Wood v. Trustees of the Fourth Baptist Church

61 A. 279, 26 R.I. 594, 1905 R.I. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 11, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 A. 279 (Wood v. Trustees of the Fourth Baptist Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Trustees of the Fourth Baptist Church, 61 A. 279, 26 R.I. 594, 1905 R.I. LEXIS 15 (R.I. 1905).

Opinion

Tillinghast, C. J.

This is a bill for instructions as to the disposition of certain trust property now in the possession of the complainant as trustee, under and by virtue of the will of Harriot O. Baker.

Said Harriot died-on November 26, 1876, leaving a last will and testament dated June 28, 1875, which was duly admitted to probate on December 26, 1876. Under said will the testatrix, after providing for the payment of all her just debts and funeral expenses, including the expense of erecting gravestones, etc., in the family burial lot in the North Burial Ground in Providence, and after making a specific devise and bequest to her daughter Harriet S. Olmstead,' disposed of the remainder of her property and estate as follows:

“ 3d. I give and devise all the rest and residue of my estate both real and personal after the payment of the debts and expenses therefrom as mentioned in the first clause of this my will, in Trust to the trustee hereinafter named for the sole and separate úse of my said daughter Harriet,-independent'of her' husband, my said daúghter Harriet to have all of the income of said trust fund to her own use forever and as much of the principal thereof as she-may require. And I do hereby authorize, empower and direct the said trustee hereinafter named as aforesaid and his successors by and with the advice and consent of my said daughter Harriet, to collect, sell, invest and reinvest said trust fund as'may seem to them most advantageous, and at the death of my said daughter Harriet in case she survives me, my will is that the balance of said trust fund, if any there be, shall be turned over to the Committee of the Fourth Baptist Church of this City, of which I am a member, In Trust — to be kept as a fund, the income of which shall be used for the benefit of the said Fourth Church, and in their discretion for the advancement of the cause of religion in the Regular Baptist Denomination, and the trustee acting for my said daughter at that time to bé discharged therefrom.”

The bill sets out that the requirements of the first and second *596 clauses of said will'have been carried-out; that said Harriot O. Baker was the widow of one Elisha W. Baker, formerly- of Providence, R. I., who deceased June 8, 1873, in the lifetime of said Harriot, and that she never remarried; 'that -the only child of said marriage was Harriet S.'Olmstead, aforenamed,, and that she deceased on January 17,1904, never having had any children, and that the persons who would -have been the-heirs at law of said Harriot O. Baker/at the time said will was-admitted to probate,'would have been (but for said Harriet S. Olmstead) her two brothers, viz., George W. Sheldon, of said Providence, who deceased March 27, 1889, and James E. Sheldon, of Boston, Mass'., who deceased on the fifth day of February, 1878; that this complainant has been appointed a trustee under said will, in compliance with the terms thereof as to filling-vacancies under the same, by a decree of the Municipal Court of said city of Providence, and that he has for several years-discharged the duty of trustee under said will and is now the only trustee thereunder, 'and now has in his hands and possession, as such trustee, a considérable amount of personal property, consisting of shares of the 'capital stock of various-banks and other corporations, and also certain parcels of real estate with the buildings and improvements thereon situated in said Providence:

The bilí then proceeds at length to set out that various charters, have been granted by the General Assembly relating to said, church, as follows, viz.: One in October, 1820, creating a corporation under the name of “Fourth Baptist Society in Providence;” one in January, 1875, creating a corporation under the name of “The Fourth Baptist Church in Providence;” and one in 1879, under the name of “Trustees of the Fourth Baptist Church in Providence.” And that the first two of said charters, were subsequently materially amended.

The bill also alleges that at the date of the execution of said will, and at the timé of the death of testatrix, there was no corporation existing under either the act of October, 1820, because that had been repealed, or under that of 1875, because no corporation had been organized under it; and that no corporation can now be organized, under the act of 1875, that- *597 shall have any right to receive the property in question; that the complainant is informed and believes that proceedings were taken to organize a corporation under said last-named charter, and that said corporation is now in control of ■and managing a place of worship and carrying on religious work in the city of Providence. But whether the .same has been technically and completely organized, and whether it has received any conveyance of, or has any title to, the property that was held by the corporation created in 1820 the complainant is not informed, and leaves the same to be proved as the court may require.

The complainant further represents that said George W. Sheldon died intestate, and administration was granted upon his estate, by the Municipal Court of Providence, and the administrators settled their account in said court June 28, 1892, and that no appeal was taken from the decree therein, and that the only heirs at law of said George W. Sheldon are his two children, viz., Susan A. Wood and Sarah T. Harrison, both of Providence, they being two of the respondents in this cause; that the said James E. Sheldon hereinbefore referred to died intestate, and administration was granted upon his estate, and all debts and claims against the same have been paid and satisfied, and that his only heirs at law are Delia.A. Potter and Hattie M. Wardner, two of the respondents in this cause.

The complainant, therefore, avers and alleges that he is uncertain to whom to account as trustee under said will, and uncertain to whom to deliver and transfer said property, and he therefore prays for advice and direction in the premises.

To this bill the respondent, Trustees of the Fourth Baptist Church in Providence, has filed an answer in which it admits most of the allegations contained in the bill relating to said corporations, and as to the remainder thereof, together with other allegations contained in the bill, it leaves complainant to prove the same as -he may be advised. But as in our view of the case the decision of the question raised does not depend upon the -existence of either of the corporations above named at any time, or on the capacity of either, of them to take and hold property at any particular time, but simply upon the *598 question as to whether the testatrix created a charitable use by making said gift in her will, and designated the object thereof with sufficient certainty to enable the court to carry it out, there is no occasion for us to consider said acts of the General Assembly or the doings of the several corporations created thereby. And we will, therefore, only refer to that part of the answer which bears upon the, relation which the testatrix sustained to said Fourth Baptist Church, and to the constitution and duties of the committee thereof, viz.:

“Sixth. And this respondent further answering says that the said Harriot O.

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Bluebook (online)
61 A. 279, 26 R.I. 594, 1905 R.I. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-trustees-of-the-fourth-baptist-church-ri-1905.