197 F. 129 | 1st Cir. | 1912
This is an appeal in these two cases from the decree of the District Court upon the intervening petition of Willard G. Nash. The'record shows that the cases are actions at law, begun by writs dated September 28, 1911, and entered at the October Term, 1911, of the Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts. On October 2, 1911, the plaintiff made an attachment on these writs of all the right, title, and interest, which the defendant had in and to any and all real estate in the county of Suffolk. On October 26, 1911, the defendant, Hayes, filed a motion in each case for the discharge of the attachments of real estate in Suffolk county. These motions describe the parcels attached, and recite that, although the record title to those parcels stood in the name of the defendant, Hayes, he was not in fact the owner thereof, but held the same as trustee for one Willard G. Nash, and for the creditors of Nash, whereupon the plaintiff moved that a special precept be issued in each case to attach any real estate of the defendant, Hayes, in Middlesex county, and in Norfolk county, and on the same day the motions were allowed, special precepts were issued, and on October 30, 1911, attachments were made of any real estate standing in the name of the said Alfred S. Hayes, in Middlesex and Norfolk counties. On November 7, 1911, the defendant Hayes filed a motion in each case for the discharge of said attachments of real estate in Middlesex and in Norfolk counties. These motions describe the parcels of land under attachment, and ask that the attachments be discharged, for the reason that,
(1) That the real estate under attachment was conveyed to the defendant, Hayes, by Nash in fee simple.
(2) That the defendant, Hayes, had made an oral agreement with said Nash, and the latter’s creditors, to hold the said real estate as trustee for them.
(3) That there was no written agreement, memorandum, or declaration of trust between the defendant, Hayes, and Nash as to said real estate, either in the deeds o f conveyance or elsewhere,
(4) That there was a power of attorney on record from said Nash to the defendant, Hayes, but that said power contained no express reference to any trust.
(5) That the motions to discharge the Suffolk county attachments, and the accompanying affidavits, contain no reference to, or notice of, a trust regarding the real estate afterwards attached by the plaintiff in Middlesex and Norfolk counties.
(6) That said causes of action against the defendant, Hayes, accrued prior to the appointment of the plaintiff, as receiver of the Continental Company. That at the time said actions accrued the defendant, Hayes, was a director, a member of the executive committee, assistant treasurer and secretary of said corporation. That no official of said company (except the defendant, Hayes) or any one else connected \yith said company had knowledge of said oral trust agreement. That neither the plaintiff receiver, nor his counsel, had any knowledge of said oral trust until after the filing of the aforesaid motions to dissolve the Suffolk county attachments (which motions and affidavits set forth the oral trust agreement only as regards said Suffolk county real estate and not as regards the Middlesex and Norfolk real estate subsequently attached). That at the time of making the Suffolk county attachments the plaintiff receiver and his counsel had no knowledge of said trust and acted in good faith and in the belief that the land in question was the property of the defendant, Hayes; and that as to the subsequent attachments in Middlesex and Norfolk counties they had no notice, ‘'unless as a matter of law the aforesaid affidavits filed by the defendant, Hayes, in regard to the Suffolk county attachments, constitute such notice,” upon which the master did not pass.
On February 15, 1912, a hearing was held in the District Court, the cases having come over from the Circuit Court. Upon the suggestion of the learned judge sitting, the motions and affidavits to which we have referred were then supplemented by an intervening petition filed by Willard G. Nash, asking for*the, dissolution of the plaintiff’s attachments, for the reasons set forth in the motions to which we have referred. This petition was filed nunc pro tunc, and
The District Court substantially overruled the demurrer by a decree dissolving the plaintiff’s attachments of real estate.
It is now urged by the appellant that the petition, to which he has demurred, failed to allege that the appellant, the plaintiff, had notice of the oral trust agreement set out in the petition, at the time the attachments were made, as required by the statutes of Massachusetts. The following statute is brought to • our attention (Revised Laws, c. 147, § 3): ,
“No trust concerning land, whether implied by law or created or declared by the parties, shall defeat the title of a purchaser for a valuable consideration and without notice of the trust, nor prevent a creditor who has no notice of the trust from attaching the land or from taking it on execution in like manner as if no such trust existed.” /
Section 915 of the United States Revised Statutes provides that in common-law causes in the Circuit and District Courts the plaintiff shall be entitled to remedies, by attachment or other process, against the property of the defendant, similar to those which' are provided by the laws of the state in which such court is held for the courts thereof. In Schunk v. Moline, Milburn & Stoddart Co., 147 U. S. 507, 13 Sup. Ct. 416, 37 L. Ed. 255, the Supreme Court gives force to this statute, in matters where the jurisdiction of the court is in question. By section 933, Revised Statutes of the United States, Congress has provided further that:
“An attachment of property upon process instituted in any court of the United States, to satisfy such judgment as may be recovered by the plaintiff therein, except in cases mentioned in the preceding nine sections, shall be dissolved when any contingency occurs by which, according to the laws of the state where said court is held, such attachment would be dissolved upon like process instituted in the courts of said state: Provided, that nothing*133 herein contained shall interfere with any priority of the United States in payment of debts.”
Under the statutes of the United States, and in pursuance of the practice of federal courts, it is clear that chapter 147, § 3, of the Revised Statutes of Massachusetts, applies in this proceeding. The statute has received the interpretation of the Massachusetts court in Attorney General v. Massachusetts Benefit Association, 173 Mass. 378, 53 N. E. 879, where the court said:
“The statute is broad in its terms and makes no exception in regard to the nature of the trust. It expressly declares that no trust shall prevent a creditor who had no notice of it from attaching.”
In that case the attachment was the same in form and substance as the attachments in the cases now before us. In United States v. Canal Bank, 3 Story, 79, 82, Fed. Cas. No. 14,715, Judge Story said:
“I understand that, under the local laws of Massachusetts and Maine (which upon this subject are the same), it has been held, that the attaching creditor is entitled to a prior satisfaction, out of the real estate attached, if he has not, at the time of the attachment, any notice of the prior unrecorded deed.”
Judge Story also gives his opinion that in states where there is no such local statute an attaching creditor in all cases, except cases of fraud or gross negligence, can entitle himself only to the same interests and rights in the estate attached as the debtor himself has, or would have at the time of .the attachment, against the purchaser. The law, when unaffected by local statute, is clearly stated in Drake on Attachment (7th Ed.) § 234, and cases cited. But it is not necessary for us to consider what the law would he, apart from the statute of Massachusetts; for in these cases, as we have seen, we are bound to follow that statute.
In the proceedings at bar the matter is presented in a somewhat informal way, as we have already suggested. If, however, we proceed upon the idea that in the Circuit Court the matter was heard on demurrer, it will be seen that the appellant demurred to the petition upon grounds which we have already stated. It seems clear that the appellant can be held to have admitted by his demurrer only what is stated in Nash’s petition, namely, that the real estate, although it stood in the name of the defendant, was the property of the petitioner, “and that the same stood in the name of the defendant upon an oral trust, which said oral trust has been found by a master upon a reference of that question,' the same being already on file in this cause.” From the record it appears, then, that the appellant admitted in his demurrer only the facts found by the master, the substance of which we have already stated. The master has covered the question of actual notice by his finding that the appellant and his attorney “had no knowledge of said trust, and acted in good faith and in the belief that the land in question was the property of the defendant, Hayes, as evidenced by the deeds and power of attorney on record.” The master did not pass upon the question whether the appellant had any notice other than actual notice, believing that this was a matter of law for the court to decide. By his
“(1) That inasmuch as the defendant, Ha5res, at the time said causes of action accrued, was an officer of the Continental Telephone Company, the real plaintiff in these actions, acting through its receiver, the appellant, and inasmuch as said oral trust agreement between Hayes and Nash existed a.t the time the actions accrued, therefore the company and its receiver must be held to have had constructive notice of the oral trust agreement.
“(2) That the motions and affidavits of the defendant, Hayes, filed soon after the attachments of the Suffolk county real estate, and setting forth the trust agreement as regards Suffolk county, constitute notice to the appellant of the oral trust regarding the Norfolk and Middlesex real estate.
“(3) That a certain power of attorney from Nash to Hayes, recorded with the Suffolk county deeds September 2, 1909, constitutes notice to the appellant of the oral trust agreement.”
There is no reason, apparent from the testimony in the cases before us, for holding that, in regard to his dealings with Nash, Hayes was in any sense the agent of the plaintiff company. So far as appears from the record, the appellant had no actual knowledge, and' no constructive notice of the oral trust agreement. He must then be held, in the language of the statute, to have been “a creditor who has no notice of the trust.”
In Minnesota Co. v. St. Paul Co., 2 Wall. 609, 632, 17 L. Ed. 886, in speaking for the court, Mr. Justice Miller said:
“No one would hesitate to say that, according to the English chancery practice, a bill to enjoin a judgment at law is an original bill in the chancery sense of the word. Yet this court has decided many times that when a bill is filed in.the Circuit Court to enjoin a judgment of that court, it is not to be considered merely as an original bill, but as a continuation of the proceeding at law.”
In Gregory v. Pike, 67 Fed. 837, 15 C. C. A. 33, this court had before it an appeal from the Circuit Court. In that case one of the defendants claimed an interest in the subject of litigation, and was made a party defendant against the objection of the complainant. He filed a cross-bill which was dismissed in the lower court on the ground that he had been improperly made a defendant. In speaking for the court, Judge Putnam said that this defendant “was entitled at some stage of the cause below * * * to intervene pro interesse suo by summary petition. There is'no rule touching the merits or necessities of technical proceedings which prevents the court from regarding his cross-bill as such a petition. This court may, therefore, Dn the principles already laid down, treat the cross-bill * * * as in effect a petition to intervene, and confirm the decree.”
In the cases at bar the intervening petition of Nash may be treated as an equitable proceeding. The decree made by the District Court upon that petition and on equitable principles presents a matter to which an appeal lies.
It is not necessary for us to consider tire further questions presented by the record.
It is ordered ;n each case that the decree of the District Court dissolving the attachments be vacated. The appellant recovers his costs in this court.