Bernard and Jeanne Adler v. Save, N/K/A Save, a Friend to Homeless Animals

74 A.3d 41, 432 N.J. Super. 101
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 5, 2013
DocketA-0643-10
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 A.3d 41 (Bernard and Jeanne Adler v. Save, N/K/A Save, a Friend to Homeless Animals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bernard and Jeanne Adler v. Save, N/K/A Save, a Friend to Homeless Animals, 74 A.3d 41, 432 N.J. Super. 101 (N.J. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-0643-10T3

BERNARD and JEANNE ADLER, APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION Plaintiffs-Respondents, August 5, 2013 v. APPELLATE DIVISION

SAVE, n/k/a SAVE, A FRIEND TO HOMELESS ANIMALS,

Defendant-Appellant. ____________________________________

Argued November 16, 2011 - Decided August 5, 2013

Before Judges Fuentes, Harris, and Koblitz.

On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Mercer County, Docket No. L-2611-07.

Sara F. Merin argued the cause for appellant (McCarter & English, LLP, attorneys; Gerard G. Brew, of counsel and on the briefs; Ms. Merin and Carissa L. Rodrigue, on the briefs).

Stuart J. Polkowitz argued the cause for respondents (Brach Eichler L.L.C., attorneys; Mr. Polkowitz, of counsel and on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

FUENTES, P.J.A.D.

This appeal requires us to address the enforceability of a

conditional inter vivos gift. Guided by the facts presented

here, we hold that a charity that solicits and accepts a gift from a donor, knowing that the donor's expressed purpose for

making the gift was to fund a particular aspect of the charity's

eleemosynary mission, is bound to return the gift when the

charity unilaterally decides not to honor the donor's originally

expressed purpose.

Absent the donor's consent, the recipient of the gift is

not at liberty to ignore or materially modify the expressed

purpose underlying the donor's decision to give, even if the

conditions that existed at the time of the gift may have

materially changed, making the fulfillment of the donor's

condition either impossible or highly impractical. When, as

here, the donor is alive and able to prove the conditional

nature of the gift through his or her testimony and other

corroborative evidence, a reviewing court's duty is to enforce

the donor's original intent, by directing the charity to either

fulfill the condition or return the gift.

Here, Judge Thomas W. Sumners, Jr., sitting also as the

trier of fact, came to the same legal conclusion after hearing

the evidence presented by the parties over a two-day period.

The following facts, derived from the evidence presented in this

bench trial, will inform our legal analysis.

2 A-0643-10T3 I

Defendant SAVE, n/k/a SAVE, A Friend to Homeless Animals

(SAVE), was founded in 1941 as a non-profit animal shelter

located in the greater Princeton area. Recognized as a

charitable organization under 26 U.S.C.A. § 501(c)(3),

defendant's self-proclaimed mission is to provide for the

rescue, shelter, veterinary care, and adoption of stray

companion animals in the region.1 Plaintiffs Bernard and Jeanne

Adler shared defendant's concern for the welfare of animals,

especially for larger dogs and older cats.

Bernard Adler is a civil engineer and real estate developer

by profession. His interest in caring for dogs and cats has

spanned for at least thirty-eight years, the same amount of time

he has been married to his wife, co-plaintiff Jeanne Adler.

Over this timeframe, plaintiffs had three sons and cared for

"numerous dogs and cats."2 Plaintiffs lived in the Princeton

Township area throughout this entire time.

According to Mr. Adler, he and his wife became interested

in SAVE because it was "a no-kill shelter." This policy was

1 The term "region" includes the Borough of Princeton, which was established on January 1, 2013, through the consolidation of the Borough of Princeton and Princeton Township. 2 When asked to estimate the number of animals he and his wife had adopted over their thirty-eight years of marriage, Mr. Adler responded: "about 30 animals."

3 A-0643-10T3 extremely important to plaintiffs because "a lot of animals are

put into . . . shelters and if they don't get adopted quickly,

then they get euthanized."

At the time of trial in 2010, plaintiffs had recently

"rescued" a "120-pound Bernese Mountain Dog and a 105-pound

Newfoundland, both that wouldn't have been adopted from shelters

because they were too wild." The total number of animals they

have had living with them at any one time include three dogs and

four cats; one of their sons also had a Bernese Mountain Dog

that stayed with them "close to half a year." The smallest dog

weighed 82 pounds; the heaviest was the then recently rescued

120-pound Bernese Mountain Dog.

Plaintiffs' first involvement with SAVE began in the early

1990s, when a trainer they knew introduced them to the

organization. At first, their involvement with SAVE was limited

to bringing extra animal food and toys to SAVE's facility and

spending time with wayward and feral cats. Mr. Adler in

particular spent time attempting to humanize feral cats because,

otherwise, there is "little hope" of adoption. In addition to

these personal acts of kindness, commencing around 1992,

plaintiffs began making financial donations to SAVE.

Mr. Adler testified that the financial contributions were

relatively small at first. "It would be anywhere from a couple

4 A-0643-10T3 of hundred dollars to a thousand, fifteen hundred dollars."

They also began attending fundraisers, "getting as many things

as [they] could to get involved with, and give [SAVE] extra

donations that way." Plaintiffs made these financial donations

without specific conditions, expecting only that the funds would

be used "for the general maintenance of the animals. To buy

them food, shelter." Occasionally, plaintiffs would receive a

letter from SAVE informing them that "X number of dollars would

serve to handle X number of operations for dogs that needed it

or required it. Nothing specific, no."

II

Sara Nicolls served as SAVE's Executive Director from May

1999 to 2005. At the time the SAVE board of trustees hired her,

its main concern was how to address the problems associated with

renovating an antiquated facility that was constructed in the

1940s. Ms. Nicolls testified that, despite the minor

improvements that had been made over time, the building did not

meet modern housing standards and its internal physical layout

was inconsistent with basic notions of sound animal husbandry.3

3 By way of example, cats and dogs were housed in the same area, which tended to increase the stress caused by being placed in a shelter. Animals that were brought to the shelter from the street by animal control officials were not properly isolated from the general population; this facilitated the spread of communicable diseases and made the "street animals'" adjustment (continued)

5 A-0643-10T3 Early in Ms. Nicolls's tenure, the board of trustees spent

a great of deal of time discussing the best way to resolve these

problems and remain consistent with the charity's core mission,

because "[t]he property was left in trust with lifetime income

based on the fact that the physical plant would continue to

operate in Princeton and also service the Animal Control of

Princeton Township."

After discussing the expansion of services required and the

limitations associated with operating within an urban

environment, the board retained an architectural firm to design

a new shelter facility.

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74 A.3d 41, 432 N.J. Super. 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernard-and-jeanne-adler-v-save-nka-save-a-friend--njsuperctappdiv-2013.