Women's Homoeopathic Hospital of Philadelphia Case

142 A.2d 292, 393 Pa. 313, 1958 Pa. LEXIS 350
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 3, 1958
DocketAppeals, 156 and 157
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 142 A.2d 292 (Women's Homoeopathic Hospital of Philadelphia Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Women's Homoeopathic Hospital of Philadelphia Case, 142 A.2d 292, 393 Pa. 313, 1958 Pa. LEXIS 350 (Pa. 1958).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Jones,

A petition for the dissolution of the Women’s Homoeopathic Hospital of Philadelphia was filed in the Court of Common Pleas No. 4 of Philadelphia County. As an incident of the corporation’s termination, the court would be called upon to distribute the hospital’s restricted charitable funds which represented an accumulation of some sixty separate gifts and aggregated approximately $350,000. The court appointed two co-masters for the purpose of marshalling the assets, taking testimony, hearing claims and recommending to the court an award cy pres of the hospital’s funds subject to such award.

After extensive hearings, the masters concluded, and recommended accordingly, that the fund created by the will of William E. Sellers, aggregating, with accretions, approximately $29,000, should be awarded in equal shares to the Woman’s Hospital of Philadelphia and the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania for the use of its hospital. The masters recommended that the remaining restricted funds be awarded in equal shares to Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital and Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania for the use of their respective hospitals. After argument on exceptions to the masters’ report by disappointed claimants of the fund, the court entered decrees effectuating the recommendations of the masters. From these decrees, Preston Maternity Hospital and St. Luke’s and *316 Children’s Medical Center of Philadelphia have appealed.

In reviewing a decree which gives effect to the cy pres doctrine, the scope of onr inquiry is limited to the question whether the court below misunderstood or misapplied the law or committed a manifest abuse of discretion : Kensington Hospital for Women Case, 358 Pa. 458, 462-463, 58 A. 2d 154; Glase Estate, 384 Pa. 118, 120, 119 A. 2d 294. In Commonwealth v. Pauline Home, 141 Pa. 537, 545-546, 21 A. 661, it was said with respect to a court’s exercise of its ey pres power, — “The matter was very much in the discretion of the court below, and we would not reverse, unless for a clear abuse of discretion.” Objective criteria for determining the operative presence of abused discretion are contained in the following quotation from Echon v. Pennsylvania Railroad Company, 365 Pa. 529, 534, 76 A. 2d 175: “ ‘An abuse of discretion is not merely an error of judgment, but if in reaching a conclusion the law is over-ridden or misapplied, or the judgment exercised is manifestly unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice, bias or ill-will, as shown by the evidence or the record, discretion is abused.’ ” The record in this ease fails to disclose the slightest indication of partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill-will on the part of the court below, hence, our review is properly to be limited to determining whether the court below committed an error of law or exercised its broad discretion in the premises in an unreasonable manner.

The parties to these appeals are in agreement as to the law of the case. Their only difference is with respect to the manner in which the court below administered it. In Wilkey’s Estate, 337 Pa. 129, 133, 10 A. 2d 425, Mr. Justice Stern, speaking for this court, characterized the following from the Restatement, Trusts, §399, as being “perhaps the best enunciation *317 of the doctrine” of cy pres-. “If property is given in trust to he applied to a particular charitable purpose, and it is or becomes impossible or impracticable or illegal to carry out the particular purpose, and if the settlor manifested a more general intention to devote the property to charitable purposes, the trust will not fail but the court will direct the application of the property to some charitable purpose which falls within the general charitable intention of the settlor.” Long before the Restatement, the doctrine was expressed by this court to similar effect in City of Philadelphia v. Heirs of Stephen Girard, 45 Pa. 9, 27-28, as follows: “The rule of equity on this subject seems to be clear, that when a definite charity is created, the failure of the particular mode in which it is to be effectuated does not destroy the charity, for equity will substitute another mode, so that the substantial intention shall not depend on the insufficiency of the formal intention.”

In this State, there is express statutory authority for applying the doctrine of cy pres. The presently applicable Act of April 26, 1855, P. L. 328, §10, as amended by the Act of May 23, 1895, P. L. 114, §1, 10 PS §13 (superseded by the Act of April 24, 1947, P. L. 100, §10, 20 PS §301.10) provides: “That no disposition of property heretofore or hereafter made for any religious, charitable, literary or scientific use, shall fail for want of a trustee, or by reason of the objects being indefinite, uncertain or ceasing . . . but it shall be the duty of any orphans’ court, or court having equity jurisdiction in the proper county, to supply a trustee, and by its decrees to carry into effect the intent of the donor or testator, so far as the same can be ascertained and carried into effect consistently with law or equity . . .

In practical effect, application of the cy pres doctrine results in an approximation: City of Philadelphia v. Heirs of Stephen Girard, supra. In applying the *318 doctrine the court exercises its discretion in such a manner as to award the fund to an eleemosynary institution whose services will most nearly approximate the intention of the donor: Connors v. Ahearn, 342 Pa. 5, 7, 19 A. 2d 388. As we said in Williams Estate, 353 Pa. 638, 643, 46 A. 2d 237, “. . . once the applicability of the cy pres doctrine is indicated, the problem forthwith becomes one of approximating the testator’s express direction as nearly as possible and without doing violence thereto.” Of course, no court may capriciously substitute its judgment for that of the settlor of the restricted fund and thereby effect a transfer of the gift to a charity not within his general donative scheme: see Kensington Hospital for Women Case, supra.

In the instant case, the so-called Sellers Fund was, in a very real sense, self-determinative of its appropriate disposition. By his will, William E. Sellers bequeathed his residuary estate to the Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Company in trust to pay over, under broad discretionary powers, either the income or the principal of the fund for the endowment- of rooms in hospitals “for the benefit and assistance of women or children primarily.” In carrying out this intent of the testator, the trust company allocated $60,000 of the residual corpus equally among three institutions which it selected as “hospitals dealing primarily with women and children.” The three hospitals so selected were the Woman’s Hospital of Philadelphia, the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania and the Women’s Homoeopathic Hospital of Philadelphia. Of these three hospitals, the Woman’s Hospital and the Woman’s Medical College hospital are still functioning substantially in the same manner as they were when the trustee made its testamentarily authorized selection in 1938.

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Bluebook (online)
142 A.2d 292, 393 Pa. 313, 1958 Pa. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/womens-homoeopathic-hospital-of-philadelphia-case-pa-1958.