of Moore v. Moore

50 N.J. Eq. 554
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 50 N.J. Eq. 554 (of Moore v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
of Moore v. Moore, 50 N.J. Eq. 554 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

This suit was brought to procure a construction of the will of George D. G. Moore, deceased. His executor is the complainant. He says that in attempting to execute his testator’s will he finds himself confronted by several questions, so difficult- to solve,, that he ought not to be required to act in respect to them until his duty has been judicially defined. An executor, or any other person charged with fiduciary duties, has an undoubted right in cases where his duties or his rights are involved in doubt, so-that he cannot act without risk of doing wrong either to himself or others, to ask judicial direction.

The testator died on the 13th day of October, 1891, leaving-a will consisting of three distinct papers—-first, a will proper,, bearing date June 17th, 1889; second, a codicil, bearing date January 24th, 1891; and, third, a second codicil, bearing date October 5th, 1891. He died, it will be noticed, eight days after the last codicil was executed. He left a widow, but no issue» In the interim between the date of the last codicil and the day of his death he married his second wife. He owned at the time-of his death real and personal estate in this state, and some real' estate elsewhere, from which, the complainant believes, not much-over $60,000 can be realized. His pecuniary legacies amount to-[556]*556$51,500. He also bequeathed two mortgages upon which there is due, for principal, $3,450, and thirty shares of bank stock, worth, on the market, about $3,300. In addition to these gifts and several bequests of specific chattels, consisting of furniture, books and articles for personal use and adornment, he gives $50,000 in trust to his executor, with direction to pay the interest thereof, semi-annually, to his widow during her life, and on her death to apply and pay the principal “to and for the purpose of a home for respectable aged people of both sexes, where husband and wife can be taken care of together, and not separated in their old age.” It thus appears that the total amount disposed of by the testator, including the mortgages and bank stock but excluding the value of the chattels, is $108,300. That sum exceeds the estimated value of his estate by $48,300.

The first point on which the complainant asks for instruction is, whether or not it is his duty to pay a legacy given to the proprietors of the Rosedale cemetery. The legatee is a corporation formed for the purpose of acquiring land to be held and used exclusively for the-burial of the dead. The sum originally given was $400, but the first codicil increased it $100, making the total gift $500. The words of the original gift are:

“ I order and direct that there -shall he paid immediately after my death to The Proprietors -of the Eosedale Cemetery the sum of §400 for the perpetual care of my burial lot in said Cemetery, the interest to be used and applied to caring for and ornamenting said lot by keeping flowers planted and growing thereon as I have done as nearly as the said interest will allow.”

The validity of this gift is doubted. The ground of doubt is whether, inasmuch as the gift creates a perpetual trust for a purely private 'purpose, and is not, therefore, a gift for a charitable use, it is not void on the ground that it violates the rule against perpetuities. Professor Gray defines this rule as follows : “ No interest subject to a condition precedent is good, unless the condition must be fulfilled, if at all, within twenty-one years after some life in being at the creation of the interest.” Gray Perp. § 201. The rule applies to the creation of both legal and equitable interests, and interests in. both real and per[557]*557sonal estate. Under the rule established by the decision of this-court, in Detwitter v. Hartman, 10 Stew. Eq. 341, there can be no doubt that if the gift in this case had been made to the complainant, or to any other natural person, in its present form, that it would have been invalid. The testator,, in the case just cited, ordered his executor to invest $5,000 in bonds of the United States and expend the income arising therefrom in keeping his family monument and burial plot and the enclosure thereof in good repair. Chancellor Runyon held that while perpetual trusts-might lawfully be created for the promotion of charities, still,, as the trust under review was not of that character, but was created to promote a purely private purpose, it must be declared, void. In describing the legal character of the gift, the Chancellor used this language: “The direction in this case does not limit the continuance of the fund for repairs, and the testator makes no disposition whatever of the principal. The provision, therefore, is to be regarded as creating a perpetuity—as locking up $5,000 forever for the purpose of keeping the testator’s burial place and monument in good repair. That object is not a charity, and therefore the bequest, because it is a perpetuity, cannot be sustained.” This exposition of the law touches the-gift now under consideration at every essential point except one, and that is, the gift here is not made to a natural person, but to-a corporation created for the purpose of providing a place of burial for the dead.

. This difference in the form of the two legacies raises this. question: Are corporations, created for the purpose for which the legatee in this case was created, authorized by law to take property, by gift, subject to a perpetual trust for the purpose of keeping the burial lot of the donor in the cemetery of the legatee perpetually adorned with flowers ? ISTo doubt can be entertained that the rule against perpetuities may be altered or abolished by the legislature. By an act passed in 1878 it was enacted that any cemetery association within this state, existing under special charter or by general law, may take and hold any property bequeathed or given upon trust to apply its income to the planting and cultivation of trees, shrubs, flowers and plants in and around [558]*558any lot or plot in such cemetery, or to the improvement or embellishment of any lot or plot therein, according to the terms of such grant, devise or bequest. Rev. Sup. pp. 76, 77, §§ 12, 13. Only so much of this statute has been given as bears upon the question under consideration and not its full text. The design of this statute, as I interpret it, was to abrogate the rule against perpetuities, so far as that rule applied to gifts made to cemetery corporations, and to make it lawful for such corporations to hold property, acquired by gift, subject to a perpetual trust for certain designated purposes. It plainly declares that it shall be lawful for such corporations to take and hold property, upon trust, according to the terms of the grant, devise or bequest by which ithe trust is created. This language, understood in its ordinary sense, is broad enough to comprehend a perpetual trust. Moreover, in construing this statute, it is important to remember that the corporations, whose capacity the legislature were defining, are endowed with immortality for the purpose of providing places of burial for the dead, where their dust may rest undisturbed and inviolate forever, and that the use of any part of their lands, by the owner of a lot or plot, for the burial of the dead, withdraws such lot or plot from all the ordinary uses to which land may be put, and renders it inalienable forever thereafter except as a place of sepulture. Rev. p. 102 § 11. This legislative declaration gives expression to a sentiment common to mankind.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.J. Eq. 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/of-moore-v-moore-njch-1892.