In the Matter of the Application of Coe College for Interpretation of Purported Gift Restrictions v. Coe College

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 8, 2019
Docket19-0155
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of the Application of Coe College for Interpretation of Purported Gift Restrictions v. Coe College (In the Matter of the Application of Coe College for Interpretation of Purported Gift Restrictions v. Coe College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of the Application of Coe College for Interpretation of Purported Gift Restrictions v. Coe College, (iowa 2019).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 19–0155

Filed November 8, 2019

IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF COE COLLEGE FOR INTERPRETATION OF PURPORTED GIFT RESTRICTION,

COE COLLEGE,

Appellant.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Fae Hoover-

Grinde, Judge.

A college appeals a district court judgment denying its request for

declaratory relief as to the terms of a 1976 charitable gift. AFFIRMED.

Gary J. Streit, Megan R. Merritt, and Teresa K. Baumann of

Shuttleworth & Ingersoll, P.L.C., Cedar Rapids, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Chantelle Smith, Assistant

Attorney General, for appellee. 2

MANSFIELD, Justice.

I. Introduction.

How permanent is a “permanent home”? This case concerns seven

works painted by one of Iowa’s best-known artists—Grant Wood. In 1976,

a foundation donated the paintings to Coe College in Cedar Rapids. The

gift letter stated that the paintings would be given to the college “and that

this would be their permanent home, hanging on the walls of Stewart

Memorial Library.”

For years, the college treated the paintings on its books as an

unrestricted gift that could be sold or otherwise alienated. But in 2016,

an auditor determined the paintings should be treated as a restricted gift.

This had an adverse impact on the college’s endowment fund and led the

college to file a petition seeking a judicial interpretation of the gift’s terms.

Following a hearing on a stipulated record, the district court ruled that

there indeed exists a restriction on the alienability of the paintings. The

court also ruled that neither Iowa Code section 540A.106, part of the

Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act (UPMIFA), nor

the common law doctrine of cy pres, codified at Iowa Code

section 633A.5102, applied; accordingly, the court declined to modify the

restriction.

The college appeals. It argues that the 1976 gift was unrestricted,

but if this court finds it to be restricted, we should modify or discard the

restrictions. We conclude that the language in the gift letter did restrict

the gift. We conclude that the UPMIFA does not apply because these are

not “funds” but are instead “program-related assets.” Lastly, we find it is

premature to consider the application of cy pres because there is no

showing the gift restrictions cannot be carried out at present. 3

II. Facts and Procedural History.

In 1932, hotel magnate Eugene C. Eppley commissioned renowned

artist Grant Wood to paint a mural in the Hotel Montrose in Cedar Rapids.

The mural became known as “The Fruits of Iowa.” When the Hotel

Montrose was sold in 1957, some fifteen years after Wood’s death, Eppley

had the mural taken down and separated into seven separate panels. He

loaned the paintings to Coe College, a private liberal arts college in Cedar

Rapids. The loan was to last indefinitely, with the understanding that the

paintings could be taken back at any time after one year passed. The

paintings remained on display at Coe College for nearly twenty years.

At some point in time, the ownership of the paintings moved from

Eppley personally to the Eppley Foundation, a charitable institution whose

purposes included to

promote the well-being of mankind and to assist the needy and unfortunate, by religious, charitable, scientific, literary or educational activities; and for such purposes to make grants, donations, and contributions to corporations . . . organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, literary or educational purposes.

In 1976, while winding up its affairs, the Eppley Foundation

terminated the previous loan arrangement and donated the paintings to

Coe College. The Eppley Foundation’s gift letter stated,

The Eppley Foundation Board of Directors [has] approved that the Grant Wood paintings be given to the Coe College and that this would be their permanent home, hanging on the walls of Stewart Memorial Library.

A Plaque to be installed, per attached proposal, was discussed with you when you were here, with a piece of marble and attaching the bust and the letters to the marble, including the two bronze plaques which were outlined on the sketches.

We are again enclosing a picture of how this plaque will look like when it is completed but it will be done in bronze instead of aluminum. 4 Mr. Christian gave you the name of the Company in Omaha that made this plaque, The J. P. Cooke Co., 1311 Howard Street, Omaha, Nebraska, 68102.

Before this plaque is installed, we want to approve the full[-]scale drawing. Please return the picture of the plaque and also the sketch which is attached when you are through with same.

The plaque states in relevant part, “In [Eppley’s] memory, the Grant Wood Paintings the Fruits of Iowa were given to Coe College by the Eugene C.

Eppley Foundation Inc.” It includes a bust of Eppley and an inscription

with the years he lived. It further states that Eppley’s “great wealth” was

“to be distributed for the benefit of youth and for the lasting good of

mankind.”

The paintings have remained under the ownership of Coe College

since then and are among several Grant Wood pieces on display in the

Perrine Gallery at Stewart Memorial Library. Coe College occasionally

lends them to other institutions for temporary exhibition purposes and to

raise funds for the maintenance of the paintings.

In 1977, the Eppley Foundation was dissolved by the Nebraska

Secretary of State for nonpayment of biennial fees, and nothing has been

filed since then to revive the Eppley Foundation.

From 1976 until 2016, Coe College accounted for the paintings as

unrestricted assets. In 2016, however, as part of a routine annual audit,

the college’s auditors determined this previous classification had been a

mistake and reclassified the paintings as permanently restricted net

assets. This matters to Coe College because the classification of the

paintings affects the value of Coe College’s endowment fund. Coe College

turned to the courts for assistance.

On February 5, 2018, Coe College filed a petition seeking an

interpretation of the Eppley Foundation’s gift as unrestricted. If 5

necessary, the petition also sought a lifting of any restrictions

accompanying the gift. Coe College argued that the reference to a

“permanent home” in the 1976 gift letter was meant to contrast with the

prior situation where the paintings had been on loan and thus only on

temporary display—and not to serve as a bar to the college selling or

otherwise disposing of the paintings. Alternatively, Coe College asked the

court to remove the restrictions.

Since the Eppley Foundation was no longer in existence, Coe College

arranged for the attorney general to be served with the petition. Pursuant

to Iowa Code sections 540A.106 and 633A.5108, he participated in the

district court proceedings, resisting Coe College’s petition in each respect.

Following briefing and a hearing on a stipulated record, the district

court issued its ruling on January 2, 2019. It held that “the Eppley

Foundation’s intent expressed in the February 16, 1976 Gift Letter

transferring the Paintings to Coe College was to place a permanent

restriction on alienation of the Paintings.” The court further found that

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