Merchant v. Oakland Red Cross Society

77 P. 475, 143 Cal. 537, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 855
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 3718.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 77 P. 475 (Merchant v. Oakland Red Cross Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchant v. Oakland Red Cross Society, 77 P. 475, 143 Cal. 537, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 855 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Appeal from decree, of distribution by which the residue of the estate of deceased was distributed for the benefit and advancement of the Oakland Red Cross Society in California, in preference to appellant, Baron D. Merchant, son and sole heir at law of deceased, as he claims it should have gone.

The eighth item in the will of deceased is made part of the decree, and may be looked to as showing the intention of the testatrix, without violating the rule in Goad v. Montgomery, 119 Cal. 652. 1 ‘ ‘ Eighth: All the rest, residue, and remainder of my property of every kind and nature I direct my executors and trustees to take charge of and use the same, for the benefit and advancement of the ‘Oakland Red Cross Society’ in California, and it is my wish that if there be a hospital used in connection with the work of said society in California, that the above-mentioned residue be used to equip such hospital so far as the same may be necessary, and that the same be used for soldiers who come from the Pacific Coast.” The decree provides as follows: “To J. B. Richardson [executor of the will], as trustee, all the rest, residue, and remainder of the property remaining for distribution, consisting of cash amounting to $2,842.99. Said J. B. Richardson, as such trustee, is directed to take charge of and use said residue for the benefit and advancement of the ‘ Oakland Red Cross Society’ in California.” Among other things the court found that this society was at the death of the testatrix, ever since had been, and now is, “a purely unincorporated charitable organization and society, having for its objects and purposes the prevention of unnecessary barbarities in war and the alleviation of suffering on the field of battle, and in connection with the conflicts of war, to accumulate funds and material, and to provide nurses and assistants for national services in times of war, pestilence, fire, flood, and other calamities so great as to be considered national, and having at all times a certain ascertained membership, not organized for profit or benefit of *540 any of its members, and has used, and does now use, when necessary, a hospital in connection with its charitable work.”

The points apparently relied on by appellant are, that the power given the trustee is uncertain, and that it cannot be determined from the will how or in what manner the residue shall be used; that the will makes the executor the trustee, and the society the beneficiary, and that as the society has “at all times a certain ascertained membership,” the trust must fail as a charity, for, as it is claimed, the great distinguishing feature of a charitable trust is, that the persons to be benefited must be uncertain and indefinite. It is conceded that if “the testatrix had given directly the residue of her estate to the Oakland Red Cross Society to use it for the benefit and care of sick or disabled soldiers and sailors, the bequest might stand.” But it is insisted that the residue is given to trustees to take charge of and use for the benefit of said society; that the society is composed of a definite and ascertained number of persons, and is clearly pointed out by the terms of the gift to receive and control its benefits, and hence is not a public charity. (Citing Old South Society v. Crocker, 119 Mass. 23 ; 1 Fay v. Howe, 136 Cal. 601.). On the assumption that the foregoing point is sustained,—i. e. that the trust must fail as a charity,—it is further claimed that it is void as creating a trust in perpetuity. (Citing In re Walk erly, 118 Cal. 656; Estate of Fair, 132 Cal. 528, 2 and especially relying on Adams v. Perry, 43 N. Y. 487.)

Obviously the intention of the testatrix, as shown by the decree, was, that the residue of her estate should be devoted to the objects to carry out which was the sole purpose of creating and maintaining the society, and appellant concedes that those objects are charitable. The intention being charitable, the bequest ought to be upheld if a way can be found to do so without violating sound reason and recognized principles of law. This court said in Estate of Willey, 128 Cal. 1: ‘ Charitable donations are looked on with favor by the courts, and will be carried into effect if they can possibly be made good consistently with the rules of law. ’ ’ The meaning of the finding that the society has had “at all said times a certain ascertained membership, ’ ’ is, that an organization exists sufficiently formed to take; i. e. the number at any time could be *541 determined., not necessarily the same persons but as “having at all times a certain ascertained membership.” But this finding was coupled with the further finding that the society was a “charitable organization, having for its objects and purposes the prevention of unnecessary barbarities in war and the alleviation of suffering on the field of battle,” etc., and “has used, and does use, when necessary, a hospital in connection with its charitable work.” The intention of the testatrix, as shown by her expressed wish, was not only that the bequest should be “for the benefit and advancement” of the society, whose charitable objects she must have had in her mind, but she directed that the bequest should be applied to equip a hospital used in connection with the society, which was to be used by soldiers coming from the Pacific Coast. The power given the trustee seems to us to be sufficiently definite and certain.

In effect the will indicated an intention that the residue of the estate should be used for the benefit of the society in carrying out its charitable objects, and to that end also to equip a hospital for the benefit of soldiers who came from the Pacific Coast, and all of the residue might be used for that purpose.

The bequest was not for the benefit of the individuals who happened at the death of the testatrix to constitute the membership of the society, but for the benefit of the society in its organized capacity, and through it for the benefit of the charitable objects to promote which it was formed.

Respondent cites cases to support the proposition that even if the will means that the society is the beneficiary, still, as it is conceded to be a charitable institution, the bequest necessarily becomes a charitable use; that on principle there is no difference between a bequest to a trustee for the benefit of a designated society, known or shown to be solely charitable, and a bequest to a trustee for the benefit of the persons who are the objects of the charitable ministrations of such society. Where the devise is directly to a society that exists only to dispense charity, it is presumed that the trust will be administered agreeably to the wish of the testator,—i. e. for charitable purposes,—and resort may be had to the courts to compel such application. So also where the devise is to a trustee for the benefit of such a society, the same presumption *542 arises as to the application of the trust fund, and the same power of the court to compel it or to restrain a misuse of the fund exists.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P. 475, 143 Cal. 537, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchant-v-oakland-red-cross-society-cal-1904.