President of Mt. Saint Mary's College v. Williams

103 A. 479, 132 Md. 184, 1918 Md. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 16, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 A. 479 (President of Mt. Saint Mary's College v. Williams) 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
President of Mt. Saint Mary's College v. Williams, 103 A. 479, 132 Md. 184, 1918 Md. LEXIS 37 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal presents for consideration the question of the validity of a bequest to the President and Council of Mount Saint Mary’s College, contained in the residuary clause of the Will of Dr. Charles W. Hoffman, late of Frederick County, deceased.

*186 Dr. Hoffman’s will is dated. September 7, 1894, and was probated on January 4, 1897. Tbe testator died in December, 1896. His will contained a number of bequests to friends and relatives and disposed of the rest and residue of his estate as follows:

“All the rest and residue of my estate of whatever description and wherever situated, I give, devise and bequeath to my friends, Charles W. Ross, Sr., Henry Williams and Benjamin F. Reich, all of Frederick, Maryland, in trust to keep the same invested and to pay the income or proceeds of the same semi-annually to my half-brothers, William F. Hoffman and John Hoffman, and my cousins, Hannah H. Reich, Sophia E. Trundle, John H. Reich, Henry O. Reich and C. Julian Reich, in equal shares during their natural lives, commencing for the first semi-annual payment six months after the probate of this my last will and testament; said equal shares of said income or proceeds to go to them during their natural lives respectively, and on the death of any one of the aforenamed beneficiaries, a similar division of said income 'or proceeds shall continue to be made among the survivors, and this is to continue until there shall shall but one survivor, who shall then receive during his or her natural life the entire income or proceeds, and on the death of the last survivor this trust shall cease, and I direct that my said trustee shall then pay the sum of ten thousand dollars to the president and directors of Georgetown College, D. 0., to be used by them for the benefit of the library of said college, and I direct my said trustees to then pay the rest and residue of this trust fund to the president and council of Mt. St. Mary’s College, near Emmitsburg, Frederick County, Maryland, to be used by them for the erection of a plain, substantial stone church on the site of the present old church on the hill near the graveyard, and not on the coombe or plain below near the college building.”

*187 The last survivor of the life beneficiaries mentioned in the clause of the will just quoted died on or about March 1, 1914, and shortly afterward Messrs. Vincent Sebold and John S. ISTewman, substituted trustees under the will, caused an auditor’s account to be stated which showed $63,094.09 for distribution under the residuary clause, of which $10,-000 was allowed to the President and Directors of Georgetown College, and the balance, $53,094.09, to the President and Council of Monnt St. Mary’s College. The account was ratified as to all items except the one last mentioned, to the allowance of which exceptions were filed. The: next of kin of the testator and Mount St. Mary’s College: were after-wards, through appropriate proceedings, made parties to the case, the former appearing as plaintiff petitioners, claiming the fund, and the latter as respondent. In its answer, as well as in the testimony .of its President, the College expressed its intention to nse the fund of $53,094.09, if paid over to it, in strict conformity to the: wishes of the: testator as expressed in his will.

After hearing and argument, the lower Conrt, Judges Wobthisgtox and P'bteks (Ciitef Judge IPrxeii dissenting), passed a decree in which the residuary bequest to tbe President and Council of Mount St. Mary’s College was declared to be “wholly ineffectual, inoperative, void and of no effect,” and in which the papers in the ease were referred to the auditor for the purpose of distributing the fund among the next of kin of the testator, as their interests may appear, after deducting the costs and expenses of the litigation. This appeal is from that decree.

The facts disclosed by the record are that the “old church on the hill near the graveyard,” referred to in Dr. Hoffman’s will was founded in 1806 or 1808 by Fathers Dubois and Piute. At the same time they founded a college. This college was afterwards incorporated by Chapter 316 of the Acts of 1835 under the name of the President and Council of Mount Saint Mary’s College. It is a secular, and not a *188 religious corporation, chartered “for the education of youth, the pursuit of science and the general diffusion .of knowledge.” Its founders were members of the Roman Catholic Church; its officers are members thereof, some of them priests, and some of its students it prepares for the priesthood. But this does not change its secular character. In Baltzell v. Church Home, 110 Md. 244, Judge Boyd says: “The mere fact that a corporation is under the control of members of a particular church' does not make it a religious corporation.” Later on in the same opinion Judge Boyd has this to say, which is peculiarly applicable to this case: “But the case which is perhaps most analogous to this is that of Colbert v. Speer, 24 App. Cas. (D. C.) 187. Judge Alvey delivered the opinion. The Court was considering a devise and bequests to the Georgetown College, which were objected to because it was contended they were intended to be ‘for the support, use and benefit of a religious sect, order and denomination, and to a public teacher of the gospel as such.’ As the Maryland Declaration of Rights was in effect in the District, the decision is peculiarly applicable. The Court said: ‘The fact that the college is or may be under the administrative control of a religious order known as the Order of Jesus does not bring the institution within the prohibition of the Declaration of Rights. The college is not a religious institution intended for the tuition and propagation of a particular doctrine and creed of religious belief, to the exclusion of all other creeds and beliefs, but it is an institution of learning for the admission and education of students of all denominations of religious faith. The act of incorporation of the college does not limit the exercise of the corporate powers conferred to the promotion of any religious creed or denomination, but the college is open to all alike. Eor limitations of the powers,and objects of the college we must look to the charter granted by Congress, and not elsewhere.’ ”

*189 The bequest, therefore, did not come within the provision of Article 38 of the Declaration of Rights. The legislative sanction was not required.

At the time the will was executed the site of the “old church on the hill near the graveyard,” and the old church itself, had been the property of the college for many years. In the beginning the college was located near the church, but the college was afterwards moved to the plain or coornbe below where it is now. The church itself had fallen into a state of disrepair. It was, in fact, dangerous. About 1894 it had ceased to be used by the students of the college. The priests of the college attended the parish as they had always done since the foundation of the college, in 1806 or 1808, until 1893 or 1894, when a separation took place between the college and the parish, although the parish continued to worship at the old church until its church, St.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A. 479, 132 Md. 184, 1918 Md. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/president-of-mt-saint-marys-college-v-williams-md-1918.