Williams v. Committee of the Baptist Church

48 A. 930, 92 Md. 497, 1901 Md. LEXIS 137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 18, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 48 A. 930 (Williams v. Committee of the Baptist Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Committee of the Baptist Church, 48 A. 930, 92 Md. 497, 1901 Md. LEXIS 137 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

In this case the testator, after making specific bequests of his furniture, clothing and books, directed that all the rest and residue of his estate should be “ converted into cash,” and bequeathed one-half thereof to the Maryland Baptist Union Association ; and the remaining half part he bequeathed in the following words to :

“ The Committee of the Baptist Church in the city of Baltimore, a body corporate incorporated of the State of Maryland, commonly called the First Baptist Church of the city of Baltimore ; and I suggest if the spire or steeple of the said church property be unfinished at the time of my death, that the funds received, or such part thereof as may be necessary, be used for the purpose of completing the same, and further suggest if the spire is finished, that the said funds or what may be left after completing the said spire, be invested by the said committee, and the income devoted to the work at the church mission, known as ‘Williams’ Chapel,’ but if the work has been abandoned, then said income to be used for the relief of the poor of the said church.”

It is contended on the part of the appellant that under this clause of the will the Committee of the Baptist Church does not take an absolute beneficial interest in the sum so raised, but that a trust is created for the purposes there set forth. The bill charges that by the true construction of the clause, *499 the committee of the church did not take an absolute interest, but that the sum so bequeathed was to be used by it in its absolute and uncontrollable discretion, either for the completion of the spire, or for investment, and the devotion of the income therefrom in perpetuity to the work of the church mission, and in the event that it should not apply the sum to the completion of the spire, or the income thereof to the work of the church mission, then the income was to be used for the relief of the poor of the church. It is also charged in the bill, that the committee did not apply any part of the sum to the completion of the spire, nor any part of the income to the work on the mission,but that it had applied the whole sum to the redemption of the ground rent on the ground covered by Williams’ Chapel, and that in such case, the fund or the income not having been used for the completion of the spire, nor for the work of the chapel, a positive and mandatory trust attached to the fund for the relief of the poor of the chapel, and for no other purpose; and that such trust being null and void for uncertainty, the said sum constitutes a trust fund held by the committee of the defendant for the benefit of those who are next of kin of the testator.

The contention therefore is that the fund in the hands of the Committee of the Baptist Church under the terms of the will is a trust fund, first, for the completion of the spire, or for the devotion of the income to the work on the chapel, if the committee should elect to do either; or second, if it should not so elect, then for the benefit of the poor of the church.

In determining this question, it is the intention of the testator that must be sought for, and unless it can be ascertained from the language of the will taken alone, or in connection with other circumstances proper to be considered, that the testator intended to create a trust, no such trust can be found to exist. Negroes Chase v. Plummer, 17 Md. 165; Saylor v. Plaine, 31 Md. 164; Nunn v. O'Brien, 83 Md. 198; Pratt v. Sheppard Asylum, 88 Md. 622.

The main reason assigned by the counsel for the appellant for the claim that this cause creates, or was intended by the *500 testator to create a trust, is in the use of the word ‘suggest,’ which, it is insisted, must be regarded in the connection in which it is used as a precatory word. In considering what is the proper interpretation of this word as employed by the testator, it must be borne in mind that the bequest to the committee is without any limitation whatever, but is in terms that of themselves convey the grant of an absolute interest. The testator nowhere has said that the donation is made in trust. If, therefore, the subsequent words create a trust, they must do so by qualifying the terms which had been previously used, and undo that which he had previously done.

It must also be noted that the word “suggest,” as it occurs in the clause, applies to all the provisions which are supposed A designate the objects of the trust and the uses of the fund. The testator “suggests” that the spire be finished, and if that is already done, that the income shall be devoted to the work on the chapel, and if the one has been finished and the other abandoned, he further suggests that the income be devoted to the relief of the poor of the church. Can the word “suggest,” when used in this connection, without qualifying or explanatory words, be regarded as a precatory word, sufficient to create a trust as to property previously given absolutely?

We have been cited to no case, and have found none, where it has been so held. A suggestion alone, withoutother words or circumstances to affect the ordinary meaning, is a mere placing before another a matter for consideration, and under ordinary circumstances in nowise carries with it an expression of desire, will or entreaty, and here it seems to amount to no more than this. The testator gives the whole interest in the fund absolutely to the church; he places no restrictions upon it as to its use, but he does mention several matters for consideration, he “suggests” that a proper disposition would be to finish the spire, or apply the income to the chapel, not as a requirement upon the committee but as a matter for its consideration. So, also, in respect to the relief of the poor, there is no limitation imposed upon the committee but a mere suggestion as to what would be a proper use of the fund. *501 There is nothing in the word “suggest” either in its meaning as ordinarily employed, or as affected by the context of the will, that can be regarded as expressive of confidence or belief, or desire, or hope, or will, or as the equivalent of a word of entreaty or recommendation. “Suggest” is, in fact, therefore, not a precatory word at all, in the ordinary sense, and there is nothing in this will to justify us in attributing to it any other than its ordinary meaning. If this interpretation of this word be correct, there was no duty upon the committee to perform the acts suggested.

The several matters are suggested for the consideration of the committee, but it is left to the exercise of its own discretion whether any of them should be performed ; and where that is the case and the prior disposition of the property imports absolute and uncontrollable ownership, Courts of equity will not create a trust from words even of a precatory character. Nunn v. O'Brien, 83 Md. 201.

But aside from this, there remains a serious difficulty in declaring that the clauses in question create a trust upon another ground. The claim of the appellant is that the clauses create a trust, but that such trust is void, because of the uncertainty of the objects.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 930, 92 Md. 497, 1901 Md. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-committee-of-the-baptist-church-md-1901.