71 A. 454 | R.I. | 1909
From a decree entered in the Superior Court, denying and dismissing the complainant's petition that the respondent trustees be adjudged in contempt for not paying to the complainant the sum of $11,732.80, together with interest at the rate of six per cent. on the sum of $3,302.90, from March 13, 1907, to the date of satisfaction of the decree heretofore entered in this cause on April 1, 1908, the complainant has appealed to this court.
The respondents have moved to dismiss the appeal on the *391 ground that no appeal lies in such case, and, saving their rights under that motion, contend that they are not in contempt of the decree aforesaid.
The motion to dismiss the appeal must be denied. The distinction between criminal contempts and those which are civil in their nature is well settled. And it is well settled, also, that an appeal will lie in the latter class of cases. Bessette
v. W.B. Conkey Co.,
Thus, in Romeyn v. Caplis,
See also City of Newport v. Newport Light Co.,
That a decree for the payment of money may be enforced in chancery proceedings for contempt has long been settled. Thus,In re Meggett,
For this purpose the decree of the Superior Court denying and dismissing the petition may well be held to be a final decree, inasmuch as it determines the right of the petitioner in the premises; and the broad grant of "final revisory and appellate jurisdiction upon all questions of law and equity," granted to this court by section 1 of article XII of amendments to the constitution, may well be invoked in such a case.
The respondents urged in the court below, and still maintain that contention in this court, that under the language of the decree of April 1, 1908, they were only required to pay from the trust funds in their hands the amount aforesaid, and the Superior Court adopted this construction and dismissed the petition. Here there was error. The amount so required to be paid is specifically declared to be dividends and income from the trust estate which had heretofore been received by the respondents as trustees and to which the complainant is entitled. There is no limitation of language here to a payment out of the trust estate only; nor, indeed should such a limitation have been in the decree. The respondents are found to have collected, as trustees, income of the trust estate belonging *393 to the complainant, and this, in contemplation of law, they should pay him on demand; but the duty to pay the complainant dividends and income of the estate which they have collected is in no wise to be prejudiced by the fact that the respondents may have devoted the complainant's property to other purposes. If they have done so, they must reimburse him from their individual estates, and can not be heard to claim that they have none of the trust income now available therefor.
It is proper to observe that the decree of April 1, 1908, was framed by this court, and that the Superior Court was directed to enter it as thus framed. In effect, therefore, the decree in question is the decree of this court.
The appeal is accordingly sustained, the decree of the Superior Court dismissing the petition is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the Superior Court with direction to enter a decree that the respondents and each of them are adjudged to be in contempt and that they may purge themselves of that contempt by the payment of the amount named in the decree aforesaid, with interest thereon from the date of the decree, within sixty days, together with the costs of this application.