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The Uses of the Dead - The Early Modern Development of Cy-Pres Doctrine (Paperback)
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The Uses of the Dead - The Early Modern Development of Cy-Pres Doctrine (Paperback)
Series: Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Canon Law
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Cy-pres doctrine, which allows the purpose of a failing or
impractical charitable gift to be changed, has been understood
since the eighteenth century as a medieval canon law principle,
derived from Roman law, to rescue souls by making good their last
charitable intentions. The Uses of the Dead offers an alternate
origin story for this judicial power, grounded in modern, secular
concerns. Posthumous gifts, which required no sacrifice during
life, were in fact broadly understood by canon lawyers and medieval
donors themselves to have at best a very limited relationship to
salvation. As a consequence, for much of the Middle Ages the
preferred method for resolving impossible or impractical gifts was
to try to reach a consensus among all of the interested parties to
the gift, including the donor's heirs and the recipients, with the
mediation of the local bishop. When cy-pres emerged in the
seventeenth century, it cut a charitable gift o from return to the
donor's estate in the event of failure. It also gave the interested
parties to the gift (heirs, beneficiaries, or trustees) little
authority over resolutions to problematic gifts, which were now
considered primarily in relationship to the donor's intent-even as
the intent was ultimately honored only in its breach. The Uses of
the Dead shows how cy-pres developed out of controversies over
church property, particularly monastic property, and whether it
might be legally turned over to fund education, poor relief, or
national defense. Renaissance humanists hoped to make better, more
prudent uses of property; the Reformation sought to correct
superstitious abuses of property and ultimately tended to prevent
donors' heirs from recovering secularized ecclesiastical gifts; and
the early modern state attempted to centralize poor relief and
charitable efforts under a more rational, centralized supervision.
These three factors combined to replace an older equitable ideal
with a new equitable rule-one whose use has rapidly expanded in the
modern era to allow assorted approximations and judicial
redistributions of property.
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