Filed Date: 1/27/1983
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
— Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court at Special Term (Kahn, J.), entered November 25, 1981 in Albany County, which granted petitioner’s application, in a proceeding pursuant to section 1507 (subd [a], par [2]) of the Not-For-Profit Corporation Law, to withdraw moneys from its permanent maintenance fund to pay attorneys’ fees and disbursements. This proceeding, initiated by petitioner Memory Gardens, Inc., and unsuccessfully opposed by the Cemetery Board of the State of New York, was instituted to enable petitioner to obtain authorization to invade its permanent maintenance trust fund for the purpose of defraying current legal fees and expenses of some $31,000, incurred during several legal proceedings. Petitioner also sought permission to repay this sum in ten equal, yearly, interest free, installments. The board maintains that allowing this fund to be invaded to discharge expenditures of this nature runs counter to and jeopardizes the legislative goal underlying enactment of section 1507 (subd [a], par [2]) of the Not-For-Profit Corporation Law. Section 1507 requires every cemetery corporation to establish a permanent maintenance trust fund “[f]or the sole purpose” of maintaining and preserving the cemetery, “including all lots, plots and parts thereof”. On each and every sale of a lot or plot the cemetery corporation is required to deposit at least 10% of the sale amount into the permanent maintenance fund. The statute dictates that: “The principal of such fund shall remain inviolate, except that upon application to the supreme court in a district where a portion of the cemetery grounds is located, the court may make an order permitting the principal or a part thereof to be used for the purpose of current maintenance and preservation of the cemetery or otherwise” (Not-For-Profit Corporation Law, § 1507, subd [a], par [2]). In urging that Special Term’s order was a permissible exercise of discretion, petitioner emphasizes the phrase “or otherwise”, claiming that these words justify payment from the fund of those legal fees and costs generated in the course of preserving the cemetery corporation. We cannot agree. This case is a useful paradigm of the application of one of the basic tenets of statutory construction — the rule of ejusdem generis. This common-law doctrine has been described as follows: “where words of specific or inevitable purport are followed by words of general import, the application of the last phrase is generally confined to the subject matter disclosed in the phrases with which it is connected; for it is known by the company it keeps; and though it might be capable of a wider significance if found alone, it is limited in its effect by the words to which it is an adjunct. It may strengthen the general structure, but it cannot exceed the original outline” (McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes, § 239, subd b, quoted in Schulman v People, 10 NY2d 249, 256). It is also noteworthy that the word “otherwise” when used as a general phrase following an enumeration of particulars is commonly interpreted in a restricted sense to include only matters “ ‘kindred to the classes before mentioned’ ” (Daly v Haight, 170 App Div 469,473, affd 224 NY 726; see, also, Matter of Koner v Procaccino, 45 AD2d 551, 553, affd 39 NY2d 258). These principles make it apparent that in the circumstances presented, invading the permanent maintenance trust fund to satisfy the fees and expenses of the corporation now operating the cemetery is not tolerable. “[O]r otherwise” is limited by “current maintenance and preservation of the cemetery”; thus, any encroachment upon the fund must be justified by proof that the money being sought will directly prevent extinction of the cemetery itself. Additional language in the statute declaring that the