179 Ga. 417 | Ga. | 1934
Lead Opinion
B. H. Hicks conveyed to Caldwell, as trustee, described property real and personal, situate in Chatham County, for the purpose of securing an issue of bonds. Caldwell was and is a resident of Davidson County, Tennessee. Hill and two others, all residents of Tennessee, constituting a committee representing a majority of the holders of bonds secured by the deed, filed in Chat-
The contention of counsel for the defendant is that the provisions in the Code of 1910, § 5554, for service by publication are not applicable in the present case, because they are restricted to cases “in which the subject of the action is real or personal property in this State,” and “no property is the subject of this action;” that the action is purely one for the removal of the trustee; that the petition shows that the property is actually within the control and jurisdic
Among the provisions contained in the security deed the following are pertinent to the issues raised in the case:. The title was conveyed “to secure the payment of said indebtedness and said bonds and coupons evidencing same, and to secure the payment of other indebtedness and charges which may hereafter arise and for which the said owner may be liable, . . and to secure all of the covenants, conditions, and agreements herein by the owner undertaken to be kept and performed.” The trust deed sets out a copy of the bond, in which it is recited that the trust deed is made “for the benefit of the holders of said bonds and coupons, and such trust deed is hereby referred to, and as to all of its terms and provisions is hereby made a part of this bond.” It conveys the property to secure the indebtedness evidenced by the bonds and coupons, and to secure the execution of the trust. “In trust nevertheless for the uses and purposes herein expressed, and for the equal and proportionate benefit and security of all the holders of said bonds, and for the payment thereof,” and to secure the performance of all the things undertaken by the owner. The “trustee,” his successor or successors, was appointed the attorney in fact for the owner “with full power and authority in the name and behalf of the owner to do any and all things which may be found necessary to carry into effect the purpose of this instrument,” with full power to appoint a substitute attorney in fact with the same power and authority possessed by the said trustee. The deed provides that in case of default continuing after thirty days notice to the owner, the trustee may take possession of the property, operate it, and collect the income and profits and apply them to the satisfaction of the indebtedness and expense of administration, that he may sell the property after advertisement for four weeks, and that he may apply for the appointment of a receiver and for .a foreclosure “by a court of proper jurisdiction.” Other provisions are that the trustee may resign the trust, the vacancy to be filled by holders of the bonds; tha,t he does not incur liability as to the right of the owner to make
Counsel for the petitioners, in their brief in response to questions from this court, insist that the jurisdiction of the superior court of Chatham County “can be sustained under the principles recognized in 3 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 1086, to wit: “The power of courts of equity over the removal and appointment of trustees, independently of any statutory authority, or any directions in the instrument of trust, is well established. This power is confined to cases of actual express trusts. It can not, in the nature of things, extend to implied trustees, or trustees in invitum; nor does it apply to those persons who stand in fiduciary relations, and are for some purposes treated as trustees.” That authority on its face does not support the contention; and further examination of the question is required. That necessitates a review of equity jurisdiction as it existed in England at the time when the English laws were adopted in this State, as far as applicable, the judiciary act of 1799 and subsequent statutes, and such additional historical facts as may throw light upon the question. The complete history would require a study of a vast field of judicial literature. Although an extensive study of this question has been made, which included the leading works on equity, and Wigmore’s Panorama of the World’s Legal Systems, the essential facts of such history will be stated as briefly as possible. While the jurisdiction of equity, or chancery as it was known in England, extends far back into the misty past, trustees, as they are known in connection with mortgage bonds or deeds securing issues of bonds, are of modern origin. Mr. Jones in his work on Corporate Bonds and Mortgages states, in the preface to the edition published in 1879, “Prior to the year 1860 the courts had only in a few instances been called upon to enforce railroad mortgages.” The author has reference to mortgages securing issues of bonds. The business of issuing bonds on private property, for the erection of buildings such as'that in the present case, we may safely say is even of more recent date than the issuing of bonds by railroad corporations. It becomes necessary, therefore, to ascertain whether such a “trustee” as that in the present case falls within the general jurisdiction of equity. It is
Prior to the Boman legal system, there is no logically connected system revealed in all history. 1 Wigmore, 453. Even the judicial systems of oriental countries, such as China, Japan, Hindoostan, etc., followed and were patterned -on that of Borne. Trusts were known in the Mohammedan or Islam countries as early as A. D. 1200, conforming to the Boman idea. 2. Wigmore, 563 et seq. They had their origin in religious doctrines. Certainly trusts and trust estates were originally within the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical courts of England. In Beall v. Fox, 4 Ga. 403, 424, this court said that “the equitable jurisdiction of the court of chancery in Great Britain is founded upon and follows the civil law.” In that case Judge Warner declared: “The principles of equity, as administered in Great Britain, were never intended to create a new law, but were introduced for the purpose of assisting and giving effect to the general laws of the realm. Equity follows the law, but does not control it. The office of equity is to protect and support the common law, and carry it into practical effect, to secure its protecting influence for the benefit of the subject, where by reason of its universality it would fail to accomplish that object. Equity, says Blackstone, in its true and genuine meaning, is the soul and spirit of all law. Here, by equity we mean nothing but the sound interpretation of the law. 3 Blackstone’s Com. 429, 431. When we adopted the common law of England, we adopted it as an entire system, so far as it was properly adapted to the circumstances of our people; and the principles of equity, as there administered, for the purpose of giving a practical effect to those laws, constituted a part thereof. The principles of equity, as enforced by the court of chancery of Great Britain, were as necessary to give complete efficacy to the laws in the Colony of Georgia as in that country from whence the laws were derived. The first provincial governor of the Colony was therefore invested with the custody of the great seal, and, as chancellor within the province, had the same powers as the
It is a necessary conclusion that the laws, including equity, which have become part of the judicial system of Great Britain or England since May 14, 1776, are not the laws of this State, since the adopting act of 1784 included only those laws which were existing prior to that date. Cobb’s Digest, 721. Winkler v. Scudder, 1 Ga. 108, 132; Tucker v. Dennis, 14 Ga. 548, 570. By the thirteenth century the English legal system had become a system of royal justice, and the chancellor and the chancery court had from the first been closely connected with the King’s Special Council. 1 Holdsworth’s History of English Law, 396, 399. Because the office of chancellor was usually filled by an ecclesiastic who leaned heavily on the inward intent of the parties, the jurisdiction of equity which had been originally confined to matters of grace, i. e. matters requiring special indulgence or provision, was extended to matters of conscience, and this became the working foundation of the chancellor’s jurisdiction. Jenks’ Short History of English Law, 211; and see Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 33. Until the passage of the statute of uses and later developments of equity after the passing of the statute, the use and trust were practically identical. Therefore the history of uses is the history of trusts. Holdsworth’s Historical Introduction to the Land Law, 141. The use or trust was originally used to evade the lav, When testators vere unable
It is perfectly clear that the jurisdiction of equity over trust estates and trustees at the time of the 'adopting act of 1784 did not include such trusts or trustees as that involved in this proceeding. Hnder well-recognized principles, equity jurisdiction such as we have adopted in this country from England included. trust estates conveyed by deed or will for the benefit of those who were incompetent to .hold or manage property in their own names. Trusts at that time were charitable trusts, trusts for married women, minors, persons incompetent for any reason, such as mental incapacity,
A security deed in this State conveys title and creates a specific lien for the bonded debt. As each bond was sold, it assigned a pro tanto portion of the security to the purchaser. When all bonds were sold, the entire security was automatically assigned to the purchasers. The grantee in the deed, called “trustee,” held no further interest in the security, except by virtue of the powers conferred therein. Among them was the power to sell the property or foreclose in case of default. This was a mere power, separate
This court called on counsel for both sides for briefs upon specified points affecting the case. A statement from counsel for petitioners as to what section of the Code of Georgia the proceeding was based on was invited. Counsel replied that “Section 3744 of the Code of Georgia is directly in point,” arguing that “more than 92 per cent, of the outstanding bonds and the absence of a few scattering bonds” constituted “substantially all of the beneficiaries under the trust deed,” and that “the executrix of the maker of the deed is a party, and has no objection to the removal of the trustee.” As we understand the record, the executrix of the maker
The court erred in holding that this proceeding was authorized under the Civil Code (1910), § 5554, par. 5, 6. That section applies exclusively to actions in rem. Irons v. American National Bank, 178 Ga. 160 (172 S. E. 629), and cit. To hold otherwise would result in a collision with the due-process clause of the Federal constitution. The statute has no application to a proceeding such as this, where the sole object is to deprive the defendant of his right to act as trustee, and by express statement of petitioners does not seek to change the property rights, claims, or interests of any one. The trustee does not claim any interest or title in the property as his own. The superior court of Chatham County, under § 5554, par. 6, 7, could, if the pleadings authorized it, adjudicate all questions affecting the res, including the claim of interest by a non-resident. In the present case, however, the petition, if construed as seeking to adjudicate claim of title to the land for the reason alleged in the petition, would encounter an insurmountable obstacle. The reasons alleged for the removal of the trustee are chiefly: (a) That he has been convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude, and for that reason is unfit to serve as trustee. Petitioners also allege that the judgment and conviction
Judgment reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurs in the result, on the ground that the suit was