Ex parte Cassel

3 Watts 408
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Watts 408 (Ex parte Cassel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Cassel, 3 Watts 408 (Pa. 1834).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Gibson, C. J.

This case is an additional instance of the futility of private charities. Even when established by law, and provided with the conservative apparatus of visitation, inspection and whatever else ingenuity could contrive, these misdirected efforts of benevolence have conduced but to the emolument of the agents entrusted with their care. So will it ever be where the vision of the visitor is not sharpened by individual interest. But these considerations enter not into the question of responsibility: for the unpromising aspect of the design furnishes no excuse for a neglect of the means. Neither are we to look with the greater indulgence on the embezzlement of those means because we may consider them as no better than thrown away. The trust was one which the founder had an undoubted right to create, and it is our business to do what we can for the execution of it. In every thing but security for the fidelity of the agents, its object was fully provided with the usual means of accom[441]*441plishment. The founder devoted to it a large and productive estate in or adjoining Middletown, consisting of a grist-mill, three farms containing nine hundred acres, mostly prime, four messuages, a number of town lots, and quit rents issuing out of more than a hundred others. He devoted to it, also, the proceeds of a farm of two hundred acres in Middle Creek Valley, ordered to be sold ; his crop growing; and, subject to the maintenance of his widow, his personal estate, amounting by the inventory to about 29,000 dollars. At the most moderate computation this estate appears to have been worth 100,000 dollars; and the object to be accomplished by the produce of it, was the maintenance and education in the German language and Lutheran faith, of a proportionate number of poor orphan children, in a building erected but not finished by the founder. To this end the office of a “principal,” or in other words an executive agent to manage, the estate, was instituted at a salary of 100 pounds,'and ■with a perquisite called á “ free table,” to be furnished from the produce of it; and a tutor was directed to be employed at a salary of 200 dollars, and with the like perquisite. The trustees constituting the admonitory council of the principal, were to receive a dollar respectively for each day’s attendance. These, with the incidental expenses of cultivation and repair, which were, however, to be lightened by the occasional labour of the pupils, were provided for as the main channels of disbursement. Cassel, one of the respondents, went into possession as principal in June 1806, and continued in the office till February 1814, a period of seven years and eight months ; and the auditors have reported a balance in his favour, to speak in round numbers, of 700 dollars. In favour of Spayd, who succeeded him and who had the office fifteen years and eight months when the accounts were taken, they have reported a balance of 9000 dollars. Had the respondents performed their respective duties and accomplished the purpose of the trust, these balances, though sufficiently startling, might have been deemed to have accrued consistently with good management and fair dealing. But when we find that not a single step had been taken for three and twenty years towards a dispensation of the founder’s bounty; that not a single orphan had had the benefit of it; and that the orphan-house built by the founder has been suffered to rot till it is not worth the cost of repairing it; that a considerable part of the estate has been dilapidated, and sold by the sheriff, a part of it to one of the respondents, and other parts of it to some of the trustees; and that the respondents, having taken the profits without having fully accounted for them, yet claim to be let in as creditors on the fund to an amount that would bankrupt it, we are astounded by the magnitude and boldness of the pretension. It has not been suggested that the incumbent meditates, even now, to accomplish the founder’s design; or that any thing is to be hoped from him in time to come, but to let matters go on in the old way till the residue of the estate is sunk or recovered by the heirs of the. founder adversely to the trust. The most-that the respondents pfo[442]*442fess to believe is, that it may support itself with good management, pay the salary of the principal, and supply his table. But if the purpose of the charity were no more than to give the principal a living, it had been better to give him the estate in full property. The respondent, Spayd, adds that it is in better condition in respect to improvements, repairs, produce and debts, than it has been heretofore. As regards the debts, the accuracy of this assertion is best tested by the documents. It appears by Cassel’s petition for an order of sale, countersigned by Spayd and the trustees, that they were reduced to 4000 dollars in 1818; and from the answers to Dr Lochman’s inquiries, it appears they had grown to 6000 dollars' in 1820. They are now said to have mounted up to within a fraction of 10,000 dollars in 1829 when the accounts were taken — a sum nearly sufficient to swallow the residue. With the exception of a few hundred dollars, in outstanding debts, this sum is made up of salaries and maintenance allowed by the auditors as if they had been earned by an execution of the trust, though the actual business of the respondents was little more than to direct the cultivation of the estate and consume the produce of it. The excuse for not having attempted the education and maintenance of orphan children pursuant to the directions of the founder — for the employment of a master to teach an ordinary school is disclaimed as an attempt by the respondents themselves — is that the estate was embarrassed by counsel fees contracted to be paid in the trial of an issue to determine the validity of the will. These amounted to but 4800 dollars ; and it appears by the admission of the respondents that the personal estate was sufficient to pay them. Deducting the enormous allowance of 14,000 dollars for desperate debts, the inventory produced 9000 dollars clear of the charge on it for the support of the widow. The only debt certainly known to have been left by the testator is Oberlander’s judgment, which amounted in 1814 to 4200 dollars, and which, with the counsel. fees, made up a round sum of 9000 dollars. By a proper application of the personal estate, therefore, every thing might have been paid; and it was culpable negligence in the respondents, if such were .the fact, to suffer the executors to misapply or embezzle it. But to aid the personal estate they had the Beaver Dam farm, since sold for 1000 pounds, to which recourse might have been had. Whether the credits allowed in the administration account, settled by Landis in 1816, were for debts contracted by the testator, does not appear; neither does it appear that the matters with which lie charged himself were part of the inventory. The gross irregularity of all judicial proceedings in regard to this estate, and certain references in the charges of Landis in his first account, to certain other accounts stated and settled in the court of common pleas, and filed according to the provisions of the will,” make it probable that the debts, without distinction of class, all went into the same account. At this distance of time, nothing like certainty can be obtained in respect to it, as the principal and trustees kept either very [443]*443imperfect accounts, or none at all; by reason of which every intendment of fact is to be made against them, according to the principle of Hart v. Ten Eyck, 2 Johns. Ch. Rep. 81—108.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Watts 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-cassel-pa-1834.