794
,FEDERA\L REPORTER,
vol. 68.
re'quired to' run their plant. The case would then cotne. within' ' of National]!'urnace Co. v. Keystone Manuf'g 00.,110 TIL 421. In that case the National Furnace Company agreed to sell to the Keystone Company all of certain quality of pig iron, known as Lake Superior Charcoal Iron, which the Keystone Company wonld need,use, or consume in its business during the coming season from ,July 9, 1879, to July I, 1880, such amount supposed by the parties to be about 700 tons. This was held to be a good contract. The court say: "It cannot be said that the appellee [Keystone Company] was not bound by the contract. It had no right to purchase iron elsewhere for use in its business. If it had done so, appellant might have maintained an action for breach of the contract."
In the case at bar, there was no agreement on the part of plaintiffs to purchase from defendant all the oil they required in their business; They might order as little as they pleased, and supply the bulk of what they needed from other sources. The contract had the effect merely to bind the plaintiffs to receive and pay for at the stipulated price all the oil which might be shipped upon their order, from time to time, by the defendant, not exceeding 10,000 barrels. Further than that it can have no binding force, for want of mutuality. The case comes fairly within the principles announced in Railway Co. v. Dane, 43 N. Y. 240; Wilkinson v. Heavenrich, 58 Mich. 574, 26 N. W. 139; Sykes v. Dixon, 9 Adol. & E. 693; Railway Co. v. Mitchell, 38 Tex. 85; Stiles v. McClellan, 6 Colo. 89; Cool v. Cuningham, 25 S. C. 136; Davie v. Mining Co., 53 N. W. 625, 93 Mich. 491; Dorsey v. Packwood, 12 How. 126. See, also, 1 Pars. Cont. (Ed. 1893) 448. Judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the court below, with directions to award a new trial.
CITY OF CARLSBAD et I'll. v. KUTNOW et I'll. (Circuit Court, S. D. New York. July 2, 1895.) 1. TRADE·MARKS AND TRADE-NAMES-INFRINGEMENT SUITS-EFFECT OF FOREIGN DECISION.
A decision of the high court of chancery in England, granting to defendant, against complainant's opposition, the right to register as a trade-mark the words alleged to be an infringement, is no bar to a suit here for an infringement by using such words.
2. SAME-WHAT CONSTITUTES I",FRINGEMENT-"CARLSBAD SPRUDEL SAL'l'S."
The city of Carlsbad, Bohemia, having long l.l1ade and sold salts of higlJ medicinal qualities, in crystals and powder, made hy evaporating water from the springs owned by that city, under the name of "Carlsbad Sprudel SaIts," held, that it was an infringement to sell artificial salts, in no way derived from the Carlsbad waters, under the name of "Improved Effervescent Carlsbad Powder," it appearing that the city of Carlsbad had not used the name upon any but genuine salts derived from the spring waters.
8.
SAME-TRADE-MARK IN' NAME OF CrTY.
The fact that Carlsbad is a geographical name does not prevent the city of that name from having an exclusive right to the use thereof in connection with springs owned by it, which have this same name and give it to their products.
CITY OF CARI..!lBAD V. KUTNOW.
795
This was a bill in equity by the city of Carlsbad and others against Hermann Kutnow and others for an infringement of the trade-mark or trade-name "Carlsbad Sprudel Salts." Charles G. Coe, for plaintiffs. Antonio Knauth, for defendants. WHEELER, District Judge. The Carlsbad springs appear to be owned by, and wholly within the control of, the city of Carlsbad, in Bohemia; and the waters of them, for many years, to have been evaporated into salts of highly medicinal qualities, in crystals and powder, well known for their curative properties, everywhere, as "Carlsbad Sprudel Salz." This bill is brought to restrain the defendants, who are dealers in drugs and medicines in New York, from further using the words, "Improved Effervescent Carlsbad Powder," in selling other salts of similar appearance and properties, and for an account of profits from such use. As these are natural waters, unlike any others, and from which salts different from any others are produced, all genuine Carlsbad salts must necessarily emanate from them; and the plaintiffs, as proprietors of the springs and their products, must have the exclusive right to prepare and sell these waters and products as genuinely coming from these springs. The, defendants do not deny the use of these words in selling similar salts, but claim the right to so use them because registry of the,sewords, with other symbols relating to the Carlsbad springs, as a trade-mark, was granted to them by the high court of justice of England, chancery division, against opposition by the plaintiffs, in 1893; because, as they allege, the plaintiffs sell artificial salts by the name of "Carlsbad Salts;" and because their use of these words is not likely to mislead purchasers as to the origin of their salts. 'L'he decision in favor of granting the application for registry of the trade-mark could have no effect beyond the grant of that privilege in that jurisdiction; and it does not appear to have beeh granted upon any supposition that even there it could be used in selling any but genuine preparations of Carlsbad spring water as such, but rather that it could not. 10 Rep. Pat. Design & TradeMark Cas. 401. That would appear to be no bar to a suit there for using the trade-mark on other salts to deceive; and it cannot be any bar to such a suit here, out of that jurisdiction, and beyond the operation of the laws under which the decision was made. If any artificial salts have come to be known by the name of "Carlsbad Salts," from similarity or otherwise, of course the defendants have the same right to sell such salts by that name that they have to sell anything by the name by which it is known. Hut there is no real evidence to that effect. And if the defendants procured genuine Carlsbad waters or salts, and put them up in different forms, or with other ingredients, to improve their taste or var.y their effects, these words would be truthful, and tliey would seem to have ,a clear right to use them in such preparations; but the plaintiffs' proof tends to show that the' defendants' salts are not, in sub·
796
;rEDERAL REPORTER,
stance, genuine Carlsbad saIts, in any form, and the leading defendant has been a witness, and has not assumed to state-and, although the proof must be within their reach, none has been produced to show-that their salts come direct, in any form from the Carlsbad springs. The impression left by the evidence is that they do not, but are artificial. No proof has been brought showing that the plaintiffs have used the name of "Carlsbad" upon any but genuine Carlsbad sprudel saIts. . As the case stands here, the defendants appear to be using the name "Carlsbad" upon artificial saIts having no connection with that name, and to be using it only because of its connection with the genuine Carlsbad sprudel salts. Carlsbad, with its springs, is far away. This use of the name iIi connection with a preparation so similar to this well-known product of them is some representation that it is a genuine product of them. Calling the powder "Improved Carlsbad" is a direct representation that genuine Carlsbad powder has been taken to be improved upon; and calling it also "effervescent" is a representation that the improvement is in the effervescence. This is putting the plaintiffs' mark, to some extent, upon the defendants' salts, and is calculated to lead customers to think they are the salts of the plaintiffs. Such deception would be actionable at law, and is preventable in equity. McLean v. Fleming, 96 U. S.245; Menendez v. Holt, 128 U. S. 514, 9 Sup. Ct. 143; Improved Fig-Syrup Co. v. California Fig·Syrup Co., 54 Fed. 175, 40. C. A.264; Von Mumm v. Frash, 56 Fed. 830. Allusion has been made to this word being the name of the city, to which ordinarily an exclusive right cannot be acquired; but it is also the name of these peculiar springs, and gives the name to their prod· ucts. Decree for the plaintiffs for an injunction and an account.
WHITE v. KELLER.
(CIrcuit Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit. AprlI 23, 1895.) No. 262. 1. EVIDENCE-JUDGMENT.
An action of ejectment, to recovar certain land in Mississippi, was brought by W., claiming under deeds from the heirs at law of A., a former owner, against K., claiming under deeds from devisees to charita· ble uses under the will of A., who resided and died in Louisiana. Upon the trial, the defendant offered in evidence the record of a suit in Louisiana, to which both the heirs and devisees of A. were 'parties, and of the jUdgment therein. Held, that such record was admissible to prove that the will of A. was valid in Louisiana, that it devised all his real estate, that the devises to charitable uses were valid and the donees capable of taking the same, all of which points were decided by the judgment, which was binding on both parties to the action of ejectment as privies to the parties to the Louisiana suit.
2.
WILLS-INTERPRETATION-PROPERTY.
r.rhe term "property".embraces both real and personal estate, and a gift of the residue of "property and effects," in the general residuary clause of the will of a resident of Louisiana, is sufficient to pass real estate iD Mississippi not specifically devised.
WHITE V. KELLER.
797
SAME-TIME OF TAKING EFFECT.
A devise of real estate takes effect upon the death of the testator, and its operation is not pustponed to the time of proving the will in the state where the land lies. The rule against perpetuities cannot be Invoked to defeat a devise to charitable uses. There was no law or public policy In force In Mississippi In 1886 which prohibited a foreign ecclesiastical corporation, authorized by its charter and the laws of Its domicile to take and hold lands for charitable uses, from taking and holding land in Mississippi in trust for such purposes, nor did the constitution of 1890 take away any rights vested In such cor· porations prior to its adoption.
4. CHARITABLE USES-PERPETUITIES.
G.
SAME-LAws AND PUBLIC POLICY OF MISSIllSIPPI.
6.
TRUSTS-CAPACITY OF TRUSTEE.
Where a devise of land has been made upon a valid trust, the heirs at law of the testator have no right to Inquire into or contest the right of the trustees to take or execute the trust.
In Error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Mississippi. This was an action of ejectment by Walter A. White against J. H. Keller. Judgment was rendered in the circuit court for the defendant. Plaintiff brings error. Affirmed. In 1892, Walter A. White, the plaintiff in error, brought ejectment in the circuit court of Harrison county, state of Mississippi, against the tenant of J. H. Keller, defendant in error, who under the statute was admitted to defend. to recover a tract of land In that county. The same year the cause was removed to the United States circuit court by Keller on the ground of diverse citizenship, Keller alleging himself to be a citizen of Louisiana. In 1894 a trial was had, resulting In a verdict for the defendant In error under a peremptory charge by the court, and from the judgment on this verdict plaintiff sued out this writ of error. The admitted common source of titie was Kaspar Auch. The plaintiff proved that David Zable and Rosina Muller, half brother and sister, were the sole heirs at law of said Auch; that Auch died seised of the property in 1886; and read In evidence the deeds of said zable and Muller to him for the land, executed in 1891, which were quitclaim deeds, for an alleged consideration of $50 each; and rested. There were no objections to plaintiff's evidence. The defendant claimed title under the residuary clause of the will of Kaspar Auch, executed in New Orleans In 1886; and read in evidence, over the plaintiff's objection, a transcript of the record of the chancery court of Harrison county, state of Mississippi, In the matter of the probate of the will of said Auch, whereby Keller, in 1893, In his own Interest, propounded for probate and probated the original will of Auch, upon a petition which recites that Auch was a citizen and resident of Louisiana, and died at his domicile at New Orleans In 1886, seised of real and personal estate In Louisiana, and of realty In Mississippi; that in 1886 said Auch made a will In New Orleans, In nuncupative form, before a notary, In the presence of three witnesses, which was probated in the civil district court of Orleans parish in 1886, upon the petition of the executors named. A copy of the will as probated in Louisiana is filed with the petition. The petition contains proper averments for the probate of an original will, and the original will is produced for probate, and the prayer Is that the original will be admitted to probate. Due proof of the execution of the will was made by Hero, a witness, and upon this petition and proof the original will was admitted to probate. The will, after making numerous monetary bequests, among others to David Zable and Rosina Muller, contains this residuary clause: "I give and bequeath to the several incorporated religious associations of the city of New Orleans, propagating the teachings of religion according to the form of government and Book of Discipline of the Presbyterian Church, all the rest and residue of the property and effects that I may die possessed of, of whatever nature and kind, to the end that the poor of said respective churches In
798
FEDERAL ·REPORTER,
this citymllY be cared for." Theisman and Wicke were appointed executors, and qualified as such in Louisiana. Plaintiff conceded that probate proceedings were regular on their face, but objected to the reading of this record in evidence for the reason: "(1) The said will does not, on its face, purport to devise real estate in. Mississippi, and must be limited in. tts operative effect to the state of Louisiana. (2) The said will, even if otherwise unobjectionable, could not pass to foreign religious socletles the real estate or the testator In controversy, because said societies, at the death of the testator, had no capacity to take real estate in Mississippi for any purpose, and especlally for the purpose stated in the instrument itself. (3) The religious societies named in the will could, by comity, acquire and held in Mississippi no greater rights than domestic religiouB establishments, and these latter could not, when the will was executed, or at the death of the testator, take such devise as Is therein made, or acquire or hold the lands in controversy for the purpose stated in said will. (4) The said will, if allowed in evidence and given the construction contended for by counsel, would allow to foreign societies what is denied to domestic religious establishments, and invest such foreign religious socletles with the legal title to real estate in Mississippi, contrary to her constitution and laws, and against her determined policy. (5) 'fhe said will, in its residuary clause, is void for uncertainty as to the trustees and beneficiaries. It provides no plan or scheme by which to ascertain the poor of the churches or a},lportlon the fillld, and the trust could not be enforced in the courts of this state by the trustees or beneficiaries. (6) The words 'property and effects,' as used in the residuary clause, are shewn by the context to apply only to personalty, or, at best, to the 'property and effects' of the testator in Louisiana. (7) If said clause be construed as vesting title in the churches, they are given no power .01' disposition over the lands in this state, and the will would create a perpetuity. (8) The will was not probated until after the adoption of the constitution of Mississippi in 1890; and as, under that constitution, the devise is void, and no title in Mississippi could pass under the will until probated, the prohibition of the constitution extends to it, though made in 1886. There is no comity, law, or decision that could, in the doctrine of relation, defeat the constitution and policy of the state, the churches not being purchasers. But the court overruled the said objections and allowed the said wlll to be read in evidence, to which ruling and judgment of the court in overruling said objections, theplaintifl' then and there instantly excepted, and his exception was allowed. The said petition, will, and probate order and certificates, were read to the jury, the exhibi\s to the petition and caption being omitted, by consent of counsel and court, to save expense." These objections were overruled, and plaintiff excepted, and this action of the court constitutes the ground for the first assignment of error. The defendant then read in evidence a transcript of the record of the supreme court ot Louisiana in the matter of the succession of Kaspar Aucb, whereby it appeared that in 1886, on the petition of the executors and on proof of death, the will was probated in the civil district court. in nuncupative form, by notarial act, and without proof by witnesses, as the notarial act imported full proof. It contained also the petition of intervention of certain churches, to which petition the executors only were defendants, setting up the residuary clause of the will, and averring that the petitioners were the corporations thereby described, and praying to be declared residuary legatees, and that the executors sell the lands of the estate specified in exhibits. Upon proof made, the civil district court, in June, 1886, decreed the churches to be residuary legatees and instituted heirs, and that the executors sell the real estate mentioned in the inventory, and account for personalty and the proceeds of sale of lands to the churches. Said transcript also set forth a petition, filed in October, 1886, by Rosina Muller, naming the executors, said p.hurches, and David Zable as defendants, setting forth the jUdgment in favor of the churches on their petition,and averring that the residuary clauses of the will were void, for the special reasons: "(1) Because it Is therein attempted to create a trust, and to hold and perpetuate a fund for purposes not recognized by law. (2) Because the said clause is in efl'ect a fldel commissum and substitution, and in violation of law. (3) Because the said claimants and the said legatee. are incompetent to receive the said legacy, the object and purposes of
799
the same beyond the scope of the powers granted by the various charters of the said churches and societies, and· by the laws of this state for the creation and government of the same. (4) Because the said attempted disposition is too vagUe and indefinite, and can never be carned Into elfect, by reason of said vagueness and indefiniteness,"-and praying that she be recognized as heir, notwithstanding said decree In favor of the churches. 'I'he executors arid the churches answered. Zable did not appear, nor is it shown that he was served with 'process. 'I'his petition upon proof taken was dismissed. Petitioner Muller appealed to t.he supreme COUl'+ of Louisiana, and the judgment was affirmed. Succession of Auch (La.) 3 i:louth. 227. Plaintiff objected to the reading of this record of the Louisiana court in evidence, for the reasons: "Because the said transcript was not competent evidence in this controversy as to the issue to be tried by the jury, and, If intended as an estoppel on the plaintiff through one of his grantors, Rosina Muller, was inoperative here, and inapplicable, the precise question therein litigated not being now here in issue; and for the further reason that the opinion and judgment of the said supreme court is neither pursuasive nor controlling as to the validity of the residuary clause of Kaspar Auch's will here, in respect of land in Mississippi; and because the opinion of the court could be proven by the report thereof to be found in the printed volume of Reports of Louisiana, or by a certified copy of the opinion itself." These objections were overruled, and plaintiff except· ed. Therefrom arises the second assignment of error. The piaInti If admitted that the defendant derived title through mesne conveyance from the said churches. Thereupon, at the instance of the defendant, the court granted a peremptory instruction to find for defendant; to which action plaintilf excepted, and from this ruling arises the third assignment of error. Upon this writ of error, it Is admitted that the several churches through whom defendant claims title were duly incorporated under the laws of Louisiana, by charters of the same tenor and elfect as that of the First Presbyterian Church, found in the record; and that the same were duly certified, in the same form as set forth in the record, by the recorder of mortgages of the parish of Orleans; and that said several churches are named in the record. It is further admitted that s::tid churches, petitioners In the inter·' vention proceeding, passed in 1886, and had enrolled on their several minutes, resolutions of the same tenor and effect as those of the First Presbyterian Church, set forth in the record, accepting said residuary clause of the said wll1; and that said minutes of said several churches, duly certified, and said several charters duly certified, were set forth and constituted part of said record of the supreme court of Louisiana read in evidence. It is further admitted that there was contained in said record of the Louisiana court, read in evidence, proof of the identity of said Intervening churches, with the description contained in said residuary clause of said will; and that that proof showed that said churches, named as grantors In the deed to Keller's grantor, were the "incorporated religious associations of the city of New Orleans" intended to be described in said residuary clause of the will of Auch.
S. S. Calhoun, M. GreBn, W. L. Nugent, and T. A. }\fcWillie, for plaintiff in error. R. H. Browne, E. J. Bowers, Thomas L. Ford, and Ira L. Ford, for defendant in error. Before PARDEE and McCORMICK, Circuit Judges, and TOULMIN, District Judge. PARDEE, Circuit Judge (after stating the facts). That the will of Kaspar Auch was a valid will in Louisiana; that it deyises all the real estate of which Kaspar Auch died seised; that the legacy to the incorporated churches of thp Presbyterian denomination in the city of New Orleans, "to the end that the poor of said respective churches might be cared for," is a donation to pious uses; that there is no uncertainty as to the legatees described in
800
I'EDlCRAL REPORTER,
voL 68.
the will; and that the several incorporated churches named in the record have power, under their charters, to take as trustees under the said will, and have full power to administer the trust,is all adjudicated by the decision of the supreme court of the state of Louisiana, found in the record, and reported in 39 La. Ann. 1043, 3 South. 227. On the trial in the court below, the plaintiff objected to the admission in evidence of the record from Louisiana, and such admission is assigned in this court as error. Many objections are elaborated, but they are mainly as to the effect to be given to the record. In our view, the record was admissible to show that, as between plaintiff's grantors and the defendant's grantors, practically the matters above recited were duly litigated and decided, binding both plaintiff and defendant 'privies thereto as to all matters in connee· tion with the will of Kaspar Auch within the jurisdiction of the Louisiana court. "The nature, meaning, and Interpretation ot a wUl ot immovable property, and the rights and powers arising under it, are to be determined by the law ot the domicfle ot the testator, and not by the law rei situs." Crnsoe v. Butler, 36 Miss. 150: citing Story, ContI. Laws, 262, 479a, 479h, 479m, 490.
As Kaspar Auch's domicile was in the state of Louisiana, and as the question in this case involves immovable property in the state of Mississippi, it seems clear that the nature and meaning and interpretation of Kaspar Auch's will, and the rights and powers arising under it, are fully settled for this case by the decision of the .supreme court of Louisiana, supra. "The term 'property' embraces both real and personal estate: and under It, when used in the general residuary clause in a will, the real estate ot ilie testator, not attempted to be specifically disposed ot, will pass." Morris v. Henderson, 37 Miss. 492; citing Doe v. Langlands, 14 East, 370: Doe v. Morgan, 6 Barn. & C. 512, 13 E. C. L. 235. "It the real estate be not attempted to be disposed ot ISpeclfically by the wfll, It will pass to the general residuary deVisee, unless restricted by other clauses ot the will; tor, not being disposed ot, nor attempted to be disposed ot, it must be taken to have been intended to be embraced in the positive disposition ot the residuary clause. 1 Jarm. Wills, 588-590. In such a case it would be doing violence to the express disposition of the will'to say that, as to such real estate, the testator intended to die intestate." Morris v. Henderson, supra.
These authorities dispose of the objp.ctions that the will of Kaspar Auch does not, on its face, purport to devise real estate in Mississippi, and must be limited in its operative effect to the state of Louisiana, and that the words "property and effects," as used in the residuary clause of Kaspar Anch's will, are shown by the context to apply only to personalty, or, at best, to the property and effects of the testator in Louisiana. If the devise of all the testator's real estate to the Presbyterian churches of New Orleans, "to the end that the poor of said respective churches may be cared for," is a valid devise, and operated to convey real estate in the state of Mississippi,-as to which more will be said hereafter,-then the question is presented as to when the said devise took effect. It is seriously contended, and the contention is supported by very plausible argument, that the said de-
WHITE. V. KELLER.
801
vise took effect only when the will of Kaspar Auch was probated in Mississippi, and Rankin v. Scott, 12 Wheat. 177, and M'Cormick v. Sullivant, 10 Wheat. 202, are cited as authority for the position. An examination of those cases will show that they do not suppO'·t the contention, but rather establish, what we think would hardly be denied, that the subsequent probate of an unregistered will will not be effective as against an innocent purchaser for value from the heir at law. In Williams on Executors (Am. Notes, p. 255) it is said: ''The probate is, however, merely operative as to authenticated evidence, and not at all as the foundation of the executor's title, for he derives all his interest from the will itself, and the property of the deceased vests in him the moment of the testator's death. Hence the probate, when produced, is Raid to have relation to the time of the testator's death,"
In the case of Crusoe v. Butler, supra, the above proposition from Williams on Executors is quoted with approval, and the court, speaking of an Alabama will probated in Mississippi, under which the executors had made a sale of lands in Mississippi prior to probate in that state, said: "When the will was probated in Alabama, the power granted had relation back to the death of the testator. The grant of letters was merely the establishment of the character of the executors, and operated as a sanction to their exercise of the said power, granted to them in their character as executors by the will. The power in them was thus complete upon the probate of the will and their undertaking the trust in Alabama; and when the will was admitted to record in this state, it was merely for the purpose of authenticating the evidence by which the special power was established, and of rendering the prior right available here; but it was clearly neither the source nor the foundation of the power,"
If it were necessary, the proposition quoted from Williams on Executors, supra, could be supported on principle, and by the authority of many adjudged cases. But we do not understand'that the case of Crusoe v. Butler is seriously denied as correctly declaring the law in Mississippi, and we therefore conclude that the rights of the legatees under the will of Kaspar Auch, if said will was otherwise valid, vested when Kaspar Auch died, in 1886, and that the rights of the defendant in error, claiming under said legatees, are unaffected by the failure to probate the will of Kaspar Auch in the state of Mississippi until the year 1893; and also that in determining whether the will of Kaspar Auch was valid, and passed the real estate belonging to the testator in the state of Mississippi, the constitution of the state of Mississippi declared and put in force in 1890 need not be considered, except so far as the provisions of the said constitution may aid the court in determining what was the policy of the state of Mississippi in the year 1886 in regard to devises to religious corporations in trust for charitable uses. So far as the will under consideration makes a devise for charitable uses, we understand that the rule against perpetuities cannot be invoked against it. Jones v. Habersham, 107 U. S. 174185, 2 Sup. Ct. 336; Russell v. Allen, 107 U. S. 163, 2 Sup. Ot 327; Ould v. Hospital, 95 U. S.303; 1 Perry, Trusts, 384. v.68F.no.8-51
802
I'EDERAL REPORTER,
vol. 68..
Having eliminated all the objections made to the introduction of Kaspar Auch'a will as probated in 1893, in evidence on the trial of the case in the court below, except the objections, stated in various forms, that the will is invalid and did not pass title to real estate in Mississippi because the devise of real estate to religious corporations in trust for charitable uses was contrary to the law and public policy of that state, we now proceed to consider that question, the main one in the case. "For, besides the admitted Incapacity of a corporation of one state to exer· cise its powers in another state, except with the assent and permission, ex· pressed or impl1ed, of the latter, it is a principle 'as inviolable as it is fundamental and conservative that the right to hold land, and the mode of acquiring title to land, must depend altogether on the local law of the territorial sovereign.' Runyan v. Lessee of Coster, 14 Pet. 122; Lathrop v. Bank, 8 Dana, 114," Christian Union v. Yount, 101 U. S. 352-354.
The following propositions are declared in the headnotes of the case: "In harmony with the general law of comity among the states composing tile Union, the presumption is to be indulged that a corporation, if not forbidden by its charter, may exercise the powers the:reby granted within other states. including the power of acquiring lands,· unless prohibited therefrom, either in their direct enactments or by their public policy, to be deduced from the general course of legislation or the settled adjudications ot their highest courts. This court cannot presume that it is now, or was in 1870, against the pubnc polley of Illinois that one of her citizens owning real estate there situate shouIa convey it to a benevolent or missionary corporation of another state of the Union, for the purpose ot enabling it to carry out the objects of its creation, since she permitted her own corporations, organized for like purposes, to take such real estate by purchase, gift, devise, or in any other manner."
There are no settled adjudications of the supreme court of the state of Mississippi declaring the public policy of the state to be for or against the power of religious corporations of the state to take, or take and hold, as trustees for charitable uses, any devises of property real or personal made by her own citizens or by foreigners. The only case we find, or to which we have been cited, in which the supreme court has at all considered the question, is Wade v. Society, 7 Smedes & M. 663. It was held in that case that the trusts created by the will of Isaac Ross in favor of the American Colonization Society, looking to the emancipation of slaves, were legal and valid, being sufficiently definite and certain for a court of equity to enforce them by virtue of its ordinary jurisdiction. In relation to charitable trusts, and whether the statute of 43 Eliz. was in force in the state of Mississippi, the court said: , "It is next contended that if these devises are invalid, either for want of capacity to take on the part ot the donees, or of the trustees, then equity cannot enforce them as charities, To this we reply that if the trusts createU by this will be valid, then there is no room and no necessity for the application of the doctrine of charities. It is only where the bequest or devise is too vague or indefinite for those intended to be benefited to claim any interest under them that the doctrine as to charities arises. It is clearly settled that 'definite charities are trusts, which equity will execute by virtue of its ordinary jurisdiction,' Gallego's Ex'rs v. Lambert, 3 Leigh, 450; Inglis v. Trustees, 3 Pet. 100. Charities begin where definite trusts end. It is there-
803
fore wholly unnecessary for us to inquire whether St. 43 Eliz. is in force in this state, and whether the court ot chancery has any jurisdiction over charities to compel their performance, apart from and independent of that statute. It may not be out of place, however, to remark, as this point was urged in argument with great zeal,. that in the late case of Vidal v. 'Girard's Ex'rs, 2 How. 127, that court modified very much, if it did not overv. Hart's Ex'rs, 4 ·Wheat. 1. ,The court there said rule, the case of that 'new sources of information, recently developed, established conclusively that, long before that statute, courts of chancery exercised jurisdiction over charities, not only where they were indefinite in their nature, but where either no trustees were appointed or where they were not competent to take: The opinion was delivered by Judge Story, and must be regarded also as an abandonment of the opinion upon this subject expressed in his Commentaries upon Equity. But in this case it is matter of speculation rather than of practical use, because. we see no reason to change the former opinion, that these trusts, so far as it is necessary now to determine them, are valid."
There is some discussion in the briefs of counsel as to whether the court in that case approved of Gallego's Ex'rs v. Lambert, 3 Leigh, 450, or of Vidal v. Girard's Ex'rs, 2 How. 127, as to the effect of the repeal of 43 Eliz., and in regard to the power of courts of equity to enforce charitable trusts. As we read the case, we incline to the opinion that the court cited Gallego's Ex'rs v. Lambert only for the proposition that "definite charities are trusts, which equity will execute by virtue of its ordinary jurisdiction," and that, as to whether courts of chancery have any jurisdiction over charities to compel their performance apart from and independent of 43 Eliz., the court leaned to the doctrine declared in Vidal v. Girard's Ex'rs. But it is not important to be accurate in regard to this matter, because it js certain that Wade v. Society cannot be held as declaring any public policy of the state in relation to charitable trusts. So far as the laws of the state of Mississippi are concerned, our examination leads us to the conclusion that in relation to devises in favor of religious corporations in their own right, or to such corporations as trustees for charitable uses, the public policy of the state of Mississippi has not been uniform. In the early days, and up to 1838, the legislature incorporated some 46 different churches. .Hutch. Oode Miss. 335, 336. So far as we have been able to examine these charters to ascertain the power generally given the respective churches to take and hold real estate, we find generally that the power is ample, and that the churches were highly favored. Rev. Code Miss. 1824, pp. 596-603. In 1838 an act was passed granting certain powers and privileges to the officers of organized religous societies, in which it was enacted that: "Hereafter when any body of people shall orgamze themselves as a religious sect, and shall establish a place of worship, it shall be lawful for the officers of such body, so organized, or such trustees as shall be duly elected, or appointed by said body, to receive by gift, grant, or purchase, any lands, tenements, or other property, for the use and benefit of said body, or their successors, to be used and enjoyed by them, so long as they or their successors shall continue to worship at such place so established." See Hutch. Code Miss. p. 324.
So far as we are advised, this remained the law until the Code of 1857, which provided a general law for the chartering of corporations by tlte governor, with the approval of the attorney general,
804
i'EDERAL REPORTER,
and declared that thereunder charters may be granted for the following purposes only, to wit: "For the incorporation of cities, towns, Masonic and Odd Fellows' lodges, temperance societies and associations, charitable associations, literary institutions or associations, religious societies, fire companies, mechanics' societies, manufacturing companies, agricultural societies, associations formed for tlie building of theatres and hotels, and telegraph companies." Code 1857, c. 35, § 1.
Section 10 of said chapter contains the following provisions as to religious societies or congregations: "Art. 53. Any religious society or congregation, or ecclesiastical body, may hold at anyone place, a house or tenement for a place of worship, with proper and reasonable ground thereto attached: a house or tenement as a place of residence for their pastor or minister, with proper and reasonable ground thereto attached; a house or tenement to be appropriated and used as a male school or seminary Of learning, with proper and sufficient ground thereto attached; and another house or tenement to be appropriated as a female school, or seminary of learning; and a cemetery' of sufficient dimensions, and no more. Provided, that any religious society or denomination may own such colleges. or seminaries of leal'lling, as it may think proper, if used for such purposes. "Art. 54. All lands, tenements, or hereditaments, or any interest or benefit therein, or therefrom, except for the purposes provided in the foregoing article, which may be given, granted, conveyed, leased, or released, to any religious society, denomination or congregation, either directly or indirectly, or in trust or confidence for the use or benefit of such society, either express or implied, or secret, or by the judgment of any court, or by way of lien, mortgage or pledge, shall be ipso facto, by such alienation, forfeited to the state; nor shall such society, denomination, or ecclesiastical body, by any act or ingenuity, appropriate, or have appropriated, to its use, or for its benefit, or to its disposition, any present or future interest in lands, tenements, or hereditaments, other than to the extent above mentioned; nor shall any such society evade this provision, by any device or subterfuge, in taking or holding more land for any of the purposes above mentioned, than is necessary. "Art. 55. Every devise or bequest of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, or any interest therein, of freehold, or less than freehold, either present or future, vested or contingent, or of any money directed to be raised by the sale thereof, contained in any last will and testament, or codicil, or other testamentary writing, in favor of any religious or ecclesiastical corporation, sole or aggregate, or any religious or ecclesiastical society, or to any religious denomination, or association of persons, or to any person or body politic, in trust, either express or implied, secret or resulting, either for the use and benefit of such religious corporation, society, denomination, or association, or for the purpose of being given or appropriated to charitable IDles or purposes, shall be null and void, and the heir at law shall take the same property so devised or bequeathed, as though no testamentary disposition had been made. "Art. 56. Every legacy, gift, or bequest, of money or personal property, or of any interest, benefit or use either direct, implied, or otherwise, contained in any last will and testament, or codicil, In favor of any religious or ecclesiastical corporation, sole or aggregate, or any religious or ecclesiastical society, or to any religious denomination or association, either for Its own use or benefit, or for the purpose of being given or appropriated to charitable uses, shall be null and void, and the distributees shall take the same as though no such testamentary disposition had been made." See Hutch. Code Miss. pp. 302, 303.
The foregoing provisions are reprodllced in sections 2438-2441, c. 55, art 7, Code 1871. Under the provisions of these two Codes, there can be little doubt that the power of religious corporations in the state of Mississippi, so far as they could be controlled by statute, were restricted so that no religious corporation could take a devise
WHITE 11. KELLER.
805
of property either in its own right or as trustee for charitable uses. In 1872, however, the legislature dealt with the subject again, and without expressly repealing sections 2439-2441 of the Code of 1871, above quoted, enacted: "That sections 2439, 2440 and 2441, article 7, chr.pter 35, of the Revised Code of 1871, be so amended and construed as in no manner whatsoever to prohibit or prevent any religious society or ecclesiastical corporation, sole or aggregate. or any religious or ecclesiastical society of this state, or of any ot the United States, incorporated by the laws of any of the other states of the Union, prior to the adoption of the Code of this state of 1871, the acts of incorporation of which grant the franchise of taking, receiving, acquiring and holding real and personal estate, as provided for in the act of incorporation of said religious societies, corporations or denominations; and that said sections aforesaid shall, in DO· manner whatever, interfere with, be construed so as to limit or otherwIse impair the franchise granted by the laws of this state, or by the laws of any of the states of the Union, to any rellgious society or corporation aforesaid, to receIve, take, acquire, and hold real and personal estate, as provided in said acts of incorporation." See Laws Miss. 1872, p. 32, c. 20.
And to the end that the construction given by this act should be coextensive with the articles of the Code thus legislatively construed, it was enacted that the act itself, approved March 20, 1872, should take effect and be in force from and after the 1st day of October, 1871, the day on which the Revised Code of 1871 went into effect. In preparing the Code of 1880, the above-quoted act of 1872 was doubtless regarded as practically repealing sections 2439, 2440, and 2441 of the Code of 1871, for those sections were all omitted. . We have been favored on both sides with an interesting discussion as to the scope and effect of sections 2437 and 2438 of the Code of 1871, reproduced as sections 1071 and 1072 of the Code of 1880, in determining the public policy of the state as to the powers of religious corporations to take and hold real estate. As showing a legislative tendency to closely limit the powers of the religious societies created by section 1071, Code 1880 (section 2437, Code 1871), [nto quasi corporations, to hold, if not to take, real estate, the sections 1072 of the Code of 1880 and 2437 of the Code of 1871 are very impressive; but we cannot construe these sections as at all affecting the powers theretofore granted to full-fledged ecclesiastical corporations chartered by special laws, nor even affecting the powers of such religious corporations as should be thereafter fully chartered by the governor and attorney general under the provisions of sections 1027 to 1032 of the Code of 1880, which corporations were authorized to take and .hold real and personal estate, not exceeding $50,000. See, also, Acts 1882, p. 50, c. 26. That the sections in question were not intended to apply to ecclesiastical corporations is shown by the fact that they were originally followed by the sections 2439, 2440, and 2441, Code 1871, which unquestionably apply. Whf>n Kaspar Auch's will took effect in 1886, and when the Presbyterian churches of New Orleans, devisees under the will of Kaspar Auch, conveyed to the grantors of the defendant in error, in 1888, this was the state of the law in regard to the power of religious corporations of Mississippi, or of other states of the Union, to acquire real estate or other property in Mississippi in trust for charitable uses. It may be here noted that the religious corporations of Louisiana, the trustees for char-
806 '
FEDERAL REPORTER,
itablenses under Kaspar Auch's will, were fully empowered in that ,behalf prior to the adoption of the Mississippi Code of 1871, so that, for the purposes of this case, it is immaterial whether the restrictive sections 2439, 2440, and 2441 of the Code of 1871 were wholly repealed by the Code of 188,0 or remained in force with the legislative construction of 1872. After the rights of the defendant in error were acquired and vested, and before the plaintiff in error acquired his title, the constitution of 1890 was enacted and declared in force. In this constitution the sections 2439,2440, and 2441, as they appear in the Code of 1871, are practically reproduced and made a part of the fundamental law of the state. We do not understand that the constitution of 1890 was intended to give to the grantors of the plain· tiff in error any rights to property in Mississippi not theretofore existing, or that it was intended to, even if it could, take away any of the vested rights of the defendant in error; and therefore we are of opinion that the question whether the laws and public policy of the state of Mississippi prohibited and avoided the grant of property in Mississippi to the devisees under the will of Kaspar Auch in trust for charitable uses must be determined by the laws and pUblic policy in force at the time the devise took effect; and at that time, from the review we have given, it cannot be said that such devise was void because prohibited by law, or that there was such a well-defined public policy adverse to the power of ecclesiastical corporations to take and hold real estate for religious or charitable uses as would authorize this court to declare the devise void. If possibly we are wrong as to this view of the public policy of the state of Mississippi, and the declaration in the constitution of 1890 can have retroactive effect against foreign religious corporations in regard to power to take, hold, and administer trusts for charitable uses, it is still clear that under the circumstances of this case the plaintiff in error, as holding from the heirs at law of Kaspar Auch, is without right or interest to raise the question. The trust was valid in 1886, whatever the powers of the trustees may have been, or whatever may be the since-declared public policy of the state of Mississippi, and therefore the heirs at law of Kaspar Auch were divested by his will of all interest in the property devised, and left without right to attack the same. Christian Union v. Yount, supra; Jones v. Habersham, supra. "And if the trusts were in themselves valid in point of law, it is plain that neither the heirs of the testator nor any other private person could have any right to inquire into or contest the right of the corporation to take the property or execute the trust." Vidal v. Girard's Ex'rs. 2 How. 19l.
The views herein expressed practically dispose of all the questions raised by the assignment of errors, and adversely to the plaintiff in error, and the judgment of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.
OAKES
v.
807
OAKES et at. v. MYERS, Jefferson County Treasurer. (Circuit Court, D. Montana. June 22, 1895.) No. 365. 1. 'l'AXATION-PROPERTY IN HANDS OF RECEIVER.
Property in the hands of a receiver of a federal court cannot be reached by proceedings for the collection of state taxes, without the consent of such court. In re l'yler, 13 Sup. Ct. 785, 149 U. S. 164, followed. Until the final determination by the government as to what lands within the limits of the grant to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company (Act Congo July 2, 1864) are mineral, in accordance with the provisions of the grant excepting such lands from its operation, and with Act Congo Feb. 26, 1895, requiring such determination to be made before the issue of any patent for the lands, no title of any kind to any of the lands within the grant passes to the company, and none of such land is taxable by the states in which it lies. Wisconsin Cent. R. Co. v. Price Co., 10 Sup. Ct. 341, 133 U. S. 496, and Barden v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 14 Sup. Ct. 1030, 154 U. S. 288, followed.
PUBLIC LANDS-NOR'l'HERN PACIFIC HAILROAD GRANT-TITLE-TAXATION.
This was a suit by Thomas F. Oakes, Henry C. Payne, and Henry C. Rouse, as receivers of the :Northern Pacific Railroad Company, against William V. Myers, treasurer of Jefferson County, Mont., to enjoin the collection of a tax. The defendant demurred to the bill. John C. Spooner and F. M. Dudley, for complainants. H. J. Haskell, Atty. Gen. of Mont., for defendant. BEATTY, District Judge. The complainants, as receivers of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, by this action ask to enjoin the collection of taxes levied by the state of Montana, and in their complaint allege concerning the grant, by act of congress of July 2, 1864, to aid in the construction of the Northern Pacific Railroad, of the odd sections of land within the place limits of the grant, that the company has in all respects performed all the acts devolving upon it; that it desires its patent for the lands in question, and has made its demand upon the government therefor, but has been refuseo. the same for the reason that no mineral lands are included in the grant; that some of the lands in such odd sections may be mineral; that the government is investigating the facts, and will not issue its patent until it shall have determined them; that the company can· not now know or designate the lands it will finally procure title to; that in this condition of the title the defendant, as the authorized defendant county, has assessed against said officer and agent of company taxes on all the lands in said odd sections, regardless of the fact of their mineral or nonmineral character, and is proceeding to sell them for nonpayment of such taxes, and that such taxation and sale of the lands would cloud the title thereto. Upon the complaint, Judge Knowles of this district issued a temporary restraining order against such threatened sale, and to the complaint the defendant demurs, assigning as causes: First, that the complaint does not state such a cause of action as entitles complainants to the relief prayed; and, second, nonjoinder of necessary parties. The first, being the