Nelson v. Cushing

56 Mass. 519
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 Mass. 519 (Nelson v. Cushing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Cushing, 56 Mass. 519 (Mass. 1848).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This is an information, in the nature of a bill in equity, filed by the district attorney and public prosecutor for the district including the county of Essex, at the relation of certain inhabitants of Newburyport, against Caleb [526]*526Cushing and others, as the Trustees of the Putnam Free School, in that town.

It appears, that Oliver Putnam, late of Boston, formerly of Newburyport, by his will, left the residue of his property, after the payment of specific legacies, and when the same should have accumulated to the sum of fifty thousand dollars, for the establishment and support of a free English school in the town of Newburyport, for the instruction of youth wherever they might belong. He directs his executors to pay the money into the hands of trustees, to be appointed by the selectmen of Newburyport. After the first appointment, vacancies in the board are to be filled by nomination from the trustees themselves, subject to the approval of the selectmen, who, besides, are always and at all times to have and exercise the right of visitation, for the purpose of looking to the security of the funds, and of seeing that the interest and income .thereof is applied according to the bequest. In the selection of trustees, no reference i^ to be had to their places of residence, but only to their qualifications for the trust. After directions in regard to the investment of the permanent fund, he specifies somewhat more precisely the nature of the school, to which the income is to be appropriated, by directing that it shall be applied to the establishment and support of the school; the youth to be instructed in reading, writing and arithmetic, and particularly in the English language, and in those branches of knowledge necessary to the correct management of the ordinary affairs of life, whether public or private, but not in the dead languages.

It appears that in 1826 the testator died and his will was duly proved, and that in 1838, the executors, being prepared to pay over the $50,000, according to the will, gave notice thereof to the selectmen of Newburyport, who thereupon appointed Caleb Cushing and six others, the respondents, to be trustees pursuant to the will.

After the money was paid over, a special act of the legislature (St. 1838, c. 85,) was passed, reciting the gift and the purpose of it, and incorporating the trustees; who, with their [527]*527successors, were made a corporation, by the name of the Trustees of the Putnam Free School, with all the powers and privileges and subject to the restrictions contained in the forty-fourth chapter of the revised statutes, with liberty to hold real and personal estate, producing a net income not exceeding $6000 a year, to be applied exclusively to the purposes of education, in conformity with the will of Oliver Putnam, the donor. The second section requires the treasurer of the trustees to give bonds. The third section authorizes the board to remove, a member, by a vote of two thirds of the other members ; and, by a similar vote, they are authorized to fill any vacancy in their board, under the limitation and in the manner prescribed in the will.

This act, in our judgment, does not vary the powers or the duties of the trustees, or change the character of the school placed under their management. It enables them to act in a corporate name, and to have a corporate seal; and it affords them the facility of taking conveyances, obligations and securities, in their corporate name, and avoids the necessity of changing such securities upon a change of individual members composing the board. Vacancies are to be filled, as before, by nomination from the board, subject to the approval of the selectmen. Whether the last section of the act requires a nomination to be made by a vote of two thirds, and whether that is in conformity with the will, may be open to some question; though not important to the present inquiry. If such a restriction would be contrary to the true construction of the will, perhaps the last part of the section, requiring the vote nominating a successor to be passed under the limitation and in the manner provided by the will, would be held to remove the doubt as to the construction of the act, so as to make it conform to the true construction of the will.

It further appears that this act was accepted, and that the trustees, having received the funds, proceeded to erect a building in Newburyport, and to establish the school.

The gravamen of the complaint set forth in the bill is, that the trustees have proceeded to erect a structure for a school[528]*528house, which is adapted to the instruction of children and youth of both sexes; that they intend to receive and admit to the benefits of the school girls as well as boys; that this is contrary to the will of the testator, which, under the term “ youth,” was intended to establish a school for boys only ; that the proceeding of the trustees is a violation of trust, and contrary to their duty; and the bill prays that they may be restrained by an injunction from thus perverting and misapplying the funds committed to their trust.

Answers have been filed, both by the individual trustees, or most of them jointly, and also by the corporation, admitting all the material facts. But the respondents insist, that, according to the construction which they put upon the will, they understand that it was the intention of the testator to establish a school open to pupils of both sexes, if the trustees should think fit to admit them; that nothing in the will limits the benefits of education at this school to male pupils only; and, therefore, that it is not a breach of trust, or a violation of their duty, to admit females. This is the question intended to be raised by the bill and information. The cause has been very ably argued on both sides, and the very full and ingenious argument in support of the prosecution, for the purpose of illustrating the meaning of the term “ youth,” by extensive citations of passages from the English translations of the Scriptures, and the best poets and classical writers of England, as well as the philologists, has given the discussion an air of literary interest, which questions of law, in ordinary forensic debate, will seldom admit.

A preliminary question, however, of a purely legal charac ■ ter, precedes the question, which has thus been discussed in a manner alike interesting for its literary taste and research, and for its legal discrimination ; and that is, whether in this stage of the proceedings, the complaint is not prematurely brought, and whether this court, as a court of equity, has jurisdiction of it. It becomes necessary, therefore, to consider what is the nature of the institution, respecting which the question arises, and the established rules of law applicable to it.

[529]*529We have already said, that, in our judgment, the act of incorporation referred to did not constitute this charity. It did not enlarge or diminish the powers of the trustees, except as to the mode of acting in certain particulars, and it did not exempt them from the duties and responsibilities, which would have devolved upon them as trustees acting in their natural capacities.

The trustees, then, are an eleemosynary corporation, founded by the testator, as donor, for the purposes of education, which is in its nature a charity, and looks forward to perpetual existence. There is a further provision in the will, confirmed by the act of incorporation, making the selectmen of Newburyport a board of visitors.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Mass. 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-cushing-mass-1848.