A, a resident in Irish Grove, Illinois, died there leaving a
will by which, after bequeathing his library to the Presbyterian
Church of Irish Grove and $500 for the erection of another
Presbyterian church in Illinois, and $50 to be paid on the
minister's salary of the Presbyterian church of Irish Grove for
1884, and some other bequests, he bequeathed and devised the
remainder of his estate "to he equally divided between the board of
foreign and the board of home missions." The Presbyterian Church in
the United States of America has a corporate "Board of Foreign
Missions" and a corporate "Board of Home Missions," but it was
agreed by counsel that several other religious bodies in the United
States have similar organizations for the same purposes.
Held that there was a latent ambiguity in the will
respecting the object of the residuary gift, which ambiguity could
be removed by extrinsic evidence, and that the evidence introduced
on that point, taken in connection with the other bequests in the
will for the benefit of Presbyterian churches, showed that the
testator,
Page 120 U. S. 587
in making the residuary gift, had in his mind the Board of
Foreign Missions and the Board of Home Missions of the Presbyterian
Church of the United States of America, of which he was a member
and an officer.
The restriction upon the right of a congregation, formed for
religious purposes, to receive "land not exceeding in quantity . .
. ten acres," which is imposed by § 42 of the Act of the
Legislature of Illinois of April 18, 1872, applies to congregations
incorporated for the object named in § 35 of that act,
viz., "the purpose of religious worship," and does not
affect foreign benevolent or missionary societies incorporated
either with the objects named in the incorporation of the Board of
Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States or
with the objects named in the incorporation of the Board of Home
Missions of that church, although both organizations are important
agencies in the general religious work of that church.
Christian Union v. Yount, 101 U.
S. 352, commented upon, explained, and affirmed.
Bill in equity to set aside a will and its probate for
uncertainty so far as they related to the residuary devise and
bequest. Decree dismissing the bill, from which plaintiff appealed.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 120 U. S. 588
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Robert Gilmer, late of Irish Grove, Menard County, Illinois,
died December 31, 1883, having made a last will by which he
disposed of his entire estate, consisting of about $4,000 in
personal property, and from three to four hundred acres of land in
that state. The eleventh clause of the will is in these words:
"I also, after paying all debts and claims against my estate,
bequeath and devise the remainder of my estate to be equally
divided between the Board of Foreign and the Board of Home
Missions."
The object of the present suit is to obtain a decree declaring
that clause to be void and directing the estate of the testator,
after meeting the debts and the bequests contained in other
clauses, to be paid to the complainant, the uncle and only heir at
law of the decedent.
The Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the
United States of America and the Board of Home Missions of the
Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, corporations
created under the laws of New York, severally appeared, were made
defendants, and filed answers, each claiming the right to share in
the devise in the eleventh clause of the will. The executors admit
the justice of these claims, but ask the direction of the court in
the premises. To these answers a general replication was filed,
and, the cause having been heard upon the pleadings and proofs, the
bill was dismissed, with costs.
It is agreed in the case that the Baptist, Methodist, Episcopal,
and other churches, like the Presbyterian Church in the United
States of America, have boards of home and foreign missions;
consequently it is contended the eleventh clause of the will is
void for uncertainty as to the donee and the purposes of the gift.
In this view we do not concur. It is undoubtedly the rule, in
respect to the testamentary disposition of property, real and
personal, that uncertainty either as to the subject or object of a
devise will be fatal to its validity. But that rule has
Page 120 U. S. 589
no application here, for if there were no other fact in the case
than that there are numerous boards which may be generally
described by the words the "board of foreign missions" and "the
board of home missions," the devise in the eleventh clause would
not fail. With respect to charities, gifts may be good which, with
respect to individuals, would be void, "and where there are two
charities of the same name, the legacy will be divided between them
if it cannot be ascertained which was the intended object." 1
Jarman on Wills, 376. Can it be ascertained by competent evidence
which of these various boards were the objects of the testator's
bounty?
In the fourth clause of the will, the testator bequeathed his
library to the Presbyterian Church of Irish Grove; in the ninth,
$500 toward the erection of a Presbyterian church in Greenview,
Illinois, provided the same was built within two years from the
date of the will, otherwise the money should revert to his estate,
and in the tenth he bequeathed $50 to be paid on the minister's
salary of the Presbyterian Church of Irish Grove for the year
1884.
And there was extrinsic evidence to the following effect: that
the testator had been for many years a member and ruling elder of
the Irish Grove Presbyterian Church, one of the local congregations
of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America; that
collections were annually taken up in that congregation for the
various boards of that church, including its Boards of Foreign and
Home Missions; that while it was announced from the pulpit that
collections would be taken for the Board of Foreign Missions or the
Board of Home Missions, without in words, naming the Presbyterian
Church, all such collections, with the knowledge and assent of the
church session, of which the testator was an active and zealous
member, were, without exception, sent to the officers of the
Presbyterian Boards of Foreign and Home Missions in New York City,
and regular reports thereof made to the session; that the testator
took especial interest in the work of those particular boards, and
uniformly contributed thereto, and that he did not, so far as his
pastor or associates in the church session knew, make contributions
to the societies of any other
Page 120 U. S. 590
church, except to the Bible Society, which was sustained by
several religious organizations.
Of the competency of this evidence there can be no doubt. The
purpose of it was to place the court, as far as possible, in the
situation in which the testator stood, and thus bring the words
employed by him into contact with the circumstances attending the
execution of the will. Such proof does not contradict the terms of
that instrument, nor tend to wrest the words of the testator from
their natural operation. It serves only to identify the
institutions described by him as "the Board of Foreign and the
Board of Home Missions," and thus the court is enabled to avail
itself of the light which the circumstances in which the testator
was placed at the time he made the will would throw upon his
intention. "The law is not so unreasonable," says Mr. Wigram, "as
to deny to the reader of an instrument the same light which the
writer enjoyed." Wigmore on Wills, 2d Amer. ed. 161. The proof made
a case of latent ambiguity. Such an ambiguity may arise
"either when it names a person as the object of a gift, or a
thing as the subject of it, and there are two persons or things
that answer such name or description, or, secondly, it may arise
when the will contains a misdescription of the object or
subject."
Patch v. White, 117 U. S. 210,
117 U. S. 217.
In the same case, it was observed that, "as a latent ambiguity is
only disclosed by extrinsic evidence, it may be removed by
extrinsic evidence."
See also Allen's Executors v.
Allen, 18 How. 385,
59 U. S. 393;
Hinckley v. Thatcher, 139 Mass. 477;
Breckinridge v.
Duncan, 2 A. K. Marsh. 51;
Morgan v. Burrows, 45 Wis.
217;
Brewster v. McCall, 15 Conn. 274;
Tilton v.
Society, 60 N.H. 382; 1 Jarman on Wills, 423, 431; 1
Greenl.Ev. § 290.
Construing, then, the will with reference to the extrinsic
evidence of the uniform relations of the testator to the subject of
Foreign and Home Missions, and to certain societies engaged in that
kind of work, it is not to be doubted that, in the eleventh clause,
he had in mind the Boards of Foreign and Home Missions
Page 120 U. S. 591
of the general religious society or organization of which he was
a member and officer. The words of the will very well apply to such
an object, and therefore, in so interpreting its provisions, no
violence is done to the language employed by the testator.
It is also contended that the Boards of Foreign and Home
Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America
are foreign religious societies or foreign societies organized for
religious purposes, and as such cannot, under the laws of Illinois,
take exceeding ten acres of land each, and that the devise in the
eleventh clause, being of more than three hundred acres of land
jointly, is void and must fail.
In the case of
Christian Union v. Yount, 101
U. S. 360, decided in 1879, we considered the question
whether a conveyance, made in 1870 by a citizen of Illinois, of
real estate there situated of the value of $10,000 to the American
and Foreign Christian Union, a New York corporation, was void under
the laws of Illinois, the object of that corporation being
"by missions, colportage, the press, and other appropriate
agencies, to diffuse and promote the principles of religious
liberty and a pure evangelical Christianity, both at home and
abroad, wherever a corrupt Christianity exists."
The validity of the conveyance was sustained upon the ground
that the law of Illinois as it existed in 1870 did not preclude a
benevolent or missionary corporation of another state, being
thereunto authorized by its own charter, from taking title to real
estate within her limits by purchase, gift, devise, or in any other
manner.
It is, however, insisted that the force of that decision is
weakened, if not destroyed, by the failure of the court to refer to
§ 44 of chapter 25 of the Revised Statutes of 1845, making it
lawful for "the members of any society or congregation,"
theretofore formed or thereafter to be formed "for purposes of
religious worship" to
"receive, by gift, devise, or purchase, a quantity of land not
exceeding ten acres and to erect or build thereon such houses and
buildings as they may deem necessary for the purposes aforesaid,
and to make such other use of the land, and make such other
improvements thereon, as
Page 120 U. S. 592
may be deemed necessary for the comfort and convenience of such
society or congregation."
Rev.Stat. 1845, p. 120. Counsel overlook the fact that the
Court, in
Christian Union v. Yount, referred incidentally,
and as indicating the general course of legislation in Illinois, to
the like provision in the act of 1872. No comment was made upon
that provision for the reason that it had no application to the
case, there being no claim, as there could not well have been, that
the American and Foreign Christian Union was, within the meaning of
the statute, a society or congregation "for purposes of religious
worship."
In
St. Peter's Roman Catholic Congregation v. Germain,
104 Ill. 440, the supreme court of the state held that the
foregoing section of the act of 1845 was not repealed by the Act of
March 8, 1869, providing "for the holding of Roman Catholic
churches, cemeteries, and other property," but was displaced by the
42d section of the Act of April 18, 1872, c. 32 of the Revision of
1874, which last section, however, the court said, was
substantially the same as the 44th section of the act of 1845, and
to be regarded as, in effect, merely continuing the latter in
force.
We have therefore to inquire whether the devise in question is
void under the Act of April 18, 1872. That act makes provision for
the formation of corporations for any lawful purpose, except
banking, insurance, real estate brokerage, the business of loaning
money, and the operation of railroads other than horse and dummy
railroads. It also makes provision for the incorporation of
societies, corporations, and associations for any lawful purpose
not for pecuniary profit "capable of taking, purchasing, holding,
and disposing of real and personal estate for purposes of their
organization." Sections 29, 31.
The act proceeds:
"SEC. 35. The foregoing provisions shall not apply to any
religious corporation, but any church, congregation, or society
formed for the purpose of religious worship may become incorporated
in the manner following, to-wit: . . ."
"SEC. 41. Upon the incorporation of any congregation, church, or
society, all real and personal property held by any
Page 120 U. S. 593
person or trustees for the use of the members thereof shall
immediately vest in such corporation, and be subject to its
control, and may be used, mortgaged, sold, and conveyed the same as
if it had been conveyed to such corporation by deed; but no such
conveyance or mortgage shall be made so as to affect or destroy the
intent or effect of any grant, devise, or donation that may be made
to such person or trustee for the use of such congregation, church,
or society."
"SEC. 42. Any corporation that may be formed for religious
purposes under this act or under any law of this state for the
incorporation of religious societies may receive, by gift, devise,
or purchase, land not exceeding in quantity (including that already
held by such corporation) ten acres, and may erect or build thereon
such houses, buildings, or other improvements as it may deem
necessary for the convenience and comfort of such congregation,
church, or society, and may lay out and maintain thereon a burying
ground; but no such property shall be used except in the manner
expressed in the gift, grant, or devise, or, if no use or trust is
so expressed, except for the benefit of the congregation, church,
or society for which it was intended."
The 45th section permits any congregation, church, or society
incorporated under the act to receive, by grant, devise, or
bequest, real estate, not exceeding forty acres, for the purpose of
holding camp meetings. Rev.Stat. 1874, pp. 292, 293.
Assuming, for the purposes of this case only, that a church,
congregation, or society formed under the laws of another state for
purposes of religious worship in that state could not lawfully
receive by gift, devise, or purchase land in Illinois, in excess of
the quantity which may be received in either of those modes by a
similar corporation formed under the laws of Illinois, we are
satisfied that the sections last quoted from the act of 1872 do not
embrace corporations of the class to which these Boards of Foreign
and Home Missions belong. The Board of Foreign Missions of the
Presbyterian Church in the United States of America was formed
"for the purpose of establishing and conducting Christian
missions among the unevangelized or pagan nations, and the general
diffusion
Page 120 U. S. 594
of Christianity."
Its power to hold real or personal estate in New York is
restricted to such quantity as will produce an annual income not
exceeding $20,000. The object of the Board of Home Missions of that
church is
"to assist in sustaining the preaching of the gospel in feeble
churches and congregations in connection with the Presbyterian
Church in the United States, and generally to superintend the whole
of home missions in the behalf of such church, as the General
Assembly shall from time to time direct, and also to receive, take
charge of, and disburse all property and funds which at any time,
and from time to time, may be entrusted to said church or said
board for home missionary purposes."
It cannot take and hold real or personal property the annual
income of which shall exceed $200,000.
While these boards are important agencies in aid of the general
religious work of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of
America, neither of them is, in any proper sense or in the meaning
of the 35th section of the act of 1872, a church, congregation, or
society formed for the purpose of
religious worship. The
counsel for the plaintiff in error seem to lay stress upon the more
general words "formed for religious purposes" in the 42d section of
the act, but manifestly the other parts of the same section and
previous sections show that the only corporations intended to be
restricted in the ownership of land to ten acres were those formed
for the purpose of "religious worship," and not to organizations
commonly called benevolent or missionary societies. The reasons of
public policy which restrict societies formed for the purpose of
religious worship in their ownership of real estate do not apply at
all, or, if at all, only with diminished force, to corporations
which have no ecclesiastical control of those engaged in religious
worship, and cannot prescribe the forms of such worship nor subject
to ecclesiastical discipline those who fail to conform to the
rules, usages, or orders of the religious society of which they are
members.
This conclusion does not in the slightest degree conflict with
the decision in
St. Peter's Roman Catholic Congregation v.
Germain. That was the case of a conveyance of about eighty
Page 120 U. S. 595
acres of land directly to a congregation or society "formed for
the purpose of religious worship," as distinguished from a
benevolent or missionary organization. The court held that under
the legislation of Illinois,
"a religious corporation is authorized to receive or acquire
lands to the extent of ten acres, and no more. Any amount in excess
of that is expressly forbidden by statute, and it follows that all
conveyances, deeds, or other contracts made in violation of this
prohibition are absolutely void."
As the eleventh clause was intended to pass, and was valid for
the purpose of passing, to the Boards of Foreign and Home Missions
of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America the
estate thereby devised, the decree must be affirmed.
It is so ordered.