Hewitt v. Wheeler School & Library

72 A. 935, 82 Conn. 188, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 25, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 72 A. 935 (Hewitt v. Wheeler School & Library) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hewitt v. Wheeler School & Library, 72 A. 935, 82 Conn. 188, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 29 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Baldwin, C. J.

In 1899 the Wheeler School and Library was incorporated by resolution of the General Assembly, and located in North Stonington.

Among its corporate powers were “to establish and maintain in said town of North Stonington a school for the education of young persons residing in said town of North Stonington- in studies or courses more advanced than are usually taught in the district schools, including preparing scholars for college or university courses, and also to found and maintain in said town of North Stonington a circulating and consulting library for the use of all inhabitants of said town under such rules and regulations as to dues and otherwise as the board of directors may establish; ... to acquire by purchase, gift, bequest, or devise, and to hold, sell, and convey any real estate and personal estate not exceeding in value altogether one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and also to receive by gift, bequest, or devise any property, real or personal, under such lawful conditions and restrictions as to its use as may be imposed by the donor.” 13 Special Laws, p. 198, §§ 2, 4.

In 1901 Henry D. Wheeler of North Stonington executed a will, bequeathing and devising to the corporation a large amount of property, and then providing that “in case the said Wheeler School and Library for any reason should not be qualified and capable at the time of my death of taking and holding the property herein devised and bequeathed to it or not qualified and capable of taking and holding all of it, *191 then and in either such case I give, devise and bequeath to my said executors upon trust any and all of such property which said Wheeler School and Library may not at the time of my death be qualified and capable of taking and holding to hold and manage the same and to receive the income thereof until by act of the Legislature or General Assembly of Connecticut or other proceedings said Wheeler School and Library shall be qualified and made capable of taking and holding all the property herein given to it, and in such case I direct my executors to apply for such Legislative Act or take such proceedings as soon as practicable after my death and that said Wheeler School and Library be qualified and made capable of taking and holding all of said property herein devised and given to it during the lifetime of my said executors or of the survivor of them, that is if for any reason it should not be so qualified and capable at the time of my death and that immediately upon said Wheeler School and Library being thus qualified and capable of taking and holding all of said property, that my said executors shall thereupon immediately transfer and deliver to it all of said property given to my executors in trust by this paragraph of my Will to become thereupon the absolute property of said Wheeler School and Library and meanwhile in such case that is between the time of my death and the time when said Wheeler School and Library shall become qualified and capable of taking and holding all of said property herein devised and given to it which must be during the lifetime of my said executors oivof the survivor of them, the income from any and all property held in Trust by said Executors under this paragraph of my Will shall be paid over as received,” to certain charitable purposes.

The will also contained a devise and bequest to the ecclesiastical society connected with the Congregational church in North Stonington, of which the testator was a member, of certain land there, including a lot where the bodies of his parents and others of his family had been in *192 terred, “to be used only as a cemetery,” and of $6,000 “to hold, invest and manage the same and to apply two-thirds of the net income thereof to keeping in order and beautifying said plot or lot in said Cemetery where my relatives aforesaid are buried and also to establishing and keeping in order walks and drives in and walls and fences around said Cemetery and to apply the other one-third of the net income to repairing and keeping in order the edifice of the said Congregational Church.” By a codicil a trust fund of $20,000 was created, the income during the lives of four persons named, and the survivor of them, to be applied for the use of this church, with remainder to the ecclesiastical society above described, for the use of the church.

In 1903, by an amendment of the charter of the Wheeler School and Library, the words “not exceeding in value altogether one hundred and fifty thousand dollars,” used in connection with the description of its corporate powers, were struck out and the words “necessary or convenient for the purposes of the corporation” substituted. 14 Special Laws, p. 23.

In 1906 Mr. Wheeler died, and his will was duly admitted to probate. The Wheeler School and Library then owned no property. That bequeathed and devised to it by him amounted at his death to about $273,000 in value. Part of this consisted of a school and library building worth $50,000 which had been erected by the testator and in which he had maintained a school for some years, tuition being free and a small charge being made for incidental expenses.

An answer and claim was filed by the heir at law, alleging that North Stonington is a small farming town covering about six square miles, with a steadily declining population, now numbering but 1,240; that the Wheeler School and Library has conducted a school therein for nine years, with an average attendance of less than thirty pupils, some of them not residents of the town; that many subjects have been taught which were also taught in district public *193 schools; that the school and library building was large and architecturally beautiful; that there had been a small library maintained in it since 1900, but it had been scarcely ever used by residents of the town; that a fair annual salary for two teachers and a librarian would not exceed $1,200 for each; that it would not be necessary or convenient for the Wheeler School and Library to own funds exceeding $100,000 in amount, in addition to the building; and that such a fund would produce $4,500 annually.

It was also averred that the ecclesiastical society connected with the Congregational church was incapable of receiving the bequest of $6,000, for want of any charter authorizing it to act as a trustee.

These allegations were met by a demurrer, which was sustained.

The Superior Court was right in adjudging that the Wheeler School and Library was entitled to take the entire property bequeathed and devised to it, and that the provisions in favor of the ecclesiastical society were also valid.

When the will was made in 1901, the testator was obviously of opinion that there was room for question whether the charter of the Wheeler School and Library did not limit the amount of property which it might hold to $150,000. The amendment to the charter in 1903 was evidently made for the purpose of removing any such limitation.

The school is for the education of young persons in studies or courses more advanced than those usually taught in the district school, including any which may be suitable to prepare scholars for college or for courses in a university. Instruction in the higher 'branches of learning is thus fully within the scope of the corporate purposes of the Wheeler School and Library.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A. 935, 82 Conn. 188, 1909 Conn. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hewitt-v-wheeler-school-library-conn-1909.