Trustees of the Storrs Agricultural School v. Whitney

8 A. 141, 54 Conn. 342, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 26, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 8 A. 141 (Trustees of the Storrs Agricultural School v. Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of the Storrs Agricultural School v. Whitney, 8 A. 141, 54 Conn. 342, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 3 (Colo. 1887).

Opinions

Pardee, J.

The Connecticut Soldiers’ Orphan Home was incorporated in 1864 for the charitable purpose of providing [343]*343a home, support and education for orphans or destitute children of soldiers and other citizens of this state. In 1866 Edwin Whitney conveyed to the corporators thereof and their successors, two pieces of land in the town of Mansfield, to be by them used for the purposes specified in their act of incorporation, with this proviso, viz.:—“Always provided, that if at any time said grantees or their successors in office shall abandon the use. of said premises for the purpose intended and specified in their said act of incorporation, then said grantees and their successors shall pay the market value of said property derived from the grantor to the selectmen of said town of Mansfield, and the same shall constitute a fund of which said selectmen and their successors in office shall be trustees, the interest of which shall be applied by said selectmen to aid indigent young men of said town of Mansfield in fitting themselves for the evangelical ministry. But no more than one hundred dollars shall be furnished to any one person during his whole course of study. And provided further, that in case the interest of said fund shall not be absorbed by education to indigent young men of said Mansfield as aforesaid, then the surplus shall be applied by said selectmen in aid of other indigent young men in this state fitting for the evangelical ministry.” The corporators accepted the gift and administered the trust to the specified use until 1875, when they ceased to do so. No part of the value of the property donated by Mr. Whitney has been paid by them or any one else to the selectmen of the town of Mansfield, as required by the proviso in Mr. Whitney’s deed. The town of Mansfield subsequently directed its selectmen to decline the trust and quit-claim all of the interest of the town in the property to the widow of Mr. Whitney, the donor. They did so in 1876. In 1878 the Connecticut Soldiers’ Orphan Home quit-claimed its interest in the property to Mrs. Whitney, and she subsequently conveyed it to Augustus Storrs. In 1881 the legislature established the Storrs Agricultural School, and appointed trustees for the management thereof, with power to take donations of land or other property in behalf of the state for the use [344]*344of the school. The plaintiffs are such trustees. Iu 1881 Augustus Storrs conveyed, the premises to them as such trustees for the establishment of said school. They have instituted this proceeding for the purpose of obtaining a judicial determination of the question whether the state has an unincumbered title to the property. The case is reserved for the advice of this court.

Mr. Whitney by deed conveyed the premises in question to the Connecticut Soldiers’ Orphan Home, to it and its successors, upon a charitable use, “ in consideration of the benevolent ends embraced in the act of incorporation and from a desire to aid in carrying out the same.” Desiring to make it certain that either this identical property, or the value thereof in money, should perpetually serve a charitable use, and not being certain that the first named use would be long continued, he inserted the proviso in Iris deed. The legal effect of his conveyance, taken as a whole, is the gift of property in fee to one corporation for a charitable use; the right to perpetual retention and use if it chooses to exereise it, with a conditional limitation annexed upon its determination not to use. Upon such determination the donor provided for the continued use of his gift for charity by requiring the first board of trustees to pay the value of it in money to a second for a different but equally charitable use. He foresaw and provided for the probability that the Orphans’ Home corporation would expend money in the erection of additional buildings upon the land donated by him; upon abandonment he only required it to pay to the trustees for the second charitable use such sum of money as would represent his gift. He parted with his entire interest in and right or title to the land, reserving nothing—no right of re-entry for forfeiture either to himself or his heirs or assigns. Everything went from him by deed irrevocable; but in parting with the land he put an ineffaceable perpetual charitable stamp upon it. This stamp went upon the record and therefore became known to all men. Any person thereafter taking a conveyance of that land before a sum of money equal to the market value of that [345]*345which Mr. Whitney gave had been paid to the trustees for the second charitable, use, did so with knowledge that there was in legal effect an incumbrance thereon, undischarged, equal to that sum; that upon the happening of a possible event the trustees for a specified charity would come into possession of the right and power to compel the holder of the title to the land either to yield it up to them or pay the value of the original gift.

The formal rejection of the gift by the town of Mansfield is of no consequence; there is no gift to the town, and therefore no opportunity for rejection. If the persons who should at any time hold office as selectmen of that town should decline the trust, such declination would not affect it; the trust remains, and the court would supply trustees upon proper application in behalf of any member of the specified class of beneficiaries. A charitable use will not be permitted to fall because the named trustee declines; nor because of delay upon the part of beneficiaries in asking for their rights. If the donor had provided that upon the cessation of use by the corporation the land or its representative value in money should be paid to his descendants, this latter provision would have offended the statute against perpetuities, for the reason that a century might elapse before such cessation; being void, there would have remained to the Orphans’ Home an absolute fee free from all limitations or incumbrances. The gift of property first to one charitable use and then to another upon the determination of the first trustee no longer to use, as was done in this case, does not offend the statute of perpetuities. The law favors charitable uses. It does so with knowledge that in most cases they are intended to be practically perpetual; and it is willing to permit what of evil results from the devotion of property to such length of use in consideration of the beneficent results flowing therefrom. As one charitable use may be perpetual, the gift to two in succession can be of no longer duration nor of greater evil. The property is taken out of commerce, but it instantly goes into perpetual servitude to charity. The effect is practically the same as [346]*346if the gift had been to a specified charitable use during the pleasure of the trustees, then to another charitable use, both by the ministration of the same trustees or their successors. Moreover the Orphans’ Home corporation has power at any time to make an absolute unincumbered title in fee simple to a purchaser at its pleasure by abandoning the specified use and paying the incumbrance to the trustees for the second charitable use. Practically therefore this particular piece of land is no more inalienable than is that which is subjected to a mortgage by an individual for private uses; no more removed from channels of commerce. In Jocelyn v. Nott, 44 Conn., 55, it is said that all devises or grants, whether for charitable uses or otherwise, must vest, if they vest at all, within the time limited by the statute of perpetuities. In that case there was a devise of land to trustees to hold until a society should be formed and erect a church.

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Bluebook (online)
8 A. 141, 54 Conn. 342, 1887 Conn. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-the-storrs-agricultural-school-v-whitney-conn-1887.