11 Fla. 62 | Fla. | 1865
delivered the opinion of the Court,
The controversy between the parties- to this suit has arisen out of the following deed of trust, executed by Mrs. MaVy Ann Pari and, for the use and benefit of her daughter, Mrs. Louisa 0. Cooper and her children, to wit:
STATE OF GEORGIA, \
Gxyxn County. )
This indenture mad© this fifteenth day of May, in the? year oí our Lord, eighteen hundred and thirty-eight, between Mrs. Mary Ann Pari and, of the county and State aforesaid, of the one part, and "William King of the county of McIntosh and State aforesaid, and I>r. Benjamin King of Liberty county andState aforesaid, trustees for Louisa C. Cooper and her children Mary E., 'William R, Martha M. and Joseph S. Cooper, all of the State and county aforesaid, of the sec-ondpart: Witnesseth, that the said Mary Ann Parland of the first part, for and in consideration of the love, good will and affection which she bears towards Mrs. Louisa C. Cooper, of said county, and her children, Mary E., William R, Martha M. and Joseph S. Cooper, and also ten dollars to said Mary Arm Parland in hand paid by the same William and Benjamin King, trustees as aforesaid, the receipt whereof she doth hereby acknowdedge, hath granted, bargained and sold and delivered, and by these presents, grant, bargain, sell and deliver unto the said William and Benjamin King, and td’ the survivor and survivors, and to their and his executors, administrators and assigns, the following slaves, thir-thirteen in number, (’viz:) Brutus, about 39 years of ago:
Upon the execution of this deed, the slaves therein conveyed went immediately into the possession of Mrs. Louisa
It is also made to appear that Mrs. Louisa C. Cooper made disposition of another portion of the slaves to her daughter Martha M,, who afterwards intermarried with Dr. Jesse M. Valentine, (under whom the complainants in the original bill claim as next of kin,) and at the same time executed to her a deed in writing, conveying “ all her right, title, interest and claim, demand in law and equity.”
The record further discloses, that Mrs. Louisa C. Cooper, the life-tenant, survived all of her .children named in the trust deed, and that the eompla&ants in the cross bill are the children of her daughter, Mary E. It is also made to appear that after the decease of Louisa C. Cooper, James II. Downs, the brother of the husband of Mary E., who had also deceased, became the administrator on the estates of Louisa C. 'Cooper, Joseph S. Cooper and Robert R. Downs, and also guardian of the minor children of Robert R. Downs, by his wife Mary E., the complainants in the cross bill. That as such administrator and guardian, he entered into a a written agreement with Jesse M. Valentine, the surviving husband of Martha M., by which it was proposed to compromise and settle all rights of property arising out of the original deed of trust from Mrs. Mary Ann Rarland, and by which agreement it was stipulated that the title to the slaves which had been allotted to the wife of Jesse M. Valentine by her mother, Mrs. L. C. Qooper, should be confirmed to him, the said Jesse M., and with a view to consummate this agreement, a decree in Chancery was, by consent,: procured to be enrolled in the Superior Court of (-Hynn county, in the
“ In Chambers :
Jesse M. Valentine,
vs.
In Equity.
James II. Downs, adm’r of Louisa C., Joseph S. Cooper and Robert R. Downs, and guard’ll of William, Charles C., Joseph S., Louisa W. and Mary E. Downs.
“ It appearing to the court that all the parties in interest are represented as consenting, and that there is no fact in dispute: It is ordered and decreed by the court, that the agreement in the pleadings mentioned, made the 9th day of April, 1855, annexed to the petition, marked C, be specifically performed and carried into execution, and that the following negro slaves, to wit: Amy, Linda, Elizabeth, Pre-eilla, Peter, Agnes and Thomas, with the future increase of the females, are adjudged and decreed to the plaintiff, Dr. Jesse M. Valentine, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, tor ever; and that all the estate, property and effects which wrere of Louisa C. Cooper and Joseph Styles Cooper, at the time of their decase, are adjudged and decreed to Louisa W. Downs and others; and James II. Downs to receive the same.”
Upon this state of the case, the counsel for the complainan ts in the original bill assumes the following positions, viz:
1st. That the purpose in the deed from Mrs. Parland to create a trust failed : First, because there is no evinence that the trust was accepted by the trustees named, and secondly, becouse the possession of the property by the cestui que trust, was a merger of the equitable estate.
2d. That the limitation over,in the deed of Mrs. Parland was an attempt to create an estate tail$ contrary to the law both of Georgia and Florida.
3d. That Downs and wife had released all actions and claims during their lives, in regard to the same property.
5th. That the title to the property had been settled by the decree of the Court of Chancery in Georgia.
In suport of the first branch of the first general position, the counsel cited the §2316th of the Georgia Code, which is as follows, viz : “ The acceptance of a trust is necessary to constitute a person a trustee. It may be done by acts as well as words.” This is but the legislative enactment of a well established principle of the common law, but fails to sustain the position assumed by the counsel. That position, as understood at the hearing, was that the acceptance of the person named as trustee was necessary to the consummation of the trust. Such is not the law as laid down in the books. A trust will never be permitted to fail for the want of a trustee. If the person named in the deed as trustee disclaims or refuses to accept the trust, the Court of Chancery will, upon application, appoint a trustee. The citation from the Georgia Code was not designed to affect the validity of the trust, hut simply to protect the person who might be named in the deed as trustee against responsibilities which he might be unwilling to assume.
The second branch of the same position is equally unten-ble. The proposition contended for is, that the possession of the slaves by Mrs. Louisa C. Cooper, was evidence that the legal title had passed to her, and the equitable title being thereby merged, she became the absolute owner, and possessed of full authority to dispose of the property as she might desire. However true it may be, that the possession of the property will in some eases be deemed to afford evidence of the vesting of the legal estate, as in the case of a bequest, or gift of money, stocks, Ac., yet it is not correct as a general principle that the possession carries the legal estate. To determine that question, it is necessary to look as well to
But to demonstrate beyond all question how very untenable is the conclusion arrived at by the counsel tor the complainants in the original bill, viz : that the possession of the property by the cestui que trust, operated in law as a merger of the equitable estate and gave to her both estates ; we may admit the proposition, and then what would be the result % Certainly not as contended for by the counsel, the investing her with an absolute unrestricted,title, which -would give her the right so to deal with the property as to defeat the interests of the remaindermen. She would still hold an estate limited in duration to her natural life, and the remainders would still stand in full force, unaffected by the assumed merger of the equitable estate. Indeed so far as the design was to convey the interest in the slaves to the life-tenant and the remaindermen, there was no necessity in law to interpose a trustee. The conveyance might have been made immediately to the life-tenant. The interposition of a trustee was doubtless designed for the benefit of the life-tenant and to secure to her the enjoyment of the limited estate, free from responsibility for the debts and demands existing against the estate of her decased husband.
The whole doctrine upon the question of possession may be embraced in a few words. If from the nature of the property conveyed, and the use to be enjoyed, the possession of the cestui que trust is consistent with the object and design of the trust, the title of the trustee will not he affected. Hill on Trustees 376-7; Henson vs. Kinnaird, 3 Strobh. 371.
If we are correct in these views, they afford a full answer to the 3d and 4th grounds upon which the complainants in the original bill seek to establish a claim to the slaves in controversy, viz: the release of Downs and wife and the sale of the slaves by the life-tenant to Mrs. Valentine. It is a
The in terests of these remaindermen being protected by the estate of the trustees, it is clear that neither the sale by the life-tenant to the wife of Valentine, nor the release of their mother, (in whose place they are substituted by the terms of the deed) can operate to defeat or even impair the rights of these children. All such dealing between the life-tenant and the particular remaindermen, can only be' looked upon as effecting the present use arid not the ultimate estate in the slaves.
The second ground taken by the counsel for the complainants is that the limitation over to these children was an attempt to create an estate tail or perpetuity and therefore void. We are unable to appreciate the argument of the counsel on this point, for to our mind we have never seen a deed the terms of which steer more clearly against such an interpretation. In this deed the remaindermen are all named and required to be in being at the termination of the life estate. Such was the position of these children, and the fact that they were permitted by the terms of the deed to be substituted in the place of their mother, who died prior to
The last position assumed by the counsel for the complainants in the original bill is, that the children in this suit are estopped by the decree of the court of Chancery in Georgia from asserting any right to the property in controversy. It is undoubtedly true that, both by the law of comity and by the constitution of the Confederate States, full faith and credit will be given to the judgments and decrees rendered in the courts of a sister State, nor will they be enquired into (unless in cases of fraud,) further than to ascertain whether or not the parties were properly before the court, and the subject-matter within its jurisdiction.
To this extent it is admissible for this court to go, and looking to the decree presented in the record, we find that the minor children, who are the contestants in this suit, were not properly represented. It is true that the statutory guardian of the minors is represented as having been a defendant to the suit upon which the decree was rendered, and as consenting to the decree ; but we hold that upon the well understood doctrine, defining the authority of a statutory guardian, he is not competent to compromise the estate of his ward, by becoming a party to a consent decree. If the plaintiff in that suit desired to assert his rights against these minors, he ought to have had them regularly served with process, and have applied to the court to have had a guardian <td litem, appointed to defend their rights. It would be extending the author! ty of the guardian to a dangerous extent, to permit him to compromise away the estate of his ward, by simply making himself a party to the suit; and no stronger instance of this danger Can be imagined than -that presented by the circumstances of this case. In the absence of any direct -
Chancellor Kent says, “ the law is so careful of the rights of infants that if they be made defendants at the suit. of creditors, the answer of the guardian ad litem does not bind or conclude them. Such an answer pro forma leaves the plaintiff to prove his case and throws the infant upon the protection of the court.” 2 Kent. Com. 258. Indeed infants have ever been esteemed the special favorites of a court of Chancery, and while those courts will be careful not to disturb rights which have been once properly settled, they, will exert the utmost vigilance to see that the rights of so unprotected a class are not infringed or destroyed by the officious intermeddling of a stranger. "Whoever undertakes to deal with the property of an infant, must.understand that he does so at his peril, and that his acts are always open to the rigid scrutiny of the courts of equity.
Upon a full and careful investigation of this case, the court is of opinion that there is no error in the decree of the Chancellor, but because there is no provision made in the decree for the ascertainment and payment of the hires of the slaves accruing since the title became vested in these minors, the cause will be remanded to the court below for correction in that matter.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the decree of the Chancellor be affirmed, and that the cause be remanded for such further proceedings to be had therein as shall be in conformity with this opinion.
It is further ordered that the appellants do pay the costs of this appeal.