, if the legacy in question is absolute, uninvolved with any trust, it is unobjectionable, but even if it be construed as creating a species of trust, it is none the less effectual. The trustee is a corporation, and therefore capable of taking ; the purpose declared in the will is the furtherance in part of one of the specific purposes for which the corporation was chartered, and the trust is one, if trust it be, clearly enforcible in a court of chancery. It presents a vastly different case from either Provost vs. Abercrombie, 46 Md. 146, or Rizer vs. Perry, 58 Md. 115. In the former of these the Magistrates and Town Council of Dumfries, to whom the bequest was made, had ceased all connections with the schools of the town before the death of the testator, and the legacy was held void, not because it was for the purpose of education, but because the immediate legatees, who had been deprived of all connection with the schools of the town by Act of Parliament, were by reason of such severance of their duties no longer in a position to be held accountable for the discharge of the trust imposed on them. In the latter case the trustees of the Mary Hoye School, named by Mrs. Hoye in her will as trustees were unincorporated. There was therefore no trustee capable of taking, and with no trustee to take, the mere expression “for education” was manifestly too vague for administration by a Court of Chancery. In the present case the trustee is one capable of taking, the objects of the trust, a part of the purposes for which the intended legatee was chartered, and the trust is therefore one enforcible in Chancery, and valid.

II. Item 10 of the second codicil is divisible into if our parts:

(a.) The bequest of $2,000 income to be used for the support of the pastor of Trinity M. E. Church South.

(b.) A bequest of $600 income to be paid to the Trinity Auxiliary of the Women’s Foreign Missionary Society to be remitted to the Treasurer of the Baltimore Conference of the Women’s Foreign Missionary Society of the M. E. Church South.

(c.) A bequest of $500 income to be paid to the support of the superannuated preachers, their widows and orphans of the Baltimore Conference of the M. E% Church South, and

(d.) A bequest of $400 income to be given to the infant class of the Sunday School of the Trinity Church, to be by that class contributed for the support of a little girl in one of the schools under the care of the Women’s Foreign Missionary Society of the M. E. Church South.

Each of these four undoubtedly constitutes a trust, in which the trustee is the corporation, Trinity M. E. Church South. The first providing that the income of $2,000 shall be applied to the support of the pastor of the church, is clearly valid under the decisions in England vs. The Vestry, 53 Md. 466, and Halsey vs. The Convention, 75 Md. 281, while the third, intended for the benefit of the superannuated preachers, their widows and orphans, is as clearly void under Smith vs. Church Extension Society, 56 Md. 396, and Tingling vs. Miller, 77 Md. 106.

The second and fourth are not at first sight as manifestly effectual or ineffectual as the other two; and the decisions in the Baptist Church vs. Shivley, 67 Md. 493, and Crisp vs. Crisp, 65 Md. 422, are relied upon to maintain their validity. Much ingenuity of argument was shown in an attempt to demonstrate that the beneficiaries in each of these bequests were “integral” parts of the Trinity Church. But the following condition must be apparent with respect to each of these; the immediate cestui que trust is an unincorporated arm of the work of Trinity Church, and if the bequest was for the benefit of the Trinity Auxiliary in the one case, and the infant class of the Sunday School in the other, there would be much force in the argument, but while each of these Societies is named as the cestui que

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Reilly v. Union Protestant Infirmary
40 A. 894 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1898)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-converse-mdcirctctbalt-1900.