60 C.L.R.]
OF AUSTRALIA. Lastly, there is a clause in the will which gives to the Sydney Mechanics School of Arts out of the Philip Muskett Biennial Bequest a sum of £10, half to be devoted to the purchase of works of special utility for the reference library of the institution, and the other half for the general purposes of the institution. In my opinion the gift fails, either because it is part of the essay and award scheme which is now impracticable, or because it is a gift to the institution as the administrator of the fund, which position it now disclaims. But there is no intestacy the gift is available for the general charitable purpose of the testator and may be administered accordingly.
Subject to variations which will be stated by the Chief Justice, the appeal should be dismissed.
DIXON J. The questions upon which this appeal turns are, first, the validity of the provision for what the testator calls his biennial bequest and, second, the existence and disclosure in his will of a charitable intention wider and more general than the execution of the particular directions which the provision gives.
The testator, a medical man who died in 1909, had, according to his will, advocated three principles in the course of his publications and lectures. One was the adoption of measures for the prevention of Australian infantile mortality. Another was the improvement of the food habits of Australians. The third was the extension of the teaching of technical education in State schools. Subject to certain gifts and to a life interest in favour of his sister, who died in 1936, the testator directed that his residuary estate should be held upon trusts for purposes in which these principles played a part. His scheme was unusual, if not strange.
He appears to have been interested in the Sydney Mechanics School of Arts, a body incorporated by statute with objects described as
the intellectual improvement of its members and the cultivation of literature, science and art." His will requires that, after his sister's death, an award called the "Philip Muskett Biennial Bequest " shall be made in every second year for an essay written by a competitor who has spent at least half his life in Australasia. He provides that the objects of the " bequest " and the purpose of the essay shall be to popularize and promote the three principles mentioned. The