Estate of Weis
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Opinion
Estate of WALTER PAUL WEIS, Deceased. PETER A. SCHWABE, as Guardian, etc., Petitioner and Respondent,
v.
TWELVEACRES, INCORPORATED, Objector and Appellant.
California Court of Appeals. First Dist., Div. Three.
Joseph Landisman for Objector and Appellant.
Emmet B. Hayes for Petitioner and Respondent.
SALSMAN, J.
Respondent, Peter A. Schwabe, guardian of the estate of Myrtle Evans, filed a petition to determine interests in the estate of Walter Paul Weis. Appellant Twelveacres, Incorporated, responded, and after hearing, the *21 probate court determined that Myrtle Evans is decedent's half-sister and appellant is a charitable corporation within the meaning of Probate Code secton 41, [fn. 1] and hence its interest in the estate of the decedent is limited to one-third.
Walter Paul Weis died December 7, 1961. His last will, executed August 29, 1961, declared that he had no living relatives, and after certain bequests to strangers provided: "Eighth: All the rest and residue of my estate, I give devise and bequeath to Twelve Acres, Inc. of Los Altos, California."
There was undisputed evidence that appellant is a nonprofit corporation, and that it conducts a private, temporary home for children in Los Altos, California. Its articles of incorporation state its purposes to be "To conduct a children's home in accordance with the principles of Christian Science." The bylaws of the corporation provide that its members shall be "those students and friends of Christian Science who (a) state a desire to become members and (b) pay a minimum membership fee of twelve dollars ($12.00) a year." It is the duty of directors to assist "in the upbuilding of a home for children that will be a blessing to all in need of its shelter, and a channel for spiritual healing to all who come in contact with its activities, and to further the cause of Christian Science." Children eligible for admission to the home are "children whose parents or parent or guardian, are unable to provide a home for them, and who desire them to be under the care and training of Christian Scientists. ..."
At trial, appellant offered testimony from a member of the board of directors of the corporation that eligibility for admission to the home was limited to children of the Christian Science faith; that the school makes a charge of $150 per month per child; that this amount is not sufficient to cover *22 the full cost of a child's care; that the remainder of cost comes from membership fees and contributions from persons interested in the home; that care in the home is not offered on a charitable basis and that the home does not receive support from community welfare agencies, nor does the home participate in general charitable activities of the community. A letter attached to the bylaws describes the appellant as "Twelveacres, Incorporated, a nonprofit, tax exempt home for children."
[1a] Appellant's principal contention is that it is not a charitable corporation within the meaning of section 41, because its activities do not benefit an indefinite number of persons (Estate of Dol, 182 Cal. 159 [187 P. 428]), nor is there any benefit to the community as a whole from its activities. On the record before us this contention cannot be sustained.
Appellant's contention has been answered by our Supreme Court in Estate of Henderson, 17 Cal.2d 853 [112 P.2d 605]. There the decedent made a gift by will to the Eastern Star Homes of California, "to be used by the trustees in such manner as may be most beneficial to the Home and its inmates." The home was not operated for profit and its purpose was to care for aged members of the Eastern Star. Moreover, care was extended only to aged members who had been members of the order for at least 10 years. Upon entry, the resident was required to transfer all assets to the home. The court held the corporation to be charitable within the meaning of section 41, and therefore limited to one- third of the decedent's estate. The court said: "A bequest is charitable if: (1) It is made for a charitable purpose; its aims and accomplishments are of religious, educational, political or general social interest to mankind. ... (2) The ultimate recipients constitute either the community as a whole or an unascertainable and indefinite portion thereof. ... The charitable nature of an institution is determined on the same basis." (Estate of Henderson, supra, at p. 857.)
In Henderson, supra, the court considered a gift made to a corporation conducting a home for aged persons; here we consider a gift made to a corporation conducting a home for children. [2] In determining the charitable nature of such corporations there is obviously no distinction between the two activities. Society owes a duty to care for both old and young when they are dependent. [1b] Here appellant's purpose, as its articles and bylaws plainly declare, is to provide a *23 home for children whose parents cannot provide a home for them. Its services are available generally and its financial support comes, in part at least, from the general public. Appellant's purposes and manner of operation thus demonstrate its charitable nature.
Appellant argues that the benefits of charity must extend to "an indefinite number of persons," citing Estate of Dol, supra, 182 Cal. 159, 164. The evidence here it is said does not show compliance with this requirement. It is true there was testimony at trial to the effect that appellant's facilities are available only to Christian Scientists. The unambiguous language of the articles and bylaws does not support this interpretation, however, but even if its services were offered only to Christian Scientists this would not necessarily operate to remove appellant from its status as a charitable corporation. In Henderson, supra, the court said, at page 861: "A charity may be validly restricted to an indefinite class within the community so long as the class is large enough to make the enforcement of the gift beneficial to the community." As we have said, society owes a duty to care for both dependent aged and children, and to the extent that appellant's activities operate to discharge this duty, benefit to the community as a whole is apparent. In Henderson also, benefits of the home were restricted to members of the Eastern Star, and were further limited to a select number of that order, namely those who had been members for at least 10 years. Restrictions imposed upon eligibility of children to the home conducted by appellant appear far less stringent than those considered in the Henderson case.
[3] Finally, the payment of fees or tuition is no deterrent to a finding that the corporation is charitable where, as here, the income is used only to maintain the institution. (Henderson, supra, at p. 850; Sarah Dix Hamlin School v. City & County of San Francisco, 221 Cal.App.2d 336 [34 Cal.Rptr. 376].) [1c] We conclude that the probate court was correct in finding appellant to be a charitable corporation within the meaning of section 41.
[4a] The probate court found that Myrtle Evans is decedent's "half-sister, being the daughter of decedent's father, Louis Weis, by his second marriage to Jennie L. Weis." Appellant challenges this finding on the ground that the evidence is insufficient to support it. Myrtle Evans, because of her incompetency, was unable to offer any testimony or evidence bearing upon her relationship to the decedent. In *24
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224 Cal. App. 2d 19, 36 Cal. Rptr. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-weis-calctapp-1964.