In re the Probate of the Will of MacDowell

16 Mills Surr. 551
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Mills Surr. 551 (In re the Probate of the Will of MacDowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Probate of the Will of MacDowell, 16 Mills Surr. 551 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Seabury, J.—

This case presents for judicial construction a clause in the will of Annie Coe MacDowell. The clause of the will which has given rise to conflicting contentions is that in which the testatrix attempted to found the “ Mary Randol Memorial.” This elaxise provides as follows:

“ I give and bequeath to my Executor and Trustee, here in after named; all my portion of my Father’s estate, now held in trust forme, under his last Will, and which portion I have under his last Will, the right to bequeath, and in addition, all my own money, which is now in bond and mortgages, and five savings banks, amounting to about ten thousand dollars,

To be well invested, and the income derived from both, to be used for hiring a house, and maintaining same, in a respectable neighborhood, within the city limits of Yonkers, Hew York, to be used as a Home for Refined, Educated, Protestant, Gentlewomen, whose means are small, and whose home is made unhappy, by having to live with relatives, who think them in the way: * * *

“ This Home to be called the ‘ Mary Randol Memorial Home; -’ I wish the preference of being an inmate of this Home, to be given to my sister Jessie, and my cousins, and their lineal descendants forever.

“ Hamely: Mrs. Philip H. Remington, Miss Elizabeth Remington of Windsor, Conn.; Miss Bessie Terhune, Mr. Richard Morrell, Passaic, Hew Jersey; Mr. Harry Masters, Passaic, Hew Jersey; Mr. Enos Randol Hyatt, 277 Broadway, H. Y.: The same privilege is extended to my friends:

“Hamely: Miss Mary A. Hall, Port Richmond; Miss Adelaide Hall, Port Richmond, Staten Island; Miss Inlia Frances Bangs, Mrs. Enos Randol Hyatt, Miss Annie E. Scott, [556]*556Washington, Iowa; Rev. Mrs. Geórge W. Huntington, New-burgh, 1ST. Y.

“ To come and go with perfect freedom, and not confined to ' rules.

“All the inmates of .this Home, are to pay board, each week they are there, with their small means. The price not to exceed seven dollars per week; towards paying the running expenses of . the house, which will have a housekeeper at the head.”

It is claimed on behalf of the proponent and the attorney-general that this clause creates a valid charitable trust. The contestant contends that the trust attempted to be created is not a valid charitable trust- and is void. The changes that have been made in this State as to the law of charitable trusts and the history of the existing rule have been recently so thoroughly . discussed in this court that we may -proceed at once to a consideration of the existing statutory provisions. (Tilden v. Green, 130 N. Y. 29, 45 ; Allen v. Stevens, 161 N. Y. 122, 141 ; Trustees of Sailors’ Snug Harbor v. Carmody, 211 N. Y. 286.)

Section 12 of the Personal Property Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 41), sanctions the creation of a charitable trust. This section relieves such trusts as are religious, educational, charitable or benevolent within the meaning of this provision of the law, from the operation of the statute' against perpetuities. (Allen v. Stevens, supra, at page 143 ; Matter of Griffin, 161 N. Y. 71, 81.) The question to be determined is whether the trust attempted to be created by the testatrix is. a charitable trust within the meaning -of this statute. If it is,' it is not affected by the statute against perpetuities. If it is not, -it is void because it creates a perpetuity.

It- has been held by this court that the -statute referred to was intended to restore the law of charitable trusts as that law was declared to exist in the case of Williams v. Williams (8 N. Y. 525). (Trustees of Sailors’ Snug Harbor v. Carmody, supra, at page 298.) In Williams v. Williams (supra), it was held [557]*557that the law of charitable trusts- as recognized in England prior to the Revolution was 'in force in this State. Many definitions of a charitable trust have been formulated, but all the definitions that have been attempted carry the implication of public utility-in its purpose. (Jones v. Williams, Ambler, 651, 652 ; Mitford v. Reynolds, 1 Phillips, 185, 191 ; Coggeshall v. Pelton, 7 Johns. Ch. [N. Y.] 292, 294 ; Perin v. Carey, 24 How. [U. S.] 465, 506 ; Vidal v. Girard’s Executors, 2 How. [U. S.] 127 ; Williams v. Williams, supra, at page 533 ; Atty.-Gen. ex rel. Bailey v. Moore, 19 N. J. Eq. 503 ; Ould v. Washington Hospital for Foundlings, 95 U. S. 303.) If the purpose to be attained is personal, private or selfish, it is- not a charitable trust. When the purpose accomplished is that of public usefulness unstained by personal, private or selfish considerations, its charitable character insures its validity. With these principles in mind we approach the disputed' clause of the will of the testatrix to determine whether the purpose of the trust attempted to be created is public and charitable or personal and selfish. Before we shall be able to determine whether the purpose of the trust attempted to be created is public or private, charitable or selfish, it is necessary to ascertain the character of the trust which the testatrix- intended to create.

If the clause of the will which gives a preference to certain persons had not been included there would be no room for the claim that the purpose of the testatrix was personal, private or selfish. It is upon this preferential clause that the respondent and the courts below based their view that the intention of the testatrix was selfish rather than charitable. Thus the learned surrogate in expressing the view that was subsequently adopted in the prevailing opinion of the Appellate- Division, said: “ The last clause of the will referred to (meaning the clause as to preferences) shows conclusively to my mind that the -testatrix intended to prefer these six relatives- -and their descendants. She also intended to prefer her -six friends named. Her inten[558]*558tion was to provide a home for these relations and their descendants and her friends to the exclusion of all others. This then would mean that the income of the so-called trust would be devoted in part, at least, if not entirely, to a private use. This being so, the entire gift would be invalid.” We do not think that this interpretation gives effect to the -intention of the testatrix, as that intention is expressed in the will. The view adopted by the learned courts below assumes- that the preferred class are not required to possess the qualifications specified in the trust. The dominant purpose of the testatrix was to create a home “ for refined, educated, Protestant gentlewomen,” and it is evident, we think, that any person that was not within this designated class was not within the contemplation of the trust, and, therefore, not to be accorded any preferential right. In other words, the preferential clause was intended to relate to those who 'qualified as coming within the class designated. The testatrix did not provide and it is not reasonable to suppose that she intended that all of the persons named “ and their lineal descendants forever ” should actually become members of the home which she sought to establish. We think that the reasonable interpretation of -the language employed is that such of her relations and friends as-were named in the preferential clause who were within the class designated, viz., “ refined, educated, Protestant gentlewomen,” -should have a preference over others in becoming members of the home if they so desired.

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