Estate of Anna M. Deaner

98 Pa. Super. 360, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 201
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 22, 1929
DocketAppeals 125 and 126
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 98 Pa. Super. 360 (Estate of Anna M. Deaner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Anna M. Deaner, 98 Pa. Super. 360, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 201 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

Testatrix died June 30, 1925, leaving a will dated 4 days before her death. She left $4,000 to the Conestoga National Bank of Lancaster, “the interest on which is to be used for the maintenance and upkeep of our family lot in which my parents are buried at Woodward Hill Cemetery,” and $2,000, “the interest on which is to be used for the maintenance and upkeep of the grave of my grandfather ...... in St. Joseph’s *362 Cemetery.” The balance for distribution for all purposes is but $1,331.37.

The question is whether the trusts are valid. The learned court below held that by the Act of May 26, 1891, 1 P. L. 119, they are charitable bequests and void under section.6 of the Wills Act of 1917, P. L. 403, which prohibits testamentary disposition of property “in trust for religious or charitable uses except the same be done by will attested by two credible, and, at the time, disinterested witnesses, at least thirty days before the decease of the testator......”

These appeals depend on the correct construction of the Act of 1891, supra. It is entitled “An Act legalizing dispositions in perpetuity for the care of burial places.” That title gives notice of intention to legalize something theretofore considered illegal, and applies to such trusts only, as, prior thereto, were prohibited as perpetuities: “The natural meaning, of a perpetuity is ‘an inalienable indestructible interest.’ In this sense charitable trusts are perpetuities. • And this is no arbitrary doctrine, but arises from the nature of such trusts.” Gray, Rule Against Perpetuities, 3 Ed. p. 427. The title to the act is “a very important aid to its right construction........;----is part of it; it limits its scope, and is properly used in interpreting its words.......Brink v. Marsh, 53 Pa. Superior Ct. 293, 298, see too, Glen Alden v. Scranton, 282 Pa. 45, 51.

The text of the act, to be considered in the light of the rule quoted, is as follows: “That no disposition of property hereafter made for the maintenance or care of any cemetery, churchyard or other place for the burial of the dead, or of any portion thereof, or *363 grave therein, or monuments or other erections on or about the same, shall fail by reason of such disposition having been made in perpetuity, but said disposition shall be held to be made for a charitable use. ’ ’ 2

Appellant contends that the act legalized such dispositions of property as in the. absence of the statute, would be unlawful perpetuities; and that by the application of a familiar principle, the general words at the end — '“but said disposition shall be held to be made for a charitable use” — must be subordinated to and be controlled by the specific enacting language preceding those words, and that, so considered, they merely describe immunity from the illegality indicated, as if the act had stated that such dispositions of property shall no longer be considered illegal as perpetuities, but shall be classified with charitable trusts for the single purpose of exempting, them from what theretofore made them illegal. It is to be noted that the Act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 331, Sec. 10, (amended May 23, 1895, P. L. 114) had long before provided that “no disposition of property......made for any religious, charitable, literary or scientific use shall fail for...... being given in perpetuity......”

The requirement of the "Wills Act that a will must be attested by two credible disinterested witnesses thirty days before a charitable trust created by it may become effective, was intended “to make it reasonably certain that the thing done was the free will act of the donor, and was not the result of undue solicitation on the part of interested persons”: Kessler’s Est., 221 Pa. 314, 321; the obvious mischief or defect of the law sought to be remedied by that statutory requirement, is not incident to the disposition of property for the maintenance of the burial lot of a testator or of his family, and, therefore, not a defect that the legisla *364 ture sought to cure by the Act of 1891, a consideration not without force in deciding whether the purpose was to subject such trusts to section 6 of the Wills Act.

It is established by a large body of English and American decision that, in the absence of statute authorizing them, such trusts for the maintenance and care of testators’ burial lots (and generally of family burial lots) are void as perpetuities: Driscoll v. Hewlett, 198 N. Y. 298; Detwiler v. Hartman, 37 N. J. Eq. 352, 354; Corle’s Case, 61 N. J. Eq. 409; Rickard v. Robson, 31 Beav. 244, (54 Eng. Reprint p. 1132); Hoare v. Osborn, L. R. 1 Eq. 585, 588; Bates v. Bates, 134 Mass. 113; Morse v. Natick, 176 Mass. 510, 513; Johnson v. Hollyfield, 79 Alabama 723; Coit v. Comstock, 51 Conn. 352, 386; Mason v. Bloomington Association, 237 Ill. 442, 446; Est. of Margaret T. Gay, 138 Cal. 552, 554; Jones v. Habershaw, 107 U. S. 174, 183; Kelly v. Nichols, 17 R. I. 306, 318; Piper v. Moulton, 72 Me. 155, 159; see also 11 C. J. p. 324, Sec. 34. These decisions are based on the fact that the maintenance of a family burial lot or of testator’s grave is a matter of private personal concern and not of charity.

On the other hand, it is settled that a trust for the general maintenance of a cemetery, or of a cemetery in connection with a church, will be sustained as a charitable use, and some times as a religious use: 11 C. J. p. 324, Sec. 34, and section 10 of the Act of 1855, amended 1895, supra, expressly recognizes such trusts and exempts them from illegality as perpetuities.

When the familiar definition of a charitable use (see Thompson’s Est., 282 Pa. 30, 34) is applied, there is no difficulty in distinguishing charitable trusts from disposition of property for the care of the family lot ; there is no element of charity in the latter case; such expenditure “stands on the.same footing as an expensive funeral” as was said in Mellick v. President and Guardian of the Asylum, 1 Jacob 180, 37 Eng. Re *365 print, 818. In Rickard v. Robson, 31 Beav. 244, in considering a bequest for “keeping up” tbe tombs of “grandparents, parents and uncles,” Romilly, M. R. said: “......Iam satisfied this does not come within the term ‘charity,’ and it is not within any of the words used in the preamble of the 43rd of Eliz. c 4. Lloyd v. Lloyd (2 Sim. (N. S.) 255), and the other case of Thompson v. Shakespeare (John 612; 1 S. G. F. & J. 394), show that a gift merely for the purpose of keeping up a tomb or building which is of no public benefit, and only an individual advantage, is not a charitable use but a perpetuity. The cases run into very fine distinctions, because if the gift is to keep up an institution for the benefit of the public, then it is clearly a charity. But that does not occur in this case, for here the gift is merely to keep up certain individuals’ tombs. I must declare the bequests to the church wardens void.” If such trusts had been charitable tises in Pennsylvania, and therefore not illegal as perpetuities, the Act of 1891 would have been unnecessary.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Pa. Super. 360, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-anna-m-deaner-pasuperct-1929.