Smyth v. Visitors of the Theological Institution in Phillips Academy in Andover

28 N.E. 683, 154 Mass. 551, 1891 Mass. LEXIS 183
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 28 N.E. 683 (Smyth v. Visitors of the Theological Institution in Phillips Academy in Andover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smyth v. Visitors of the Theological Institution in Phillips Academy in Andover, 28 N.E. 683, 154 Mass. 551, 1891 Mass. LEXIS 183 (Mass. 1891).

Opinions

Knowltoh, J.

The Theological Institution in Phillips Academy in Andover has a peculiar organization. In 1778 the Academy was founded by Samuel Phillips and John Phillips, “ for the purpose of instructing youth, not only in English and Latin grammar, writing, arithmetic, and those sciences wherein they are commonly taught, but more especially to learn the great end and real business of living,” and was placed under the control of a board of trustees. On October 4, 1780, this board was incorporated by an act of the State of Massachusetts Bay as “ The Trustees of Phillips Academy,” with a view to accomplish more successfully the purpose of the original founders. The act provides that these trustees “ and their successors ” shall “ be the true and sole visitors, trustees, and governors of the said Phillips Academy, in perpetual succession forever,” and gives them power to make such laws, orders, and rules as to them seem best. They are authorized to receive gifts, and to hold them “ on such terms, and under such provisions and limitations, as may be expressed in any deed or instrument of conveyance to them made,” provided that the condition of the grant or donation does not require them “to act, in any respect, counter to the design of the first grantors, or of any prior donation.” St. 1780, c. 15, § 5, 5 Prov. Laws, (State ed.) 1418. By the last will of John Phillips, proved and allowed on April 18, 1795, one third of the residue of his property was given to the Trustees of Phillips Academy, “ for the benefit more especially of charitable scholars ”; and it was [553]*553provided that those who expected to become clergymen might be assisted in the study of divinity by “ some eminent Calvinistic minister of the Gospel.” By the St. of 1807, c. 22, the corporation is authorized to hold “for,the purpose of a theological institution, and in furtherance of the designs of the pious founders and benefactors of said academy,” real and personal estate, the income of which is to “ be always applied to said objects, agreeably to the will of the donors, if consistent with the original design of the founders of the said academy.” Afterwards, in the same year, Phoebe Phillips and others established and endowed “ a public theological institution in Phillips Academy,” on the condition that it “ be accepted by the trustees aforesaid, and that it be forever conducted and governed by them and their successors in conformity to” certain “general principles and regulations,” which they unitedly adopted as the constitution of the institution. Under this constitution and the preceding legislative act of the same year, the theological institution became a department of Phillips Academy, the management and control of which were in the corporation, under regulations or statutes which were set out at length in the instrument creating it. The trustees were charged with the duty of conducting the institution in conformity with the wishes of the donors as expressed in these regulations, and elaborate provisions were made prescribing methods of management. At the same time, certain visitatorial powers were reserved to the founders in Article 32 of the instrument, which is as follows: “Notwithstanding this seminary is placed by this constitution under the immediate care and government of the Trustees of Phillips Academy, it is always to be understood, and it is hereby expressly declared, that every founder of a professorship, scholarship, or any other living whatever in this institution, will have the exclusive right of prescribing the regulations and statutes to be observed by the said trustees in conducting the concerns of the same, said regulations and statutes being always consistent with the principles and object of this institution; and also the right, for the term of his life, of appointing in the original deed or grant such local visitor or visitors as he may think proper, and to endow him or them with all visitatorial powers and authorities necessary to secure and enforce due observance [554]*554and execution of his said regulations and statutes.” This was the original foundation of the Theological Institution in Phillips Academy.

In 1808, Moses Brown and others gave a fund of forty thousand dollars to the corporation, the income of which is to be applied to the maintenance of two professors in the theological institution, and by certain elaborately drawn instruments they prescribed the terms on which the gifts were made, and the manner in which they were to be used. These gifts were accepted by the trustees, and the regulations for the management of them are entitled “ The Statutes of the Associate Foundation in the Theological Institution in Andover,” or “ The Associate Statutes.” In May, 1808, in pursuance of a power reserved by them in the original constitution, the original founders, Phoebe Phillips and others, by additional regulations, brought the original statutes into conformity with the associate statutes in all important particulars.

In general character the statutes of the associate foundation, differ but little from the original statutes. They leave the whole management and control of the theological institution in the board of trustees, who constitute the corporation, and who hold the property, subject only to a visitatorial power in the board of visitors, whose general duty is to visit the corporation and see that the trustees manage the institution in conformity with the statutes, and, if errors or abuses are discovered, to correct them; and subject also to a right and duty on the part of the visitors to take original supervisory action in two or three matters in the management, as in the examination of professors prior to their inauguration, and in the approving or negativing the election of a professor by the trustees, and in appointing a standing committee to ascertain the qualifications of applicants for admission to the seminary.

The first part of Article 12 of the associate statutes is as follows : “ That the trust aforesaid may be always executed agreeably to the true intent of this our foundation, and that we may effectually guard the same in all future time against all perversion, or the smallest avoidance of our true design as herein expressed, we, the aforesaid founders, do hereby constitute a board of visitors to be, as in our place and stead, the guardians, [555]*555overseers, and protectors of this our foundation in manner as is expressed in the following provisions,” etc. By Article 20 it is.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.E. 683, 154 Mass. 551, 1891 Mass. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smyth-v-visitors-of-the-theological-institution-in-phillips-academy-in-mass-1891.