DocketNumber: Docket No. L.A. 12001.
Citation Numbers: 10 P.2d 75, 215 Cal. 328, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 418
Judges: Seawell
Filed Date: 3/31/1932
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appeal from a decree of distribution. By his last will and testament the decedent, William M. McDole, *Page 330 bequeathed the residue of his estate to "the Stubblefield Home for the Aged, at Walla Walla, Washington". Upon objections filed to the executor's petition for distribution by decedent's three brothers, his sister and three nieces, who, with a brother of decedent not joining in the objections, are his heirs at law, the court found, in their favor, that said provision was invalid for the reason that the Stubblefield Home for the Aged was not a "person, corporation or society authorized by the laws of the state of California to take a gift by will".
A home for aged women and indigent children known as the Stubblefield Home is maintained at Walla Walla, Washington, by three trustees to whom one Joseph L. Stubblefield, in 1902, bequeathed the residue of his estate "for the establishment, maintenance and support of a home for fatherless or motherless and indigent children, residents of the state of Oregon and Washington and worthy elderly indigent widows, residents of Oregon and Washington, and to their maintenance and to the giving of a common school education and the teaching of some useful trade or occupation to the children inmates thereof".
It is the contention of appellants herein, who are the trustees of said Stubblefield trust, that the provision in the will of William McDole now before us may be construed as a devise to said trustees to be held and administered by them for the benefit of the charitable institution known as the Stubblefield Home. We are in accord with this contention.
William McDole, a resident of the county of Orange, this state, died on March 25, 1925, at the age of seventy-three years, leaving property in this state valued at between $30,000 and $40,000. By his will, executed on November 21, 1922, he bequeathed $2,000 to his only sister, the sum of $75 a month to his brother Henry for the term of his life, and $1 to each of his three other brothers, and to the heirs of a predeceased brother, $1. The residuary clause, now before us for construction, reads as follows: "I hereby will and bequeath all the rest and remainder of my estate to the Stubblefield Home for the Aged, at Walla Walla, Washington." By a codicil, executed on March 18, 1925, seven days before his death, he bequeathed his household goods and furniture and his automobile to his sister. Otherwise the codicil made no change in the terms of the will. Decedent *Page 331 left no spouse, child, grandchild or parent surviving him. Therefore, by will executed at least six months prior to his death, he could validly dispose of his entire estate to charity. (Sec. 1313, Civ. Code; now secs. 40-43, Probate Code.)
[1] The provision in the will before us was not rendered invalid by said codicil, executed seven days before the testator's death, which did not in any manner change the terms of decedent's will as to the bequest to charity, nor enlarge the portion of his estate subject to said provision for charity. It is a fact that the effect of the bequest made in the codicil was to cut down slightly the residue available for the charity named, but that did not invalidate the bequest made to charity. (Estateof McCauley,
[2] It is conceded by the heirs of William McDole that a gift to the home or the inmates thereof could be effected by a devise to the trustees named in the will of Joseph Stubblefield. They alleged: "The only manner in which said William M. McDole, deceased, could have devised or bequeathed his estate by last will and testament to said Stubblefield Home, would be by devising and bequeathing the same to the said trustees under the last will and testament of Joseph L. Stubblefield, deceased." It is their contention that a devise to the "Stubblefield Home", where no words of trust or other restriction or limitation are used, cannot be construed as a devise to said trustees, without doing violence to the express language of the will. In consequence the devise must fail since there is no entity bearing said name which can hold title to real property. This question of construction presents the main problem of the case.
William McDole formerly resided near Walla Walla, Washington, according to a statement in appellants' brief. That he had said home in mind when he drew his will there can be no doubt, and the court so found. This court expressly held in Estate of Upham,
We find no difficulty in upholding the validity of the devise in the case herein, although words of trust are not used as in the Upham case. Concerning that case, this court said in Estateof Winchester,
The policy of equity to favor charitable gifts is exemplified in the rule that equity will not permit a trust to fail for want of a trustee. (Estate of Winchester,
The dominant intent of the testator was to benefit the inmates of the Stubblefield Home. The respondent heirs ask us to infer an intent to make a gift to the Stubblefield Home only in the event that it was an entity capable of holding title, because the form of language used would be equally appropriate to make a devise to a corporation or society bearing that name had one existed. The word "trust" may be omitted from the instrument creating the charity. (Tillinghast v. Council at Narragansett Pier,
There are numerous instances where homes maintained by charitable corporations do not bear the exact name of the corporation holding title to the physical properties of the home. Incorporated lodges and fraternal organizations of nation-wide membership maintain homes for aged and indigent members at various places throughout the territory where lodges or chapters exist. Applying the rule for which respondent heirs contend, it would be necessary to hold that a bequest to the fraternal home at a certain place would fail because the corporate entity which maintained the home and held title to the property upon which it was operated did not include in its title either the word "home", or the name of the town where the particular home was located.
Estate of Doane,
[3] Respondents also argue that if the provision be interpreted as a devise to the trustees of the Stubblefield Home, it must nevertheless fail because no specification is made of the trusts upon which the property is to be held. Estate of Upham,supra, to which reference has heretofore been made, is also authority against respondents on this proposition. In that case the devise was "in trust for the use and benefit of the orphan children" of the Good Templars' Orphans' Home at Vallejo. A devise to a society or corporation organized for a charitable purpose without further declaration of the use to which the gift is to be put, is given in trust to carry out the objects for which the organization was created. (Estate of Winchester,
It is of the essence of a charity that the beneficiaries are indefinite, the class only being indicated. It is a frequent characteristic of charitable trusts that the manner in which the trust is to be carried out is not declared. "If the founder describes the general nature of the charitable trust, he may leave the details of its administration to be settled by trustees under the superintendence of a court of chancery." (Estate ofUpham,
[4] That the institution which the testator refers to as the "Stubblefield Home for the Aged", also receives and rears and educates children, and is also known as the Stubblefield Home for Children, Stubblefield Home for Orphans and Aged, and Stubblefield Home for Old Women, does not invalidate the gift, it being apparent that he could have intended no other institution, and that he must have been familiar with the nature and purposes of said institution.
[5] Nor are we concerned in this proceeding with the fact that the will of Joseph L. Stubblefield, under which appellant trustees are acting, was a nonintervention will not recognized as valid in this state, or with other questions as to the procedure followed by the executors of the Stubblefield will, who were also the trustees named to found the home. In Rader v.Stubblefield,
We may say in this case, as the court said in the concluding paragraph of its opinion in Estate of Upham,
The decree appealed from is reversed with directions to the court below to distribute the residue of the estate of *Page 336 William M. McDole, deceased, to said trustees of the Stubblefield trust.
It is so ordered.
Langdon, J., Preston, J., Curtis, J., Shenk, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.
Russell v. Allen , 2 S. Ct. 327 ( 1883 )
Estate of MacPherson , 92 Cal. Rptr. 574 ( 1970 )
Carlock v. Ladies Cemetery Association , 1958 Mo. LEXIS 627 ( 1958 )
wells-fargo-bank-trustee-of-that-certain-testamentary-trust-established , 1 F.3d 830 ( 1993 )
Estate of Brown , 140 Cal. App. 2d 677 ( 1956 )
Hart v. County of Los Angeles , 1957 Cal. App. LEXIS 1755 ( 1957 )
Estate of Bunn , 33 Cal. 2d 897 ( 1949 )
Kabisius v. Brooke , 20 Cal. App. 2d 514 ( 1937 )
Estate of Faulkner , 128 Cal. App. 2d 575 ( 1954 )
Clippinger v. Brearton , 75 Cal. App. 2d 426 ( 1946 )
Steinman v. Scandinavian Faith Mission , 35 Cal. App. 2d 95 ( 1939 )
Estate of Henderson , 17 Cal. 2d 853 ( 1941 )
White v. Conference Endowment Commission , 81 Idaho 17 ( 1959 )
L'Hommedieu v. Johnson , 12 Cal. App. 2d 430 ( 1936 )