In Re Succession of Milne

89 So. 2d 281, 230 La. 729, 1956 La. LEXIS 1458
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 11, 1956
Docket42640
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 89 So. 2d 281 (In Re Succession of Milne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Succession of Milne, 89 So. 2d 281, 230 La. 729, 1956 La. LEXIS 1458 (La. 1956).

Opinion

VIOSCA, Justice ad hoc.

Alexandér Milne, a Scotch immigrant to New Orleans, who later became a great philanthropist and a benefactor of the poor, died in 1838. He left a will, drawn when he was ninety-four years of age, which was dated October 17, 1836 and probated October 23, 1838. It contained a series of particular legacies and the following donations, which are the subject matter of this controversy:

“It is my positive will and intention, that an Asylum for Destitute Orphan Boys, and another Asylum for the relief of Destitute Orphan Girls, shall be established at Milneburg, in this Parish, under names of the Milne Asylums, and that my Executors shall cause the same to be incorporated by the proper Authorities of this State and to the said two contemplated Institutions, and to the present Institution of the Society for the Relief of Destitute Orphan Boys in the City of Lafayette and the Parish of Jefferson in this State, and to the Poydras Female Asylum in this City, I give and bequeath in equal shares or interests • of one fourth to each, all my lands on the Bayou St. John and on the Lake Pontchartrain, including the old lands of Milneburg.
“I institute for my universal heirs and legatees in equal shares: or portions, the’ said four Institutions, that is to say, the two intended, at Milneburg , *737 and the two Asylums aforenamed in this City and in the City of Lafayette to whom I give and bequeath the residue of all the property and Estate moveable and immovable I may possess at the time of my decease to be equally divided and apportioned among them.”

The validity of these dispositions was upheld by this Court in Milne’s Heirs v. Milne’s Executors, 1841, 17 La. 46. See, also, Milne Asylum v. Female Orphan Society, 1852, 7 La.Ann. 19.

The four legatees above mentioned eventually received their donations, and by Act of Partition they specifically released one another from any claim quoad “the lands and properties” received by each. We are now concerned with the proceeds of the sale of some of the lands located on Bayou St. John and on Lake Pontchartrain, which the Milne Asylum for Destitute Orphan Boys received in the Act of Partition.

By Act 4 of 1839, Milne Asylum for Destitute Orphan Boys was incorporated as a charitable corporation for the care of destitute orphan boys. A small asylum for these boys was built, and it remained in existence until the Civil War. By Act 165 of 1858 of the Legislature of Louisiana, the Board of Drainage Commissioners was empowered to levy a tax. By 1893, because of seizure and sale of its lands for non-payment of drainage taxes, Milne Asylum for Destitute Orphan Boys, Inc. had become divested of all of its properties, except that portion bounded on the east by Franklin Avenue, on the west by Elysian Fields Avenue, on the north by Lake Pontchartrain, and on the south by Gentilly Road, City of New Orleans. A receiver was appointed for the corporation on February 2, 1900, and between that time and June 3, 1903 the corporation was recreated under the terms of the original Legislative Charter, a new Board of Directors was appointed by the Governor, and the remaining properties were turned over to the new Board.

The Trustees administered the lands until 1934, at which time they became aware of the need for a home for delinquent and destitute boys in the City of New Orleans. A contract by notarial act was entered into with the City, pursuant to Ordinance adopted by the Commission Council, whereby the Trustees leased to the City six squares of its ground rent free for ninety-nine years, conditioned upon the City’s building a Milne Municipal Boys’ Home. The Trustees donated $80,000 for the home, and the City agreed to contribute $100,000. The building was completed, and it is presently operated as a home for delinquent boys and needy boys. The obligation of the City was incoporated in the City’s Home Rule Charter of 1954, whereby the City obligated itself to supervise and operate the Milne Municipal Boys’ *739 Home at its own .expense in recognition of the City’s contract with the Trustees. The lease granted to the lessor the right to secure admission to the Milne Municipal Boys’ Home, without cost or expense, of such number of destitute orphan boys needing institutional care of the kind afforded by the Home as' the lessor might deem expedient and necessary.

By reason of the reclamation of the area, natural growth, and population shifts, the remaining lands took on value for residential and commercial sites. From the sales of the Milne lands the Trustees realized approximately $1,000,000, which is represented by bonds and cash. In 1955, after a lengthy study, the Trustees decided that it was presently impossible and impractical to carry out the original intent of the testator to establish and maintain an orphan asylum for boys at Milneburg. After securing the passage of Act 592 of 1954, LSA-Revised Statutes 9:2331 et seq., the Trustees proceeded in the district court under its terms and recommended the expenditure of the funds of the trust on the following projects:

1.To the Young Men’s Christian Association of New Orleans, the sum of $450,000.00 for the specific purpose of constructing a residence or dormitory to be known as “Milne Y.M.C.A. Residence” or “Alexander Milne Hall” to constitute a memorial in perpetuity to the name of the testator, to provide lodgings (at moderate cost, or no cosS. if the applicants are unable to pay) for boys and young men.
2. To the New Orleans Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, a sum not in excess of $160,000.00, for the purpose of constructing additional buildings, extending the property, and erecting other facilities conducive to the complete utilization of Camp Salmen, a camp owned, maintained and operated in St. Tammany Parish by the New Orleans Area Council, Boy Scouts of America.
3. To the Administrators of the Tulane Educational Fund, the corporation which operates the Tulane University of Louisiana, the sum of $150,-000.00, for the purpose of establishing and/or maintaining two chairs or professorships in the School of Social Work of Tulane University to be known as the “Alexander Milne Chairs”, which would constitute a permanent memorial to the name of the testator.
4. To Associated Catholic Charities of New Orleans, a sum not in excess of $50,000.00, for the express purpose of furthering its program of the vocational training of boys at Hope Haven, substantially as presently carried on.

The Trustees alleged in their petition that after diligent search they had found *741 that there were no heirs of the late Alexander Milne in existence.

The Attorney General for the State of Louisiana was cited, 1 and the following parties intervened:

1. Metropolitan Chapter of the Knights of Columbus;
2. Female Orphan Society, also known as the Poydras Female Asylum;
3. Mrs. J.. Skelly Wright, et al.;
4. New Orleans Area Council, Boy Scouts of America;
5. Young Men’s Christian Association;

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Bluebook (online)
89 So. 2d 281, 230 La. 729, 1956 La. LEXIS 1458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-succession-of-milne-la-1956.