Frierson v. General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States

54 Tenn. 683
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Tenn. 683 (Frierson v. General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frierson v. General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States, 54 Tenn. 683 (Tenn. 1872).

Opinion

Fbeemait, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This bill is filed by the executors of William E. Kennedy for a construction of certain clauses of his will, and for the direction of the Court of Chancery as to the performance of their duties in the execution of the trusts of the will.

It appears from the record that the testator died on the 17th of December, 1863, in the county of Maury, at an advanced age, having before this time emancipated the larger portion of his slaves, sending them to Liberia, through the agency of the American Colonization Society. He left no children. He disposed of a considerable share of his estate to his col[688]*688lateral relatives, by various clauses of his will. First, directing, by item second, “that all his estate, both real and personal, not otherwise disposed of, wherever situated, be sold by his executors, and converted into money,” he proceeds, in the ninth and tenth clauses, as follows:

“All the residuum of my estate, of whatever kind, whether real, personal, or mixed, left after carrying out the foregoing provisions of this will (and if any legacy I have given, or fund appropriated in this will, can not for any cause whatever take effect, or be appropriated as herein directed, the same shall constitute a part of said residuum, and be subject to the dispositions of this clause), I give, to my executors to be appropriated by them as follows: one thousand dollars to the proper authorities of the Union Theological Seminary at Prince Edward Court House, Virginia; one thousand dollars to the Rev. W. McLane and the Rev. R. R. Gurley, Secretaries of the American Colonization Society in Washington City, D. C., and their successors, to be by them held and used in promoting the objects, purposes, and enterprises of said society in colonizing negroes in Liberia, Africa; five hundred dollars to the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America, or of the General Assembly of the .Presbyterian Church, South, whatever may be its precise title, for the benefit of such Bible Society as has been,- or may be, established by said General Assembly; and five hundred dollars to said General Assembly for the benefit of such tract society as has been, or may be, [689]*689established by said Assembly; and if no suoh society should be established by said Church, or be in existence under its control, then said sums severally to be used by said General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America for the promotion and advancement of the bible and tract cause respectively in such manner as to said Assembly may seem best for the advancement of said objects. I then desire two-thirds of the remainder of the residuum to go to said General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America for the benefit of Domestic Missions, and to be used by said Assembly through its proper board or committee already, .or to be, appointed, or such agency as it may deem best for the promotion and advancement of the cause of Domestic Missions. One-half of the remaining third of said balance to go to said General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America to be by said Assembly appropriated through its boards, committees, or other agency under its control, to the uses, purposes, and benefits of Foreign Missions; the remaining half of said third to go, in like manner, to the said General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America for the benefit of the Board of Education and Publication in equal proportions; and if said Church should have no such boards or committees for these objects, then through such agencies as such Church may establish and control to carry out and promote such objects. When I use the term General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the [690]*690Confederate States of America, or General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, South, I mean to be understood as referring to the 'Old School Presbyterian Church in the Southand should any part thereof reunite with the Northern Church, I mean the part which shall remain as a separate body in the South.
“I desire said General Assembly, through its proper boards, committees, or agencies in its dispositions of the funds herein set apart to Domestic Missions, to select in one of the four tribes of Indians — viz., the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, or Creek — four male and four female youths, and to appropriate of said funds the sum of one thousand dollars for the education of said Indian youths.
“Item 10. In the event that any of the legacies or sums directed to be given to any of the benevolent objects specified in the 9th item of this will should fail on account of a want of proper description, or for any other reason, then I give the same to my executors with the hope and belief that, as they know the objects and purposes I have in view in making these bequests, they will carry them out in such manner as will approximate as nearly as possible to my wishes herein expressed. I here declare it to be my wish and desire that I should not be considered as dying intestate as to any part of my estate. What I have already done for, and given to, my relatives, together with the bequests in this will, is as much of my estate as I wish them to have; and should it so happen that any portion of what I have given to charitable and benevolent objects [691]*691and societies in this will should fail, or not vest as I have herein desired and directed, 1 do not intend the same, or any part thereof, to go to my kindred, or any of them, but to my executors to be paid over to such charities as may be declared valid and legal in the proportion herein set forth; and if all such charitable bequests should be declared illegal and void so as not to vest, then the whole to my executors in their own right, trusting, nevertheless, and believing that under a proper sense of their obligation to their own consciences and accountability to God, they will as nearly as they possibly can in conformity with what I have herein indicated, pay over and contribute the same to charitable objects and purposes. In other' words, I trust that, should these charities fail as herein set forth, they will do for me when I am dead what I have attempted to do in this my will.”

He then concludes by appointing his friends, the present complainants, and George Lipscomb, the executors of his will — the latter of whom renounced, the other two qualifying and taking upon themselves the duties of its execution.

The defendants, heirs, and distributees, a portion of them answer and claim that these clauses of the will, 9 and 10, are of no validity, because at the date of the will no such corporation was in existence as therein named capable in law or equity of taking the bequests, and because such bequests are in themselves contrary to the policy of the State,- and not to be encouraged.

[692]*692The others answer and insist that the bequests are illegal and void because of want of capacity in the donees to take, these being, it is claimed, merely voluntary associations not incorporated, and because the charities are not definite in their objects or lawful in their creation, and no trustees are appointed to execute the trusts, and therefore “that the testator died intestate as to this part of his estate, and the same should be distributed by executors under the statute of distributions.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 Tenn. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frierson-v-general-assembly-of-the-presbyterian-church-in-the-united-tenn-1872.