House of Mercy of New York v. Davidson

39 S.W. 924, 90 Tex. 529, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 339
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 S.W. 924 (House of Mercy of New York v. Davidson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
House of Mercy of New York v. Davidson, 39 S.W. 924, 90 Tex. 529, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 339 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme Judicial District has,certified to this court the following statement and questions:

“In 1865 Isaac Cromie died at Louisville, Kentucky, and left a will in which he named the House of Mercy of New York as a residuary legatee and devisee. A portion of his residuary estate consisted of lands in the State of Texas. The House of Mercy of New York, appellant herein, is a charitable corporation domiciled in the State of New York and created under an Act of the Legislature of that State, entitled “An Act for the Incorporation of Benevolent, Charitable, Scientific and Missionary Societies,” passed on April 12, 1848. Said Act contains the following provision respecting the corporations authorized to be created thereunder: “And they and their successors by their corporate name shall in law be capable of taking, receiving, purchasing and holding real estate, for the purpose of their incorporation and for no other purpose, to an amount not exceeding the sum of Fifty Thousand Dollars in value, and personal estate for like purposes to an amount not exceeding Seventy-five Thousand Dollars in value.” Appellant was incorporated in the year 1860 by filing a certificate of incorporation under the law above mentioned. At the time of Cromie’s death it owned real estate of the full value of Fifty Thousand Dollars, and personal property of the value $678.75. The executors of the will subsequently delivered to it personal property in amount sufficient to make, with that already owned by it, the sum of $75,000. In the year 1866 the heirs of Isaac Cromie filed a suit in equity in the Chancery Court of Louisville, Kentucky, against the executors of the will, and others, for the recovery of all the property included in the residuary clause of the will. The executors answered and prayed that the House of Mercy of New York, and the other residuary legatee and devisee, the Presbyterian Orphans’ Home of Louisville, be made parties. And also in their answer alleged that the Institution of Mercy of New *532 York, another charitable corporation, was claiming to be the beneficiary intended by the testator, instead of the House of Mercy, and prayed that said Institution of Mercy be made a party to the suit and that said parties be cited to appear and have their respective rights adjudicated. All said parties did appear and become parties to said suit, setting up their several claims under the will. The final result of the suit was a judgment by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, revising the judgment of the lower-court, and adjudging that the House of Mercy of New York, and not the Institution of Mercy, was intended by the testator to be his beneficiary; and further adjudged that the House of Mercy of New York, being in possession of real estate of the value of $50,000 at the time the will went into effect, was incapable, on account of the provision in the law of its creation, to take any real estate devised by the residuary clause of the will, and that the devise to it was for that reason void and the property vested in the heirs of Cromie. The court also directed that personal property sufficient in value to make, with that held by appellant at the time of Cromie’s death, equal to the sum of $75,000 be delivered to-appellant out of the estate of testator. This direction was carried out and the personal property delivered to and received by appellant.. Cromie’s Heirs v. House of Mercy, 3 Bush. (Ky.), 365.

“Appellant never took possession of the land in controversy nor exercised any acts of ownership over it, such as paying taxes, etc., until the.institution of this suit in the year 1894. Appellee claims the land through conveyances from and under the heirs of the testator Cromie, and is in actual possession thereof and was in such possession at the time of the institution of this suit, and he and those under whom he claims have regularly paid all taxes due on the land.

“Appellant claims the land under the will of Cromie which made it a = residuary devisee and legatee after the payment of specific legacies. The land in dispute is part of the estate devised by the residuary clause of the will to it.

“The questions we submit are: Did the devisee to appellant vest title to the land in Texas in appellant, it owning at -the date of Cromie’s death real estate in value equal to the sum of fifty thousand dollars; and,, if not, can the heirs of Cromie, or their grantees, make the disability of appellant to take the land available as a defense in this suit? In other words, does the fact that appellant was prohibited by the law of its creation from taking more land than it owned at the time the will went into-effect, render the devise to it of the land in Texas void, or only voidable?

“And did the judgment of the Kentucky court adjudicate and settle the rights of appellant under the will, so as to bar a recovery of the land in controversy, or rather its acceptance of the benefits thereof?”

To the first question propounded, we answer the title to the land in controversy did not vest in appellant under the will of Cromie, because-the corporation was without capacity to receive and hold it at the time the will took effect; and we also answer that the land descended to and vested in Cromie’s heirs, and they, or those who claim under them,. *533 can defend their title against the appellant by showing that it had not -capacity to take the land under the will.

We understand from the statement accompanying the question, that there was a general law in Hew York authorizing the formation of certain classes of corporations by filing articles in accordance with the provisions of that law, and that the appellant was incorporated under that general law, which contained the provision quoted in the statement, to the effect that corporations therein named were empowered to hold lands to an amount not exceeding $50,000 in value. This general law with the articles filed under it constituted the charter of the appellant, and its power to take and hold land in Texas must be governed by the provisions of that law to the same extent that it would be if the appellant had been chartered by a special Act of the Legislature of Hew York containing the same limitation upon its power to take and hold land. Granger L. & H. Ins. Co. v. Hamper, 73 Ala., 325; 1 Thompson, Corporations, sec. 216; American Water Works Co. v. F. L. & T. Co., 20 Col., 203, 46 Am. St. Rep., 285.

A foreign corporation can exercise in this State no power prohibited to it by its charter, or by the governing statutes under which it is organized, and the appellant corporation, being incapacitated under the law of Hew York, its charter, to receive the lands devised to it in Cromie’s will, which land was situated in Texas, had no more capacity to take the land in Texas than it would have had if the land had been situated in the State of New York. Talmadge v. Am. Coal & T. Co., 3 Head, 340; Thompson v. Waters, 25 Mich., 214; Diamond Match Co. v. Powers, 51 Mich., 145; Bank v. Earle, 13 Pet., 587.

In the case of Thompson v.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W. 924, 90 Tex. 529, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/house-of-mercy-of-new-york-v-davidson-tex-1897.