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King v. Boston University: Difference between revisions
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|court=Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court | |court=Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court | ||
|date=1995-4-12 | |date=1995-4-12 | ||
|subject= | |subject=Contracts | ||
|case_treatment=No | |case_treatment=No | ||
|facts=In 1964, Martin Luther King Jr. (1929 - 1968) sent his collected papers to [https://www.bu.edu/ Boston University]. | |facts=In 1964, Martin Luther King Jr. (1929 - 1968) sent his collected papers to [https://www.bu.edu/ Boston University]. |
Revision as of 01:43, July 8, 2023
King v. Boston University | |
Court | Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court |
---|---|
Citation | |
Date decided | 1995-4-12 |
Facts
In 1964, Martin Luther King Jr. (1929 - 1968) sent his collected papers to Boston University.
Mrs. King, his widow, tried to get the King papers back after his death.Procedural History
In 1987, Mrs. King sued Boston University ("BU") for conversion. She claimed that the King estate held title to the papers. Mrs. King loses.
Issues
Can a charitable pledge be enforceable if a party promises to give property to a charitable institution & there is consideration (or reliance) on that promise?
Arguments
Mrs King argued that the 1964 King letter isn't a sufficient promise to establish a charitable pledge.
Holding
Yes. If there is evidence of both donative intent & consideration (or reliance) on that promise, a charitable pledge can be enforceable.
Reasons
Being accepting and caring for King's bailed papers, BU assumed the duty of care as bailee.
Rule
A bailment is the transfer of property from 1 party to another in accordance with (IAW) the 1st party's direction.