Quinn v. Shields

17 N.W. 437, 62 Iowa 129
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 4, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 17 N.W. 437 (Quinn v. Shields) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quinn v. Shields, 17 N.W. 437, 62 Iowa 129 (iowa 1883).

Opinion

Beck, J.

I. Mary Tally, deceased, executed a will, in the sixth item of which she directs that a certain note and mortgage securing it, made to her by The Sisters of the Humility of Mary, a corporation organized under the laws of the state, should be surrendered to that corporation, and should he canceled without payment. The seventh item of the will disposes of certain notes and mortgages by directing, in tbe language of tbe will, that the securities “shall go and be held and controlled and managed by my friend and relative, Miss Mary T. Shields, for and during her natural life, and for her and to her sole benefit, and, at the death of Mary T. Shields, I desire, and my will is, that the principal of the securities in this subdivision of my will mentioned, and so much of the interest arising therefrom as shall remain in the hands of Mary T. Shields unexpended, shall go to the sup[131]*131port and encouragement of such worthy and charitable and educational and religious institutions of the Roman Catholic faith, as my said friend, Mary T. Shields, may determine, and she is charged with the duty of making such disposition of said means as is herein provided, by will properly executed before her death, it being my intention that so much of the funds herein entrusted to said Mary T. Shields, for her use and benefit during her natural life, as may remain at her death, shall not descend to her heirs, but go, as above provided, to some Catholic institutition or institutions.”

The ninth item directs that Mary T. Shields “shall take and hold, for the purposes mentioned in the seventh subdivision [item] of this will,” certain real' estate, “or the proceeds which may arise from the sale of said property.”

The plaintiffs are the heirs at law of Mary Tally. They allege in their petition that The Sisters of the Humility of Mary, which is claimed to be a corporation organized under chapter 2, title 9, of the Code, which provides for the organization of corporations other than those for pecuniary profit, is not, by its articles of incorporation, intended or required to act for any of the purposes specified in the chapter of the Code referred to, or for any public charity or purpose, but exercises its powers for adequate compensation, and for private gain to itself or to its individual members. It is claimed in the petition that the incorporators, as is shown by the articles of incorporation, have and are to have no associates, or accession to their numbers, and that the incorporation does not hold its property in trust, but as an absolute owner, having power to manage, control, and dispose of all property for the benefit of itself and the incorporators.

It is also claimed that the devise to the corporation is not by its terms in trust, but is an unqualified gift, without any direction or obligation imposed to use the funds for any charity.

It is also shown that the will is witnessed by Ellen Gal-vin, one of the incorporators, who has ever since been a [132]*132member of tbe incorporation, and that, as but one other witness attests it, the corporation cannot take under the will, by reason of the alleged fact that Ellen Galvin is net, as is required by the statute, a disinterested and competent witness. This claim is based upon the allegation of the petition above set out.

It is alleged in the petition that the bequest in the seventh item, and the devise in the ninth, are void for uncertainty, inasmuch as the will does not indicate the persons or objects .for which the funds and property shall be appropriated.

It is shown by an amendment to the petition that the incorporators, who are the only members of the corporation of The Sisters of the Humility of Mary, are all aliens, and none of them are citizens of the United States and of this state. For this reason it is claimed that they are not authorized by the laws of this state to become an incorporated body.

The defendants, the executors named in the will (Mary T. Shields being one of them), which has been admitted to probate, and the legatee and devisee named in the sixth, seventh and ninth items of the will as above shown, demurred to the petition, on the ground that it fails to show facts entitling plaintiff to the relief claimed. The demurrer was sustained. The case is before us for determination upon the pleadings.

II. It will be observed that the petition assails the respective items of the will on different grounds. 1. The bequest to The Sisters of The Humility of Mary is claimed to be void, for the reason that Ellen Galvin, one of the two. witnesses to the will, is not competent and disinterested. The claim is based upon the ground that the corporation is not a charitable institution, but is a private corporation for profit, and the witness to the will has a property and interest in its assets.. 2. The incorporators and members of the corporation are not citizens of the United States and of this state. 3. The bequest and devise to Mary T. Shields is [133]*133claimed to be void for uncertainty. We will proceed to consider these grounds of objection to the will.

III. We will proceed to enquire whether Ellen Galvin, under the facts of the case as disclosed by the allegations of 1. will: cie-tehiewirporal teíícy of cor-" witness.83 the petition, is a competent and disinterested witness to the will. It may be premised that the questions relating to the character and pow-. ers of the corporation of the Sisters of Humility of Mary, and whether it is a corporation for charitable purposes or for pecuniary profit, relate alone to the question of the competency of the witness to the will. If she is a competent witness, and there is, on the grounds of her interest, no objection to the will, the corporation will take the property without regard to its character and powers.

The allegations of the petition, urging the objections to the will on the ground of the interest of the witness, are 2. cokpojjaer for SSy or for profit, based upon or refer to the articles of incorporation of The Sisters of the Humility of. Mary, keoomes necessary to .consider these-articles, in order to determine the question before us. This can be better and more fairly done by setting out in full the articles of incorporation, which are in the following language:

“Articles of Incorporation of The Sisters of the Humility of Mary, made and adopted this eleventh day of May, 1878, in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 2, Title IZ, of the Code of Iowa, A. D. 1873:
“Aet. 1. The name of this corporation shall be ‘The Sisters of the Humility of Mary.’
“Aet, 2. The territory of its business shall be the state of Iowa, with its principal place of doing business Ottumwa, Wapello county, state of Iowa.
“Aet. 3. The incorporators are, Mary CatherineManjean, Mary Lawler, Ellen Galvin, Ellen Wogan, Anna Patterson, Margaret Burke, Jane Mangan and Josephine Gerardine.
“Aet. 4. The object and purposes of this association are to afford a greater opportunity and more security to the in-[134]*134corporators and their successors, in the establishment and management of hospitals, Schools, asylums, and other institutions, for the relief, education and care of the poor, the needy, the distressed, the orphan, and the ignorant.
“ART. 5.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.W. 437, 62 Iowa 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinn-v-shields-iowa-1883.