delivered the opinion of the Court.
The record in this case shows that Robert Daniel of the City of Baltimore, died in June, 1873, leaving a will, and the sole question for determination on this appeal is the validity or invalidity of the first clause of that will, which reads as follows:
“1st.' I do hereby order and direct that the house and side lot where I now reside, situated on Hamilton Terrace, in the City of Baltimore, Nos. 239 and 241 N. Eutaw street, be sold by my executors hereinafter named, as soon after my death as they may deem expedient, and on such terms as they may think best; and I do hereby devise and bequeath the proceeds therefrom arising to the Magistrates and Town Council of the Royal Burgh of Dumfries, the county town of Dumfrieshire, Scotland, to be paid over to them by my executors aforesaid, together with such rents and profits of said property as may accrue up to the time of said sale, and which said executors shall collect; in trust and confidence nevertheless, to and for the uses, trusts and purposes following, that is to say, that they, the said *177Magistrates and Town Council, shall permanently invest said rents and profits and the proceeds of sale in Government stocks, or in other safe and profitable securities, and pay over the interest and dividends of such investments as they accrue and are received, to the High School of Dumfries, which is under their direction and care, either by increasing the salaries of teachers or providing scholarships, or in such manner as may seem best to said trustees, and most likely to promote the cause of education and elevate the standard of instruction in the said High School of Dumfries.”
The hill avers, and the answer admits, the testator held only a leasehold interest in this property, and we must therefore treat the clause in question as a testamentary disposition of personal estate. The record further shows, that nearly a year before the'testator’s death, the care and management of this school was transferred from the Magistrates and Town Council and vested in the School Board for the Burgh, by Act of Parliament, (35 and 36 Victoria, ch. 62,) generally known as the Scotland Education Act. This transfer is without condition and absolute. The terms of section 24 of this statute are, “Every burgh school shall he vested in and be under the management of the School Board of the Burgh in which the same is situated from and after the election of such School Board, and the said School Board shall thereafter, with respect to school management and the election of teachers, and generally with respect to all powers and duties in regard to such schools now vested in the Town Council and Magistrates or other authorities in whom the school management and the election of schoolmasters and teachers is at present vested, supersede and come in the place of such Town Council and Magistrates, or other authorities.” By other sections, these School Boards are duly incorporated, and the funds and revenues of such schools whether derived from public contribution or special endowment, are also *178placed under their management and control. Then by section 46, it is further provided, that “When in any burgh property or money has been or shall be vested in the Town Council, or in the Magistrates of any Burgh, or in any person or persons as trustees for the behoof of the Burgh School, or for the promotion of any branch of education in such school, or to increase the income of any teacher, the income or revenue, of such property or money shall, as it accrues, be accounted for and paid to the School Board of such Burgh, and shall be applied and administered by the said board according to the trusts attaching thereto,” and to this is added a provision that would be altogether beyond the scope of legislative power in this State if it interfered with vested rights, viz., “and it shall be lawful for the School Board from time to time with the sanction of the Board of Education, to vary or depart from the said trusts, with a view to increase the efficiency of the Burgh School by raising the standard of education therein or otherwise.”
It thus appears that at the time this will took effect there was no High School answering the description which the testator has given, that is, there was no such school under the “direction and care” of the Magistrates and Town Council. But what is of more importance, the Magistrates and Town Council whom he made trustees of this fund, and charged with the duty of dispensing its income, had no power to pay over that income as the will directed, nor to exercise the discretion in its disposition which the will conferred upon them, and upon them alone. By this clause of his will, the testator constituted the Magistrates and Town Council for. the time being of this Burgh and their successors in office, trustees of a permanent fund to be invested by them, and the income therefrom they were required to pay over to the High School which is under “their direction and care,” and this payment is to be made by them to or for the benefit of that school, *179“ either by increasing the salaries of teachers or providing scholarships, or in such manner as may seem best to said trustees, and most likely to promote the cause of education and elevate the standard of instruction in the said school.” What salaries shall be increased, and to what extent and of what teachers, what scholarships shall be provided, and who shall be benefited thereby, and in what other mode the cause of education shall be promoted, and the standard of instruction elevated by the disbursement of the income of this fund, are all matters which the testator confided solely to the judgment and discretion of the trustees whom he selected and appointed. But at his death, an Act of Parliament had deprived these trustees of all power over such disbursements, and had substituted in their place for the performance of this duty and the exercise of this discretion a different body corporate, composed of different individuals, elected in a different manner, and invested with more extensive powers. The vesting of this large discretion as to the distribution of his bounty, in these trustees of his own choice, is no immaterial or unimportant part of his will which a Court can say the testator intended might be changed, and may therefore be disregarded. So far from it, the substitution of the provisions of this Act of Parliament in place of what the will directs in this resj>ect, would, in our judgment, change what we must assume the testator considered an essential and important part of it, and in effect, make a new will for him. If this Act had not been passed or had not taken effect until after his death, this difficulty might not have arisen, but the question before us must be determined upon the state of facts and law existing when he died. If this clause was not then effective, the rights of the residuary legatees or next-of-kin vested immediately and irrevocably. It may be that this difficulty would be overcome in England by the provisions of the Statute, 43 Elizabeth, ch. 4, respecting charitable uses, or by virtue of the powers which the Courts of Chan-*180eery in that country possessed before and independently of that statute. But -must decide this case upon the doctrines of Maryland law as established by our own judicial decisions, and by these neither the statute nor any such chancery powers, have ever been adopted as part of the law of this State, but have been uniformly denied and repudiated in every case in which an attempt has been made to have them recognized. Regarding the difficulty we have thus stated as insuperable and conclusive against the validity of the clause in question, we rest our decision upon what we have said on that subject, and shall not consider any of the other objections that have been argued at bar.
(Decided 1st March, 1877.)As the decree below relates to other matters which this appeal does not bring up for review, we must affirm that part of it only which declares the first clause of this will to be void.
Affirmed, and Gause remanded..
Robinsom, J., dissented.