Subsequently the case came again before the court for hearing on questions submitted by the executors, and on others raised by the answers, and on exceptions to the report of the master to whom the case had been sent to report on various claims made to the charitable bequests contained in the will. We are asked to decide certain questions arising under the will and codicil of the late Daniel W. Lyman.
First. The first clause of the will contains the following, to wit: "I desire so much of the real estate I may die seized and possessed of as may be necessary to pay the following legacies to be sold, and from the proceeds of such sale the following legacies paid to the following persons and institutions and societies." Then follow numerous pecuniary legacies and some devises, and a residuary clause by which the testator gives "all the residue of my property, both real and personal, remaining after paying all legacies, expenses," etc., to his cousin, Esther D. Chapin, for life with remainders over. The will was executed July 14, A.D. 1885. On September 18, A.D. 1886, the testator executed a codicil, beginning as follows, to wit: "Whereas, owing to certain changes in human affairs, which affect more or less the foregoing instrument, I do hereby make this my codicil to my will and testament as follows." The first clause changes a devise of real estate. The second clause states the death of a legatee to whom *Page 112 he had given $10,000 by the will, and bequeaths said sum to three other legatees. The third clause bequeaths $10,000 to Amory Chapin, and the fourth $25,000 in trust to Frances Jones Chapin for life, and after her death to Brown University as a fund for the education of poor students, etc. The question is, whether the legatees under said third and fourth clauses are entitled to have their legacies paid on the same footing as the pecuniary legatees under the will, the estate being insufficient to pay all the legacies in full. We think they are. In the codicil the testator calls the will "the foregoing instrument," and makes the codicil as "this my codicil to my will and testament," thus uniting the will and codicil so that the legacies in the codicil are, equally with the legacies in the will, "the following legacies" for the payment of which the executors are desired by the first clause of the will to sell so much of the real estate as may be necessary. If it be said that the legacies of the codicil were not "the following legacies" when these words were written, the answer is that the codicil operated as a republication of the will, making it speak as of the later date of the codicil. 1 Jarman on Wills, cap. 8; Evans v. Evans, 17 Simons 86, 108; Hartley v.Tribber, 16 Beav. 510; 1 Redfield on Wills, *287, *288. "If the will be republished," says Chief Justice Shaw, "then all the words contained in it which have reference to time must be considered as applying to the time of the republication, and not to that of the original will." Haven v. Foster, 14 Pick. 534, 540. It is evident that, to have any effect, the legacies given by the codicil must have place with the legacies given by the original will so far as to have priority to the residuary devise, and, if so, we do not see why they should be postponed to the legacies given by the original will to any extent, there being nothing indicating an intent to have them postponed. It is well settled that all codicils are to be regarded as parts of the will, and are to be construed together with it as one instrument or testamentary disposition. 1 Redfield on Wills, *287, *288; 1 Williams on Executors, 6th Amer. ed. 8. If the legacies given by the third and fourth clauses of the codicil are to be paid on the same footing with the pecuniary legacies given by the original will, still more clearly are the legacies given by the second clause to be so paid, they being substitutions for the $10,000 *Page 113 legacy in the original will. 1 Jarman on Wills, *185; 1 Roper on Legacies, *185; Pond v. Allen, 15 R.I. 171.
Second. The will contains the following bequest, to wit: "To The Nursery I give five thousand (5,000) dollars." There was no corporation having the corporate name of "The Nursery" when the will was written, but four charitable corporations claim the bequest. The case was sent to a master for him to investigate their claims and report thereon, and it now comes before us on exceptions to his finding. It appears that A.D. 1872 an act was passed by the General Assembly creating a corporation under the name of the "Providence Nursery," and that an amendment thereto was passed A.D. 1879, changing the name to "The Rhode Island Children's Hospital and Nursery of Providence." The principal work of this corporation was to care for poor children under three years old, day and night. It was a well known charity, and was popularly called "The Nursery." It had appealed to the public for pecuniary aid by entertainments and otherwise as "The Nursery." The testator was accustomed to contribute to it as "The Nursery," and to speak of it by that name. But in April, 1881, more than four years before the testator made his will, it had abandoned its work for lack of funds, and had transferred its property and the children whom it was caring for to St. Mary's Orphanage, a charitable corporation in East Providence, and the testator had since then discontinued his contributions to it. St. Mary's Orphanage has maintained the Nursery since the transfer, in connection with its other work, having on an average half its inmates in the Nursery. In 1884 the testator was asked to contribute to the Orphanage. He said, "You mean the Nursery." The solicitor said, "No, the Orphanage." To which he replied, "It is the same thing," and contributed. The early friends of The Nursery often called the Orphanage The Nursery after its transfer. It seems to us that the Orphanage makes a better case for the bequest than the Rhode Island Children's Hospital and Nursery, for evidently the bequest was intended for the benefit of The Nursery as a favorite charity, and should go to the corporation as the medium through which the benefit would reach its destination.
We think it also makes a better case than the Grace Memorial *Page 114 Home, which, prior to its incorporation, carried on its work under the name of the "Day Nursery." Its work began only a few months before the execution of the will, and without either assistance, or, so far as appears, favor from the testator.
The fourth claimant is The Providence Shelter for Colored Children, which was for children between three and twelve years old, and in some instances under three years old. Its charter provides: "No children are to be received into the Shelter under three years of age, unless attended by peculiar circumstances." It is a children's home rather than a nursery. It was never popularly known as The Nursery, and it does not appear that the testator ever took an interest in it or contributed to it. His cousin, Mrs. Frances J. Chapin, who is interested in it, testifies that he was in the habit of calling it "the Nigger Nursery;" that he wrote his will at her house, and consulted her about the legacies; that he read it to her before signing it; that she asked him to leave something to the Shelter, and he replied that he had left $5,000 to it; that she told him he had made a mistake and called it The Nursery; that he replied, "You know what I mean, I mean the Nigger Nursery," pointing toward the Shelter; that she asked him to change the word, but he said, "You know what I mean," and declined because he did not wish to scratch anything out. The testimony, so far as it relates the conversation, is objected to as inadmissible. The objection seems to us to be well taken. The testimony is not within the rule under which extrinsic testimony is ordinarily received to elucidate the testamentary intent, namely, that when a devise or bequest is expressed in terms which apply indifferently to two or more persons or institutions claiming the benefit thereof, then extrinsic testimony may be resorted to to show which of them was intended. For, as we have seen, the Shelter was never called or known as The Nursery, and, properly speaking, it is not a nursery. The effort is to impose upon the will by extrinsic testimony a meaning which, taking it as it naturally applies to existing facts and circumstances, it does not express. It is an effort which contravenes the fundamental requirement of the law that a will shall be in writing; that is, that it shall be awritten expression of the testator's intention.
But granting that the testimony is admissible, it does not carry *Page 115 conviction. The testator knew that there was a charity called "The Nursery," and if he had intended to give to The Shelter instead of The Nursery, it is incredible that he would have refused to alter the bequest, or, indeed, that he would have put it originally in a form to need alteration. His excuse that he did not wish to scratch anything out was evidently a pretence; for it is in evidence that the will has both an interlineation and all erasure. His entire talk about "the Nigger Nursery," and "You know what I meal," and the pointing, seem to us much more like a playful method of putting his cousin's request aside than like a serious purpose to accede to it. His calling The Shelter "the Nigger Nursery" does not, to say the least, indicate a benevolent feeling toward it.
The master found in favor of St. Mary's Orphanage. We confirm his finding. We think the legacy should be paid to the Orphanage, not for its general purposes, however, but for the benefit of "The Nursery" which it maintains.
Third. The will bequeaths as follows, to wit: "To the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children of the City of Providence, my Mansion House and buildings thereto belonging, situate in the town of North Providence, on Fruit Hill Avenue, so called, and ten (10) acres of land adjoining the same (as my executors may select); also fifty thousand ($50,000) dollars as a fund for the same, said Real Estate and money to be forever used as a home and fund for the maintenance of said home for said children, and if not accepted, or ever discontinued, to revert to Brown University as a `Poor Students' Fund,' to be used as the Trustees and Corporation of Brown University may determine for that purpose, said fund to be called the `Daniel Wanton Lyman Fund for Students.'"
The master finds that this bequest was intended as a bequest to the "Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children," a corporation duly chartered by the General Assembly at its January session A. D. 1882, and established in the city of Providence, there being no other corporation or society answering the description, and the correctness of his finding is not questioned. Section 4 of the act incorporating said society provided: "This society shall not in its corporate capacity hold real and personal *Page 116 estate at any one time exceeding in value the sum of ten thousand dollars." The General Assembly, at its January session A.D. 1887, after the death of Daniel Lyman and after the probate of the will and codicil by the Court of Probate of North Providence, and pending an appeal therefrom in this court, at the request of the society, passed an act in amendment of said act of incorporation, authorizing the society to hold real and personal estate not exceeding in value the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. The master reports that at the time of Mr. Lyman's death the society held real and personal property of the value of $10,525.65, with an indebtedness of $5,159.75, which being deducted, would leave a residue of $5,365.90, and, at the time of the probate of the will, property real and personal of the value of $10,742.01, with an indebtedness of $6,479.47, which being deducted would leave a residue of $4,262.54. We are asked to say, in view of these facts, whether the whole of said legacy and devise shall go to the society, and, if not the whole, which part and how much shall go; and if the whole or any part shall not go, whether the same or such part shall go to the corporation of Brown University, or shall become a part of the residuary estate under the will.
The primary question is, whether a corporation, whose capacity to hold property is limited by its charter, can nevertheless take or hold as devisee or legatee in excess of the limit. There is some conflict of decision on this question. The doctrine of some of the cases is that the limit is operative only in favor of the State, and that as against all other persons the corporation can take and hold the same as if no limit were prescribed. The cases in which this doctrine has been declared have been for the most part cases where the corporations exceeding their limits have done so by purchase for value, and consequently where the vendor was estopped by his own conveyance from contesting the title conveyed, and equally so his heirs, or where the persons challenging the title were mere strangers to it, and as such in no position to question its validity. The doctrine, however, is laid down in Jones v. Habersham,107 U.S. 174, 183, and in De Camp v. Dobbins, 29 N.J. Eq. 35, and in those two cases there was no estoppel, the property having been given by will. In each of them, however, the act imposing the limit had been altered or repealed before the will went into effect, *Page 117 so that the decision did not necessarily rest on the doctrine, and it would seem that the doctrine received only a cursory consideration. Moreover, De Camp v. Dobbins was reheard on appeal, and in the appellate court, though the decision of the court below was affirmed, Chief Justice Beasley, in delivering judgment, took occasion to disavow the doctrine very emphatically, giving reasons for the disavowal. See De Camp v.Dobbins, 31 N.J. Eq. 671, 690.
The doctrine of the three following cases is, that where property is given by will to a corporation, whose capacity to take or hold is limited by charter, or by the general statute law, the gift will be invalid in so far as it exceeds the limit, and to that extent will either go over under the will, or descend as intestate to the heirs or next of kin of the testator.Gromie's Heirs v. Louisville Orphans' Home Society, 3 Bush, Ky. 865, decided A.D. 1867; Chamberlain v. Chamberlain, 43 N.Y. 424, decided A.D. 1871; Matter of McGraw v. CornellUniversity, 52 N.Y. Supreme Court, 354, decided A.D. 1887.
In the first named case the gift was a residuary gift of real and personal estate, by the will of a citizen of Kentucky, to a charitable institution in New York, incorporated under a law of that State, by which it was authorized to take and hold real estate to an amount not exceeding $50,000 in value, and personal estate to an amount not exceeding $75,000 in value. The Court of Appeals of Kentucky, sitting in equity, decided that, inasmuch as it appeared that the institution had, when the testator died, real estate in excess of its limit, it should take no part of the real estate devised, and that it should take only so much of the personal estate bequeathed as should be required to carry its personal estate up to $75,000, and that the whole of the real estate, and so much of the personal estate as should not be required as aforesaid, should go as intestate to the heirs and next of kin of the testator.
In Chamberlain v. Chamberlain, the gift was a residuary gift to an incorporated academy, authorized as such to take and hold, by gift, grant, or devise, real and personal property, the clear yearly income or revenue of which should not exceed the value of $4,000, and the court held that it was not entitled to take as legatee beyond that limit. Said the court: "The institute can take and hold property within the limit prescribed, but can *Page 118 neither take or hold in excess of that limit. Effect will not be given to a transgressive bequest in excess of the amount authorized. Claiming property and seeking the aid of the court to reach it, the corporation can rely only on the warrant and authority conferred by law, and cannot claim in transgression or excess of that authority. The statute permits the corporation to take property of a given yearly value, and prohibits the taking in excess of that value."
In The Matter of McGraw, the gift was a residuary gift of a very large property to Cornell University. The charter of Cornell University provided that "the corporation hereby created may hold real and personal property to an amount not exceeding three millions of dollars in the aggregate." The University had property to that amount when the testator died. The question was whether, nothwithstanding this, it was entitled to take as legatee under the will in opposition to the claims of the heirs or next of kin. The Supreme Court decided, after careful consideration and on the authority of Chamberlain v.Chamberlain, that it could not. Thereupon the case was appealed to the Court of Appeals, where the judgment of the Supreme Court was affirmed. Matter of McGraw, 111 N.Y. 66.
On account of the magnitude of the interests at stake, the case received in the Court of Appeals from both counsel and court an elaborate and exhaustive study and discussion. There is no reason to suppose that any argument or authority of any value, bearing upon the subject, can have escaped a thorough scrutiny and consideration. The conclusion of so able and learned a tribunal, so reached, though not binding on us merely as authority, is eminently entitled to respect, and it seems to us to be correct.
We do not think it would serve any good purpose for us to reproduce, in an abridged form, the excellent exposition of the learned judge who prepared the opinion. It seems to us that the natural and logical conclusion, independently of authority, is, that an artificial body created by law, without capacity to take or hold property beyond a certain limit, cannot, by reason of the very law of its being, take or hold property beyond that limit, and consequently that the courts ought to recognize the fact in favor of any person who is entitled, on supposition of the incapacity of the *Page 119 corporation, unless by estoppel or otherwise such person is precluded from making claim. The contrary view seems to have originated, partly at least, in the analogy which was supposed to exist between laws limiting corporate capacity in this respect and the old law of mortmain or the law of alienage. But the analogy, such as it is, is not close enough, as is clearly shown in The Matter of McGraw, to warrant such a view. The statutes of mortmain were so worded that they were construed, not to prohibit absolutely grants of land to corporations without license from the crown, but only to render such grants defeasible by the feudal superior of the grantor by entry for that purpose; and they were, in default of entry by any other feudal superior, forfeitable to the crown. And so, also, an alien might purchase land or take it by devise, but he would do so at the risk of having it forfeited to the crown upon inquest of office found. These old laws, founded on feudal reasons, throw little light on the meaning of modern statutes.
The provision in the charter of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children was not, as we have seen, that the society should not take property exceeding $10,000 in value, but that it should not hold it, and it is contended that, under this language, it was competent for the society to take the property devised, and, except as against the State, to hold it, and that, the State having enlarged its capacity, it can now hold it absolutely. The same argument was pressed with great ingenuity and in various forms in The Matter of McGraw, and the court, after patiently examining the argument in all its phases, held it to be unsound. The question is, of course, a question of legislative intent. It seems to us that the limitation on the power of the corporation to hold is necessarily an implied limitation on the power to take, for why take what it cannot hold? Indeed, the very act of taking involves an act of holding, momentarily at least. And, if the illustration be permissible, a vessel which is as full as it can hold is incapable of taking any more. And see Bank of Michigan v. Niles, 1 Dougl. Mich. 401.
We do not think the amendment of the charter, by which the capacity of the society to hold property was enlarged, is effectual to enable the society to take under the will in its larger capacity. *Page 120 The will, though the probate was not completed until after the amendment, took effect by relation, when proved, from the death of the testator, and became operative from that time, as if it was a special law of descent for the estate disposed of by it, and the rights of all persons, designated as devisees or legatees therein, are to be regarded as determined by it at that time, unless dependent on future contingencies. It follows that the property given to the society, beyond its capacity to hold, became immediately subject to the other dispositions of the will.
The counsel for the society contends that the gift to the society was in effect a gift in trust for charitable uses, and if the society was incapable of taking, the trust nevertheless will survive to be executed by a trustee to be appointed by the court. This might be so if the testator himself had not provided what should be done in case of nonacceptance by the society. The language is, "if not accepted, or ever discontinued, to revert to Brown University." The gift, in excess of the charter limit, was not accepted, the society being incapable of accepting it, and therefore the property given in excess of that limit went by the will to Brown University.
Another question presented is, whether the society, inasmuch as it cannot take the whole gift, is entitled to any part of it. The answer is not free from doubt, but it seems to us that the will should be carried out in favor of the society so far as possible in the absence of any clear manifestation of an intent to have the gift pass as a whole, the inability to take the whole being the misfortune, not the fault, of the society. We decide that the society is entitled to take so much of the gift as is necessary to carry the property, held by the society at the death of the testator, to the charter limit, the debts of the society to be deducted in ascertaining the amount which the society then held.
We are of the opinion that the real estate constituting a part of the gift must be regarded as a specific devise, and it will not be subject to abatement. We think the ten acres adjoining the mansion house, which are to go with it, should be selected by the executors who have qualified. Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 184, § 21.1 The *Page 121 making the selection is simply the execution of a power, and may very properly be effected by an instrument under seal, though we do not see that a seal is indispensable. We think a proper form will be for the executors to recite the clause of the will which confers the power upon them, and then, stating their action under it, to set apart by apt words of description and appropriation the ten acres which they have selected. We think the $50,000, given in connection with the house and land, is not to be regarded as a specific bequest, but should abate in common with the other legacies.
Fourth. The will makes several pecuniary bequests in trust for certain persons for life with remainder over. The estate being insufficient to pay the legacies in full, we are asked to decide in what manner, as between the life tenants and remaindermen, the legacies are to abate. Our answer is that they must abate proportionately. After the legacies have been set apart in trust, the life tenants will be entitled to the income of them as set apart. The net income of the estate for the first year after the death of the testator is bequeathed specifically by the will to the executors, and therefore no part of it is apportionable to the life tenants for that year. After the first year and until the legacies are set apart, they are entitled to their proportionate share of the net income, that is to say, of the income less the taxes and less the interest, if any, accruing after the first year on any debts remaining unpaid after that time. Bailey, Petitioner, 13 R.I. 543, 561, and cases there cited; Croly v. Weld, 3 De G., M. G., 993; Tinkler'sEstate, in re, L.R. 20 Eq. 456; Cox v. Cox, L.R. 8 Eq. 343.
We see no objection to the executors paying to the legatees portions of what the legatees are entitled to from time to time in course of settlement, so far as they can safely do so.
The executors ask us to modify the decree, heretofore entered by us, instructing them to exhaust the personal estate in the payment of debts before resorting to the real estate, by allowing them to exercise a discretion in the matter, on the ground that *Page 122 the personal estate now remaining unsold, to wit, fourteen shares in the capital stock of the Providence Drying, Bleaching, and Callendering Company, though of much intrinsic value, cannot be sold immediately, as the executors have ascertained by repeated attempts to sell it, without great sacrifice or loss. The affidavits filed in support of the request give certain reasons for supposing that the shares will become more marketable in the future; but it seems to us that the reasons are too much matter of speculation, and too indefinite as to time, for us to yield to them, if indeed the statute is not too peremptory to allow us to do so. The executors are not obliged to sell the shares in lump, if they can sell them one or two at a time to better advantage.
1 As follows:
"SECT. 21. If any testator shall appoint more than one executor of his will, and some of them do not accept the trust, or, having accepted thereof, shall die, those who shall undertake to execute the will, and the survivors of them, shall have the same power and authority as is given by such will to the whole of them, to every intent and purpose whatsoever."