Gilman v. Hamilton

16 Ill. 225
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 16 Ill. 225 (Gilman v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilman v. Hamilton, 16 Ill. 225 (Ill. 1854).

Opinion

Scates, J.

It would seem by the first decree in this case in 1845, and the opinion of the supreme court reversing it, in 12 Ill. R. 260, that no evidence had been produced, but a decree pro forma upon agreement to some extent, had been entered. It is further very apparent from the decree, though not its strict phraseology, that a scheme for the application of this charity upon an assumption of the failure of its objects, and upon the principle of a cy pres application of it, had been digested and agreed on between the trustees of the fund, the contestants in the suit, and the contemplated trustees of it, for the new object.

This scheme does not appear to have 'been adjudged necessary by the chancellor, by reason of a failure of a plan of the founder, nor to have been originated, matured or sanctioned by him, upon this hypothesis. I am not able to resist the impression that the chancellor was only asked to become the passive instrument to record the arrangement and agreement of the parties, by way of a decretal sanction.

This scheme as set forth in the decree, shows a palpable violation of this trust in two particulars. First, a waste or destruction of a part of this fund, by returning to part of the original donors, $1,075, in satisfaction of their donations as creditors upon the fund, and showed the application of the remainder to another and different, though kindred, object, at a different place.

One of the express trusts, I might say, conditions, of the deed appointing the trustees, declaring the trusts, and conveying the lands and other funds, was, “ that the S. E. i of the S. E. j-of section 21, and the N. E. J of the N. E. I of section 28, in T. 10 N., R. 7 W., be the site for the permanent location of the institution hereinafter mentioned, the said parcels of land having been purchased by the party of the first part, and other friends of the institution, for that express purpose.”

And the objects expressed, were, upon this site to found and build up “ an institution of learning, the object of which shall be to promote the general interests of education, and to qualify young men for the office of the gospel ministry, by giving them such instruction in the holy scriptures as may enable them to perform the duties of that high and holy office, acceptably and usefully in the world.”

The fund was mostly in land, which continued for eight or ten years to be of little value and insufficient for the erection of buildings, and the endowment or support of the institution.

This is the only reason I have heard assigned, to show the impracticability of executing the trust, and a failure of the objects of the charity. I do not think this satisfactory evidence. It may not now, but may be sufficient at a future day for that purpose.

But I might admit even a conclusion that it never could become sufficient, and still it may not show a total failure of the charity; others may contribute, other means and funds may bo obtained, and the end accomplished.

Very few donations of this kind are alone sufficient to accomplish fully the designs and objects of the benevolent. Should all donations be tested by a rule of sufficiency in themselves, there would be but few that might not be diverted from the original purpose, to some other as near like it as could be readily found, and especially would this be true, of the foundation or first donation beginnings. We have few educational institutions however well endowed, at this day, whose earliest donations might not have been diverted for the same reasons.

Neither can I admit a long prospective delay and inadequacy, as showing generally a sufficient ground of interference of the chancellor, especially as the trustees may, by a judicious management of the fund, accumulate by its income or enhancement in value.

I should hardly allow myself to doubt that the benevolent donors of these funds, and especially Dr. Blackburn, contemplated that the institution might and would ultimately become large, popular and useful, but he could not have indulged the idea that the funds he conveyed were sufficient to carry his hopes and plans into immediate and full effect. He certainly would have made a contingent provision of the funds, had he not contemplated the persevering efforts of the trustees. The fund could not have been sufficient, at the time he donated it, to accomplish all that we may and must presume to have been intended, as an ultimate result of the effort.

But it by no means follows, that the object of this enterprise is wholly defeated, and the charity become wholly impracticable, because the funds are inadequate for such a scale of operations, as are our better endowed and older colleges and seminaries.

No one, I presume, would be willing to say that the fund of upwards of fourteen thousand acres of land, is not sufficient, to a certain extent, and in a certain degree, useful and profitable in founding and building up an institution of learning, and calculated to promote the general interests of education, and could be made to contribute towards the qualifying of young men for the ministry, by teaching them the holy scriptures with a view to the ministry.

Humble and obscure as might be the scale of operations fixed by this firnd, it might not therefore be the less apostolical, pure or effectual. In view of the character of the donor, as an able, learned and pious divine, we are not at liberty to fix our minds upon a scale of magnificence, as that alone contemplated by him, and abandon the object altogether, because the means justify a scale and extent of operations too humble.

Such an interpretation of his views and intentions might be as little complimentary to his wisdom and piety, as it would be beneficial to posterity, and the cause he labored to promote.

He was not a stranger to the Illinois college. He had been both trustee and agent of it, and assisted it in its struggles and difficulties. He could not have overlooked the advantages of bestowing the fund upon it, for the endowment of a theological professorship in it, had the plan of the institution had no influence in his mind.

But his own residence, and that of several other donors, was in the immediate vicinity of the site selected, and must have had its due weight in influencing their liberality for its object. The plan, locality or site of the institution is evidently a part of this trust. It is not the province Of the trustees or the chancellor, to inquire into or determine whether the plan and object of the charity are the most judicious, but only into the intention and means designated. There can be no doubt that the funds can be applied to educational purposes at the place designated, including instruction in the holy scriptures, with reference to a preparation for the ministry. I have seen no authority upon the doctrine or principle cy pres, or otherwise, authorizing the court or trustees to change the object or place, because the fund could be more efficiently or judiciously administered in another place, or applied to a different object.

The courts have adopted and administered charities upon cy pres principles, only with the view of sustaining and carrying into effect the benevolent intention of the donor. 2 Story Eq. Jurisp., Secs. 1168 to 1177, and notes; Curling’s Administrators v. Curling’s Heirs, 8 Dana R.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Martin v. Haycock
55 A.2d 60 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1947)
Village of Hinsdale v. Chicago City Missionary Society
30 N.E.2d 657 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1940)
Kerner v. Thompson
13 N.E.2d 110 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1938)
Eich v. Czervonko
161 N.E. 864 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1928)
McCarroll v. Grand Lodge of the I. O. O. F.
243 S.W. 870 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1922)
Jones' Unknown Heirs v. Dorchester
224 S.W. 596 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1920)
Northwestern University v. Wesley Memorial Hospital
125 N.E. 13 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1919)
In Re the Probate of the Will of MacDowell
112 N.E. 177 (New York Court of Appeals, 1916)
In re the Probate of the Will of MacDowell
16 Mills Surr. 551 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1916)
Allen v. Trustees of Nasson Institute
77 A. 638 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1910)
Kemmerer v. Kemmerer
84 N.E. 256 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
Miller v. Riddle
130 Ill. App. 392 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1906)
State ex rel. Hamilton v. Guinotte
50 L.R.A. 787 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1900)
Grand Prairie Seminary v. Morgan
49 N.E. 516 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1898)
Morgan v. Grand Prairie Seminary
70 Ill. App. 575 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1897)
Ryan v. Staples
76 F. 721 (Eighth Circuit, 1896)
In re Estate of Hull
3 Coffey 378 (California Superior Court, San Francisco County, 1894)
Rector v. Fitzgerald
59 F. 808 (Eighth Circuit, 1894)
Phelps v. Elliott
35 F. 455 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Ill. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilman-v-hamilton-ill-1854.