65 Vt. 84 | Vt. | 1891
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The tribunal of arbitration which met at Geneva, in Switzerland, under the provisions of the treaty of Washington, for the adjustment of the claims of the United States against Great Britain, known as'the Alabama claims, awarded to the United States a certain sum in gross in satisfaction of its demands. In 1874, ^ie Court of Commissioners of Alabama, Claims was established by act of Congress to effect a distribution of the sum so awarded ; but after the satisfaction of all claims which the court was authorized to allow,’a portion of the award remained undistributed, and was covered into the treasury of the United States. In 1882, this court was reestablished for the allowance of claims directly resulting from damage doné on the high seas by Confederate cruisers, and claims for the payment of premiums charged for war risks after the sailing of any Confederate cruiser; and provision was made for the payment of the claims so allowed by the secretary of the treasury out of the balance of the Geneva award not appropriated to claims allowed under the previous act. This suit is to recover for services rendered in the prosecution of claims of the second class above named before the Court of Commissioners as thus reestablished.
Soon after the passage of the act of 1882, the plaintiff undertook to prosecute the demands of certain complainants, under contracts by which he was to have one-half of the amount recovered and collected, and was to make no charge unless recovery was had. These demands were based upon payments made by the complainants as agents of certain
On the 29th day of July, 1885, and before ány further action had been taken by the plaintiff upon the claims in question in view of these decisions, the plaintiff was prohibited from appearing in the Court of Commissioners, and from exercising in any way the functions of an attorney and counsellor of that court; and the clerk was authorized to substitute for the plaintiff’s name the name of any other
The beneficiaries whose claims were thus preferred for allowance by the plaintiff, and of whose estates the defendant was thus appointed administrator, with the exception of Henry W. Slicer, died in foreign countries, and left estates which were there administered. • In some of the cases the entire service of the plaintiff is shown to have been rendered after the death of the beneficiary, and this is apparently true of all the cases, except that in the case of Raynsford the initiatory proceedings were before his death. In some of
The plaintiff sought to establish before the referee an express promise by the defendant to pay for these services. The referee having failed to find that any promise was made,' the plaintiff now claims that the circumstances were such that the law will imply one. This claim must rest upon one of two grounds ; either that the defendant has received and disposed of a fund upon which the plaintiff had a lien, and out of which it was the duty of the defendant to see that the plaintiff was paid; or that the defendant has received the benefit of the plaintiff’s services under such circumstances that the law casts upon him the burden of compensation.
But the defendant suggests that the plaintiff’s only remedy upon a claim of this nature was in the court where the defendant accounted for the estates. The case shows that to establish a claim against a deceased person’s estate in the District of Columbia the claim must be filed with the register of wills within thirteen months after the issue of letters of administration, and that the notice required by law to be given to creditors in such cases was duly given by the defendant, but that the plaintiff did not, within the period named, file any claims against these estates. Ordinarily the persons referred to as creditors of an estate are those who had claims against the deceased in his lifetime; and the requirements concerning the presentation of claims ordinarily refer to demands of this character, and not to such liabilities as may have been incurred by the administrator in the settlement of the estate. Without more definite findings as to the probate procedure in the District of Columbia, we should hesitate to reject any claim which the plaintiff may have
The plaintiff claims to have had an attorney’s lien upon the money recovered by the defendant; and the defendant insists that any right of this kind which the plaintiff might otherwise have had was barred, both by the provisions of the act constituting the court, and by the Revised Statutes of the United States. By the act of 1874 it was provided that the court should upon motion allow the compensation of attorneys, and enter the same as a part of its judgment, and that all other liens upon the judgment should be of no effect. The act of 1882 reestablished the court with its former obligations, duties and powers; directed that the practice and proceedings established by the former act should be followed ; and authorized the rendition of judgments in the mode and subject to the conditions, limitations and provisions of that act. This seems clearly to revive the provisions of the act of 1874 above recited. It has been so held in Maryland. Brooks v. Ahrens, 68 Md. 212. And those provisions being in force, an attorney’s lien could not be acquired. Bachman v. Lawson, 109 U. S. 659.
The plaintiff’s right to assert a lien seems also to be inconsistent with section 3,477 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, as construed by the United States Supreme Court. It is provided by that section that all transfers and assignments of any claim upon the United States, or of any interest therein, shall be absolutely null and void, unless made with certain formalities, and after the allowance of the claim and the issuing of a warrant therefor. In several cases involving the claims of agents and attorneys for compensation for services rendered in establishing claims, this provision has been treated as inconsistent with the existence of any lien upon the sum recovered. Trist v. Child, 21 Wall. 441; Wright v. Tehbitts, 91 U. S. 252. In Spofford
But the plaintiff insists that these claims are not “claims against the United States” within the meaning of the statute or the decisions, but are merely demands which the claimants are permitted to prosecute against a special fund. It is true that the judgments recovered are to be satisfied out of a particular fund, and that the United States assumes no responsibility beyond this. But the money had been covered into the treasury of the United States, and the right to it was to be established by legal proceedings. Whatever the relation of these parties to the United States may have been before the act of 1882 was passed, it is certain that by that act they were placed upon the footing of persons having a right to establish claims against the United States. In Hobbs v. McLean, 117 U. S. 575, a claim against the United States is defined to be “a right to demand money from the United States.” We think the claims in question were claims against the United States within the meaning of the law, and so within the scope of the section referred to.
But if the plaintiff was entitled to assert a lien, it does not follow that the defendant is liable for having paid over these judgments without satisfying it. The report contains nothing to charge the defendant with a knowledge of the plaintiff’s claim upon the funds transmitted. The defendant knew that the plaintiff had rendered these services, but had no
It is true that the funds realized from the Slicer and Zan-groniz claims are still in the hands of the defendant. But the views before stated as to the right of the plaintiff to assert a lien leave no ground upon which this fact can entitle the plaintiff to a judgment for any part of the compensation claimed. If it should seem that the defendant’s possession of this money ought to avail the plaintiff in some way, it must be remembered that this is not a proceeding to reach .and control the fund in satisfaction of a lien, but a suit to establish a personal liability for the pajunent of the claim. If the defendant could have been held liable on account of the other cases in a suit of this character brought while the money was still in hand, special difficulties might be found in the way of recovery on account of these two. The plaintiff’s services in the Slicer case were rendered upon the employment of the guardian of the heirs, and judgment was obtained by the defendant as administrator of Slicer’s estate. The Zangroniz claim was prosecuted by the plaintiff for the foreign executor of Zangroniz, while the fund is held by the defendant as administrator of the estates of Kessel and De Lassa.
It remains to consider whether the defendant has taken the benefit of services rendered by the plaintiff under such circumstances that he should be and can be compelled to pay for them. Did the use of the proofs filed by the plain-itff, in the circumstances stated, fasten upon the defendant a
The procurement of judgments upon proofs provided at the expense of the plaintiff, and receiving what appears to have been sufficient compensation for the entire - business while ignoring the plaintiff’s claim, certainly presents an inequitable feature which appeals to the careful consideration of the court. But the apparent inequity of this proceeding is somewhat modified by other features of the case. True, the plaintiff’s right to pursue employers in foreign countries, if he is in a position to assert that right, can hardly be considered a substantial remedy in view of the .nature and size of the demands. But the law under which the claims were presented seems to have provided a method by which
But the plaintiff claims further that the Orphans’ Court of the District of Columbia had no jurisdiction of the estates of these beneficiaries; that the entire proceedings in probate are void, and afford the defendant no protection; that he should be treated as an intermeddler, and held to the extent of his receipts for the payment of any just claim against the decedent’s estate. If the proceedings of a court of the District of Columbia are entitled to the same credit that is required to be given to judicial proceedings in one of the States, they are nevertheless open to examination upon the question of jurisdiction. Story Confl. Laws, § 609. Only two things are essential to the jurisdiction of a probate court; the death of the person upon whose estate letters are granted, and domicile or assets within the district. 3 Redf. Wills, 121, note. It is not necessary to consider the difference in the nature of these requirements as affecting the validity of an administration based upon an erroneous finding, nor the conflict of authority in regard to matters of presumption and record. By all the cases, if these two facts exist, and appear of record as judicially ascertained, the grant of administration is valid, however irregular the proceedings may have been. And if these two matters properly appear of record, the administration is at least -prima facie valid, and he who questions it must establish its invalidity. 33 Am. Dec. 239, note.
The plaintiff' seeks to impeach the defendant’s appoint
The plaintiff further objects that this claim was not an asset upon which administration could be granted, and that consequently there was no estate within the jurisdiction. Passing the question whether the action of the Orphans’ Court is conclusive upon this point, we think the obligation assumed by the United States was an asset in the jurisdiction where provision was made for its satisfaction. A debt due the deceased is property in the jurisdiction of the debtor. The right to prove a claim upon this fund, even if granted as a pure gratuity, must be treated as a demand against a debtor for the purpose of administration. The money could be obtained only by an administrator whom the tribunal charged with the distribution of the fund would recognize as having authority to sue in that jurisdiction. Moreover, it
It is further objected that in the petitions upon which the defendant’s letters were granted the petitioner represented himself to be a creditor, and that it appears from the accounts submitted that he was not. If this were sufficient to determine that the representation was untrue, and that the administration was granted on the ground of that representation and not of other representations which the petitions may have contained, the objection could not avail the plaintiff. The matter does not touch the question of jurisdiction. Neither the residence of a creditor within the district, nor the application of one, if creditors there were, was essential to the validity of the proceedings. It was within the power of the court, in certain circumstances, to make an appointment not based upon kinship or interest. Schoul. Exrs. §
But the plaintiff insists that the foreign administrators were entitled to recognition, and that the Court of Commissioners could not lawfully render judgments in favor of an administrator appointed in the district. The foreign administrators certainly had no better standing than an administrator appointed in one of the States would] have had. In Wyman v. Halstead, 109 U. S. 654, it is said that the United States may, in their discretion, exercised through their appropriate officers, pay a debt due the estate of a deceased person, either to the administrator appointed in the State of his domicile, or to an ancillary administrator appointed in the District of Columbia. In Mackey v. Coxe, 18 How. 100, an administration in the district had been required by the treasury department as a prerequisite to the payment of a claim. The court said that the claim might have been paid, and indeed should have been paid, to the
It is true that an award of the Court of Commissioners is only a determination of the amount and validity of the claim as against the United States, and precludes no one who claims to have been entitled to the allowance from asserting his right to the funds against the recovering party in other tribunals. Heard v. Sturgis, 146 Mass. 545. But if it could be held that the Court of Commissioners awarded these funds to one not entitled to receive them, the plaintiff could gain nothing by it, for he has no title to assert.
The defendant cannot be held liable to pay for the plaintiff’s services on the ground that they were contracted for by the foreign administrators. The defendant’s administration was ancillary, and independent of the administration in the country of domicile. There is no privity between principal and ancillary administrators. Story Confl. Laws, § 522; Low v. Bartlett, 8 Allen 259.
Judgment reversed, and judgment for defendant.