Wigglesworth v. Cowles

648 N.E.2d 1289, 38 Mass. App. Ct. 420
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedApril 24, 1995
DocketNo. 93-P-765
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 648 N.E.2d 1289 (Wigglesworth v. Cowles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wigglesworth v. Cowles, 648 N.E.2d 1289, 38 Mass. App. Ct. 420 (Mass. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Jacobs, J.

The plaintiff trustees under the will of Roxana C. Cowles petitioned the Probate Court in 1987, pursuant to G. L. c. 204, § 24, essentially seeking ratification of two acts of predecessor trustees which took place between 1957 and 1961 — the conveyance to a G. L. c. 180 corporation of land held in trust and the razing of certain structures located on that land.3 The defendant heirs of Roxana C. Cowles appeal from a decree of ratification. We affirm.

We take the pertinent facts from the agreed statement of the trustees and heirs and the exhibits filed with the Probate Court. Roxana C. Cowles died in 1921. Among the provisions in her will and three codicils admitted to probate that year is a devise of her dwelling house and the lot upon which it stood on Green Street in Ipswich to three named persons “in trust ... to use the same for a Convalescent Home, to be called the Stephen Caldwell Memorial Home.” The will provides that “[s]aid house and land shall not be sold, and if used for any other purpose than a convalescent home, said house and land shall revert to my heirs.” Cowles also devised two other houses and lots located within the same block as [422]*422the Green Street property, in trust, “for use in connection with the Stephen Caldwell Convalescent Home. . . .” One house and lot was located at the corner of Green and County Streets; the other was on Summer Street. Each of these devises specifies that “[s]aid house and land shall not be sold, but the income may be allowed to accumulate till such time as my house ... in Green Street” shall come into the trustees’ care following the life estates to which the Green Street property was subject. The will also places certain personal property in trust to be used for the support and maintenance of the convalescent home.4 The residuary clause of the will, in addition to placing property in trust to be used to support and maintain the contemplated convalescent home, provides that if “any bequest of property, either real or personal, made in this will, shall be used for any purpose other than that for which said property is given in this will, then said property . . . shall revert to my heirs.” Several of the bequests and devises in trust were made subject to life estates benefiting named relatives of Roxana C. Cowles. The will provides that “[t]he board of trustees shall be self-electing” and that the remaining trustees shall fill vacancies in their ranks.

The trustees’ efforts to use the devised properties for a convalescent home awaited the written renunciation in 1956 of the last of two life estates to which the Green Street property was subject. Until that time, the income of the trust was accumulated. In 1957, following the written approval of the Attorney General, the trustees applied for and received a charter under G. L. c. 180 for a charitable corporation to be known as the Stephen Caldwell Memorial Convalescent Home, Inc. The stated purpose of the corporation was “[t]o establish, support, maintain, and operate a charitable convalescent home ... in conformity with the will of Roxana C. [423]*423Cowles . . . and in general to exercise any and all powers which a corporation organized under [G. L. c. 180] may legally do, not inconsistent with the terms of said will.” The by-laws of the corporation vest full control of its property and affairs in a board of trustees, the members of which are limited to the trustees from time to time appointed under the will of Roxana C. Cowles.

By a deed dated June 24, 1957, the trustees under the will conveyed the three parcels of real estate devised to them to the corporation. No pecuniary consideration accompanied this conveyance. Although the deed recited that the conveyance was made under the powers contained in the will and codicils, no such specific powers are contained in those documents. The conveyance to the corporation was approved, however, by the Attorney General in response to an application that indicated that it was the intention of the trustees to convey all of the real estate held by them to the corporation in order to qualify for certain tax benefits.

In 1957, the petitioners as trustees of the corporation authorized the demolition of the dwelling house at the corner of Green and County Streets. The house was then being rented, but unprofitably. A dissolution petition, filed in 1970 by the trustees,5 indicates the demolition had been undertaken “because the cost of maintaining [the house] far exceeded the income which could be derived from it.” In 1957, they also authorized the demolition of the house on Green Street be[424]*424cause according to the same petition “it was discovered in the course of construction of alterations and additions . . . that [its] condition . . . would not permit its use [as a convalescent home] under prevailing standards ... of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts . . . .” The corporation’s records indicate that a substantial part of this demolition was approved by the Attorney General.

In 1959, the Stephen Caldwell Memorial Convalescent Home was opened on the Green Street site with a capacity of twenty-one beds. The trustees at that time applied the income of the trust to the operating expenses of the corporation. Thereafter, the corporation authorized the demolition of the dwelling house on Summer Street for the purpose, according to the corporation’s records, of providing access to the rear of the convalescent home. It also had been unprofitably rented. By 1962, all three homes had been razed. Neither the corporation nor the trustees under the will sought the authority of the Probate Court prior to the razing of the three structures.

In 1961, the purpose of the corporation was amended, deleting any reference to the will of Roxana C. Cowles and providing that, upon termination of the corporation, its net assets shall, “unless otherwise directed by law, be given only to any one or more states or municipalities of the United States or to any one or more nonprofit charitable corporations incorporated therein as a majority of the members of the corporation shall determine and no . . . person . . . shall by virtue of such liquidation ever receive or be entitled to any of the assets of the Corporation.” No change was made in the governance of the corporation, which remained under the sole control of the trustees under the will. The stated primary purpose of operating a charitable convalescent home under the name of the Stephen Caldwell Memorial Convalescent Home was reiterated in the amendment. The amendment was enacted in order to obtain the tax exemption benefits of Section 501(c) (3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

In 1964 and 1986, the corporation added to the original convalescent home so that it now contains sixty beds. It [425]*425maintains a hundred percent occupancy rate, has a substantial waiting list, and is Medicare and Medicaid approved, providing both intermediate and skilled nursing home care. The stipulation of the parties indicates that the convalescent home “presently uses land originally owned as six parcels, two of which were devised under the Will, three of which were purchased by the Corporation and one which was purchased by the trustees under the Will.” The parcel at Green and County Streets is a small, unbuildable lot which is not contiguous to the other property presently used by the convalescent home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
648 N.E.2d 1289, 38 Mass. App. Ct. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wigglesworth-v-cowles-massappct-1995.