Brown v. Condit

61 A. 1055, 70 N.J. Eq. 440, 4 Robb. 440, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 41
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 30, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 61 A. 1055 (Brown v. Condit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Condit, 61 A. 1055, 70 N.J. Eq. 440, 4 Robb. 440, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 41 (N.J. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Stevenson, Y. C.

The bill is filed to obtain a construction of the will of Susan M. Corson, deceased, late of East Orange, Hew Jersey, who died March 11th, 1899. This will, which bears date July 7th, 1897, after making various legacies, disposes of the residuary estate as follows:

“Fourteenth. If after expenses and legacies are paid there be any surplus, I give, devise and bequeath it to the hospital fund for sick seamen at Navy Yard, Brooklyn, New York, care of Mr. John M. Wood, chaplain.”

The heirs and next of kin of Mrs. Corson were, at the time she made her will, and at the time of her decease, the children of a deceased brother, and their claims upon her bounty are disposed of by her in a paragraph which immediately precedes the residuary clause above set forth, and is as follows:

“Thirteenth. As the children of my late brother will, at my death, inherit the entire estate of my late father, Calvin Condit, I feel no responsibility in regard to their future, but simply give to Herbert N. Condit, Annie E. Smith and Clarence Condit the sum of five dollars each.”

Besides the next of kin, the bill brings in as defendants the International Committee of Young Men’s Christian Associations, the American Seamen’s Friend Society, and the United States of America. The last two named defendants have preferred no claim to the fund, and have submitted to decrees pro confesso.

The heirs and next of kin have answered, claiming the entire residuary estate upon the theory that the residuary devise and bequest lapsed.

'The International Committee of Young Men’s Christian Associations file an answer setting forth their relation to the charitable work now going-on on behalf of seamen at the Brooklyn navy yard, and offering to take the fund and apply it according to Mrs. Corson’s charitable purpose.

At the suggestion of the court, the attorney-general of Hew [442]*442Jersey has been made a party to the suit, and has had an opportunity to be heard.

The International Committee of Young Men’s Christian Associations, the American Seamen’s Eriend Society, and the United States of America were made parties defendant by the complainants as the result of their investigation of facts and conditions at the Brooklyn navy yard, and of the charitable work which had been carried on there by Mr. John M. Wood, styled “chaplain” in the residuary clause.

Mr. Wood died on May 24th, 1898, a little less than a year after the date of the will, and a little less than a year prior to the death of the testatrix.

The testimony seems to show conclusively that neither at the time Mrs. Corson made her will nor at any time thereafter until her decease was there any “fund” in existence which could properly be called a “fund for sick seamen” at or in any way connected with the hospital of the Brooklyn navy yard. It further appears that Mr. John M. Wood was not a chaplain in any proper sense of the term. He was not an officer or employe of the United States. He was a “lay worker,” a missionary, in the employ of the American Seamen’s Friend Society. He did not reside at the Brooklyn navy yard, but his work seems to have been located there, and consisted principally in holding religious meetings—missionary work. He had no official employment of any kind in connection with the government hospital located at the navy yard. He merely had the privilege of ministering to the sick sailors in the hospital, presumably to such extent as his services were acceptable to them, the sailors. He also was accorded access to the navy yard and vessels stationed there for his missionary work. These privileges seem to have been accorded to other missionaries or agents of benevolent societies.

In some way Mrs. Corson became acquainted with Mr. Wood and corresponded with him, and on four occasions sent him the sum of $5 “to get delicacies for the sick boys, and flowers,” &c. There is no evidence that Mrs. Corson ever had any connection whatever with any form of charitable work at the Brooklyn navy yard excepting through Mr. Wood. It might be surmised, if it [443]*443had not been proved in the case, without objection, that the form of Mrs. Corson’s donation was suggested by Mr. Wood. No doubt Mr. Wood was glad to encourage Mrs. Corson and all other charitable-minded persons to put him in possession, from time to time, of moneys which he could advantageously employ for the benefit of the sick seamen among whom he worked. Without there being any element of permanency, such moneys might be regarded by Mr. Wood as his “hospital fund.”

Since Mr. Wood’s death in May, 1898, the American Seamen’s Friend Society has, with a'short, intermission between the employment of two missionaries, continued the religious work which it had carried on through Mr. Wood at the Brooklyn navy yard, and when the testimony was taken in this cause was still continuing that work through the instrumentality of a missionary named Fithian.

The testimony also shows that the defendant the International Committee of Young Men’s Christian Associations, in March, 1899, established a branch of charitable work among the sailors in the Brooklyn navy yard, which charitable work, although apparently wider in scope than that carried on by the American Seamen’s Friend Society, seems to include the same kind of work.

My conclusion is that the charitable donation lapsed.

1. This case at the start .must be sharply distinguished from that large class of cases in which the intended gift to a charitable use has gone into effect upon the death of the testator by the vesting of the gift in the donee, but the continuance of the charity has subsequently become impossible or impracticable on account of a change of conditions occurring after the death of the donor. In this last-mentioned class of cases the law to be investigated and applied relates to a possible reversion or resulting trust and to 'the ey pres power which a court of equity or the legislature may exercise. These cases, which may be divided into several sub-classes, all present a situation in which property once absolutely devoted to a public use—a charitable use—has got adrift.

The question to be considered in the ease now before this court [444]*444is whether the property in litigation ever has been devoted to a charitable use; whether, when Mrs. Corson died, the charitable donation which she undertook to provide for when she made her will became effective; whether, in other words, the charitable devise and legacy vested or lapsed.

2. If it be a rule for the construction of wills that every testator who makes a donation to charity having certain characteristics is presumed to intend that in case his specified charity'is hnpracticable or impossible, or becomes such after the making of his will or after his decease, then the fund shall be applied to that other and different charity which judicial investigation shall discover as most like or nearest to the charity specified, then the distinction above noted would seem to be unimportant. I do not think that any such rule of construction is or ever will be established in New Jersey. Whether there is any rule of positive law giving the pourt of chancery, ■ independently of or subject to legislative action, the power to apply charitable funds which have got adrift—funds which are somewhat in -the situation of bona

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 1055, 70 N.J. Eq. 440, 4 Robb. 440, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-condit-njch-1905.