25 A.2d 327 | Pa. | 1942
This is a suit in equity by a wife for maintenance which action seeks to reach certain property of her husband who is alleged to have deserted her and their three children and to be now residing in another state. The bill was filed in the county where the desertion occurred; her husband and two trust companies, holding certain trusts, were named as defendants. The question involved is whether the husband's future interests in trusts administered in Allegheny County are such property interests and have such a situs as to give the court below jurisdiction pursuant to the terms of the Act of May 23, 1907, P. L. 227, as finally amended by Act of July 21, 1913, P. L. 867 (48 P. S. § 131-132).
After the bill was filed, personal service was had upon the trustees and by permission of the court notice of the proceedings and a copy of the bill were served on the husband, Thomas Mifflin Jones, III, at Buffalo, New York. Thereupon Jones appeared specially and filed a petition under the Act of March 5, 1925, P. L. 23 (12 PS 672), raising the question of jurisdiction. The petitions were refused and Jones has appealed. Since the appeal is under the Act of 1925, the only matter to be decided now is the jurisdiction of the court below: Hughes v. Hughes,
Section 1 of the Act of 1907, as amended, supra, provides that a wife whose husband has separated himself from her without reasonable cause or who has neglected or refused to provide suitable maintenance for her may bring an action at law or equity for maintenance in the court of common pleas of the county where the desertion occurred. By the second section of the same act it is further provided that the wife may have proceedings *312 against any property, real or personal, of the husband necessary for her maintenance, that the court may direct a seizure and sale or mortgage of sufficient of such estate as will provide the necessary funds for such maintenance, and that "service upon the defendant shall be made in the manner provided in the act of General Assembly entitled, 'An act to authorize the execution of process in certain cases in equity, concerning property within the jurisdiction of the court, and on the defendants not resident or found therein,' approved the sixth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-nine [12 Pa.C.S.A. § 1254]." The Act of 1907 confers jurisdiction of the cause of action while the Act of 1859 merely prescribes the manner in which service upon defendant shall be made.
It is imperative if service cannot be made on the principal defendant in the jurisdiction of the court that there be property, "real or personal", within that jurisdiction and that the property of the defendant which the court is asked to seize be specifically set forth in the bill: Boudwin v. Boudwin,
Two questions therefore arise. (1) Are the vested interests in remainder which Jones has in these estates "real or personal" property as that term is used in the Act of 1907 as amended? (2) If they are, is the situs of the interests which plaintiff seeks to reach in Allegheny County?
(1) Academic authorities and essayists have for a long time debated the nature of a beneficiary's interest in a trust, some arguing that the right of a beneficiary is merely in personam, that is, only a right against the trustee without any right in the trust res. We have in this state adopted the more realistic view as stated by Mr. Justice STERN in Commonwealth v. Stewart,
This is also the view taken by the United States Supreme Court: Brown v. Fletcher,
(2) The appellant argues that the future interest of Jones in these trusts is an intangible interest, the situs of which is not in Allegheny County, but is at the domicile of the owner citing the principle mobilia sequuntur personam immobilia situm. This argument passes lightly over the established principle of law that a vested interest of a beneficiary in a trust estate is an equitable property interest in the res. By virtue of that interest the beneficiary is entitled to enforce the trust and to obtain redress in that county in case of breach. The assets of the estate are in custodia legis and it is in that county that the trustee must account. Where the purpose of the suit is to subject Jones' equitable interest to a claim against him we see no reason for holding that the situs of his interests in the trust estates is at any other place than Allegheny County.
The presence of property within the Commonwealth is a prerequisite to foreign attachment. Yet in such actions our courts have consistently subjected equitable remainders to attachment: Wheaton Coal Co. v. Harris, supra; Riverside TrustCo. v. Twitchell, supra. There is a close parallel between this action and one in foreign attachment.
Our conclusions are not at variance with the principles enunciated in Commonwealth v. Stewart, supra, affirmed
Any situs assigned to intangibles is purely fictitious and may vary according to the purpose of the proceedings: for example, simple debts are considered to be located at the domicile of the creditor for purposes of taxation but follow the person of the debtor for purposes of garnishment. It is obvious that there is no way in which by an in rem quasi in rem proceeding New York could subject appellant's intangible interests to its process, so as to realize a fund for his creditors. It is equally clear that this Commonwealth has the power, through the presence of the trust res and the administration of the trust res to subject appellant's interests to satisfaction of claims against him. It would be unrealistic and unduly legalistic in a suit under the Act of 1907 not to say that these intangibles have a situs in this Commonwealth, if they must be assigned any situs at all. *316
The appellant in his endeavor to show that the situs of his interest is in New York leans heavily upon the case ofGallagher v. Rogan,
Appellant also suggests the objection that the vested remainder cannot be sold or mortgaged at the instance of creditors and in support thereof cites the form of the order inRiverside Trust Co. v. Twitchell, supra, a case of foreign attachment. Here the interest of the beneficiary has a present market value and it is an interest *317
which could be sold or aliened by appellant while he is yet a remainderman. The test of jurisdiction, the subject of this appeal, is the presence of property in the jurisdiction. The question of the form of the order will only arise if it is found that the wife is entitled to relief after the case has been considered upon its merits. At that time the question raised may or may not be of importance. Cf. Rankin v. Culver,
Order affirmed at cost of appellant.