Bridgeport Public Library & Reading Room v. Burroughs Home

82 A. 582, 85 Conn. 309, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 128
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 7, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 82 A. 582 (Bridgeport Public Library & Reading Room v. Burroughs Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridgeport Public Library & Reading Room v. Burroughs Home, 82 A. 582, 85 Conn. 309, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 128 (Colo. 1912).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The advice of the Superior Court is asked in answer to three questions. The first and fundamental one is whether or not the trustees have complete title to the premises in question so that they can sell them and apply the proceeds in a prescribed manner without risk of forfeiture or jeopardizing the trust estate. The question thus presented, if taken with any degree of literalness, is one which seeks information as to the consequences which would attach to a sale and application of proceeds as provided, if made. It does not call for advice as to the adequacy of the authority of the trustees to sell, or as to whether title could be given, if they now undertook to convey. It, and the other two questions, appear to assume that the trustees have all the authority which could be bestowed upon them, and their solicitude apparently arises from a fear that if they make a conveyance of the property which Mrs. Pettengill placed under the trust which they are executing, the trust would be defeated, and a forfeiture to her heirs or residuary legatee result. However this may be, no one of the questions propounded directly calls for an adjudication as to the nature and extent of the power of the trustees. Neither does any *315 one of them indirectly call for such adjudication. This latter fact follows from the nature of the trust under which the property is held, and the peculiar incidents of trusts of its class. It is a public charitable trust, and as such is brought within the application of the general principles governing trusts of that nature, and of General Statutes, § 4026.

The existence of this statute, first enacted in 1684, renders it unnecessary to inquire whether or not its provisions of present pertinence add anything to what the general principles of equity would supply, did it not exist. It at least removes from the domain of discussion the policy of our law, and contains an unmistakable statutory declaration as to the permanent and abiding character of the devotion to the charitable use which attaches to gifts intended for such use by the donor.

Wherever this policy prevails, whether it be declared in statute, or otherwise deduced, it is well settled that the trust will not ordinarily be permitted to fail through any improper action on the part of the trustees in their administration of the trust. There may indeed be express conditions so embodied in the instrument creating the trust as to make manifest the intention of the donor that for the breach of them there shall be a forfeiture and a reversion of the fund. But nothing which even remotely partakes of the character of such conditions enters into Mrs. PettengilTs will. Her provisions are all such as are regarded as either explanatory of her object, indicative of her purpose to make the trust a perpetual one, or regulations for the guidance of the trustees in the management of the trust. Similar provisions have been before the courts repeatedly, and upon several occasions before the United States Supreme Court, and held not to constitute conditions in the strict sense of that term, but regulations for the *316 guidance of the trustees, or explanations of. the terms under which the donor intended the estate to be managed. In not a few of these cases the terms of the gift were much more suggestive of conditions than the present, even going to the extent of expressly forbidding a sale of the property. Stanley v. Colt, 5 Wall. (U. S.) 119, 165; Ould v. Washington Hospital, 95 U. S. 303, 311; Jones v. Habersham, 107 U. S. 174, 183, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 336. This proposition and its natural corollary is well stated in Perry on Trusts (Yol. 2, 6th Ed.) § 744, as follows: “If the trustees of a charity abuse the trust, misemploy the charity fund, or commit a breach of the trust, the property does not revert to the heir or legal representative of the donor, unless there is an express condition of the gift that it shall revert to the donor or his heirs, in case the trust is abused; ... If a good public charity is created by gifts upon condition or with limitations, or by gifts for particular purposes, or to a certain end, the heir cannot defeat the charity by reason of a breach of the trust or perversion of the charity; but the courts upon proper proceeding will correct all abuses, and restore the charitable gift to its original purpose. Heirs and personal representatives of a donor have no beneficial interest reverting or accruing to themselves from the breach or non-execution of a trust for a charitable, use.” The following are a few of the cases which support this statement of the law. Vidal v. Girard, 2 How. (U. S.) 127, 191; Ould v. Washington Hospital, 95 U. S. 303, 312; Sanderson v. White, 18 Pick. (Mass.) 328, 333; Chapin v. School District, 35 N. H. 445, 455; Dutch Church v. Mott, 7 Paige Ch. (N. Y.) 77, 82; Women’s Christian Association v. Kansas City, 147 Mo. 103, 126, 48 S. W. 960. This court has repeatedly recognized its underlying principle. American Asylum v. Phœnix Bank, 4 Conn. 172, 178; Langdon v. Plymouth Congregational Soc., 12 Conn. *317 113, 128; Storrs Agricultural School v. Whitney, 54 Conn. 342, 345, 8 Atl. 141; Christ Church v. Trustees, 67 Conn. 554, 567, 35 Atl. 552.

It follows that no forfeiture would result from any attempt on the part of the trustees to alienate the! property, that neither Mrs. PettengilFs heirs, nor the Burroughs Home as residuary legatee, have any right, t title, or interest in it to be made the subject of a release or conveyance, and that any release or conveyance by any or all of these parties would be ineffectual as enlarging the title which the trustees have, as adding to their power to alienate the property, or as helping to give validity to any attempted alienation of it.

This conclusion, as we have already had occasion to observe, results from considerations quite apart from any question as to the authority of the trustees to convey, and the legal propriety of any attempt on their part to do so. This question of authority, however, is so interwoven with those which the complaint propounds that we ought not perhaps in fairness to ignore it.

Whatever authority the trustees may have to sell and convey the premises in question must be derived from the terms of Mrs. PettengilFs will creating the trust or from the resolution of the General Assembly.! 15 Special Laws (1907) p. 356. It is clear that the will; gives them no such power. The resolution purports I to do so. It contains other provisions, some of which1 are unusual, but its second section, in clear and positive language, undertakes to empower the trustees to sell, and to direct as to the investment of the proceeds for the uses of the trust.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 582, 85 Conn. 309, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridgeport-public-library-reading-room-v-burroughs-home-conn-1912.