Novak v. Trustees of the Orphans' Home

90 A. 997, 123 Md. 161, 1914 Md. LEXIS 112
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 19, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 90 A. 997 (Novak v. Trustees of the Orphans' Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Novak v. Trustees of the Orphans' Home, 90 A. 997, 123 Md. 161, 1914 Md. LEXIS 112 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Stockbridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The relief sought by the bill filed iu this case is a decree for the specific performance of a contract of sale of two tracts of land in northeast Baltimore. E'rank Aovak, the defendant, the prospective vendee, objects to carrying out the contract on the ground that the appellees cannot give him a merchantable title, and that question presents the issue which the Court is now called on to determine. The property in question formerly belonged to James. Dolan, who was a catholic priest. By his will executed in December, 1869, and proved in January, 1870, he attempted to dispose of it in the three following provisions:

Item: I give and bequeath my house and lot on Gough street to the Young Catholics’ Briend Society in the City of Baltimore in trust, not to be sold, for the purpose of establishing a Children’s Aid Society. I also leave them one-third of all my property real, personal and mixed, for the support of the said society.
Item: I give and bequeath one-third of my real estate in trust to the Trustees of the Orphans’ Home in Baltimore City, with power and authority to lease said real estate, but not to sell the same, and to use the interest, or income of said lease for the following purposes, for the support of the Orphan Boys and Girls belonging to St. Patrick’s Parish, Bells Point, (whose parents died within the limits of said Parish) in some Catholic Orphan Asylum or at some Catholic School, said boys and girls to be kept at said Asylum or School until of twelve years of age and no longer and then to have said hoys and girls bound or placed in s-jme’good Catholic, families.
*164 Item: I give one-third of my real estate to the Trustees of St. Patrick’s School, in the City of Baltimore for the purpose of establishing a regular Free School for boys and girls, perfectly free schools, and for no other object. In my bequests of real estate to the Orphans’ Home in Baltimore City and to the Trustees of St. Patrick’s School in the City of Baltimore the house and lot in Gough Street is. not included, the said house and lot being bequeathed by a previous item to the Young Catholics’ Friend Society in the City of Baltimore, nor is the ground rent on St. Michael’s Church, in the City of Baltimore, of four hundred and twenty dollars, which has been previously disposed of in this will to be included in said bequest to said Young Catholics’ Friend Society, said Orphans’ Home or said St. Patrick’s School in the City of Baltimore. All the rest and residue and remainder of my estate I give and bequeath one-third to “The Trustees of the Orphans’ Home” in the City of Baltimore; one-third to “The Trustees of St. Patrick’s School” in the City of Baltimore, and one-third to the “Young Catholics’ Friend Society” in the City of Baltimore, to be used for the above-named purposes; I hereby authorize my executors hereinafter named to lease any real estate of which I may die possessed and execute good and sufficient deed or deeds for the same to any lessee or lessees who may agree to lease said property or any part thereof.

At the time when this will was admitted to probate three of the four intended beneficiaries were existing corporations. The Trustees of St. Patrick’s School having been chartered ■ by the General Assembly by the Act of 1845, Chapter 126; the Young Catholics’ Friend Society by a certificate of incorporation dated March 30, 1848, and the Orphans’ Home by the Act of 1860, Chapter 382. After the death of Father Dolan, by Chapter 205 of the Acts of 1872 a corporation was created under the name of the Board of Managers of the Dolan Children’s Aid Society. That act, however, could have no effect towards validating the devise made for the purpose of establishing a Children’s Aid Society as it was passed long *165 before the adoption of Chapter 249 of the Act of 1888, now codified as section 328 of Article 93 of the Code (1912), and there was no request or even suggestion contained in the will looking to the formation of a corporation for the purposes of carrying out the devise. Yingling v. Miller, 77 Md. 104. This intended legacy must therefore bo held void. Even if it was to be treated as a gift directly to the Young Catholics’ Friend Society, and to be regarded as constituting a trust or not according as the purposes contemplated in the devise were such as came directly within the corporate purposes for which the Young Catholics’ Friend Society was chartered it must still be held void. Articles 8 and 9 of the charter o£ the Young Catholics’ Friend Society set out the objects for which that corporation was formed and these were for the purposes of investigating the circumstances of indigent children and supplying them according to their needs with clothing, books, etc. No case has been cited, and it is doubtful if one could be, which attempts to define in precise terms the functions of such a society. It is an organization essentially charitable in its nature, but not necessarily religious within the meaning of the Constitution, and it is difficult to conceive purposes more likely to be a matter of aid to children than the supplying them with clothing and books, unless it be the furnishing them with food. The Young Catholics’ Friend Society was therefore essentially a Children’s Aid Society, and the devise, if it could be treated as made to that society, could not be regarded as in any manner creating a trust. The devise in the first of the clauses quoted above is however open to a far more serious objection in the fact that it is expressly provided that it shall not be sold, that is that the property is placed extra commerciam, thereby offending the rule against perpetuities. It was upon this precise ground that an intended gift in the will of Melissa Baker was held to be inoperative. Trinity Church v. Baker, 91 Md. 574. See also Missionary Society v. Humphreys, 91 Md. 131. This provision of the will accordingly cannot be sustained.

*166 By the second clause quoted Eather Dolan attempted to give óne-third of his real estate to the Trustees of the Orphans’ Home, in trust to use the income for the support of the orphan hoys and girls of St.-Patrick’s Parish whose parents had died within the limits of that parish. The devise in this provision was to a corporation capable of taking, not for the use of the corporation, devisee, but for a fairly accurately designated class, with which the testator had become familiar through his long years of service -as pastor of the Parish. The effect of this was therefore to create a trust, with beneficiaries none too clearly designated. But in this case again while the power was given to the trustee named to lease the property as a means of deriving revenue for the benefit of the trust there was an express and absolute inhibition on its sale. Thus it is open to the same objection as that which proved fatal to the devise made in the first clause of the will already considered, and this devise must therefore be held void.

The third clause was a devise of the one-third of the testator’s real estate to the Trustees of St.

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Bluebook (online)
90 A. 997, 123 Md. 161, 1914 Md. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novak-v-trustees-of-the-orphans-home-md-1914.