Clement v. Hyde

50 Vt. 716
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 50 Vt. 716 (Clement v. Hyde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clement v. Hyde, 50 Vt. 716 (Vt. 1878).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Ross, J.

This case stands upon bill and answer. The orator is the executor of the will of David Poor, and in the performance of his duties as such, July 23, 1859, paid to the defendant, then and now treasurer for the County of Orange, one thousand dollars in satisfaction of a bequest of the testator. He has not closed the administration of the estate of David Poor in the Probate Court, and now asserts that the bequest of this one thousand dollars is incapable of execution for indefiniteness, and asks the Court of Chancery to decree tlie restoration of this sum, with its accumulations, to him, that the same may be distributed as a part of the estate of David Poor; or, if the bequest is found to be [719]*719capable of execution, that the Court of Chancery will devise a scheme, and compel the proper execution of the trust, and distribution of the income of the fund. The defendant admits the bequest, the receipt of the money, and that he has not been able thus far to distribute the income arising therefrom; but denies that the trust on which he received and holds the money is incapable of execution, and also asks the court to devise a scheme by which he may annually distribute the income arising from the fund. The Court of Chancery entered a decree against the claim of the orator, and referred the case to masters, among other things, to devise and report-a scheme for the annual distribution of the income of the fund in the hands of the defendant. From this decree the orator appealed to this court. The question presented is, whether the bequest is of such a character that it is incapable of execution. The language of the bequest is, “ I give the use, interest, and income, after my decease, the sum of one thousand dollars in cash, to the treasurer of the County of Orange and his successors in office; the income of said one thousand dollars to be expended in the education of the scholars of poor people in the County of Orange.” Although somewhat inartificially expressed, it is clear, and not denied by the orator, that the testator intended a gift of one thousand dollars to the county treasurer and his successors in office, in trust, to apply the income thereof to the education of the scholars of the poor people of the County of Orange. A definite sum is taken from his estate and appropriated by the testator. A perpetual trustee of that sum is declared, who is directed to appropriate its income to a definite object — the education of the scholars of the poor people of the county. The designated beneficiaries are an unfailing class, always found in every community, and ever in need of aid to obtain an education. This is a bequest to a public and charitable use; to a public use, as the whole community is interested in the education of the scholars of the poor ; and to a charitable use, under the Statute of Elizabeth and the decisions of the courts prior and subsequent to the passage of that statute. The doctrine applicable to this class of trusts was early and fully discussed and considered in this State in the case Exrs. of Burr v. Smith, 7 Vt. [720]*720241. After having been three times argued, and on a careful review of the authorities, Williams, O. J., p. 307, says: “ On examining the authorities upon this subject, some of the cases will be found directly applicable to the case under consideration, and embracing almost every point raised in argument. These general principles have been established, which seem to rise necessarily from the nature of the subject, that the court are to be liberal in the construction of charitable bequests, to carry into effect the intention of the testator; that where they can discover the charitable intent, they will carry it into execution, and support the charitable purpose ; that they will not suffer an equitable interest to fail for want of a trustee to support it; and that it has never been considered as an objection to a charitable use, because if was general and in some measure indefinite, unless there was an uncertainty as to the amount intended to be given, or the general purpose was of so uncertain and indefinite a character that it could not be executed.” The doctrine of this case has been adhered to by this court in several subsequent cases. Button v. American Tract Society, 23 Vt. 336; McAllister v. McAllister's Heirs, 46 Vt. 272. The general purpose of the bequest under consideration is sufficiently clear and definite — the education of the scholars of the poor people of the county. The first bequest considered by the court in the case last cited, was identical in principle with the one under consideration. That was a bequest “ for the education of the-Ereedmen of this nation " — a class more numerous than the scholars of the poor people of the County of Orange, and quite as indefinite and difficult to select from. The pittance given could not be applied to the education of all the Ereedmen of this nation. Not all of that class of persons were proper subjects of education.

If it is more difficult to determine who are the poor people of the County of Orange than to determine- who were the Ereedmen of this nation, surely it is quite as feasible to select from and apply a limited sum to the education of the scholars of such poor people as to select and apply the same sum to the education of the four millions of Ereedmen of this nation. * The beneficiaries of most gifts to a charitable use are of necessity more or less indefi[721]*721nite ; especially is this the case where the benefits of the bequest are to be extended over a large period of time, and to be conferred upon a class of individuals, who are to be the poor of a parish, or the students of a school, during a number of years, no human being can foretell. Yet bequests for such purposes have often been upheld and administered. It is true, in McAllister v. McAllister, the testator clothed the executor with a discretion as to the appropriation of the bequest. In the case at bar the testator orders the trustee to apply the income to the declared purpose. Its application implies the exercise of discretion. The public schools being open to the scholars of the poor as well as of the rich, and being supported by taxation, it is manifest that the testator did not intend to have his bounty so applied as to relieve the tax-payers, in any measure of the burden of the support of these schools. Neither did he intend to have it applied to all of the children of the poor people of the county indiscriminately; for he has designated a definite class of such children — the scholars, not necessarily those attending schools, but those children of this class who have an aptitude for learning, and who could not avail themselves, for the want of a suitable education, of the powers that the Creator has bestowed upon them, without extrinsic aid. If the trustee had applied the income arising from the trust-fund in good faith and in the exercise of ordinary discretion, in the purchase of books, payment of tuition or board of any of the class of scholars indicated, no one, we think, would doubt about his accomplishing the intention of the testator. If the trustee hesitates to take the exercise of this discretion upon him, it is clearly the province of the Court of Chancery to aid him by devising a scheme for the appropriation of the income of the fund. Where a trust is created for a charitable use, the application will be effected by means of a scheme, to be directed and approved of by the Court of Chancery. Hill Trustees, 461; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 86; Paice v. Archbishop of Canterbury, 14 Ves. 372; 1 Am. Law Reg. n. s. 385, 400.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Vt. 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-hyde-vt-1878.