John .0. Balfour, late of Talladega County, departed this life in January, 1843, leaving his will, so much whereof as it is material to consider is in .these: words, viz.:
“ Item I give to my sister Emily J. Balfour, a life right in my negro boy Mike, also, such .articles as she and my wife may agree upon to the value of $100:
Item: I give $1000 to be paid at my wife’s death, and to be divided in equal proportions, betwixt the following benevolent societies, viz.: The Baptist .Societies for Foreign and Domestic Missions, and the .American and Foreign Bible Society; and at .my sister Emily’s death, if the boy Mike., given to her during her life time, be alive, he shall be sold to the best advantage, .and the proceeds of sale equally divided between the societies above named.
After my debts are paid, the remainder of my property, uf whatever kind or nature, I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Regina Balfour, including the lands whereon I now live, &c.
I appoint my wife sole executrix of this my last will .and testament,” &c.
Regina Balfour,, after taking possession of all the estate of John O. Balfour, but previous to any probate of his will, died in ■June, 1843, leaving her last will, by which she disposed of all .her estate. Her will being attested by -only two witnesses, was *822good only as to tbe personalty therein bequeathed, and void as to the real estate. After the death of Regina Balfour, both of the wills were admitted, to probate, in the County >' Court of Tal-ladega County, and letters of administration, with' the - wills annexed, on both estates, were granted to William McPherson.. By him this hill was subsequently filed, ashing the aid and directions of the court in the execution' of the trusts created by the wills.
The bill is demurred to, first, for alleged multifaiiousness and misjoinder of defendants.
The object of the bill is to ask the court to place a construction on the wills, to decide on the validity of the bequests, to direct the marshalling of the assets of the estate, and contingently, to require contribution from the legatees, if necessary, to pay the debts of the estate. With this view, I think the bill of the complainant properly made a full disclosure of all the facts connected with the case, and made all the persons interested in the estate, parties defendants.
Secondly, for misjoinder of complainants, alleging that the complainant appears-as the • representative of two estates, between which estates there is a conflict of interests, &c. There is but one complainant, and he sues here to protect his personal interest, by asking the court to guide him in the administration of the estates, the interests of which are;so blended and so nearly the same, that it was necessary to proceed under both wills at once»
Again: it is insisted that the representatives of Theodore and Alice Balfour should have been made.'parties defendants. This would have been necessary, if the chancellor had assumed jurisdiction over that part of the legacy still due them by the will of Richard Wilkes, and which remains in the - hands of his executors, John W. Wilkes and Joseph Carter, in South Carolina. To that part of the legacy which was paid and delivered to John 0. Balfour in his life time, viz., the sum of $1350 • and the two slaves, Hezekiah and Moses, I think John 0. Balfour’s title at least prima facie good, and not requiring any action of the court to settle it, and it was therefore unnecessary to make the representatives of the infants parties. John 0. Balfour being the sole heir of his infant children previously deceased, and being in the possession and enjoyment of the property at the timo of his death, there was no ground to question his title.
*8231- It is!'contended that the charitable bequests to the-benev-©lent societies are yoid, because they are repugnant to' the last clause of the will,.' and that they come under the rule of construction of wills, that if two parts or clauses of a will are so utterly inconsistent with each other that both cannot stand, the latter must prevail. The correctness of this rule is not. questioned, but it is not considered as applicable in this case.. The word “remainder,” in the last clause, must, I think,, be considered to-rnean the remainder of his estate left after taking out the previous bequests to Emily falfour and the societies, as well as the-amount necessary to; pay the debts. The bequest to Regina-Balfour is in effect a'gift of all ■ the estate, except said'legacies and the amount necessary to pay the debts. The language of the will, I think, readily admits of this constructian, without being compelled to resort to the known rule, that if possible, we must give to the whole instrument a construction that will rendei - every part of it effectual,, ut res magis vcdeat quam pereat.
The great rule in the constructito 'of wills is,, that the intention of the testator must govern, that the intention of the testator must be sought after and carried'out,'if not inconsistent with the law of the land. Can it be doubted,' here,, that the testator intended to make the bequests to the benevolent societies 1 If" not, why did: he make the second clause in his will I Or if, after-making the bequests, it may be supposed he wished to revoke them, could he not find language to effect his -purpose, without leaving the matter to remote' inference or equivocal- argument ?:
It is admitted that the last clause of the will making the bequest to the wife, is not inconsistent with the- previous bequest to Emily Balfour. Then why should it be considered inconsistent with the-charitable bequests'?: It would seem that if'the last clause is repugnant to and necessarily repealed the charitable bequests, it necessarily repealed the bequest to Emily - Balfour; for the two bequests occupy the samo position in the will,. and the reason for considering one revoked is equally applicable to the other-..
The following rules tend strongly to sustain the charitable-bequests in this case: That the general terms in the latter part of a will should not render void the specific'devise before made,, and that general words may be restrained to make the whole will"consistent.—6 Ves., jr., 129; 7 ib. 403; 10 ib. 595-7; *824Bac. 341; and again, general and doubtful words in a will <shall not alter an express devise before made, nor carry any •thing contrary to the'apparent intent, (7 Bac. 342,) nor express '.dispositions be varied by inference or-argument from other parts (of the will. — Wms. on Ex. 716; 1 Ves., jr., 269; 8 ib. 42.
It is also insisted, that to sustain - the charitable bequests, -Would, in effect, restrict the whole'-of -the estate bequeathed to «Regina Balfour to a life estate; because1 the incumbrance of the ■'charity would apply alike to every part df her bequest, and that «this would defeat the intention of • the testator, which'was to give ■ her the property in fee simple.
To this it -may be.successfully replied, thafethere is-no rule bf law to prevent the testator from charging the-whole of the resid-uary es tato With the payment of the legacy, orfrom makinp it payable at his wife’s death.; - that it was clearly his intention to do •so, and that Regina Balfour took the estate with the charge upon it, and as a necessary consequence; when the charity was payá--ble, at her death, her representatives were bound to pay it. I •know of no law preventing a per son. from binding his representa--five, either expressly or impliedly, to.pay a debt at his death.
2. It is insisted that the bequests must fail because the benevolent societies arc merely voluntary associations, unincorporated and incapable by law of taking the bequests, and that there is no trustee'to take for them; and further, that the object of the v charities is too vague and undefined to be sustained by a court of ■ equity.
The bequests are, '“to the Baptist societies for Foreign and Domestic Missions,” and “to the American and Foreign Bible •Societies.” I think these descriptions sufficiently specific, and if societies can be found which were organized and known by those names-at the time of the testator’s death, they should be considered-the societies referred to by the will, and capable of taking the bequests, whether incorporated or not. In making the gifts to -the societies by their names5 I think it clearly and necessarily inferrable that the gifts were intended to bo made to them in their aggregate capacity, and for the purposes for which they were organized, and that the testatoi* could not have intended the gifts for the individual members Pf the societies, or he Would have made the bequests to them by their individual names in the ordinary way. It must be .presumed that the testatdr *825knew for what object the societies were formed, and that he •intended to have the funds applied to that object. — 4 Wheat. R. •28. It is like “ a devise to a college or any institution known by name j it is presumed to be for the purposes intended by the founder.” In such cases, there can be no -reasonable doubt as to the intention of the testator; it therefore need not be more specifically made known. It appearing satisfactorily, then, that the testator intended to create a trust in this case, the question arises, whether the court, by virtue of its common law powers, and without, the aid of the statute of 43d Elizabeth, has the power to enforce the trust. The general jurisdiction of chancery over trusts has never been questioned, and the interposition and direction of courts of equity as to trusts created by will* are very frequently afforded for the safety of parties in interest, and to protect them against further litigation.--2 Story’s Eq. 325.
I think it clear, that according to the English authorities, these bequests would be sustained independently of the statute of Elizabeth. Such is the opinion of Judge Story, as expressed in the case of Vidal et al. v. Girard’s Ex’rs., (2 How. 128.) After an elaborate examination of the English authorities, and showing that the dicta and opinions in a large majority of the cases go to sustain such bequests, he says : “ There is the very ■recent case of the Incorporated Society v. Richards, (1 Drury & Warren R. 258,) where Lord Chancellor Sugden, in a very masterly opinion, upon a full survey of all the authorities, and where the point was directly before him, held the same doctrine as Lord Redesdale, and expressly decided that there is an inherent jurisdiction in equity in cases of charity, and that charity is one of the objects for which a court of equity has at all times interfered, to make good that which, at law, was an illegal or informal gift; and that cases of charity in courts of equity in -England were valid, independently of, and previous to, the statute of Elizabeth. Justice Baldwin, in the case of the will of Sarah Zane, after very extensive and learned researches into the English authorities and statutes, arrived at the same conclusion.” Judge Story further adds, in the foregoing case of Vidal et al., &c., “that very strong additional light has been thrown upon this subject by the recent publications of the Commissioners on the Public Records in England, &c. Among these are found many cases in which the Court of Chancery en*-*826tertained jurisdiction oyer charities long before the statute of 48d Elizabeth, and some fifty of those cases have been laid before us. They establish in the most satisfactory manner, that cases of charity, where there were trustees appointed for general and indefinite charities,, as well as for specific, were familiarly known to, and acted upon and enforced in the Court of Chancery. In some of these cases the charities were not only of an uncertain nature, but as far as we can gather from-the imperfect statement in the printed records,.they were also cases where there were either no trustees, or the trustees were incompetent to take-The Records,, therefore, do, in a remarkable manner, confirm the opinions of Sir Joseph Jekyll, Lord Northington, C. J. Will-mot,. Lord Redesdale and Chancellor Sugden. Whatever doubts^ therefore,, might properly be entertained upon the subject, when the case of the Philadelphia Baptist Association v. Hart’s Ex’rs. (4 Wheat. 1,), was before this court, those doubts are entirely removed by the late and. more satisfactory sources of information to which we have alluded.?’’
There seems to be greater contrariety among the. American than the English decisions on this subject, but I think-the weight' of American authority is decidedly in favor of such bequests.
In Massachusetts,, in the case of Burbank v. Whitney, (24 Pick. 146,) the bequest was to the American Bible Society, and to the American Home Missionary Societies, unincorporated societies. The court say,.there is no doubt that donations to charitable purposes were held valid previous to the statute Elizabeth, and that they were good, although the charity was to be distributed by an unincorporated society, and although no person was in esse who could be the cestui que Mse,.and'rwhether. such society transacts its business here or in another State.
In Kentucky, in Moore’s Heirs v. Moore’s Devisees and Ex., (4 Dana, 354,) it was held that the devise, viz: “that the testator’s estate in a certain contingency that did happen, should be converted into a fund for the education of some poor orphans (of this county) to be selected by the County Court, is a valid devise at common law, and may be enforced independently of any English statute.”
In North Carolina, (1 Hawks’ L. & E. R. 97, Griffin v. Graham,) the object of the bequest was the establishment of a school for the education and maintenance of poor orphan chil*827dren, and it was sustained. In these three States the statute of Elizabeth was held to be substantially in force, but that the bequests were good independent of the statute.
In New York, in Potter v. Chapin, (6 Paige 649,), the chancellor says, “ although some doubt was thrown, upon the question of charitable donations, for the benefit of a community or body not incorporated, so as to be capable of taking and conveying the legal title to property, by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of the Baptist Association v. Hart’s Ex’r., (4 Wheat. 1,) I believe that it is generally admitted that the decision in that case was wrong. And it may be considered as an established principle of American law, that the court of chancery will sustain and protect such a gift, bequest, or dedication of property to public or charitable uses, where the object of the gift is specific, and capable of being carried into effect, according to the intention of the donor.”
In King v. Woodhall, (3 Edwards 79,) the bequest was to the Home Missionary Society, an unincorporated voluntary association, where neither the object of the bequest was specified, nor any purpose to which the money was to be applied,, yet the bequest was sustained. The vice chancellor says, “ the testator must be presumed to know the purposes for which the society was formed, and to what objects and uses its funds were to be applied.” In Wright et al. v. Trustees of Methodist Episcopal Church, (1 Hoffman 205,) the bequest was “ to the Yearly Meeting of Friends in New York, a voluntary unincorporated association.” The bill was filed to obtain the directions of the court as to the distribution of the estate. It was held that the power to enforce such a charity was in the court, by virtue of its original constitution, independent of the statute,, and the bequest held to be valid. The decision of McCartee v. Orphan Asylum, (9 Cowen 437,) is to the same effect.
In Pennsylvania, in Witman v. Lex, (17 Serg. & Rawles 93,) a bequest to St. Michael’s & Zion’s Churches, to be laid out in bread, annually for ten years for the poor of the Lutheran Congregation, and also a bequest for the education of young students in the ministry of the German Lutheran Congregation, were sustained} and the Chief Justice adds, “it is immaterial whether the person to take be in- esse or not, or whether the legatee were, at the time of the bequest, a corporation capable *828of taking or not, or bow uncertain the objects may be, provided there be a discretionary power vested any where over the application of the testator's bounty to those objects.”
In 7 Vermont Reports, 241, (Executors of Burr v. Smith et al.,) the bequest was to the treasurer, for the time being, of the American Bible Society, an unincorporated society. The be* quest Avas sustained, and it was decided that courts of chancery held jurisdiction over charitable bequests before the statute of Elizabeth, by virtue of their equity jurisdiction, and that a gift to a charitable use might be decreed, notwithstanding the objects wore vague and indefinite, and the persons who were to carry into effect the intent of the testator, Avere a society unincorporated.
In the three last mentioned States the statute of Elizabeth Aras not in force.
The leading case in opposition to the foregoing decisions, is the the case already referred to in 4 Wheat. 1. The bequest was “ to the Baptist Association that for ordinary meets at Philadelphia annually, to be a perpetual fund for the education of youths of the Baptist denomination, who shall appear promising, for the ministry, always giving preference to the descendants of the testator’s father’s family.” It was held that the association, being an unincorporated society, could not take the trust, and that the bequest was void for uncertainty as to the devisees, and could not be established by a court of equity without the aid of the statute of Elizabeth, which Avas not in force in Virginia, where the case arose. This case was followed by the decisions (and the decisions placed upon the same ground) in Gallego’s Ex’rs. v. The Attorney General, (3 Leigh 450,) decided in Virginia, and in Dashiell v. Attorney General, (5 Har. & John. 392,) decided in Maryland. In Tennessee, in Greene et al. v. Allen et al., (5 Humph. 170,) a similar doctrine is held, and that a devise analogous to the one under consideration could not be sustained under the statute of Elizabeth. In this construction of the statute this decision differs from all the authorities I have examined.
I consider the above case from 4 Wheat, as partially, if not altogether overruled by the same court. In Beaty v. Kurtz, (2 Peters 566,) a lot of ground had been marked out by the proprietor, upon the original plan of the toAYn, for the use of the Lu*829theran Church, a voluntary unincorporated society. This was sustained in favor of the society upon a bill filed by a committee in behalf of the society. In Ingles v. The Trustees of the Sailor’s Snug Harbor, (3 Peters 99,) the testator gave real estate to the chancellor, &e., and other persons by their official description and their successors in office, to establish an asylum called the “ Sailor’s Snug Harbor,” for the purpose of maintaining aged and decrepid sailors. The devisees, as requested by the testator, were incorporated after his death. The court sustained the devise in opposition, aS I think, to the case from 4 Wheat. 1. The object of the bequest, the maintaining aged and decrepid seamen, is quite as vague as the object in that case, nor were the devisees more competent to take than the members of the Baptist Association.
In the case in 2 Howard 128, (Vidal et al. v. Girard’s Ex’rs.) one of the objections to the will was, that the beneficiaries were too uncertain and indefinite. They are declared in the will to be “ poor white male orphans, between the ages of six and ten years,” first, of the city of Philadelphia ; secondly, those born in any part of Pennsylvania; thirdly, of the city of New York, and lastly, those of New Orleans. See the opinion of Judge Story, above referred to, in which the case in 4 Wheat. 1 is reviewed, and this is held to be a valid charity, independent of the statute of Elizabeth.
With the view I take of this case, it is not necessary to inquire whether the statute of 43d Elizabeth is in force in this State. It appears that that statute was passed in the year 1601, and the first settlement of Virginia, (that being the first settlement in any part of the United States,) was in 1607. And the doctrine appears to be settled that English statutes passed before the emigration of our ancestors to America, and which were applicable to our situation and not inconsistent with our institutions and government, constitute a part of the common law, and arc in force (unless repealed) in all the States of the Union.—5 Pet. 233; 8 Pick. 309; 4 Paige 198; 1 Kent. 472-3; 4 Dana, 361.
In the case above referred to in 4 Wheat. 29, Chief Justice Marshall admits that the legacy in that case would be sustained in England under the statute of Elizabeth, and the decisions, so far as I have examined them, are uniformly to that effect, except the cáse above referred to in Tennessee.
*830My opinion is, that the bequests in the will are valid, and that a court of equity can give them effect by virtue of its common law and judicial powers, without claim to any prerogative power, and without invoking the aid of the statute of 43d Elizabeth. I do not recognize the doctrine of “ cypres,” which,, in substance is, if you cannot find the society specified in the will, or apply the fund to the charity intended by the testator, the court will then apply it to some other charity as nearly analogous to it as possible. The bequests should be paid only to the societies specified in the will, or their authorized agents. If the societies or either of them did not exist at the time of the testator’s death, or cannot now be found, organized and known as above stated, then the bequest to such society or societies should be considered and disposed of as lapsed legacies. The meaning of the chancellor is somewhat obscure on this last point, but we think if the decree is reasonably construed, it will be found to conform substantially with the foregoing view of the case.
We see no error (as is insisted by part of the plaintiffs in error,) in the mode of marshalling the assets of the estate adopted by the decree. John 0. Balfour, by his will, after giving the legacies to his sister Emily, &c., in legal effect gave the whole of his estate to his wife, subject to the charge of the charities. She bequeathed specifically to the legatees named in her will all the personal estate, leaving the real estate undisposed of, and which was consequently properly decreed first to be appropriated to the payment of the charities. The whole of the estate, real and personal, was charged with the payment of the charities, but Regina Balfour had clearly the right to determine what part of the estate should be first applied towards the payment thereof.
The decree is affirmed.
ChiltoN, J., having been of counsel, did not sit in this case.