Dashiell v. Attorney General

5 H. & J. 392
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 15, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 5 H. & J. 392 (Dashiell v. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dashiell v. Attorney General, 5 H. & J. 392 (Md. 1822).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.

delivered the opinion of- the court. • This, ease ha? been ably and elaborately discussed; and on an. attentive examination of the numerous authorities referred: to, and relied upon in argument by the counsel on either’ side, we have come to this conclusion:. That the peculiar law of charities originated in the statute 43 Elizabeth, for. regulating- charitable uses, and that independent of that-statute, a court of chancery cannot,, in the exercise of its. ordinary jurisdiction, sustain and enforce a bequest to charitable uses, which, if not a charity, would- on general", principles be void; and in this we. are supported by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, in tlio.. case of The Bqptist Association against Hart’s Executors, 4 Wheaton, 1, in which all the principal authorities, are reviewed, and the subject very fully investigated:

It is an admitted general principle, that a vague.bequest,. the object of which is indefinite, cannot be established in a. court of equity.

Is this a bequest of that description? We think it clearly i?. The. testator, by his will, appointed the appellant, George Dashiell, and Henry Downs, trustees of his estate, apcl guardians of his only child, with instructions to his executors to pay over to them the annual income of his estate, to be by them appropriated according.to the provisions of the. will, which, after providing among other things, for the payment of Iris debts, and' the support and education of his daughter, directs the residue of the income ot his estate “to be equally divided-, one half to be applied towards feeding, clothing and educating, the poor children belonging to the congregation of Saint Peter’s Protestant Episcopal Church in the city of Baltimore, ” &c. with cer* [399]*399thui provisions for the eventual increase or decrease of the fund, so set apart for that purpose.

Wherever the word poor or poorest, has been used ¿s á term of description in a devise or bequest, it has been held to be insufficient, for uncertainty; as a devise to twenty of the poorest of the testator’s kindred. Powel on Devises, 419. 3 Com. Dig. 412, with many Other authorities, to which it is unnecessary to refer, in this case the bequest is quite as vague and indefinite as if it was to twenty of the testator’s poorest relations, or to his poof relations generally, or to the poor people of a particular county.

Who are “the poor children belonging to the congregation of Saint Peter’s Protestant Episcopal Church in the City of Baltimore?” No court can know, or have the means of ascertaining; and the description of the cestui que trust is so vague, that none can be found who, upon the general principles of equity, can entitle themselves to the benefit of the trust.

It seems to' be supposed, that the power of ascertaining and designating “the poor children belonging to the congregation of Saint Peter’s Uiurch,” is given by the will to the trustees, and that the beneficial interest of the cestui que trust may be sustained by reason of the intervention of trustees capable of taking the legal estate, on the principle that id cerium est quod cerium reddipotest.

If it be admitted that authority is vested by the will in the trustees to ascertain and designate who are the poor children belonging to the' congregation of Saint Peter’s Church, it cannot, abstracted from the' statute, assist the case of the defendants, for being a personal trust, without the aid of the statute, the cestui que trust can only be brought into being by the ascertainment and designation of the trustees; and there being no such ascertainment and designation, though certain selections have been made, no persons exist Iiaving in themselves a vested equitable interest which they are capable of asserting in a court of equity. The bequest therefore is too vague and indefinite to be carried into execution on general principles, there being none who can show themselves entitled to the beneficial interest, but is void, and the subject of the trust being undisposed of, the benefit of it results to the next of kin, as in the case of Morrice vs. The Bishop of Durham, [400]*4009 Ves. 399; where the devise was to the Bishop, in triiát “to dispose ot the ultimate residue to such objects of be-,.1 ,. .... .. . , .. nevolence and liberality as he m his own discretion should .. , , . , . most approve or,” which being held not to be-a charity,the bequest was determined to be void, and the residue decreed to the next of kin, on the ground that it was too indefinite to be executed by the court, which, as the master -of the rolls said, “had not been and could not be denied.” And if it were otherwise, the trustees, by neglecting to execute the trust, might virtually convert the trust into the ownership of the trust fund. If there was here a discretion vested in the trustees appointed by the testator, that case would precisely fit this, there being no legal distinction in this state between a bequest to charitable and other objects. But no such power is given; the trustees are directed to appropriate the fund entrusted to them, to the feeding, clothing and educating, the poor children belonging to the congregation, &c. that is, all the poor children belonging to that congregation, not such as they "might select, and’ without any right or power to discriminate; and there is no difference whether a devise or bequest be immediate to an indefinite object, or to a trustee for the use and benefit of an indefinite object. If it be immediate to an indefinite object, it is void, and if it be a trust for an indefinite object, the property that is the subject of the trust, is not disposed of, and the trust results for the benefit of thos'e to whom the law gives the property in the absence of any other disposition of.it by the testator or donor; and independent of. the statute of Elizabeth, no court in this state can by any mode carry such a devise or bequest into effect in violation of vested individual rights. It would be to make and not expound and enforce wills; an arbitrary exertion of judicial power altogether inconsistent with any principle known to the institutions of the state. And it is believed that in England, before the' Statute of Elizabeth, no charity could have been established on information in the name of the Attorney General; where the instrument creating it was defective, or the object of the donor’s or testator’s bounty was so vaguely and imperfectly described as to be incapable of taking if it was not a charity, and the thing-intended to be given would vest in the heir at law or next of kin; but that whenever' [401]*401‘charities were established on such informations, they were such as were valid in law, and the enforcement of which did not interfere with vested private rights. It is also, in this case, a fatal objection to the validity of the devise, that it is not for the benefit of those poor children alone, who at the time belonged to the congregation of Saint Peter's Church, but of the poor children who should in succession belong to that congregation, and who not being a corporate body were incapable of taking in succession. A devise or bequest immediately to an object incapable or taking, or in trust for such an object, standing on no better footing than if it were to a vague and indefinite object, and “The Trustees of Saint Peter's Church," and “The Trustees of

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Bluebook (online)
5 H. & J. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dashiell-v-attorney-general-md-1822.