Gambell v. Trippe

McSherry, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By the fifth or residuary clause of the last will of Emma Spence, it is provided as follows, viz., “I direct my trustee to pay over the whole residue and remainder of my means and estate to some Presbyterian institution in Baltimore, as they may determine, for charitable' or religions purposes.” By the first clause she appointed Jesse K. Hines and James A. L. McClure trustees and executors, and devised and bequeathed all her estate to them upon various trusts — that relating to the residuum being the one just quoted. Mr. Hines died a few days after the testatrix, without having qualified as executor, and letters testamentary were issued to Mr. McClure, who subsequently died without having stated an account, and without having administered the estate. Thereupon letters of administration de bonis non cum testamento an*254nexo were committed to the appellant, who has passed his final account, showing in his hands a balance which constitutes the residuum of the estate. Neither Mr. Hines nor Mr. McOluré ever designated any Presbyterian institution to receive this residuary legacy, and the father of the testatrix, her next-of-kin, claims it as a lapsed legacy. He has assigned his right therein to the appellee who filed the bill now before us. The object of the proceeding is to have the residixary legacy declared lapsed, and to procure a decree directing the fund and personal property to be paid and delivered to the appellee.

There is no doubt as to the invalidity of the residuary clause of the will. The object intended to be benefited or promoted is neither so certain nor definite as to enable a Court of equity to declare who is entitled to the fund to the exclusion of all others. The legacy is required to be paid to some Presbyterian institution for religious or charitable purposes; but what institution or what character of institution, whether religious, educational, or charitable, is no where declared or intimated. And the purposes to which the fund is to be applied, whether religious or charitable, are as indefinite and uncertain as the institution is. It was said by this Court in Barnum,. et al. vs. Mayor, &c., of Baltimore, 62 Md., 292: “If there be parties capable of taking the subject-matter of the trust, and objects legal and definite to he subserved or benefited by its execution, so that a Court of equity may take cognizance of and enforce the trust, these are the essentials, and only essentials, to the validity of the trust, though the object of the trust be in its nature charitable.’' Not one of these essentials is present in this- case, and according to the well settled doctrine in this State, the trust cannot be upheld, even though the trustees named in the will were empowered to select the institution ultimately to receive the fund. Dashiell vs. Attorney-General, 5 H. & J., 392, 6 H. & J., 1; Wilder-*255man vs. Mayor, &c. of Baltimore, 8 Md., 551; Needles, et al. vs. Martin, 33 Md., 609; Church Extension of the M. E. Church, et al. vs. Smith, 56 Md., 399; Rizer, et al. vs. Perry, et al., 58 Md., 112; Crisp, et al. vs. Crisp, et al., 65 Md., 426; Maught vs. Getzendanner, et al., 65 Md., 527; Dulaney, et al vs. Middleton, et al., 72 Md., 67.

(Decided 29th January, 1892.)

But in addition to this, the power given by the testatrix to Mr. Hines and Mr. McClare to select some Presbyterian institution as the beneficiary under the residuary clause was purely one limited to the persons named. It was a discretion vested in them individually. They both died without attempting to exercise it, and it has devolved upon no one else. Whenever a power is of a kind that indicates a personal confidence, it must prima facie he understood to be confined to the individual to whom it is given, and will not, except by express words, pass to others, to whom by legal transmission, the same character may happen to belong. Cole vs. Wade, 16 Ves., 27; Attorney-General vs. Berryman, 1 Dickens, 168; Powles vs. Jordan, 62 Md., 503. As a consequence of this, even had the bequest been valid in the first instance, the legacy would have lapsed. In either event, whether void or lapsed, the father of the testatrix as her next-of-kin became entitled to the fund and personal property attempted to be disposed of by the residuary clause, and under the assignment from him the appellee may recover that fund and personal property from the administrator de bonis non. This is what the Court below decreed, and, for the reasons we have given, its decree must be affirmed.

Decree affirmed, with costs — the costs in this Court and 'in the Court below to be paid out of the fund.