In re Crane

205 A.D. 147, 199 N.Y.S. 880, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4968
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 205 A.D. 147 (In re Crane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Crane, 205 A.D. 147, 199 N.Y.S. 880, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4968 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

H. T. Kellogg, Acting P. J.:

These are cross-appeals which call for the review of a decree of the Surrogate’s Court of the county of Columbia, construing the 26th paragraph of the last will and testament of Ida C. Potts, a resident of Columbia county, who died on or about the 19th day of November, 1921, leaving personal property of the value of $1,729,773.96, and also certain real property.

The 26th clause of the will directs the executors to organize and create “ as quickly as it can be done in accordance with the law,” a corporation, the purposes and objects of which shall be to construct, maintain and operate a hospital for the care and treatment of patients afflicted with tuberculosis.” The clause then gives the residuary estate to the executors in trust to receive and hold “ all of said property with all accumulations thereof ” until such corporation be'organized. It directs the executors to purchase land in Columbia county, N. Y., for the erection of hospital buildings. It provides that for the purchase of a site and the erection and equipment of buildings not more than $150,000 of the fund bequeathed shall be spent. It then directs that all of the residuary estate, over and above the sum of $150,000, be given to the trustees of the corporation to be organized and to their successors in perpetuity and provides that such sum shall constitute an endowment fund, the income from which shall be used for the maintenance and, operation of the hospital. It is apparent that the gift sets up a trust for the benefit of an indefinite and uncertain class; that the trust duties imposed upon the executors might [149]*149require them to hold the subject of the gift for a period greatér than two lives; that the devise over to the corporation directed to be organized might suspend the power of alienation for a period not measured by lives. Had the purpose of the gift been other than charitable, it is self-evident that the gift would have been invalid. The question arising, therefore, is whether the gift is saved by its charitable purpose.

In the leading case of Williams v. Williams (8 N. Y. 525) the testamentary disposition considered was a gift to individuals in perpetual trust for the education, at a certain village academy, of the children of the poor. Although the trust was created for the benefit of an indefinite class6 and'was not limited by lives in being, nevertheless the gift was upheld. The court, per Denio, J., said: The result of my examination of the case is, that the law of charitable uses as it existed in England at the time of the Revolution, and the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery over these subjects, became the law of this State on the adoption of the Constitution of 1777; that the law has not been repealed,' and that the existing courts of this State having equity jurisdiction are bound to administer that law.” The court also said: “ So far as my researches have gone, I have found no case or dictum, which would cast a doubt upon the validity of this bequest in the courts'in England, at any time during the century preceding the nineteenth day of April, 1775. Having adopted the common law of England, so far as it was applicable to our circumstances, and conformable to our institutions, the law of charitable uses is in force here.” The decision in the Williams case was expressly repudiated in Bascom v. Albertson (34 N. Y. 584); Burrill v. Boardman (43 id. 254) and Holmes v. Mead (52 id. 332). In those cases it was held that the English doctrine of charitable uses does not obtain in this State; that all testamentary gifts made for charitable purposes are subject to the rules in relation to indefiniteness and remoteness prevailing in the case of non-charitable gifts. The law so stood until the year 1893, when the Legislature enacted chapter 701 of the Laws of 1893, the provisions of which have since been made a part of the Personal Property Law (Pers. Prop. Law, § 12) and of the Real Property Law (§ 113). This act provided that no gift to religious, educational, charitable or benevolent uses should be deemed invalid by reason of the indefiniteness of the class of beneficiaries designated; that if the instrument creating the gift named a trustee to execute the same the title should vest in the trustee; that if it named no trustee the title should vest in the Supreme Court; that the Supreme Court should have control over gifts, grants, bequests and devises in all cases provided for ” in the act. The act contained no pro[150]*150vision expressly relieving charitable trusts from the statutory rule forbidding perpetuities. Nevertheless it was held in the leading case of Allen v. Stevens (161 N. Y. 122) that charitable trusts created to endure for a period greater than two lives were thereby rendered valid. The court said: Reading the statute in the light of the events to which reference has been made, it seems to me very clear that the Legislature intended to restore the law of charitable trusts as declared in the Williams case.” This declarationj as well as the decision in the case, has been many times approved and never disaffirmed. (Matter of Griffin, 167 N. Y. 71; Bowman v. Domestic & Foreign M. Society, 182 id. 494; Matter of Shattuck, 193 id. 446; Matter of Robinson, 203 id. 380; Matter of Cunningham, 206 id. 601; Matter of MacDowell, 217 id. 454.) The question whether a charitable gift made to take effect after the lapse of a period not measured by lives creates an unlawful suspension was not decided in Allen v. Stevens, has not since been decided by the court which rendered that decision, and remains in this State an open question. The declaration in Allen v. Stevens that the act of 1893 worked a restoration of the law of charitable trusts as declared in the Williams case is, therefore, important. The law so declared was the English law of charitable uses. In order to determine the unanswered question we must, therefore, largely have resort to cases in other jurisdictions where that law has at all times prevailed.

The law of charitable uses does not protect a gift for a charitable purpose, made to take effect after a gift to an individual, upon a condition not necessarily to be fulfilled within the period prescribed by the rule against perpetuities. (Attorney-General v. Gill, 2 P. Wms. 369; Johnson’s Trusts, L. R. 2 Eq. 716; Merritt v. Bucknam, 77 Maine, 253; Merrill v. American Baptist Missionary Union, 73 N. H. 414; Perry Trusts [6th ed.], § 736.) The rule is explained in Odell v. Odell (10 Allen, 1, 7), as follows: And if a gift is made in the first instance to an individual, and then over, upon a contingency which may not happen within the prescribed limit, to a charity the gift to the charity is void, not because the charity could not take at the remote period, but because it tends to create a perpetuity in the individual who is the first taker, by making the estate inalienable by him beyond the period allowed by law.” This is the principle underlying Leonard v. Burr (18 N. Y. 96). In that case a testator devised to an individual the use of a certain parcel of land

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Bluebook (online)
205 A.D. 147, 199 N.Y.S. 880, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-crane-nyappdiv-1923.