Cruikshank v. . Home for the Friendless

21 N.E. 64, 113 N.Y. 337, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 738, 68 Sickels 337, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 951
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 64 (Cruikshank v. . Home for the Friendless) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cruikshank v. . Home for the Friendless, 21 N.E. 64, 113 N.Y. 337, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 738, 68 Sickels 337, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 951 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The testator devoted the bulk of his estate to charity. He carefully explained in his will that he left neither wife nor children; that his brother and sisters and nieces were already in comfortable, if not affluent, circumstances ; and so he felt at liberty, after some moderate gifts to them, to follow “ the impulses of his own heart ” and his sense of duty ” by devoting the rest of his property to the rescue and help of the unfortunate. Two of his nieces, Mrs. Schieffelin and Mrs. Beekman, accepted the disposition which he made, but his sister, Mrs. Chase, in her own right and as administratrix of the deceased brother, seriously disapproves, and is now here upon appeal seeking to wrest the property from the uses of charity, and, to that end, invoking the aid of established rules of law to destroy the trust created by the *350 will, and break through its fences into the fortune which the testator, at least, intended to withhold.

His primary purpose was to found and endow an institution to be denominated the Delaplaine Home for the Friendless. It was to be situated in the city of Hew York. Its object, as it existed in his mind, was indicated only by its name, and his reference to a similar institution already incorporated and doing its charitable work. He says: “ My desire is that the object of the same and the class of persons to be relieved and benefited thereby should be similar to the object and to the recipients of the charity of the institution in the city of Hew York, now known as the Home for the Friendless, my wish being to make it similarly useful.” To accomplish his purpose he directs his executors to apply for and obtain from the legislature, as early as practicable, an act of incorpo- • ration; and in a codicil to the will recommends and directs that it be obtained before the expiration of ten years from his decease, but repeats the injunction that it be obtained as soon as possible. There seems to have been in his mind some lurking doubt of the validity of his trust, and some fear that collaterals might covet his wealth, and so he provides an alternative or substituted devise and bequest of the same residue to a number of existing charitable corporations, which he names, “ in the event,” as he phrases it, “that this bequest and devise of my residuary estate should be adjudged or prove invalid, or its execution be impossible, either by judicial decision or from any other cause.” The courts below have held that the gift to the corporation to be created is invalid, because it suspends the absolute power of alienation beyond the statutory limit, and from that determination the executors have appealed. Those courts also decided that the substituted bequest to the charitable societies named was valid, and from that decision Mrs. Chase appeals. Two questions are, therefore, presented for our consideration.

First. Can the gift to the unincorporated and non-existing institution be sustained ? It is quite apparent that the testator expected and the will contemplated a delay before vesting in *351 the intended beneficiary long enough to enable it to come into being through the consent of the sovereign, and which by possibility might extend to a period of ten* years. Such incorporation was dependent upon the will of the legislature. Its consent could reasonably be anticipated, but was not at all certain. Eleven existing corporations, more or less useful and influential, were to take the property if a charter should be withheld, and under their possible pressure and argument the legislature might think that the interest of the- state would be better subserved by the strengthening of existing institutions which had passed beyond the stage of experiment than by the creation of a new one, more especially when a Home for the Friendless already existed. It might he argued that under the will a choice of alternatives was fairly left to the state, which it might make by granting or refusing a charter to the proposed institution. The delay contemplated was not incidental merely to a result certain and possible, as in Robert v. Corning (89 N. Y. 225) where it was the time reasonably needed for a conversion in the ordinary manner, but contingent upon the uncertain action of the state, which might not take place at all, and leave a period of ten years during which the power of alienation would be suspended. It is not material to consider where the fee would lodge in'the interim, whether in the executors, by force of an express or implied trust, or in the heirs by descent, subject to he divested by the happening of the contingency. In either case there was contemplated a period measured by years and not by lives in being during which there would be no persons in existence by whom an absolute estate in possession could he conveyed. The authorities fully and clearly determine the invalidity of such a limitation. In Bascom v. Albertson (34 N. Y. 584) the gift was to such persons in Vermont as might be appointed by the Supreme Court of that state as trustees of an institution to be located at Middlebury for the education of females. Beyond a criticism upon the uncertainty of the object, the court held that the bequest was void because it was contingent and executory and involved an illegal suspension of the ownership of *352 the fund. To a similar effect are Leonard v. Burr (18 N. Y. 107) in which the gift was to the village of Gloversville, when it should be incorporated, for a public library; Dodge v. Pond (23 id. 69), where the bequest was for a college to be founded in Liberia; Beekman v. Bonsor (23 id. 306), in which an effort was made to found a dispensary; and Rose v. Rose (4 Abb. Court of Appeals Dec. 108). One vice in all these cases was that by force of the limitations created the ownership was left “ swinging in abeyance,” doubtful of its direction and ultimate resting-place, and this for a period longer or shorter, and not measured by lives in being. Where that limit of suspension was provided the trust escaped condemnation; as in Shipman v. Rollins (98 N. Y. 311), where the gift was to vest or fail at the end of the one life of the widow; and in Burrill v. Boardman (43 id. 254) where a hospital was to be incorporated, but within the two lives of a nephew named and the youngest of the executors.

It does not save the gift that in the present case a Home for the Friendless could have been incorporated under the general law, for such a corporation the testator .did not intend or direct, but specifically required that his donee should be a corporation formed under a special charter. The restrictions in the general law made it inappropriate to the testator’s design, but, whether so or not, we cannot substitute for his explicit direction something other and different, and outside of his expressed purpose. Nor does it help the situation to say that there was an equitable conversion resulting from the power of sale which, though discretionary, was claimed to be essential to the scope and plan of the will; and that the property treated as personal was not within the statute regulating trusts, as was held in Gilman v. McArdle (99 N. Y. 451).

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 64, 113 N.Y. 337, 22 N.Y. St. Rep. 738, 68 Sickels 337, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruikshank-v-home-for-the-friendless-ny-1889.