Case Name: In the Matter of Proving the Will of Elizabeth B. Frasch, Deceased. Mildred L. Martin et al., Appellants; United States Trust Company, as Executor and Trustee, et al., Respondents
Court: New York Court of Appeals
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1927-05-03
Citations: 245 N.Y. 174
Docket Number: 
Parties: In the Matter of Proving the Will of Elizabeth B. Frasch, Deceased. Mildred L. Martin et al., Appellants; United States Trust Company, as Executor and Trustee, et al., Respondents.
Judges: 
Reporter: New York Reports
Volume: 245
Pages: 174–186

Head Matter:
In the Matter of Proving the Will of Elizabeth B. Frasch, Deceased. Mildred L. Martin et al., Appellants; United States Trust Company, as Executor and Trustee, et al., Respondents.
(Argued March 30, 1927;
decided May 3, 1927.)
Charles A. Collin, John L. Wells and J. Arthur Leve for Mildred L. Martin et al., appellants.
Charles Angulo and James D. Ouchterloney for Mary B. Norton, appellant.
Michael E. Reiburn for William H. Blee et al., appellants.
Joseph E. Cavanaugh for Cecelia E. Blee et al., appellants.
William A. W. Stewart, George L. Shearer and John Henry Mottola for executor and trustee, respondent.
Albert Ottinger, Attorney-General (Robert P. Beyer of counsel), for People of the State of New York, respondent.

Opinion:
Lehman, J.
. In the proceedings for the probate of the last will and testament of Elizabeth Blee Frasch, a supplemental decree has been made and entered which adjudges that the testatrix by the sixth paragraph of her will has made a valid disposition of the rest, residue and remainder of her property and that the trust created in that paragraph is in all respects legal and valid. We have concluded that this adjudication is correct.
The sixth paragraph of the will reads as follows:
"All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, I give, devise and bequeath to the United States Trust Company of New York, r¡sr trust, however, for the purpose of establishing a fund for chemical research, which fund shall be known as the Herman Frasch Foundation for Chemical Research. I direct that the said trustee shall hold, manage, invest and reinvest the said fund, collect the rents, issues and profits thereof and after paying its proper charges and expenses, pay over the net income therefrom to one or more incorporated institutions in the United States, which shall be selected by the said trustee after advising with The American Chemical Society, upon the condition that the said institutions shall agree that the money so received shall be devoted to research in the field of agricultural chemistry, with the object of attaining results which shall be of practical benefit to the agricultural development of the United States. The payment of said income to the institutions so selected shall continue for the period of five years after my death, and before the expiration of the said five years, the trustee shall request The American Chemical Society to examine into the work done by the said institutions with the funds received from the Foundation, and to report to the trustee whether in its opinion, satisfactory progress has been made with the funds of the Foundation, toward the attainment of such practical results, and if the said Society shall report that in its opinion satisfactory progress has not been made by any institution, the trustee shall thereupon cease to make payments from the Foundation to that institution, and may select another institution in the same manner as above outlined, which institution, when so selected, shall receive such payments for the further term of five years, and every five years after my death the trustee shall obtain such a report from The American Chemical Society, and shall either continue to make payments to the institution then receiving such payments for the further term of five years, or may select other institutions as above provided, to receive the said payments for the ensuing five years. The trustee is authorized to use so much of the income from the said fund as may be necessary to pay the expenses and compensation of The American Chemical Society for advising and reporting as above provided."
The testatrix undoubtedly intended to create a trust for purposes which would advance the public welfare. Intention to advance the public welfare is not sufficient to give validity to a trust in perpetuity for the benefit of indefinite and uncertain persons, unless such trust is authorized by chapter 701 of the Laws of 1893} now section 12 of the Personal Property Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 41). That statute applies to a " gift, grant, or bequest to religious, educational, charitable or benevolent uses." The enactment of that statute was part of a general scheme to restore to the courts of equity the power formerly exercised by Chancery in the regulation of gifts for charitable purposes. (Matter of Cunningham, 206 N. Y. 601; Allen v. Stevens, 161 N. Y. 122.) The provisions of the statute must be read in the fight of its history and purpose. We hold that under a fair con- , struction of the language of the will, the trust created thereby is within the provisions of the statute so read.
The testatrix has directed that the money shall be held for the purpose of " estabhshing a fund for chemical research. ' ' Its income must be used for research. It must be paid over to " one or more incorporated institutions in the United States, which shall be selected by the said trustee after advising with The American Chemical Society." Such payment may be made only " upon the condition that the said institutions shall agree that the money so received shall be devoted to research in the field of agricultural chemistry with the object of attaining results which shall be of practical benefit to the United States." No institution to which payment of the income is made may use it for other purpose than research in the designated field and with the designated object. Other use would be a diversion of the income of the trust.
Research is the method used by modern universities and scientific foundations to increase the sum of human knowledge. Research conducted for such purpose and by such institutions is clearly" educational " and " benevolent " within the meaning of the statute. Not every charitable, educational or benevolent use is enumerated in the statute 43 Elizabeth (c. 4) commonly called the Statute of Charitable Uses, though that statute was intended to limit the trusts for charitable uses which might be enforced by courts of equity. Conceptions of public charity, benevolence and education change with the passing generations. When the courts are called upon to give effect to a statute covering trusts to " religious, educational, charitable or benevolent uses," they construe those words as including at least those uses which prevailing conceptions bring within the spirit of the Statute of Elizabeth. (Williams v. Williams, 8 N. Y. 525; Matter of Cunningham, supra.)
No new conceptions of public benefit may, however, enlarge such words to include a use of the trust property for private profit o£ benefit. Doubtless the dominant purpose in the creation and management of a business corporation may occasionally be the advancement of the public welfare. None the less, where the income of the corporation may be applied to the profit of the founders, " business has a beginning and charity an end." (Butterworth v. Keeler, 219 N. Y. 446.) Where the terms of the trust are so indefinite that the trustees may apply the income if they see fit " to undertakings of public utility," the possibility that such undertakings may include private enterprises renders the trust invalid. (Kendall v. Granger, 5 Beavan, 300.) A " private pecuniary enterprise " is not a " public charity, even if indirectly it serves charitable ends," per Holmes, J., in Stratton v. Physio-Medical College (149 Mass. 505). So, too, a trust which may include social, educational or moral benefit confined to members of a corporation and in which the general public has no direct participation, has been declared a trust for a private use. (Attorney-General v. Hewer, 2 Vernon's Reports, 386; Carne v. Long, 2 De G., F. & J. 75; Miley v. Atty.-General, [1918] 1 Irish Rep. 455.) In such cases since the, use is not charitable even in a broad sense, an intent or purpose on the part of the creator of the trust to confer an indirect benefit upon the public does not change the character of the trust. Not even if the designated use might tend to create the contemplated public benefit would the rule be different. " There is no authority for holding a charitable tendency to be a charitable use; in other words, that a gift to a person for his own benefit, whereby consequential charity may arise, is not a charitable use." (Attorney-General v. Haberdashers Company, 1 Mylne & Keen's Reports, 420, per Brougham, Lord Chancellor.) Benevolent motive or a purpose to confer a general benefit does not bring a trust within the terms of the statute if the trust permits a use which is " personal, private or selfish." (Matter of MacDowell, 217 N. Y. 454.) These principles are well established. Their validity is not challenged by expressions in judicial opinions in which the term " purpose " is used as synonymous with " use." Doubtless the purpose or intention of the creator of the trust often dictates the construction which the courts place upon the language he has employed to define the " use " of the trust. It is nevertheless the construction which the court places upon the language of the will under consideration and not the unquestioned public spirit and unselfish purpose of the testatrix which determines the validity of the trust she has created.
The trustee must pay over the income of the trust fund to " one or more incorporated institutions." The recipient must devote the money so received to " research in the field of agricultural chemistry." It is said that the term " incorporated institutions " may include business corporations, and that the trustee might under the terms of the will pay the income of the trust fund to one or more business corporations which maintain research departments for the purpose of making the business more profitable. If the trustee may under the will choose a business corporation as one of the " incorporated institutions " to which the income of the trust fund may be paid, and if further such business corporation may use that income for research to advance its own business interests, then undoubtedly the trust created is not valid. We have held in Matter of Shattuck (193 N. Y. 446) that a trust is invalid where a bequest is rdade to a trustee, " the rents, profits and income thereof to be expended by him annually and to be paid over to religious, educational or eleemosynary institutions as in his judgment shall seem advisable." The court in that case construed the words " religious, educational or eleemosynary institutions " as including " educational institutions " organized as stock corporations and conducted wholly for profit. Under that interpretation of the terms of the trust, the conclusion was inevitable that the trust was invalid, because, as the court pointed out, " the will does not in terms refer in any way to the use to be made of the income of the trust fund. Such income is not in terms devoted to any purpose or object, and there is no direction by the testatrix to the institutions to which the income on the trust fund is paid as to what use they shall make of sucb gift. Its devotion to charity is dependent upon the object and purposes of the several institutions which by the grace of the trustee may become the beneficiaries thereof."
In later opinions this court has pointed out the narrow scope of the decision in the Shattuck case. (Matter of Robinson, 203 N. Y. 380; Matter of Cunningham, 206 N. Y. 601.) " The decisive consideration was the contrast which the court discerned in the mind of the testatrix between purposes that were educational and purposes that were eleemosynary." The decision " lays down no principle of large and general application. It defines the meaning of a particular will, and later cases have held that it must be limited to its special facts." (Butterworth v. Keeler, 219 N. Y. 446.) Courts in other jurisdictions have interpreted the word "institutions" as including both private and public corporations when the language of a deed or will showed intention that the term should not be limited to corporations that were public, charitable or eleemosynary. (See Thomson's Executors v. Norris, 20 N. J. Eq. 489; Taylor v. Keep, 2 Ill. App. 368; Matter of Clarke, [1923] 2 Ch. Div. 407; Minty v. Bourne, [1909] 1 Ch. 567; Grimond v. Grimond, 1905 A. C. 124.)
The meaning of the word " institutions " is not so fixed that necessarily it must be held to include corporations organized for private as well as public purposes. Indeed when not used in context indicating a broader definition it may well be held to denote primarily organizations created for a public purpose. " It is a little difficult to define the meaning of the term ' institution ' in the modern acceptation of the word. It means, I suppose, an undertaking formed to promote some defined purpose having in view generally the instruction or education of the public," per Lord MacNaghten in Mayor of Manchester v. McAdam ([1896] A. C. 500). In the same case Lord Herschell cited with approval the definition contained in the Imperial Dictionary: "A system, plan, or society, established either by law, or by the authority of individuals, for promoting any object, public or social." Definitions might be cited from all dictionaries of recognized authority that the word " institution " at least suggests an organization formed for a public purpose. (See, also, Matter of McClellan's Will, 46 N. B. 161.) At least where intention to provide for a public charitable use may be inferred, the word " institution " need not be given a construction which contravenes that intention. (Matter of Smith, 36 Times L. Reports, 416.)
In the present case, as we have pointed out, the testatrix has provided that any institution receiving income from the trust fund must use it for research in the field of agricultural chemistry. Though there may be private corporations which are permitted by their charters or certificates of incorporation to conduct research as an incident to and for the benefit of a commercial business, the research which was authorized by the terms of the will was not research so conducted. The authorized research was to be conducted " with the object of attaining results which shall be of practical benefit to the agricultural development of the United States." Though it is conceivable that research, where the results are appropriated by a commercial organization, might indirectly benefit the general agricultural development of the United States, it is hardly conceivable that this testatrix intended to devote her property to such private use when she indicated that the object of the research must be a general benefit. Indeed, the provisions of the will that the work done by the institutions receiving the income must be subject to the examination of the American Chemical Society, whose membership includes men engaged in the pursuit both of pure science and of science applied to commercial use, negative the secrecy which surrounds research by commercial organizations. In the case of Rotch v. Emerson (105 Mass. 431) the court held that from the context in which a testator had used the words " for the promotion of agricultural or horticultural improvements " the inference *must be drawn that the " testator had in his mind the acquisition and dissemination of knowledge, the study and inculcation of principles affecting those departments of industry or of sciences relating thereto." Similar inference is dictated by the language used in the will now under consideration.
A bequest for such use is clearly within the provisions of our statute for " charitable uses." Any institution to which income of the bequest is paid must apply it to a public use. No institution not authorized to apply to such use the moneys received by it could have been within the intention of the testatrix. Even if the testatrix intended that the trustee might use as an instrument in the execution of the trust a private corporation authorized to carry on research for the public benefit, if any such corporation exists, the fact that the money was earmarked fora "religious, charitable, educational or benevolent use " would render inconsequential the circumstance that the corporation had also other objects which are selfish in purpose. (Miley v. Attorney-General, [1918] 1 Irish Rep. 455; Matter of Shattuck, supra.)
Judgment should be affirmed, with costs to respondents payable out of the estate.
Cardozo, Ch. J., Pound, Crane, Andrews, Kellogg and O'Brien, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, etc.