In re the Accounting of Judson

2 A.D.2d 205, 153 N.Y.S.2d 816, 1956 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4629

This text of 2 A.D.2d 205 (In re the Accounting of Judson) 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 the Accounting of Judson, 2 A.D.2d 205, 153 N.Y.S.2d 816, 1956 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4629 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Williams, J.

This is an accounting proceeding by the trustees under the will of Eliza Lillian Ablett. The will was executed in 1931, and testatrix died in the same year. Petitioners seek construction, in the light of events which have transpired, of paragraph 17 of the will, which, so far as relevant, provides: Upon the death of James Vincent [testatrix* step-brother and the life beneficiary of the residuary estate], and after the deduction of the above bequest [to a humane society], I direct my trustees to divide my residuary estate into five equal parts and to pay one of said parts to the London Hospital of Whitechapel, London, England, to be known as the Robert Ablett Memorial, the income of which is to be used for such purposes as the board of managers or directors may deem advisable; [there follow identical gifts of one fifth of the residuary estate to four named Utica, N. Y., charities: the Y. W. C. A., Inc., the Door of Hope, Inc., Camp Healthmore, Inc., and the Central Association for the Blind, Inc.] * * *. In case any of the specific legacies mentioned herein shall lapse or become void, I direct that such become a part of my residuary estate.” The life tenant, James Vincent, died in 1951.

In 1946, by Act effective July 5, 1948 the British Government nationalized certain hospitals including the London Hospital, by passage of the British National Health Service Act, 1946 (9 & 10 Geo. VI, ch. 81; hereinafter called Act ”). We must decide the effect of this Act upon the share of the London Hospital, which is claimed by the board of governors thereof, by the other four charities jointly, and also by the next of kin, who are nephews and nieces of a first cousin of the testatrix. The Special Surrogate has decreed that the board of governors of London Hospital is entitled to the legacy, which shall be invested “as a separate endowment fund to be known as The Robert Ablett Memorial and the income from such fund shall be applied for research, services, and facilities, or other purposes benefiting the patients of London Hospital, as the Board of Governors may deem advisable ’ ’. The board of governors has filed an undertaking to comply with this decree, from which the next of kin and the other four charities appeal. The latter group of charities also appeals from the decree so far as it directs that allowances to the attorneys be paid from the residuary estate generally, rather than from the share of the London Hospital.

[208]*208The London Hospital of Whitechapel was incorporated in 1758 by royal charter. It became the largest “voluntary” hospital in England, nonprofit and nonsectarian. The testatrix herself was a patient at the London Hospital' in 1891. It is unnecessary to consider the problems confronting private hospitals prior to 1946, except to say that because of financial necessity and for other reasons which satisfied the British Parliament, voluntary hospitals were nationalized by said Act. Prior to the effective or appointed day, the Minister of Health designated the London Hospital as a teaching hospital, which means that it is affiliated with a medical college. He also, by order, constituted a “ Board of Governors ” appointed by him to administer the hospital (§ 11, subd. [8]; 3d Schedule, part III). The board of governors is a body corporate with perpetual succession (3d Schedule, part IV). Prior to the Act the hospital was managed by the governors of London Hospital. Certain of the former governors became members of the new board of governors, but on the appointed day the governors’ ownership and control of the hospital was divested without compensation. The old governing bodies were not automatically dissolved by the Act (Matter of Kellner, [1950] Ch. 46), but only if their “functions wholly cease in consequence ” thereof (§ 78). The former governors have continued to perform functions not affected by the Act — chiefly as trustees of certain trusts — and have therefore not been dissolved.

By section 6 of the Act the physical properties of the London Hospital were transferred to and vested in the Minister of Health. By subdivision (1) of section 7 “ all endowments of the hospital held immediately before the appointed day shall on that day, by virtue of this Act, be transferred to and vest in the Board of Governors Section 60, so far as relevant, provides: “ (1) Where property, other than property transferred to the Minister or to the Board of Governors of a teaching hospital * * * under section six or section seven of this Act, is held on trust immediately before the appointed day, and the terms of the trust instrument authorise or require the trustees, whether immediately or in the future, to apply any part of the capital or income of the trust property for the purposes of any hospital to which section six of this Act applies, the trust instrument shall be construed as authorising or, as the case may be, requiring the trustees to apply the trust property * * * to the Board of Governors * * * (2) Any sums paid as aforesaid to any such Board * * * shall, so far as practicable, be applied by them for the purposes [209]*209specified in the trust instrument.” The British courts, resolving a problem of statutory construction which it is unnecessary for us to consider, have held that section 60 applied to such a case as this (Matter of Kellner, supra; Matter of White, [1951] 1 All E. R. 528). By virtue of section 60, the legacy to the London Hospital, vesting, as we shall show, in the old governors at the time of the death of the testatrix, was transferred to and vested in the new board of governors, to be applied by them “so far as practicable” to the purposes specified in the will.

By the Act, Parliament has undertaken to provide public funds to cover the general expenses of the minister and the board in operating and maintaining the hospitals nationalized. The board is not allowed to have a deficit. When the testatrix died in 1931, the hospital was receiving no money from the Exchequer. In later years, it began to receive substantial grants from the government, although it was still supported primarily by private subscription and fees from certain patients. Now, of course, the great bulk of its revenue comes from the national treasury. It still receives substantial “ free 'funds ” — donations and legacies—which are invested and are wholly free from control by the Minister of Health. The importance of free funds is that public money cannot be spent for purposes not included in the budget. The public grant covers the general expenses of maintaining the hospital — wages, food, fuel, and the like—but additional facilities and services which a modern hospital may reasonably provide are dependent upon free funds. For example, medical research, vital to public health, is privately supported. Without reciting in detail the objects for which free funds are disbursed, we are fully persuaded that they play an important role in the proper and efficient operation of the London Hospital.

There is in this case a continuity o'f function and activity. Notwithstanding the marked administrative and fiscal changes effected by the Act, the work of healing and caring for the sick at the London Hospital goes on as before, and viewing the problem simply as a question of the intention of the testatrix, we would not be justified in saying that the donee for whom she intended the gift has ceased to exist. That she was not concerned with technical details of administrative control is revealed by her general and inaccurate reference to ‘ the board of managers or directors”, instead of to “ the Governors of London Hospital.” Her purpose was entirely charitable. The entire residuary paragraph indicates that.

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2 A.D.2d 205, 153 N.Y.S.2d 816, 1956 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-judson-nyappdiv-1956.