238 N.W. 687 | Minn. | 1931
1. The order appealed from is an order settling the final account of appellant, Foshay Trust Savings Bank, as trustee under the will of Julia A. Rosenfeldt, deceased, and accepting the resignation of appellant as trustee. Respondents are beneficiaries of the trust.
The order is in the form of findings of fact and conclusions of law, and ends with the direction: "Let judgment be entered accordingly."
No lawsuit of any kind had been commenced or was pending. The provisions of decedent's will creating the trust and appointing appellant as trustee are the basis for the proceeding. The matter came into the district court by application of the trustee for confirmation of its appointment as trustee and for appointment as trustee by that court. There is no statutory provision in reference to such application. The proceeding in the district court whereby that court controls and regulates the carrying out and completion of such trusts is a special proceeding.
2. Our statutes governing uses, trusts, and powers, G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) §§ 8081 to 8167, inclusive, do not prescribe procedure except in a few special matters. Section 8100 prescribes the procedure where the trustee applies for authority to sell or mortgage or to lease real property for a term of more than five years. It provides that after notice and hearing on such application the court shall make its final order thereon. No judgment is provided for or mentioned in any of the sections cited. *305
All ordinary steps in such a trust proceeding, where authority or determination of the court is required, are properly determined by orders of the court.
3. The order here in question accepts the resignation of the trustee, settles its account, and directs it to pay over the funds, charged to it by the account as settled, to its successor. All of these things are properly finally settled by the order and cannot be changed or added to by entry of a judgment. The allowance of costs and the direction to enter judgment are mere incidental matters not going to the substance of the order. In all matters of substance the order is a final order. No judgment has been entered so far as appears.
4. Appeals to this court are purely statutory. An appeal is provided by G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9498(7) from a final order affecting a substantial right in a special proceeding or upon a summary application in an action after judgment.
Appeals to this court from judgments are limited by § 9498(1) to appeals from judgments in actions commenced in the district court or brought there from another court. The only other case in which an appeal from a judgment is provided is in subd. 6 of the same section, where an appeal from a judgment rendered in supplementary proceedings is allowed. There are other statutory provisions in other parts of the statutes for appeals from orders and judgments, such as in drainage proceedings, election contests, tax proceedings, and other special matters, but none applicable to special proceedings such as we have here.
In McNamara v. Minnesota Cent. Ry. Co.
In Conter v. St. P. S.C. R. Co.
In County of Koochiching v. Franson,
"Whether the conclusions of the court vacating a plat be in the form of an order or judgment formally entered by the court, it is in the nature of a final order, for it puts an end to the proceedings, affects substantial rights, and is appealable, not as a judgment and within the time fixed for such appeals, but as a final order and within the time provided for such, namely, thirty days from notice of the order."
In Prahl v. County of Brown,
In In re Estate of Bridgham,
In the case of In re Dissolution of Olivia Co-op. Merc. Co.
In Duncan v. Barnard Cope Mfg. Co.
"There is sound reason for holding final orders in receivership proceedings reviewable only on appeals from the orders. Many such final orders may be made in the course of a single proceeding; and if by entry of judgment on each order the time to appeal therefrom might be extended to six months, intolerable delay might result."
This reasoning applies with full force to trust proceedings such as we have here. By treating the judgment as a final order, this court could perhaps restrict the time to appeal from the judgment to 30 days; but this would not avoid delays, for there is no time fixed for entry of judgment, and by motions or neglect the judgment might not be entered until even more than six months after entry and notice of the order.
5. The law intends that in such proceedings as trust matters, receiverships, and other special proceedings there shall be speedy and summary determination of matters passed upon by the court; that its orders shall be final and appealable, provided appeal is taken within 30 days after notice of the order. To hold that the court, by appending to such an order a direction that judgment be entered, could make the order nonappealable, would result in delay and require useless formalities. It would also place the party desiring to appeal in a hazardous situation where, if judgment were entered and an appeal taken therefrom, the judgment might be held unauthorized and not appealable. His right to appeal might be wholly lost.
The motion to dismiss is denied. *309