First Camden National Bank, C., Co. v. Wilentz

19 A.2d 648, 129 N.J. Eq. 333, 1941 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59, 28 Backes 333
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 26, 1941
DocketDocket 139/71
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 648 (First Camden National Bank, C., Co. v. Wilentz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Camden National Bank, C., Co. v. Wilentz, 19 A.2d 648, 129 N.J. Eq. 333, 1941 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59, 28 Backes 333 (N.J. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Complainants, named as executors in the will of Joseph Greenstone, deceased, the probate of which is being contested in the Atlantic County Orphans Court, seek to invoke the injunctive powers of this court to prevent the consummation of an alleged plan to secure withdrawal of caveats filed by the widow and a niece of decedent by diverting and paying to them moneys bequeathed to designated charitable organizations. The claims of the caveatrices are alleged in the bill to be unfounded and such as cannot be sustained in the Orphans Court. Complainants, though still not qualified as executors, plead a duty to see that decedent's expressed desires are not thwarted and that funds marked for public charitable use are not diverted by trustees of these charities to the widow, whose participation in the estate was expressly limited by the testator, and to a niece not mentioned by him.

The immediate motion is one to strike the bill of complaint; a motion on behalf of the complainants, for preliminary restraint, is held in abeyance.

The courts of New Jersey seem never to have been called upon to consider and determine whether or not trustees to carry out charitable purposes may use trust funds to settle a controversy such as has here arisen. Nor have our courts been asked to consider and determine whether or not those named in a will as executors and trustees may, prior to the probate of the will and their qualification, file such a bill in equity as has here been filed. Nor have our courts definitely determined that one named in a will as executor and trustee, but not yet qualified, under circumstances such as those here alleged, is such an aggrieved party as to entitle him to seek relief in this court.

The value of the estate of Mr. Greenstone is estimated at $500,000. A trust fund of $100,000 is created by the will to *Page 335 provide an annual income of $1,820 for the widow for life. Most of the balance of the estate is bequeathed to fraternal organizations, in trust for use in their charitable work. One of these organizations was incorporated by an act of Congress and its charitable work is national in its scope. Several of the organizations are corporations of Pennsylvania; some are of New Jersey. The charitable work of all is public in its nature. Decedent directed that even the moneys set aside to provide an income for his widow should be divided among the fraternal organizations, for public charitable use, if the widow refused to relinquish her right to take against the will or contested it, if she did not survive the testator, if her death occurred prior to the setting up of the trust, or, upon her death, after accepting benefits under the trust.

Complainants allege they have been informed that four of the designated charitable organizations have entered into or are about to enter into agreements with the caveatrices to the end that their caveats may be withdrawn; that said agreements contemplate payment to the caveatrices, by those designated as trustees, of a portion of the moneys bequeathed for public charitable use; and, that such payment and diversion of funds would be illegal. This court is asked to intervene by temporary injunction and, in the event the will is admitted to probate, to permanently enjoin the parties from making or concluding any such contracts. Complainants also seek to compel a discovery relative to any such agreements, made or proposed, and as to the specific nature and probable beneficiaries of the charitable work performed by the corporate charitable beneficiaries.

The motion to strike is made by Anna E. Greenstone, the widow of decedent. In support of her motion, she urges that complainants are not aggrieved, have no standing to enforce a charitable trust, and have no right in this court to prosecute this cause because they have failed to allege probate of the will.

Obviously, complainants could not here allege probate; the will has not been probated and complainants have not qualified as executors. This is not only admitted but the fact is alleged as a fundamental reason for this appeal for relief. Complainants, in fact, claim that in appointing them as *Page 336 executors decedent put upon them the responsibility of seeing that his charitable purposes were carried out and that his widow received only what he expressly stated he wished her to have from his estate. They argue that their position is justified because of the necessity of maintaining the estate in statu quo and of preserving the res. The preservation of the status quo and the res has, however, been provided for by the Atlantic County Orphans Court. On argument, counsel advised this court that one of the complainants, The First Camden National Bank and Trust Company, had been appointed and was acting as administratorpendente lite.

Suppose we assume that, already, agreements have been prepared and are about to be executed between the caveatrices and one or more of these charitable organizations, and that such agreements provide for ultimate payment to the caveatrices of some portion of the fund bequeathed for public charitable use as a consideration for withdrawal of the caveats, would that be illegal? Am I to assume that the designated trustees would execute and deliver such agreements without seeking the advice of this or other proper court? In MacKenzie v. Trustees ofPresbytery of Jersey City, 67 N.J. Eq. 652; 61 Atl. Rep. 1027, Court of Errors and Appeals, the prayer of the bill was to restrain a charitable trustee from diverting funds of the charity to uses contrary to those expressed in a deed of trust. The cause was instituted by executors and trustees and the devisees and heirs-at-law of the settlor. The defendant was a charitable trustee. The bill was dismissed on the ground that complainants had no standing to bring the action; that only the attorney-general, the charitable trustees, or the beneficiary had that right. The court said:

"It must not, however, be inferred, from the fact that the right of the present complainants to maintain their suit has been denied, that the use of the estate or fund proposed by the Presbytery of Jersey City, and revealed by the pleadings, meets with our approval. Evidently such use is not in exact accord with the original intent of the founder, and it can be permitted, if at all, only after the whole case shall have been fully disclosed in the Court of Chancery, either upon an information filed by the attorney-general (probably ex relatione), *Page 337 as representing the undefined beneficiaries of the charity, against the Presbytery of Jersey City, in and through its trustee body, or upon a bill exhibited by the presbytery, by and through its body charged with the duties of trusteeship, in which the attorney-general, as representing the beneficiaries, should be made a party defendant. In the proceedings upon such information or bill, if it appears that the trust cannot be literally executed, there should be presented to the Chancellor, for approval, either directly or by an inquiry in the master's office, a scheme for the due administration of the charity within the limits of the judicial doctrine of cy pres, as hereinbefore accepted. Until such course shall have been pursued, it will be the duty of the proper presbyterial body to preserve the fund intact, and the attorney-general should take care that such duty is not violated."

In the early New Jersey case of Covenhoven v. Executors ofCovenhoven, 1 N.J. Law 243, the Supreme Court said:

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 648, 129 N.J. Eq. 333, 1941 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 59, 28 Backes 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-camden-national-bank-c-co-v-wilentz-njch-1941.