Town of Milton v. Attorney General

49 N.E.2d 909, 314 Mass. 234, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 813
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 29, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 49 N.E.2d 909 (Town of Milton v. Attorney General) 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
Town of Milton v. Attorney General, 49 N.E.2d 909, 314 Mass. 234, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 813 (Mass. 1943).

Opinion

Lummus, J.

By the will of Edwin D. Wadsworth late of Milton, dated May 29, 1899, and admitted to probate on March 27, 1901, the testator left the residue of his estate, after the deaths of his wife and children without issue of the children, to “the town of Milton, aforesaid, for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a Public Hospital within said town, to be under such regulations and board of management as said town may, from time to time, adopt and establish.” Apparently the wife had died, and the children had died without issue, as early as 1915, for in that year the residue, called the Wadsworth Fund, amounting to $61,766.63, was turned over to the town, and on March 4, 1916, the gift was formally accepted by the town. The fund amounted in November, 1939, to approximately $195,000. It is now in the hands of a board of trustees elected under Spec. St. 1917, c. 305.

When the testator died there was no hospital in Milton. In 1903 a public charitable corporation, now called Milton Hospital and Convalescent Home, was incorporated. By Spec. St. 1916, c. 46, its purpose was enlarged to “include the furnishing of medical and surgical aid and other service of a similar character to persons of both sexes, adults, children and infants, and the establishment and maintenance of a hospital, convalescent home, out-patient department, dispensary, ambulance service and any other department or service of a similar nature.” For a long time it has maintained, and still maintains, a public hospital in Milton.

The existing hospital is “reasonably well equipped and efficient,” except that its capacity is only twenty-six beds instead of the forty beds needed, and that the hospital is [236]*236in a rather old wooden building. The population of the town is between eighteen thousand and nineteen thousand. There is need of a new hospital building large enough to contain forty beds. With such a hospital, there would be no need of another.

The cost of such a new hospital building, apart from the site, would be about $207,600. There would probably be an annual operating deficit of about $15,000 for one such hospital. With two hospitals to divide the receipts the operating deficit would be materially increased. For some years the town has spent on an average about $3,000 a year for hospitalization, apparently under § 3 of Amendment 46 to the Constitution of Massachusetts. Every $1,800 of operating deficit would require an addition of five cents to the tax rate.

Both the town of Milton and the Milton Hospital and Convalescent Home desire that the Wadsworth Fund be turned over to the Milton Hospital and Convalescent Home under an arrangement by which it will use the fund in building a new hospital for forty beds, and will supply whatever additional money may be necessary, and will assume the maintenance of the hospital for both charity and paying patients. If this arrangement is made, a site for the hospital will be supplied without cost. The Milton Hospital and Convalescent Home will move to the new building, furnishing any necessary additional equipment, and will use its old building as a nurses’ home. The Milton Hospital and Convalescent Home is financially able to supply the necessary funds, and will then have an income from its invested funds of about $9,000 to meet operating deficits. Besides, it will have bright expectations of raising by subscription among the inhabitants of the town, many of whom are wealthy, such additional funds as may b.e necessary to meet any operating deficit.

By St. 1931, c. 317, the town was authorized to “dispose of and use the funds and property received by said town under the will of Edwin D. Wadsworth ... for such other purposes, in such manner and upon such terms and conditions as may be authorized by the decree of a court of com[237]*237petent jurisdiction upon a bill in equity for instructions or other appropriate proceeding brought by said town.” Accordingly this bill was filed on June 10, 1939, setting forth that the fund is inadequate to establish and maintain a public hospital, that the town cannot augment the fund sufficiently within any reasonable time, and that the town has voted to authorize proceedings for the application of the fund cy pres by payment to the Milton Hospital and Convalescent Home for the erection and equipment of a new hospital building. The Attorney General appeared and answered, contending that there is need of additional hospital facilities in Milton, but that the town is bound to furnish the necessary funds and to use the funds on hand strictly in accord with the provisions of the will.

The Attorney General contends that by accepting the gift the town became bound to supply from its own funds all the money needed, in addition to the Wadsworth Fund, to build, equip and maintain the hospital according to the literal provisions of the will. He cites Adams v. Plunkett, 274 Mass. 453; but in that case no fund for maintenance was given. This court said (page 464), “The conveyance to the town was upon the express condition that the property should be used forever as a hospital. Since no endowment accompanied the grant, the acceptance of the gift upon this condition imported an obligation to maintain and support the hospital at public expense so far as necessary.” In the case at bar, however, the gift was for the purpose of maintaining as well as establishing a public hospital. The acceptance of the gift imported no contract to make up its deficiencies. Cases in other jurisdictions where a donee was held to make such a contract depended upon express provisions to that effect. Seibold v. Naperville, 19 Fed. Sup. 281. Woman’s Hospital League v. Paducah, 188 Ky. 604. Alumnae Association of William Penn High School for Girls v. University of Pennsylvania, 306 Penn. St. 283. In Bowden v. Brown, 200 Mass. 269, the gift was to a town “toward the erection of a building that should be for the sick and poor,” and it was intimated that if the town had accepted the gift, which was manifestly" insufficient to erect and main[238]*238tain the building, it would have had to supply any deficiency. Here the will does not contemplate any contribution by the town or anyone else. It is true that Spec. St. 1917, c. 305, § 2, which was accepted by the town, says that “The town may appropriate and raise money for the establishment, support or maintenance of the hospital”; but that provision implies that the mere acceptance of the gift did not bind it to do so.

' In Sanderson v. White, 18 Pick. 328, 333, Chief Justice Shaw said: “In case of a gift to charitable uses, . . . where a literal execution may become impracticable or inexpedient, in part or even in whole, it will be carried into effect so as to accomplish the general purpose of the donor, as nearly as circumstances will permit, and as such general charitable intent can be ascertained.” This is quoted with approval iii Judkins v. Hyannis Public Library Association, 302 Mass. 425, 427. See Scott, Trusts (1939) § 399. As in Ely v. Attorney General, 202 Mass. 545, it is altogether problematical and uncertain how long it would take to accumulate the Iiécessary funds to build and maintain the required hospital. Even if the fund should be so accumulated, ignoring the existence of the Milton Hospital and Convalescent Home, a' waste of charitable facilities would result through the coexistence of two hospitals, one of which would be unnecessary. Attorney General v. Briggs, 164 Mass. 561.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.E.2d 909, 314 Mass. 234, 1943 Mass. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-milton-v-attorney-general-mass-1943.