This is a suit in equity by the Attorney-General to establish and enforce what is alleged in the petition to be a trust for public charity created by the will of John Corby, deceased, who died in 1870 leaving a large estate, real and personal, leaving also a widow but no child or other descendant. It is claimed in the petition.that by the will the widow was given a life estate in the whole property and the re-, mainder was devised in trust for public charity. The will is copied in the petition in full, and the judgment to be pronounced in the case is to be based on the interpretation to be given the will.
This will came before this court some years ago for interpretation and the judgment of the court then was that the will gave the widow a life estate but made no disposition of the remainder, that is, that except as to the life estate to .the widow, John Corby died intestate. [Corby v. Corby, 85 Mo. 371.] That suit was between the heirs at law of John Corby on the one side and the widow on the other; there was no party in *424the ease representing the general public, claiming that the will created a trust for public charity. After the decision in that case the heirs at law conveyed their interests in the estate to the widow, who thereupon assumed the absolute ownership of the whole property and, as the petition in this case states, sold large parts of the real estate, appropriated the proceeds- to her own use and reinvested part of the same in other real estate, taking the title in her own name. The widow died in 1899 leaving the defendant, her sister, her sole heir at law.
The petition in this case, after setting out the will in full, states the plaintiff’s theory of its legal effect, that is, that after the life estate to the widow the remainder was given in trust for charity; the defendant filed a general demurrer to the petition, the court sustained the demurrer, and plaintiff declining to plead further judgment for defendant was rendered and the plaintiff appealed.
The decision in Corby v. Corby, above mentioned, was rendered in 1884 — nearly twenty years before the filing of this suit. In view ojf the fact, as the petition informs us, that in those years there have been many' sales and transfers of property belonging to the Corby estate we should be careful to say nothing in this case to impair titles taken on the faith of the decision in that case unless it becomes necessary in order to protect some interest that was not bound by that decision. What was decided therefore in that case, as between the parties to that suit and their privies, we will take as the law in this case and we will now consider only the question as to whether a trust for charity is created by the will.
The will is in these words:
“In the name of God, amen! I, John Corby, of the city of St. Joseph, county of Buchanan and State of Missouri, being of sound mind and clear memory, *425and being fully aware of tbe uncertainty of life and tbe certainty of death, and being desirous of disposing óf all my worldy goods and effects in such manner as I believe to be just and equitable, do declare the following to be my last will and testament.
“I do will and bequeath to my dearly beloved wife Amanda Corby, all my property of every kind that I am possessed of, both real, personal and mixed, including all my lands, lots, tenements, improvements, hereditaments wherever situated; also I do hereby will and bequeath to my said wife Amanda Corby, all of my money, notes, bonds, bank stock, insurance stocks, or any other evidence of debt and of money or property of every kind of character whatever, which I own or have any claim to, to have and to hold the same to her own use and benefit during her natural life, subject to the following conditions:
“First. That she will pay all of my just debts; secondly, that after providing for her own wants and comforts, I leave to the discretion of my dear wife to give to such of my relations such aid or assistance as my dear wife may, of her own will, think proper and just, hereby declaring that my relations have no claim of any kind upon me or upon any of my property, and anything that they may receive from my said wife, out of my effects, shall be in accordance with her sense of justice and in accordance with my wishes, the nature of which she has been advised by me during my life.
“Secondly. That the balance of my said property will be given to advance the cause of religion, and promote the cause of charity, in such manner as my dearly beloved wife may think will be most conducive to the carrying out of my wishes.
«Thirdly. For the purpose of enabling my dearly beloved wife to more effectually carry out my wishes in reference to the disposition of my property, as aforesaid, she is hereby authorized and empowered to lease, *426sell or convey any of my said property, which she may think will be beneficial to said property, by leasing or selling the same.”
As was said in the former case commenting on the general frame of the will: “It is said that this will was written by the testator himself. It is evidently the work of an nnpracticed hand, and of a mind untrained to babits of precise and consecutive thought, or weakened by age or disease. It contains an abundance of legal terms and phrases, but the ideas expressed are indistinct and confused, and there is hardly a sentence in it that is not inconsistent with some other provision.” After a labored consideration, with the aid of distinguished counsel, the only thing this court in that case could make out of the jumble was a life estate to the widow in all the property. One of the judges was of the opinion that in addition to the life estate there was a power of disposition given to the widow, but the majority held that as to the corpus of the estate John Corby died intestate.
At the end of the only clause in the will which purports to grant an estate are these words: “subject to the following conditions.” Then follow two paragraphs the first directing his debts to be paid and authorizing the widow to give as she may see fit of his estate to his relations, and, “Secondly — That the balance of my said property wili be given to advance the cause of religion and promote the cause of charity, in such manner as my dearly beloved wife may think will be most conducive to the carrying out of my wishes.” It is upon that second paragraph that the plaintiff’s case rests.
Gifts to charitable uses have always received favorable consideration in this court, as the cases cited by counsel for the plaintiff show. [Chambers v. St. Louis, 29 Mo. 543; Academy of Visitation v. Clemens, 50 Mo. 167; Schmidt v. Hess, 60 Mo. 591; Howe v. Wil*427son, 91 Mo. 45; Mo. Hist. So. v. Academy of Science, 94 Mo. 459; Powell v. Hatch, 100 Mo. 592; Barkley v. Donnelly, 112 Mo. 561; Sappington v. Trustees, 123 Mo. 32; Lackland v. Walker, 151 Mo. 210.]
The law is, as contended by counsel for plaintiff, that uncertainty as to the individual to whom the benefit may reach does not defeat the gift but on the contrary is one of the features that distinguish a public from a private charity.
It has been said that this distinction is illustrated in the Book of Ruth by the custom of the harvesters leaving at random in the field a sheaf for the gleaners who would come after, but not knowing which one of them would get the leaving. In that case although it was not known which individual would get the sheaf, yet it was known that a class of poor gleaners would come after the harvesters had passed; it was charity for that class that prompted the good deed and when one or some of that class received the benefit the purpose of the particular charity intended was effected:
But there are many objects of charity in every community, some of them are regarded with favor by one benevolent person and with disfavor by another. There are deserving poor and undeserving poor and whether one falls within one class or the other is often a matter of individual opinion.
A man who gives of his wealth to relieve the suffering of fellowmen of a class whom he regards as worthy is to be adjudged as actuated by a charitable intent, and that is so even though he especially limits his benevolence to that class. It is not necessary that a man’s charity should be aimed impartially to all suffering mankind in order to credit him with a charitable intent, nor is he to be adjudged as having intended to bestow his bounty on every sufferer, without regard to class or condition, merely because he has manifested a charitable intent in a certain direction.
*428And what is here said of a charitable purpose is equally true of a religious purpose. There are many kinds of religion, and religious men are generally very particular about the kind. What is religion in the estimation of one is superstition in the estimation of another. There are men who give largely to the support of one church who would regard it as evil to aid the support of another. John Corby in this clause of his will which we are now considering says: “the balance of my said property will be given to advance the cause of religion,” etc. What kind of religion — Catholic, or Protestant? The will does not say, yet it manifests an intent to advance the cause of religion, and if the chancellor should undertake to enforce that purpose he would have as broad a field to gather from as he would if he should undertake to carry out the charitable intent.
It is not every general intent that appears in a will that can be put into effect by a court of chancery. For example, the purpose to disinherit an only heir may clearly appear, the testator may say in his will that he gives him one dollar and he is to have no more of the estate, yet unless the testator wills the property to some one else the heir will take it under the Statute of Descents. So in the ease at bar: though a general intent to advance the cause of religion and promote the cause of charity appear, yet in the absence of any provision in the will showing how that purpose is to be put into effect the court is powerless. If in such case it should undertake to designate the church or charity to be benefited it would assume to do for the testator what he did not do for himself.
But the testator did not express in this will an intent to advance the cause of religion and promote the cause of charity in general, but he indicated a purpose to advance the cause of some particular religion and promote the cause of some particular charity but *429he left us without information as to the particular religion or the particular charity he had in mind. He gives us to understand that he has confided his purpose in that respect to his wife and will he satisfied with whatsoever she may do. How is the court to know whether or not the wife is carrying out those directions, or, if at her death the court should appoint another trustee, who is to instruct him in his duties? The testator was not willing to put his property in a condition that a chancellor might give it to the advancement of any religious order he might select or any charity he might prefer. He trusted that matter to his wife alone and as she is now dead no one can ever know what his wishes in that respect were.
It is unnecessary to say whether or not the wife had any power at all under that clause of the will, as no act of hers under if is in question here; it is sufficient to say that there is no such trust for a charitable use created in the will as a court of equity can enforce.
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur, except Woodson, J., not sitting.