McClure v. Carter, Ex'r

116 S.E.2d 260, 202 Va. 191, 1960 Va. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 10, 1960
DocketRecord 5150
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 S.E.2d 260 (McClure v. Carter, Ex'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClure v. Carter, Ex'r, 116 S.E.2d 260, 202 Va. 191, 1960 Va. LEXIS 205 (Va. 1960).

Opinion

Eggleston, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Curry Carter, executor and trustee under the will of Alma B. Foster, deceased, filed his bill in the court below against the beneficiaries named in the will and the decedent’s heirs at law, praying inter alia for the interpretation of the will and the determination of whether under certain of its provisions a valid charitable trust was established. The defendants filed an answer and cross bill charging that the trust sought to be created was not charitable or public but was a mere private or benevolent trust which is void under the rule against perpetuities, that the property sought to be disposed of passed to the decedent’s heirs and distributees, and praying for a declaratory judgment to that effect. After hearing the case on the pleadings and the will, the court entered a decree holding that the will established a valid charitable trust and from this decree adjudicating the principles of the cause the defendants have appealed under Code, § 8-462(2) (c). In their assignments of error the defendants make the same contentions which they made in the court below.

The facts as disclosed by the pleadings are not in dispute. The testatrix, who died on August 14, 1958, was the elderly, childless widow of G. Kemper Foster who predeceased her on May 18', 1951. At the time of her death Mrs. Foster lived in a two-story frame 12-room house on a 69-acre farm, in Augusta county, which she and her husband had occupied. Her gross estate was appraised at approximately $107,000, of which $68,000 is personalty and $39,000 is real estate.

By the second item of her will the testatrix bequeathed $25 to each of her five named nieces and nephews. By the third item she gave to each of her five nieces, Edith Searson Hawpe, Mary Boone McClure, Anna Katherine Brooks, Polly Dunlop Hawpe and Thelma Sanders Hawpe, “the right and privilege,” within five years of her death, “to build, maintain and occupy six-room homes” on lots 50 by 100 feet fronting on the public highway near her home. She *193 further provided that, “At the end of the five-year period mentioned above, those nieces who have not availed themselves of the foregoing privilege shall forfeit all right and interest herein and such lots as have not been built upon and occupied shall be and remain a part of my estate, to be dealt with in accordance with Item Four.”

Items Four and Eight, with which we are mainly concerned, read thus:

“Item Eight: Should the occasion ever arise where there are no all my personal estate, exclusive of those pieces of personal property used and enjoyed in and about the home which I now occupy, and the proceeds derived therefrom he shall turn over to himself as trustee hereunder upon the following charitable trust:
“Said trustee and his successor or successors in title shall establish and maintain in perpetuity at the residence now occupied by me as a memorial to myself and my beloved late husband, G. Kemper Foster, a home to be known and designated as ‘Our Home,’ to be used and enjoyed by indigent widows and maiden ladies, who shall be maintained and supported from the proceeds of said trust fund, supplemented by the rents, issues and profits from the farm lying adjacent to and/or surrounding ‘Our Home,’ which farm I give deavor to limit the number of occupants of ‘Our Home’ to such trust. In the selection of the beneficiaries under this Item the trustee and his successor or successors in title shall be the sole judges of who shall be admitted, but he and his successors in title are requested to prefer such indigent widows and maiden ladies as are named in Item Three and their heirs; and said trustee and his successors shall en-devise and bequeath to said trustee upon the foregoing and following number as the proceeds from said trust fund and the rents, issues and profits from said farm will comfortably support and maintain; however, said trustee and his successors shall have the right to accept from said beneficiaries or others such sums as they may be deemed able to pay.”
“Item Four: I direct my executor hereinafter named to liquidate applicants for the use and enjoyment of ‘Our Home’ and there appeared to be no eligible persons available for its use and enjoyment as contemplated by this will, said trustee or his successor or successors in title shall preserve ‘Our Home’ against wear and tear and depreciation and said trust shall be continued for a period of Five (5) years and if ‘Our Home’ should not be occupied for a con *194 tinuous period of Five (5) years said trustee is authorized, and he is hereby directed, to liquidate the trust and turn the proceeds therefrom over to some strictly charitable organization of continued and proven service. In selecting said charitable organization said trustee shall be the sole judge of its entitlement to said fund.”

Before considering these items it should be said that in Item Six the trustee, afterwards nominated, is “vested with the right, power and authority to select and appoint his successor or successors by an instrument in writing, to take effect in his lifetime or at his death.” In Item Eleven, the testatrix provided that wherever the words executor and trustee are used in the will “they apply interchangeably and to their successors.”

The contention of the appellant heirs is that by the fourth and eighth items of the will the testatrix intended to establish “two entirely separate trusts,” neither of which is a valid charitable trust. They argue that Item Four creates the first trust which lacks the requisite characteristics of a public or charitable trust in that it is not for the benefit of an indefinite number of persons, but, on the contrary, is a personal benevolence for the benefit of the five named nieces of the testatrix. Being a mere personal benevolence, the appellants say, the trust violates the rule against perpetuities and is void in that it directs the trustee to maintain the home of the testatrix “in perpetuity” as a memorial to herself and her husband.

They next argue that Item Eight creates a second trust which is an attempted gift over to charity of the property devised in Item Four for noncharitable purposes; that such gift over is void because it is to vest upon the condition, “Should the occasion ever arise where there are no applicants for the use and enjoyment of ‘Our Home’ ” and there are “no eligible persons available for its use and enjoyment as contemplated” by the will; and that such condition may happen at a time beyond the period fixed by the rule against perpetuities. Restatement of Trusts, 2d Ed., Vol. 2, § 401, p. 314; Scott on Trusts, Vol. 3, § 401.7, p. 2136; Claiborne v. Wilson, 168 Va. 469, 473-475, 192 S. E. 585, 586, 587.

We do not agree with this position. In the first place, under the plain language of Item Four the object of the bounty of the testatrix is the class of persons whom she describes “as indigent widows and maiden ladies,” and not her named nieces. The essence of Item Four is that, “Said trustee and his successor or successors in *195

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.E.2d 260, 202 Va. 191, 1960 Va. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclure-v-carter-exr-va-1960.