City of Belfast v. Goodwill Farm

103 A.2d 517, 150 Me. 17, 1954 Me. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 9, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 103 A.2d 517 (City of Belfast v. Goodwill Farm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Belfast v. Goodwill Farm, 103 A.2d 517, 150 Me. 17, 1954 Me. LEXIS 11 (Me. 1954).

Opinion

Williamson, J.

On report in equity. ' The City of Belfast seeks a decree relieving the City of a trust under the will of F. Louis Bartlett and instructing the City to whom and in. what manner the property held by it should be distributed. The named defendants are Goodwill Farm, Belfast Home for Aged Women, Girls Home, the heirs of F. Louis Bartlett, and the executor under the will of F. Louis Bartlett. The case is before us on bill, answers of the several defendants, and agreed facts. Subsequent to the bringing of the bill, the Attorney General sought and received permission to intervene as a party defendant and thereafter disclaimed any further interest in the case. See R. S., Chap. 17, Sec. 4.

The controversy arises over the disposition of the residue of the estate under the fourth clause of the will, reading:

“I give, bequeath and devise to the City of Belfast, Maine, forever, all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real, personal and mixed, wherever situated and. however and whenever acquired, conditioned, however, that the City' of Belfast, Maine shall maintain a home for age! men on my homestead farm, said home to be named “Bag *19 ley Home for Aged Men”. Said City of Belfast to have the right to make such charges as an entrance fee to each individual or applicant in the same manner and under like circumstances as is done by the Belfast Home for Aged Women located in said Belfast, Maine, in other words, it is not my purpose to request the City of Belfast to maintain a poor farm. It is also my wish that all of my books and furniture found in said buildings at the time of my decease, in so far as is practicable, shall be used to furnish said home and be kept for the use and occupancy of the residents of said home for aged men. In the event, however, the City of Belfast, Maine, refuse to accept this legacy and devise, I give, bequeath and devise the same to the Girls Home and Belfast Home for Aged Women, both located in Belfast, Maine, and the Good Will Farm located in Fairfield, Maine, to share and share alike.”

The testator, F. Louis Bartlett, late of Belfast, died November 12, 1950. Under his will dated August 4, 1949, and allowed Decembér 12, 1950, he gave $100 each to two individuals,. $400 to the City of Belfast for perpetual care of his cemetery lot, and the residue in the fourth clause above. In the fifth clause he directed his executor to deliver certain articles and personal property listed in a black book to the persons named therein.

On July 16, 1951, the City Council of Belfast voted to accept the trust. The City thereafter received from the executor property valued at $28,721.65 in the first and final account of the executor allowed in the Probate Court in March 1952. The homestead farm devised under the will was appraised at $5850. The City sold at auction items of personal property not deemed essential to the operation of the homestead farm as a home for aged men. The City announced in the local press that it was ready to receive applications for admission to the “Bagley Home for Aged *20 Men.” No applications, however, were received from such announcement.

On August 13, 1952, the City Council, to use the words of the bill “having become convinced that there were no candidates for admission to such home as contemplated by the will, and that the sum of approximately $25,000 left by the above will to the trustees would be insufficient to equip the above homestead farm as a home for aged men and to support and maintain in the future aged men likely to desire admission, the said city council voted to instruct its City Colicitor to commence this bill in equity to determine to whom the assets of said trust should be delivered, in. order to terminate completely and for all time any connection of the said City of Belfast with said trust.”

The City, the heirs, and the several institutions all agree that the- City of Belfast should be relieved from any further obligation as Trustee and that the continuance of the trust for the benefit of a home for aged men will serve no useful purpose. In brief, they agree the gift for the Bagley Home for Aged Men has failed. The Attorney General, who, as we have seen, has disclaimed any interest in the case, has entered no objection to this view of the matter.

We start the discussion of the case with these facts accepted, namely, that the City should be relieved as Trustee and that the gift for the Bagley Home for Aged Men has failed.

The questions for decision are:

(1) Does the residue go

(a) cy pres under a plan to be framed by the court, or

(b) to the heirs, or

(c) to the named institutions ?

*21 (2) If the residue goes to the named institutions, does the Children’s Aid Society of Maine take under the name of Girls Home, or does this share go to the heirs?

It is strongly urged that the City refused to accept the gift, and hence under the will the institutions took the residue. We are not called upon to meet this issue. The fact is the City did not refuse — it accepted the gift. Whether the acceptance was completed by the Council vote of 1951 need not be ■ determined. It is plain that by the 195Í vote and the receipt of the trust property, taken together, the trust with its responsibilities was accepted by the City. Thereafter it was too late for the City to refuse the gift. “The vote of the town was a valid acceptance of the trust. It could not thereafter disclaim. American Academy of Arts & Sciences v. Harvard College, 12 Gray 582, 595; Drury v. Natick, 10 Allen 169, 183; Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Trusts, Sec. 102 (2).” City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Carpenter, 319 Mass. 78, 64 N. E. (2nd) 636, 637. 14 C. J. S. 462, Charities, Sec. 28. On acceptance of devise or bequest by town see R. S., Chap. 80, Sec. 103.

The claim of the institutions cannot rest upon a refusal of the City to accept the gift. It must therefore be based upon the failure of the gift for the purposes stated in the will. The difficulty it may be noted lies not with the Trustee, but with the size of the fund and the purposes of the gift. Equity does not hesitate to appoint a new trustee to carry out a trust, but such an appointment would not solve the present problem. Manufacturers National Bank v. Woodward, 138 Me. 70, 21 A. (2nd) 705.

The trust property cannot be applied under the principle of cy pres for relief of the aged men of Belfast for three reasons.

First: The testator expressed no general charitable intent to aid aged men. There is thus lacking an essential *22 element in the application of cy pres. The testator made the gift for maintenance of a home on his homestead farm.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A.2d 517, 150 Me. 17, 1954 Me. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-belfast-v-goodwill-farm-me-1954.