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    351-year-old will sparks bitter dispute in Mass.

    BOSTON (AP) — With only eight days to live, a wealthy, ailing Massachusetts merchant wrote in his will 351 years ago that he was leaving a spectacular 35-acre seafront property for the benefit of public school children, decreeing the land should never be sold or wasted.

    The dying wish of William Payne, one of the state's earliest settlers, created the nation's oldest charitable trust and eventually led tenants to build 167 cottages — most of them used by summer vacationers — on the land he left for the seaside city of Ipswich. The rent money has generated some $2.4 million to help fund public schools over the last 25 years.

    Now, the trustees want to tear up the will, convert the property into condominiums and sell them to the tenants to settle a 2006 lawsuit filed by the tenants over rent increases. But hundreds of Ipswich residents have gone to court to block the settlement, saying it violates the sacred intent of Payne's will and shortchanges the schools.

    The Massachusetts Appeals Court is considering whether to nullify the settlement and is scheduled to hear arguments in the case March 2.

    The residents contend that while independent appraisals show the value of the land is an average of about $41 million, the agreement sets a sale price of nearly $32 million. They also say that the settlement also denies public schools the benefit of rising land value that occurs over the long term and that could help them collect higher rents.

    Attorney General Martha Coakley, whose office enforces laws governing public charities, is supporting the settlement approved by a probate court judge in December, saying that the trust is no longer able to carry out Payne's wishes.

    Mark Swirbalus, who represents opponents of the settlement, said the case sends a "troubling message" because it shows the intent of someone setting up a trust could be trampled and the rights of beneficiaries could easily be compromised in decisions that do not protect their best interest.

    "In short, the agreement to sell the land, and the court's approval of this agreement, seem to have been done for the sake of expedience, regardless of William Payne's intent and Massachusetts law," Swirbalus said.

    Residents seeking to block the deal have accused trustees of mismanagement, operating in secrecy and making sporadic and small payments to public schools for years long before the tenants sued over the rent. Disputes over wastewater and other necessary improvement to the land also fueled complaints against the trustees, formally known as Feoffees of the Ipswich Grammar School.

    "The fundamental problem in all this is there are a lot of different opinions in town as to whether the trustees are sort of willfully evil or just incompetent," said Douglas DeAngelis, an Ipswich parent and one of the 14 people seeking to join the lawsuit. "But, at the end of the day, you have a $40 million asset that's never been professionally managed."

    Payne's land gift was intended to help Ipswich comply with a 1647 colonial law that required communities with more than 100 families to set up a grammar school to prepare students for admission to "the College at Cambridge" — a reference in his will to Harvard College, founded in 1636 with a mission to prepare young men for the ministry.

    The second paragraph of Payne's handwritten will declares in flourishing script: "I giue vnto the free scoole of lpswitch, the little neck of land alt Ipswitch, commonly knowne by the name of Jeferrys neeck. The which is to bee, and remaine, to the benifitt of the said scoole of Ipswitch, for euer, as I haue formerly Intended, and therefore the sayd land not to bee sould nor wasted."

    Ed Cafasso, a spokesman for the sale opponents, said the plaintiffs are not only contesting the probate court ruling, but also contend that Coakley "failed to investigate evidence of the charity's mismanagement," including the fact that so little money has been distributed to the schools over the years as well as previous instances in which trustees rented cottages they were managing — leaving them with little incentive to set rents at market value.

    The attorney general's office, however, on Friday defended its decision to support the land sale, saying the trust had become ineffective in serving its stated purpose of aiding Ipswich schools.

    "The settlement terms ... comply with charities law and achieve two important goals: First, they restore a much needed revenue stream for the Ipswich schools consistent with William Payne's wishes and ensure the long-term viability and sustainability of his gift in the future," Brad Puffer, spokesman for Coakley, said in a statement.

    "Second, they provide for a publicly appointed board to govern the trust that will be created with proceeds from the sale of the Little Neck land," Puffer said. "This change will enhance public accountability and transparency for the trust going forward."

    Trustee Peter Foote, who manages affairs on behalf of other trustees, declined to comment.

    Attorney William Sheehan, who represents the trustees, said the settlement represents the best option in efforts to ensure that Ipswich schools continue to receive funding from Payne's dying wish.

    Suggestions that the trustees have mismanaged the land "and this notion of 'no, we are better off if the property is rented'" ignores the fact that the settlement shifts to condo owners the burden of about $1 million required to fix significant erosion problem that occurred on the land in 2007, Sheehan said.

    The settlement also eliminates the uncertainty created by a potential liability from the 2006 lawsuit that tenants filed to block the trustees from evicting them from their cottages for refusing to pay higher rents, Sheehan said.

    ___

    Rodrique Ngowi can be reached at www.twitter.com/ngowi

     
    • Bret C  •  New Ulm, Minnesota  •  2 mths ago
      There is a reason why Wills are made. This needs to be honored and the case thrown out. If this is rejected, it will set precedence on other wills and trusts that don't meet the interest of the deceased.
      • south jersey frank 2 mths ago
        i gave you 2 thumbs,see how in my post that follows by 10 min.
      • Bec 2 mths ago
        Bret, you hit the nail on the head!
      • tommy j 2 mths ago
        bret this IS the point exactly! glad you mentioned it!
    • Nick  •  2 mths ago
      The will states that the property shall be for the children and never sold. So how clear can that message be without some money grubbing lawyer or politician helping their friends make money. Those who moved onto that property knowing about the trust need to vacate it.
      • richardE 2 mths ago
        Judges who do not respect privite property. Who over rideour rights for the so called public good. This is what happens
      • KillTheMessenger 2 mths ago
        If the state can't follow the original intent of the will, the land should be bestowed to the other original heirs of his property or their heirs; with allotments in proportion to their original inheritance.
      • Heidi Warkentin 2 mths ago
        The law has to make room for changing times. That is why there is usually a loophole for such things. If it is no longer viable for all it can be nullified. However, it might be nullified with "conditions."
    • Ian  •  2 mths ago
      Main problem here is the simple and plain language used in the document. How can a lawyer argue against something so simple and direct. Only thing that brings to mind and just as plain and simple is the phrase - -Thou Shall Not Steal.....
      • LT 2 mths ago
        plainand simple tear the houses down sell the wood and sell the land and make it a park then no one includeing the children looses and it goes back to the way it should have been for over 351 years..NOW THATS PLAIN AND SIMPLE......
      • richardE 2 mths ago
        Yes Obama was a lawyer for activist groups like Acorn. A lawyer is always hoping for change
      • militant_moderate 2 mths ago
        Gee, most of the people responding to this article have completely forgotten that this was all originally American Indian land. How convenient.
    • Free American Thinker  •  Matthews, North Carolina  •  2 mths ago
      The will is very simple and clear. The original owner reaches down through time to do good for the common folk. Stand up against the modern day speculators who want to violate this perpetual trust--leave the land alone!!!!
      • Charles 2 mths ago
        AMEN brother/Sister
      • joe 2 mths ago
        Lawyer + trustee = How can I get a huge commission from sale of property and make it look legal??
      • SUR 2 mths ago
        @Free Amercian Thinker...I like your way of thinking.
    • Mari  •  2 mths ago
      Guess the saying is right " No good deed goes unpunished". No charitable donations of land or property because once you are gone, the courts are only too happy to get their fingers in the pie and who cares what you wanted!!! Sad, sad
      • PADAA 2 mths ago
        Just goes to show you Judges are Lawyers and they are all crooked as the year is long.Just look at what they are doing to the rest of the United States and the Government. They should all be tared and feathered because there are no honest Lawyers so how can we have honest Judges.
      • glen 2 mths ago
        Of couse, the state of Mass will receive additional income from highe real estate taxes.
      • Bill 1942 2 mths ago
        Don't forget, the state of Mass is Romney country. Is this the kind of crap we can expect from him? God help us.
    • Joe G.  •  2 mths ago
      OH MY GOD! REALLY!? 351 years and now they make a fuss? 100 years, OK. 200 years so-so. 351 years, COME ON PEOPLE! Let the man's dying wishes be honored and respected. There is plenty of land for Mass. to build crappy condominiums and hurt the school board! This man's final request was that his land be used to help the schools. And oldest charitable donation...isn't that a record?
    • Steelsil  •  2 mths ago
      The will seems clear enough. Throw out the trustees, and bar future conflicts of interest.
    • Loren  •  Fort Wayne, Indiana  •  2 mths ago
      Some one is getting a great deal on the property and the schools will not benefit as much as they should. It sound as if those benefiting from the trust are the trustees.
    • tomas  •  Winston-Salem, North Carolina  •  2 mths ago
      Greed, greed, greed! Follow the man's original intent!
    • bob  •  2 mths ago
      No matter what you write, no matter what your intentions are, there will always be a lawyer who can spin it his way,,,,and of course, a judge who can spin it back.
    • robert  •  2 mths ago
      They will just pull an eminent domain on them. The needs of scoolchildren have never been of any concern to developers or elected officials.
    • James Shue  •  Columbia, Maryland  •  2 mths ago
      Why can the needs no longer be met? Tell me why it cannot happen? The Attorney General is incorrect with her position. Sounds like another Eminent Domain issue in the Northeast and we know how those have turned out in the past.
    • Pete  •  2 mths ago
      Respect the man's wishes and keep the damned developers away from this land!
    • Steve D  •  2 mths ago
      What part of "sayd land not to bee sould" do they not understand?
    • May Pang Ping Pong  •  2 mths ago
      I want to reach out from my grave in 351 years
    • Dave  •  Rockwood, Michigan  •  2 mths ago
      It's not right that will's are contested. You can't even stipulate that anyone in your will that acts up can be cut off. Well you can but it won't be enforced. The greed and true nature of people comes out when there is a will.
    • Big Leo  •  Gila Bend, Arizona  •  2 mths ago
      The will is clear. The intent is clear. The goal of the testator is still attainable after over three hundred years. Anyone who interferes with this is clearly breaking the law.
    • Yahoo User  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  2 mths ago
      Leave it to lawyers, courts, and government to screw something up.
    • Robbie  •  2 mths ago
      Yep we keep allowing big business to come in and buy everything.. We will eventually get to a point like the Soviet Union, nobody owns anything except big companies and the govt. A judge needs to shut this down quick!! No reason for this to be happening.. GREED Will be the end of this country.. Look at the Roman Empire! We are heading the same way!
    • Lisa K  •  Port Angeles, Washington  •  2 mths ago
      First. The writers of this must have of had a minium of words limit for this article. It says in his handwritten will...Well they did not have typewriters or computers then so DAH....It must have, had to have been HANDWRITTEN. Second....Leave his trust alone, there are many public lands that were gifts and are still used as they were intened / left for. Yes, GREED, GREED, GREED.
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