
    PAYMENT OF PROFESSORS OF LOSS IN SALARY FROM ENTERING THE MILITARY SERVICE.
    Court of Appeals for Hamilton County.
    George Carrel, Auditor, et al v. State of Ohio, on the Relation of Sanford Brown et al, Directors of the University of Cincinnati.
    Decided, June, 1919.
    
      Trust Funds — Where for Purposes of Education Laws Relating to Will be Liberally Construed — Discretion of Trustees in Expenditure of, Will Not be Interfered with in the Absence of a Showing of Abuse— Facts and Conditions Existing at the Time Should Guide in the Matter of Expenditures.
    
    1. The directors of the University of Cincinnati have the discretionary power under the wills of Charles McMicken and Matthew Thoms, to pay from the trust funds thereby given, to professors and instructors of the University who entered the military service of the United States in the war with Germany, such amounts as would make up the difference between their regular salaries and the compensation paid by the Government.
    2. Gifts in trust for the purposes of education are within the rules governing charitable trusts and are liberally construed.
    3. Courts will not interfere with or control the discretionary application of funds by trustees in such a trust, except to prevent abuse or misuse. Such question is not properly raised in an action in mandamus.
    4. The propriety of expenditures to carry on a university must he determined in view of the facts and conditions that exist at the time.
    
      D. J. Ryan and Oliver M. Dock, Assistant City City Solicitors, for plaintiffs in error.
    
      Rufus B. Smith-, O. J. Renner and Sanford Broum, contra.
   Shohl, P. J.

On April 30lth, 1917, shortly after the declaration by the United States of a state of war against the Imperial German Government, the directors of the University of Cincinnati adopted the following resolution which was communicated to all the professors, instructors, officers and other employees of the University:

“Resolved, That all professors, instructors, officers and other employees of the University who enlist or are drafted in the army, navy, medical or hospital service of the United States or in recognized training camps of the United States who are now permanently employed for next year be assured that their positions will be held for them and that they will receive compensation out of the trust funds under our control at regular times in such amount as will make up the difference between the army, navy, hospital or other service pay and the regular salaries in this institution.”

At that time a substantial number' of professors and instructors had already entered the military service and others were about to do so. A list of the names with the amount of compensation due to each of the members of the teaching force under the resolution was certified in 1918 by the directors of the University to the civil service commission and'by them transmitted to the auditor of Cincinnati. Under the direction of an examiner in the office of the auditor of state, the city auditor refused to draw his warrant on the treasurer to make the payments called for by the list unless ordered to do so by the courts. The directors of the University thereupon brought this action in mandamus against the auditor and treasurer of Cincinnati, and the court of Common Pleas, after a trial, rendered judgment against the defendants and ordered a peremptory writ of mandamus to issue, directing, the drawing and the payment of the warrant. The city auditor and city treasurer prosecute error to this court.

The réfusal of the city officials to pay the professors and instructors is based upon the contention that it constitutes a payment of public money as a gratuity or donation and that the board of directors are-exceeding their powers in attempting to use funds for such purpose. They cite State ex rel Barker v. Philbrick, 13 O. D., 158, and Steubenville v. Culp, 38 O. S., 18.

In the first case, certain sanitary employees were laid off temporarily, and, in the latter case, a police officer was suspended from duty. In both cases it was adjudged that no compensation could be recovered by the complainants as they were not rendering services to the city. In the case at bar, however, the resolution does not call for the payment out of money received from taxation. The disbursements are to be from-trust funds. The record establishes that in addition to the funds raised by taxation, the board has an income from certain trust funds, among which are the McMicken fund and the Thoms fund.

Under the will of Charles McMicken a large amount of property was left for the purpose of establishing a college or university. Item 21 provides:

Item XXI: I therefore devise, and bequeath to the city of Cincinnati and its successors for the purpose of building, establishing and maintaining, as soon as practicable after my decease, two colleges for the education of white boys and girls, all the following real and personal estate in trust forever.”
‘ ‘ Item XXXVII: The establishment of the regulations necessary to carry out the objects of my endowment I leave to the wisdom and discretion of the corporate authorities of the city of Cincinnati who shall have power to appoint directors of said institution.”

The income from the McMicken estate thus devised amounts approximately to $28,000 annually.

Matthew Thoms, after certain other 'bequests, left the rest, residue and remainder of his estate as follows:

‘ ‘ Item III. All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, wheresoever situate, of which I may die seized, I give and devise to the City of Cincinnati, in trust for the University of Cincinnati, upon condition that out of the same there be set apart and provided a sufficient sum as the endowment of a professorship, to be called in memory of my father ‘ The William Thoms Professorship,’ and the residue, if any, of the property given, shall be applied to such uses and purposes of said university as the directors thereof may from time to time provide.”

The income from the Thoms estate, in excess of the amount required for the William Thoms professorship, amounts to approximately $6,000 annually.

- All the powers granted by these bequests are vested in the board of directors under Sections 7902 and 7915 of the G-eneral Code. Under the wills the disbursements of the money is left to the “wisdom and discretion of the board” in the one case, and it is to be “applied to such uses as the directors may provide” in the other. The directors justify the expenditure, in accordance with the resolution, on the ground that in a proper aspect and under a broad view, it promotes the purposes and objects of the donors and tends to further the success of the University of Cincinnati. If so, it comes within the discretionary powers granted to them.

The vital force of a university is its teaching body. No matter how fine the buildings, equipment and appointments devoted to the university purposes may be, the ultimate achievement of the university is accomplished 'by its staff of teachers. The establishment of a staff of professors in a university and the welding of all into a unit is a slow growth. The number of teachers who are the most competent and desirable is necessarily limited. In securing professors and instructors and in retaining them, the University of Cincinnati comes into competition with the other institutions of learning throughout the country.

The uncontradicted evidence shows that the policy of paying the professors' and instructors of universities, who entered the war service of the United States, the difference between the amount paid them at the University and the amount received from the government has been so generally followed in the universities and other institutions of learning, that it may fairly be said to ’be the generally accepted policy in the country. White the professors and instructors had no contractual obligation to resume their positions after the war, it was hoped that they would do so, and the directors knew that the continuing payments would operate in fact to bind them to the University. The áetion of the directors in adopting the resolution was taken because in the judgment of the directors it was advisable to maintain the reputation of the University in the educational world and thus make it an institution which would attract to its faculty men of high standing, to make certain the continuance with the University after the war of the services of those professors and instructors who had enlisted for the war, and to continue the good will of the- citizens of Cincinnati who had from time to time made gifts to the institution. Had the University declined to follow the accepted and prevailing policy, there might well have been a feeling among the members of the teaching body that the University was lacking in appreciation of its members, as well as in patriotism for the country, and it might have impaired the standing and' reputation of the University with the teachers whom it sought to attract.

The trusts under the wills mentioned, being given for the purpose of education, are within the rules governing charitable trusts. Zanesville Canal & Mfg. Co. v. Zanesville, 20 Ohio 483, 488; Russell v. Allen, 107 U. S., 163, 172; Perry on Trusts, Section 700; Dexter v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, 176 Mass., 192; Rockwell v. Blaney, 9 N. P. N. S., 495 et cit.

Courts are liberal in the construction of powers of trustees of charitable trusts. Zanesville Canal & Mfg. Co. v. Zanesville, supra; Mills v. Newberry, 112 Ill., 123; Ingraham v. Ingraham, 169 Ill., 432, 450; 3 Story Equity, 14th Ed., Section 1550.

While courts in proper proceedings will restrain trustees from dealing with trust funds in a manner not authorized by law, they will not interfere with the discretion of the trustees in a charitable trust and will not control their discretionary application of the funds, except toi prevent abuse or misuse. Perry on Trusts, Section 511; Attorney-General v. Moore, 19 N. J., Eq., 503, 50)7; Attorney-General v. Wallace, 46 Ky., 611, 620; see Hunt, Trustee, v. Edgerton, 9 C.C.(N.S.), 353. Affirmed 75 O. S. 594.

Moreover, an action in mandamus does not raise such questions. See Bannon v. Board of Education, 17 O. L. R., 47; State ex rel Clarke, v. Board of Education, decision by this court, Clinton county, May 26, 1919.

Just what expenditures are suitable and necessary to carry on a university must be determined in view of the facts and conditions that exist at the time. Cincinnati v. Jones, 28 C. C. 210. Under the circumstances it can not be said that the money in question was not devoted to the uses and purposes of the University. The resolution was designed to promote the objects of the donors of the trust funds, and the payments therein provided for should 'be made.

Judgment affirmed.

Hamilton and Cushing, JJ., concur.  