It is true that, if you once find the charitable purpose in the will, the Court will go far to overcome difficulties in the way of effectuating it: Bruce v. Deer Presbytery 1. The Lord Chancellor in that case quoted the language of Lord Cranworth in Morgan v. Morris 2. "There has always been a latitude allowed to charitable bequests, SO that when the general intention is indicated, the Court will find means of carrying the details into execution."
But you have first to ascertain the intention by a fair inter- pretation of the will. See Pearks v. Moseley 3, per Selborne L.C. Lord Davey said in Hunter v. Attorney-General 4, at a page cited by Street J., "you are not
to do violence to the language of any part of the will, or to import words which you do not find there to make the purposes charitable because of those prefatory dispositions which the testator has made."
Now, as to the gifts to persons to whom they would be an assistance and benefit-it was urged that they should be regarded as limited to poor persons. This, however, would introduce a word not expressed by the testator in that connection, but in marked contrast explicitly employed directly afterwards in another phrase, apparently to denote a different set of individuals. As the clause stands, it extends the testator's bounty to three distinct classes of persons (1) those who are not necessarily poor, but are in such a situation that a pecuniary donation would mean assistance and benefit, as, for instance, to publish a work, or perfect an invention, to apprentice a son, or to enlarge a business; (2) those whose general condition in life is more or less one of poverty or distress (3) those who by accident, misfortune, or otherwise, find themselves temporarily in necessitous circum- stances.
If a person, answering any one of these three descriptions, is considered deserving by the trustees, they may assist him.
But to require a recipient of the first description to be also poor, would obliterate that branch as a distinct class, and would really reduce the classes to two, thus giving no force or effect whatever to the first division of individual bounty.
1L.R. 1 H.L. Sc., 96.
23 Macq. H.L. Cas, 134, at p. 166.
35 App. Cas., 714.
4(1899) A.C., 309, at p. 321.