District Nursing Ass'n v. Koerner

91 Misc. 265, 15 Mills Surr. 161, 154 N.Y.S. 776
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 Misc. 265 (District Nursing Ass'n v. Koerner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District Nursing Ass'n v. Koerner, 91 Misc. 265, 15 Mills Surr. 161, 154 N.Y.S. 776 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

For many years prior to her death in 1892 Elizabeth C. Marshall of this city took an active interest in assisting various charities in the city of Buffalo, particularly the free nursing charity enterprise carried on by this plaintiff. Largely through her efforts the said enterprise was incorporated in 1891. In 1888 Miss Marshall made a will in which she substantially left all her property to her brother, Charles D. Marshall, “ after carrying out any requests which I may make to him in my lifetime as to the disposition of my estate for charitable objects.” After the death of Miss Marshall, and in March, 1882, Charles D. Marshall wrote a letter to one of the directors of the plaintiff in which he mentions the fact that his sister (Elizabeth C. Marshall) had “ expressed a desire to aid the association in some way after her power to give it her personal care and assistance should have ceased, leaving the method of carrying out her wish to me.” In this letter Mr. Marshall further says that he does . not think that this can be done better than supplying the need referred to by said direction of the plaintiff, that- is to say, the need of a third nurse; and Mr. Marshall goes on to say that he will therefore pledge himself in his sister’s name to pay fifty dollars a month, the salary of the third nurse, so long as the association shall support the other two. He further [267]*267goes on to say in this letter that the plaintiff should understand clearly “ that this is Lizzie’s bequest and will be paid out of funds left by her for that purpose.” Mr. Marshall went on and paid fifty dollars a month to the plaintiff from this time until his death in 1908, a period of sixteen years. Shortly before his death the payments ceased. Mr. Marshall died intestate and left all his property to his adopted daughter, this defendant. The plaintiff claims that the property of this defendant should be impressed with a trust in favor of the plaintiff in some manner so that the plaintiff shall receive, so long as it shall exist, as I take it, the .sum of fifty dollars a= month from the estate left by Elizabeth' C. Marshall.

Assuming that the wording of the will of Elizabeth C. Marshall and her connection during her lifetime with the plaintiff and its work, taken with the said letter written to Mrs. Bell by Charles D. Marshall, and the payment by the latter, from 1892 to 1908, of fifty dollars a month to the plaintiff for nurse hire, show a disposition on the part of both Elizabeth C. Marshall and Charles D. Marshall to assist this worthy charity, is there sufficient shown thereby and in addition thereto to warrant my finding a trust ex maleficio in favor of the plaintiff, substantially in perpetuo f If the answer to that be no, then it seems to me that I cannot find that a lump sum should be turned over to the plaintiff sufficient to give it an annual income of $600, for in effect that would amount to the same thing practically as the perpetual trust. So what have I before me in addition to the facts above assumed: (1) The leaving by will of property, whose value is not definitely shown, to Charles D. Marshall by Elizabeth C. Marshall. (2) That the defendant as sole heir inherited the property of' Charles D. Marshall. There is no specific fund to which the claimed trust attaches. [268]*268There is no definite proof that this defendant became possessed of any of the property left by Elizabeth C. Marshall. The duration time of the .claimed trust is entirely indefinite and therefore such trust is invalid. Even if there were a trust created in Charles D. Marshall, there is nothing to indicate who or how many others should become trustees in turn at the death of Charles D. Marshall. Then too, to render this a valid trust it must have been absolutely confined to two lives in being. As Judge Cullen says in Matter of Mount, 185 N. Y. 169, quoting from Schettler v. Smith, 41 id. 328: “It is not sufficient that the estate attempted to be created may, by the happening of subsequent events, be terminated within the prescribed period, if such events might so happen that such estates might extend beyond such period. In other words, to render such future estates valid, they must be so limited that in every possible contingency they will absolutely terminate at such period, or such estates will be held void.” The rule is that the question of lawful or unlawful suspension of absolute ownership is not to be determined from what actually happens but upon what may happen under the terms of the will at the date of the death of the testator.

I can reach no conclusion other than that Charles D. Marshall was financially generous to the plaintiff for his sister’s sake, and perhaps partially through his own inclinations, for sixteen years; that whatever the desires of Elizabeth C. Marshall may have been she failed to create any valid trust in favor of this plaintiff that would have bound even. Charles D. Marshall, much less this defendant.

The complaint should be dismissed on the merits, but without costs.

Judgment accordingly.

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Related

District Nursing Ass'n v. Koerner
159 N.Y.S. 1109 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
91 Misc. 265, 15 Mills Surr. 161, 154 N.Y.S. 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-nursing-assn-v-koerner-nysupct-1915.