Weller v. Farmers Bank of the State

275 A.2d 574, 1970 Del. Ch. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedOctober 30, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 275 A.2d 574 (Weller v. Farmers Bank of the State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weller v. Farmers Bank of the State, 275 A.2d 574, 1970 Del. Ch. LEXIS 96 (Del. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

MARVEL, Vice Chancellor:

Margaret P. Weller, the plaintiff herein, serves as agent for the Benjamin Potter trust by appointment of the Chancellor. She is charged, within the confines set by law, with responsibility for the distribution to individual members selected by her out of the class of beneficiaries designated in the last will and testament of Benjamin Potter of income derived from the aforesaid charitable trust as directed by the testator who died in Kent County in 1843.

Mrs. Weller seeks instructions as to whether or not she may, notwithstanding the directions in said trust to the contrary, distribute trust income “ * * * to residents of Kent County who are not white, or whether she is bound by the terms of the Benjamin Potter will to distribute trust moneys only to white residents of Kent County * * * ”, the latter having been designated by the testator’s will and third codicil thereto as the income beneficiaries of the residue of his estate.

The late Colonel Potter left express testamentary directions that income derived from the residue of his estate should be distributed “ * * * to and for the use support maintenance and education of the poor white citizens of Kent County generally * * * ”, by agents to be appointed by the Orphans Court or the Levy Court of Kent County. However, as matters worked out, agents for the trust, since its establishment, have, in fact, been appointed by the Chancellor of the State of Delaware, who has also named the first and successive trustees as a result of the declination to serve of the trustees named in Colonel Potter’s last will and testament.

Mrs. Weller’s petition was filed because of the fact that she has received an application for financial assistance from a resident of Kent County “ * * * who is not white * * * ” but who otherwise “ * * appeared to meet all of the normal qualifications for assistance from the Potter Trust * * * And while non-whites have never knowingly been made recipients of Potter trust income, petitioner prays to be instructed as to whether or not such type of discriminatory action is violative of the constitutional principle of equal protection of the laws as was found to be the case in Pennsylvania v. Brown (CA 3) 392 F.2d 120, cert. denied 391 U.S. 921, 88 S.Ct. 1811, 20 L.Ed.2d 657, a case concerned with a charitable trust established for “ * * * poor male white orphan children * * * ” under the will of Stephen Girard, who was, incidentally, a contemporary of Colonel Potter.

*577 The Farmers Bank of the State of Delaware, which is the present trustee of the Potter trust, and the Attorney General of the State of Delaware, who is charged with responsibility for enforcing public charitable trusts, having been joined as parties defendant to this proceeding, the former answered to the effect that the terms of the Potter trust here in issue must be reformed in order to entitle such trust to tax-exempt status as defined in the Internal Revenue Code of 1934, as amended in 1969. 1 The answer of the latter also questions the trust’s claim to tax-exempt status as a charitable use again because of the discriminatory language employed by the testator barring non-whites from the benefits of the charitable trust created under the terms of his last will and testament.

It thus having been made to appear that the issues framed by the pleadings raise an important question of constitutional law, namely whether or not the distribution by petitioner of trust income solely to citizens of Kent County who are of the white race is constitutionally permissible in the light of recent case law on the subject, two amici curiae have been appointed, one to argue for a strict construction of the provisions of the will here in issue and the other to argue that under the relevant facts of this controversy 2 , as well as the applicable law, that the type of discriminatory action directed to be made under the terms of the Potter will, being based solely on color, is in violation of the constitutional principle of equal protection of the laws. The latter has filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings which has been supplemented by affidavits and a deposition. Such motion will accordingly be treated as a motion for summary judgment, and this is the opinion of the Court on such motion, in the making of which judgment the Court has taken judicial notice of papers of record in the file of the Benjamin Potter trust as well as the statutory and case law having to do with such trust.

In the third codicil to his will Colonel Benjamin Potter amended item eighteenth of his will by providing in part:

“I give and bequeath that portion of my estate * * * for the use support maintenance and education of the poor white citizens of Kent County generally. The apportionment and distribution thereof to be made in the same manner and under the same restrictions and regulations as are mentioned and written in the 18 Item of my Last Will and Testament to which this present writing is a Codicil concerning the poor white citizens of the Town of Milford and Milford Hundred.”

The distributive provisions to which the third codicil refers are found in item eighteenth of Colonel Potter’s will wherein it is provided that distribution of trust moneys “ * * * is to be made by agents to be appointed by the Orphans Court or the Levy Court of Kent County as may be deemed most proper.” Distribution of trust income was thus directed to be placed under the direction of agents to be appointed by one or the other of the named governmental *578 agencies, subject, however, to the provision, that it be clearly understood that:

* * * no part of my bequest shall be applied to the use or benefit of any of person or persons residing within the walls of the poor house, but to be distributed amongst only such of the poor who by timely assistance may be kept from being carried to the poor house and becoming subjects thereof * *

After the death of Colonel Potter, the trust created under the terms of his will and codicils thereto became the subject matter of several complex legal proceedings. In 1847, the trustees named in the will having declined to serve, a suit was brought by the Attorney General which resulted in a holding by this Court that the trusts contemplated by Colonel Potter constituted a charitable trust in that neither its appointive provisions nor the terms designating persons to be benefited were void for uncertainty, and further that such trust’s provisions creating a public charitable trust of indefinite duration did not violate the rule against perpetuities. Considering the provisions which granted power to the Orphans Court or the Levy Court to appoint agents to administer the trust, the Court held that either court might exercise such power and that if neither court exercised such power, then that the Court of Chancery would make the necessary appointments, State v. Griffith, 2 Del.Ch. 392, aff’d 2 Del.Ch. 421.

The Chancellor, having restrained the Potter heirs from seeking to recover the lands in issue, then placed them in trust, and on June 2, 1847 named Charles T. Fleming, trustee. Thereafter, in 1851, the Legislature, concerned with the fact that much of the Potter farm land was of poor quality and its buildings badly maintained, passed an act authorizing Charles T.

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Bluebook (online)
275 A.2d 574, 1970 Del. Ch. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weller-v-farmers-bank-of-the-state-delch-1970.