56 Tex. 506 | Tex. | 1882
In its leading features and in the questions involved this case does not materially differ from the case of the same company against McDonald, 53 Tex., 510. In that case the judgment was affirmed, and in this case, after a very careful reconsideration of the questions presented, our conclusion is the same,— that this judgment also should be affirmed. It is deemed
The authorities are clear that a creditor seeking to enforce the trusts under an assignment cannot sue alone, but must either make the other creditors parties, or must bring his suit in behalf of himself and all the other creditors who may choose to come in and take the benefits of the decree. Story’s Eq. Pl., secs. 8, 157 and 219a; Perry on Trusts, sec. 594; 1 Dan. Ch. Pr., 1st Am. ed., p. 285; Bispham’s Eq., 469, 470; Pomeroy on Remedies, sec. 858. Where there is an insufficient trust fund, it would be clearly inequitable to aid one of the beneficiaries, having no rights superior to the others, to appropriate more than his pro rata share of the fund, and that too without giving the other beneficiaries an opportunity to contest his proceeding. If the petition of Mrs. Butler stated such a case, or if in the progress of the case it appeared that such was the character of the case, the plainest principles of equity would be violated by granting the aid of the court to the consummation of such a wrong.
The authorities relied on by the appellees to show that other creditors were not necessary parties will be found insufficient to support this case, if indeed it had been one of the character just described. McDermutt v. Strong was a case in which a creditor had acquired a lien superior to that of any other creditor, and his right to legal priority in consequence of that lien was allowed. His appeal to equity was not based on his rights under
But in the present case we tbjnk under the averments of the petition, taken in connectiohswith the acquiescence of the trustees in the judgment, talsqn also in connection with the indefinite allegations of the assignee as to other creditors, it is to be presumed that the claims of all other creditors have been paid or that the fund ls~ ample for the full satisfaction of any which may remain.
More than the longest period of limitation known to our laws had elapsed since the old company had been sold out and their unsold assets passed into the charge of the trustees. There is certainly good reason to presume that in the course of twelve years the claims of creditors have been in some way adjusted. Mumford v. Murray, 5 Johns. Ch., is authority for refusing to compel the plaintiffs to bring in the other, beneficiaries of the trust, where the presumption was that their demands were stale. The suit was by parties claiming under an assignment to enforce their rights under it, and it appeared by their bill that there were other creditors for whose benefit the assignment was also made. After saying that the presumption, after a silence of twenty years, is that the claims of those creditors have been abandoned, Chancellor Kerr says: “We cannot in sound discretion suspend this cause merely to compel the plaintiff to bring in'parties resting on such stale demands and with such presumptions against them.” Page 11.
In regard to this identical trust fund, this court, after the lapse of four years, refused to presume that there were other creditors entitled to protection, and allowed a judgment creditor to proceed to levy on the fund in the hands of these trustees. Good v. Sherman, 37 Tex., 660. The trustees were before the court, and if there were other creditors whose interests were liable to be injuriously affected by the decree, it was their duty to protect
To this explanation of the grounds on which we proceed in affirming the judgment, we will only add that we do not regard the special answer of the railroad company as presenting any valid defense, whether regarded as a plea in abatement or a plea to the merits. The trustees being before the court and acquiescing in the" judgment, appellants are protected as fully as if the "recovery had been in the name of the trustees. Regarded in this light, it is not perceived that appellant has any interest in the distribution of the money recovered, or can complain that it has been in any way injured by the action of the court. >
Being satisfied that the justice of the case has been reached, and that the court committed no error to the prejudice of the appellant, it is ordered that the judgment be affirmed.
Affirmed.