Noel v. Olds

138 F.2d 581, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 155, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2605
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedOctober 11, 1943
Docket8352-8355
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 138 F.2d 581 (Noel v. Olds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noel v. Olds, 138 F.2d 581, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 155, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2605 (D.C. Cir. 1943).

Opinion

MILLER, Associate Justice.

William Hayes Ackland was a citizen of the United States, domiciled in the District of Columbia. He owned property having a value well over a million dollars; including certain manuscripts and art objects which he valued highly. On May 4, 1936, Ackland executed his last will and testament; in which, among other things, he provided for the erection of a memorial building in the form of a gallery or museum, to house his treasures, upon the campus of Duke University in North Carolina, or, in the event permission could not be obtained therefor, then, upon the campus of the University of North Carolina, or, as a third alternative, upon the campus of Rollins College in Florida. He provided, also, for the perpetual maintenance and upkeep of the building and for continuing acquisition of additional objects of art. Thereafter, in December, 1936, the testator addressed letters to Duke University, the University of North Carolina and Rollins College, substantially in the following language: “I am the owner of some valuable paintings and statuary and have thought of building and endowing a gallery in connection with a southern university. Before making my will, I should like to know whether such a gift would be acceptable and under what conditions the gift would be received? The style of architecture is to be in keeping with other buildings and the site I would expect the University to furnish. In regard to other particulars— which do not occur to me at the moment— I should be glad to be informed through the authorities.” Interviews and letters followed between the testator and President Few of Duke University, and between the testator and President Holt of Rollins College. President Few gave the testator oral and written assurances that the building contemplated by the testator would be constructed upon the campus of Duke University and urged that he change his will of May 4, 1936, to designate Duke University, alone, as the site for the same. He tendered to the testator the services of a member of the Duke Endowment Board to prepare a new will. 1 He furnished to the testator the services of the architect of Duke University, who drew plans for the proposed gallery or museum. He visited the testator in Washington and invited him to visit Duke University. He expressed a heartfelt common interest with the testator in the “cause of art in the South.” While engaged in these blandishments, Few attempted — for what reason does not clearly appear — to persuade the testator to make either an inter vivos gift or a direct bequest *584 to Duke University instead of providing for administration of his estate in trust as he had done in his 1936 will. 2 Upon counseling with his advisers Ackland declined to make a gift or bequest of his estate in the manner suggested; but he did execute a new will on November 10, 1938, designating the Duke University campus as the site for the memorial gallery or museum. He died in February, 1940; his will was admitted to probate in June, 1940; in September, 1941, Duke University, by resolution of its Executive Committee, declined: “ * * * all of the provisions of said Will with respect to said institution, including all the benefits, burdens and responsibilities thereof, * In the meantime, in August, 1941, a complaint was filed in the District Court seeking a construction of the will of testator and other relief. Plaintiffs in this suit are the next of kin of testator. They named as defendants the executors and trustees under the will of testator, Duke University, Rollins College, and other beneficiaries named in the will. Duke University defaulted and responsive pleadings were filed by the other defendants. Plaintiffs moved for judgment on the pleadings. The University of North Carolina moved for leave to intervene and filed a proposed answer, counterclaim and cross-claim. The trial court confirmed the clerk’s entries of default of Duke University; upheld the legacies to individuals, and held them sever-able from the charitable trust; upheld a trust in favor of Rollins College to provide an annual prize; held that the trust for the construction and maintenance of a gallery or museum was a valid charitable trust, but that Duke University having declined all the benefits, burdens and responsibilities of the will, the trust had become impossible of performance and hence had failed; denied the motion of the University of North Carolina for leave to intervene, but without prejudice to its right to renew the motion, in event the judgment of the court should be reversed on appeal. It ordered distribution accordingly. Four appeals from the judgment 1 were consolidated for hearing in this court.

We agree with the trial court that the will created a valid charitable trust. As the Supreme Court has said: “Charitable uses are favorites with courts of equity. The construction of all instruments where *585 they are concerned is liberal in their behalf.” 3 The proposition has been many times repeated by this and other courts. 4 The trust created by testator in the present case fully satisfies the requirement that the object and effect of a true charitable bequest is to confer a public benefit. 5

Appellants Noel, Brown, et al., in No. 8352, contend that the trust should fail, on the theory that in creating it testator’s major purpose was the erection of a memorial apse and “an elaborate sarcophagus.” They rely upon cases which are concerned with bequests for perpetual maintenance of burial lots 6 or which, they say, were for memorials trying to masquerade as charities. 7 But this contention has no application in the present situation. The placing of the gallery or museum on a university campus; specification that it should be constructed according to plans submitted by Duke University, which included galleries, classrooms and instructors’ offices; provision of funds for continuing purchase of art objects and for enlargement of the building; all combined to give the trust a character which comes clearly within the scope of trusts for charitable purposes. 8 Many of the best known charitable trusts have carried the names of their creators 9 and memorials erected under such trusts have frequently included, as incidental thereto, apses, mausoleums and recumbent statues. Such vanities, if they may properly be so characterized, 10 are not sufficient to defeat the major purpose of such trusts, or prevent their recognition as true charities. 11 As Scott states the proposition: “Where a trust is created for educational, religious or other charitable purpos-, *586 es, the mere fact that it is to serve as a memorial to the testator or another does not prevent it from being a charitable trust.” 12 Again, the same author says: “It is well settled that the motive of the donor is immaterial.

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Bluebook (online)
138 F.2d 581, 78 U.S. App. D.C. 155, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 2605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noel-v-olds-cadc-1943.