Moore's Heirs v. Moore's Devisees

34 Ky. 354, 4 Dana 354, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 7, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 34 Ky. 354 (Moore's Heirs v. Moore's Devisees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore's Heirs v. Moore's Devisees, 34 Ky. 354, 4 Dana 354, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 81 (Ky. Ct. App. 1836).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertsor

delivered the Opinion of the Court,

Henry C. Moore, who died in Harrison county in this state, in 1832, by his last will, regularly proved and admitted.to record in the same year and county, empowered his executors to sell any or all of his estate for the benefit of his wife, and only surviving child, Thomas W. Moore, then an infant; directed that his said son should have two thirds of his estate whenever he should attain twenty-one years of age, and his wife the other third for life, remainder to his son; and then made the following provision:—“In case my son Thomas should “ depart this life before he arrives at age, then the es- “ tate devised to him I desire may be converted into a “ fund for educating some poor orphans for this county “ (Harrison,) to be selected by the County Court, who “ are the guardians of such, and to be confined to such “ asare not able to educate themselves—that it may do “ as much good in that way as it can, I desire the funds “ shall be taken and loaned out at interest, so as to be [355]*355tt rendered a perpetual fund, and the interest only to be “ applied to their tuition—thereby affording a partial “ good to as many orphans as the scanty pittance will allow.”

The appellants, as heirs and distributees of Thomas W. Moore—who, whilst an infant, died in a short time after the demise of the testator—claiming the estate devised to him, because, as they alleged, the legal title, in the event of his death under twenty-one years oí age, descended to them, and because, as they argued, the contingent devise to the use of the poor orphans of Harrison county was void for want of certainty~^filed a bill in Chancery, in 1834, against the County Court of Harrison and against the executors of the will of Henry C. Moore, for establishing and enforcing their claim,.

The relief sought by the bill was resisted by the an,swers, on the ground that the devise for the benefit, of , . , tt . . . ,. the poor orphans ot Harrison is neither uncertain, nor, on any other account, void, but is good, and may be f ° ' ' «. available.

The Circuit Court having dismissed the bill—Ahis ap- ° * peal seeks the reversal of that decree, and. the appellants insist here, as in the Court below, that the. devise for the use of the poor orphans is void, and that, therefore, they themselves, as heirs and distributees, are entitled to the whole estate thus undisposed of by the will.

The case, as thus presented, involves questions both, delicate and difficult, hitherto undecided, and but little considered by this court, and which, therefore., are felt, to be peculiarly interesting and important..

Although the devise has not been, written w.ith proper skill or suitable precision or care, yet the object and. general intention of the testator cannot be seriously doubted. It is sufficiently clear that he intended, in the event of his son’s death under twenty-one years of age,, that his executors should convert the estate devised to that son into money; and it seems to us but reasonable and consistent to infer, that the fund, when thus fixed, should be deposited with the County Court of Harrison, i.n. trust, for the education, of such poor orphans.of that. [356]*356county, as should be ascertained to be unable to educate themselves, and as should be designated as fit beneficiaries, from time to time, by the justices of the said Court, who should keep the principal on loan and apply the interest to the purposes of the trust. No other depository of the fund having been designated, we feel authorized to infer, that the testator intended that the Court charged with the distidbution of the proceeds, and with the. selection and superintendence of the recipients, should have the possession of the fund and the legal right to control if. And consequently, we deem the county court a legatee of - the whole trust fund.

Where 5s "the common-law repetmtiesdoes^ot ' ” ‘ The British mor.t main acts have not been held tp be in force in Ya. or Ken. The Ken. statute of wills does ijot forbid devts'es to corporations; and if the County Court, could hot take the devise {supra). still the power of appointment might' be executed, So-Held, that the devise {supra) to the county court (of a fund, t.o educate poor orphans) is not illegal. Nor void, (as the court incline to think)' for uncertainty, ^vben - tested ...by the rules of the common law alone; but maybe enforced independently of any English statute'. For—

[356]*356Thus considering the devise—the first question to be considered, is whether it is either illegal or void, without any aid from the. statute of charitable uses, of the, 49»d of-Elizabeth.

land is not locked up, but the only fund secured *s money! which is, by the direction of the testator and according to the nature and objects of the trust, to be kePt ™ active and constant circulation—the common law repugnance to perpetuities can have no application.

Nor do any of the British mortmain acts affect the case: jfc'sí-r-bécause they were chiefl-y, if not altogether, local in their policy and operation, and were therefore nevar recognized as the law of Virginia or Kentucky; and, second—because none of them enacted prior to ’76, embraced such a devise as that which wrn are now considering; unless the British statute of wills should be deemed,'in one respect, a mortmain act; and if so much of it as prohibited devises to corporate bodies should be so. considered, still it can have no effect, because our statute of wills contains no such inhibition or exception; and besides, if the County Court of Harrison could not take the money, yet it would be competent to execute the power of appointment, and then the only question would be whether there is an available trust created by the will, which a Court of Equity might protect and execute. Hence it seems to us, that there is nothing illegal in the devise. ' ' '

A court of equity, without the aid of any statute, may enforce a trust, whenever it is so defined, or described by the donor, as to enablq the court, consistently with the rules of law, to ascertain, and apply it to, the objects intended.—And where, in such case, there is no trustee appointed by the will, the court will act as trustee, & appoint one if necessai7».

And we are strongly inclined to the opinion that the deviséis not void for uncertainty,if tested by the doctrines of the common law alone, and might be enforced by a Court of Equity, under its general jurisdiction over trusts, and the execution of powers connected with beneficial interests. Such a jurisdiction, upon original bill, whether the trust was deemed a charity or not, had been established in the time of Lord Ellesmere, at least five years prior to the enactment of the statute of 43d Elizabeth. Philadelphia Baptist Association v. Smith and Robertson, 3 Peters, 488 to 493; Orphan Assylum Society v. McCartee, 9 Cowen's New York Rep. 437; Witman v. Lex, 17 Sargeant and Rawle, 88; Attorney General v. Mayor of Dublin, by Lord Redesdale, 1 Bligh’s Rep. 347; Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheaton 476; Attorney Gen. v. Utica Ins. Com. 2 Johns. Chy. Rep. 389; Baptist Association v. Haris Ex’rs. 4 Cond. Rep. 383.

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34 Ky. 354, 4 Dana 354, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moores-heirs-v-moores-devisees-kyctapp-1836.