Were the law of Georgia on the subject of charitable bequests precisely as it was when the case of Beall vs. Drane, 25th Georgia, 430, was decided by a majority of this Court, we should feel greatly embarrassed by that decision. As we shall hereafter show, the principles of that decision would deny to Courts of chancery in this State any other jurisdiction over charitable bequests than they have over ordinary trusts. Indeed the decision in Maryland, (5th Harr. & John. B., 392,) which is the only case referred to fully sustaining the conclusion at which the majority of our Court arrived, was put by the Maryland Court expressly upon that ground. If this be so, the case in 25th Georgia would seem to be directly conlrary to the unanimous decision of this Court in the Fox will case, decided in 4th Georgia Reports, 404, where it was held that the principles of the statute 43d Elizabeth are of forcein this State, and where a bequest was enforced which was utterly void, as too uncertain for judicial action, unless jurisdiction over it was taken by virtue of the special jurisdiction of Courts of chancery over charitable bequests. But whatever may have *92been the state of the law at the date of the hearing of the Beall will case, it cannot be doubted that, under the Revised Code of this State, our Courts do have a special jurisdiction to carry into effect charitable bequests. Sections 3099 and 2432 declare the doctrine of Oy-pres — the most striking feature of the special jurisdiction over charities — to be a power of our Courts. Section 3100 defines what are charitable subjects, and in so doing almost copies the statute of 43d Elizabeth. And section 3103 goes further than was usual even in the English Courts by allowing parol evidence to explain and give point to bequests coming within the class defined as charitable. It is true, that section 3098, which in general terms declares the jurisdiction, uses the words, “when the same are definite and specific in their objects and capable of being executed,” but as we shall hereafter show, to give these words the confined and limited meaning contended for by the defendant in error, or even as suggested by the majority of the Court in the Beall will case, would be to ignore the whole history of the law upon this subject and impute to the framers of the Code the folly of conferring a jurisdiction over charitable bequests, and in the very words conveying it denying it altogether.
The right of a testator to make any definite and specific bequest, and for any definite purpose not contrary to law or public policy, has never been denied by any Court. That the gift is to one person or to a thousand is immaterial — that it is for one purpose or another can make no difference, if the purpose be not illegal. A Court of law or of equity, accordingly, as it is within the jurisdiction of either, would always enforce it, if it were definite and specific in averment, and the legatees were distinctly pointed out. The ordinary powers of either Court in settling disputes of suitors are abundant for this purpose. A bequest, for instance, to the great-grandchildren of A, who died in 1800, to be equally divided between them, might be a bequest to a large number of people, but the proper Court, if the amount of the legacy were certain, would have no want of power to enforce it, be*93cause the objects of the testator’s bounty are definitely and specifically pointed out and capable of exact ascertainment. Nor would it make any difference that the motives of the testator were his kinship to said grandchildren, or charity for them, or whether they were poor or rich.
The special chancery jurisdiction over charitable bequests grows out of the rule that, in cases of private right, Courts will not enforce uncertainties, and that the parties at interest must be capable of definite ascertainment. It is of the very nature of a charity that this is impossible, and from the most ancient times Courts of chancery in England have applied very different rules in determining the validity of charitable bequests from the rules applied to such as were not charitable. A less degree of certainty as to the objects of the bequest, and as to the mode of its application has been required than was requisite in other bequests. It is of the very essence of a charitable bequest that the objects to be benefited shall be to some extent indefinite. Mr. Justice Grey, in Jackson vs. Philips, 14th Allen, 556, gives the following as the definition of a charity so far as the objects of it are concerned : “A charity in a legal sense may be more fully defined as a gift to be applied (consistently with existing laws) for the benefit of an indefinite number of persons.” And in Fontaine vs. Ravenel, 17th Howard, 384, Judge McLean, in delivering the opinion of the Court, says: “ It is no charity to give to a friend. In the books it is said that the thing becomes a charity when the uncertainty of the recipient begins.” And in Salstonsal vs. Sanders, 11th Allen, 456, the Court says: “ It is the number and indefiniteness of the objects which is the essential element of a charity.” And this for the very simple reason that if the amount be certain, and the persons to take be certain, the bequest has nothing in it outside of the ordinary jurisdiction of Courts of chancery over trusts or of Courts of law over legacies: Blanford vs. Fackerell, 4 Brown Chan., 394, 1 John, 612; Liley vs. Huy, 1 Hare, 580.
It follows, therefore, that when the framers of our Code *94declared our Courts of chancery to have jurisdiction to enforce charitable bequests, declared what were charities and recognized the doctrine of Oy-pres, they intended to say something more than that Courts of equity could enforce trusts. There was no propriety in giving this special jurisdiction if a bequest, for charitable purposes, to be valid, must have the same certainty and definiteness as to its objects and mode of division, as bequests, not for charitable purposes. There was no reasou for defining charitable purposes if bequests of that character must have the same definiteness and certainty as bequests for other purposes. Since nobody for a moment ever supposed there was any trouble in enforcing a definite and specific bequest simply because the testator’s motives for making it were charitable. All bequests are charities, in so far as they are without consideration. They are bounties, gifts, and dependent upon the simple will of the testator. It seems, therefore, incontestible that the words “ definite and specific,” used in this section of the Code are to be understood in connection with the other words used, to-wit: “charitable bequests.” Since to give them the same meaning as though they were used in connection with other bequests would be to make the law absurd.
We are, therefore, to look for the proper meaning of these words to the fathers of the,law; we are to go for the proper sense of them, when applied to charitable bequests, to the English Chancery Decisions, as provided by section 3045 of the Code. There were, according to these decisions, two classes of charitable bequests, to-wit: bequests to “charity” indefinitely, or for “religion” or “pious uses” indefinitely, or for “education” and other bequests; when, though there was a clearly expressed charitable intention, there was a total want of any special objects, and a total failure to fix any means by which the objects should be pointed out or the fund applied. In such cases, Courts of chancery in England, as such, had no power to carry them into effect. The charity was not, however, allowed to fail. The king, under his sign manual, declared the objects and pointed the mode of *95application, or the Lord Chancellor, not as a Judge but instead of the king, did the same: 1 Jarman on Wills, 224. See, also, Perry on Trusts, section 729, and the cases cited. But if the general objects of the bequest were pointed out, or if the testator had fixed any means for doing so, as by the appointment of trustees for such purpose, Courts of chancery treated the bequest as one sufficiently definite and specific for judicial cognizance and carried it into effect, notwithstanding there might remain some indefiniteness and uncertainty. The Chancellor referred the ease to the Master to devise a scheme by which any such uncertainties should be determined. Thus a gift to “the poor”: Legge vs. Asgill, Turn & Russ., 265; 49 Maine, 288; to a particular parish or place: 9 Allen; 2 Sanford’s Chancery, 46; 2 Iredell’s Equity, 210; 13 Allen, 474; 1 Beav., 370; 5 Beav., 289; or to the widows and orphans of a parish; 2 Sim. & G., 93; or a gift to a church to be laid out in bread for the poor: 17 Sergeant & Rawle, 88; were all held good. The distinction would seem to be this: If the bequest be to charity generally, or to religion and education generally, the jurisdiction was not in the Court, as such, to carry into effect; but if the objects of the gift were stated, though only generally, or if there were a trustee appointed, the Court would supply the want of definiteness in the object or would compel the trustee to carry out the general intent of the testator: See Perry on Trusts, sec. 719.
Assuming, therefore, that by the words “definite and specific” our Code means such as by the usual practice in Chancery Courts are held to be “definite and specific,” we think the words of this bequest come within the rule. Here is a trustee, and here are the objects — the Inferior Court and the poor children of Greene county. It is true there is some indefiniteness in the objects, since the word poor and the word children are both to some extent indefinite. But as we have seen, if such an indefiniteness is to make the bequest illegal for want of certainty, then all charities must fail, since, in the very nature of them, this kind of indefiniteness must exist. An examination of the authorities will, however, clearly *96show that such a bequest as this has uniformly been held to be sufficiently certain for the exercise of that peculiar jurisdiction which the Courts of chancery, as such, undertake to exercise over charitable bequests: See Story’s Equity, sections 1164-5; Hill on Trustees, 81, 128, 452; Perry on Trusts, 719 et seq.; Vidal vs. Gerard’s executors, 2 Hare, 127; 7 B. Monroe, 611; Williams vs. Pearson, 38 Alabama, 299.
Without doubt there has been, until within a few years, some confusion in the minds of even Judges upon this subject. It has been sometimes supposed that the whole jurisdiction of Chancery in England over this subject was only a branch of the King’s prerogative and not a judicial function at all, and again it has been thought that the jurisdiction was wholly derived from the 43d Elizabeth. But it is now well settled that it is only that branch of the jurisdiction which undertakes to carry into effect charities generally where there are no trustees, which is prerogative, and that when trustees are appointed, or where the objects of the charity are pointed out, even generally, then the Court acts by its inherent power over trusts; but from the nature of the subject-matter it does not require the same degree of definiteness and certainty as it would if the bequest were not charitable: See Perry on Trusts, sections 690, 748.
We see no difficulty in the Inferior Court of Greene county devising a scheme, in accordance with the manifest intent of the testator, and carrying it out faithfully. If the Court should fail or should itself need judicial aid, the Court of Chancery has power here to appoint a Master to devise a proper scheme for carrying the bequest into effect.
Judgment reversed.