274 Mass. 191 | Mass. | 1931
This suit was brought on November 4, 1926, to establish a debt amounting to about $141,000 alleged to be due to the plaintiff from the first named defendant, hereafter called the Canada Company, and to reach and apply in payment thereof an indebtedness due to the Canada Company from the other defendants. Concerning
The trial judge then reported the “case on the bill of complaint, answers, temporary injunction and modification thereof made March 18, 1927, the first report of the special master, the interlocutory decree of December 24, 1929, on said first report (as modified . . .), the answer of the Boston Mexican Petroleum Trustees to the order of notice issued on said first report, my findings of fact and my decision on the rulings of law requested by the defendant.”
1. The facts stated in the report of the special master and in the findings of the judge must be accepted as true.
2. There is nothing in the objection urged by the Trustees that persons whose interests are affected are not parties. This objection rests on the manifest fact that the individuals against whom actions and suits are authorized by the decree are not parties to this suit in their capacity as individuals. The Trustees in their capacity as trustees alone are parties to this suit. As individuals in their private capacity they can be made parties only by amendment of the bill and service of process or voluntary appearance. Ño proper steps have been taken to make them as individuals parties to this suit. Cochrane v. Forbes, 265 Mass. 249, 255, 256. McCarthy v. William H. Wood Lumber Co. 219 Mass. 566. Eaton v. Walker, 244 Mass. 23, 31.
3. In their private capacity as individuals they are not necessary parties to this suit. The rulings, findings and decrees now before us simply authorize an officer of the court to enforce by independent legal proceedings certain obligations alleged to be due from them as individuals to the trust. No adjudication against them as individuals is found on the present record. Every, defence will be open to them if and when as individuals they are made defendants in actions or suits authorized by the decree here in controversy. The only question on this branch of the
4. Since the Trustees as individuals are not necessary parties to the present proceeding and no adjudication is made against them, they have no such interest in the matters here reported as entitled them to be heard. The Trustees cannot interpose objections in behalf of other persons, or in behalf of themselves as individuals, who are not parties. They can be heard only as to matters affecting them in their capacity as Trustees. Ryder v. Brockton Savings Bank, 238 Mass. 52, 57. Ensign v. Faxon, 224 Mass. 145. Monroe v. Cooper, 235 Mass. 33, 34. Horton v. Attorney General, 269 Mass. 503, 514.
5. There is in our opinion no merit in the contention that all the Trustees have not been joined. There was no plea in abatement based on nonjoinder of any Trustees. The ones now alleged to have ceased to be Trustees before this suit was instituted were not necessary parties to this suit, because it was brought only against those alleged to be Trustees and it related solely to the affairs of the trust. No personal service was made upon the Trustees save in a single instance, but service was made, according to the return of the deputy sheriff, upon their attorney. That attorney, in November, 1926, filed an answer to the merits in their behalf as “ Boston Mexican Petroleum Trustees.” Iri his “ Answer of Objection ” filed in response to the order of notice on the first report of the special master, that attorney states that he is attorney of record “ for Boston Mexican Petroleum Trustees as such trustees but not individually.” He is described in the finding of the judge as “ counsel for said Trustees.” It appears from the report of the special master that one of the present Trustees, B. Nason Hamlin, is not named as a party to this suit. All the other Trustees are so named and made parties as Trustees. In the “ Answer of Objection ” filed in behalf of the Trustees it is stated
6. It is urged that Allen Forbes ceased to be a Trustee before the present suit was instituted. It is so stated in the “Answer of Objection.” He was named as a Trustee in the present bill and in the return of service. The answer of the Trustees also names him as one of them without qualification. No steps have been taken to dissociate him from the case as a defendant Trustee. Whatever may be thé fact in this particular, no material error is shown on this record. This argument cannot be supported.
7. The appointment of a receiver, for such the special master must be deemed to be, is an appropriate means for a court of equity to adopt in a proceeding of this nature. Amy v. Manning, 149 Mass. 487, 489, 491. Adamian v. Hassanoff, 189 Mass. 194. Hampden National Bank v. Hampden Railroad, 246 Mass. 404, 407. Pierce v. United
8. The contention that the report of the special master is virtually the interjection of a new party into the suit, seeking additional relief in the guise of that report without amendment to the pleadings, cannot be supported. Other attorneys have from the outset represented Cochrane in the present suit. The special master is an officer of the court charged with duties under his appointment. That is his only relation to the case at bar disclosed by the record. The appropriate method of communicating progress in the performance of his duties is by report to the court, and it was within the scope of his duty to make the recommendations contained in this report as to furtherance of the main cause of action in the present suit. Its design was to enlighten the court in order that thereby proper judicial action might be taken. The report is in no sense a pleading. It was, however, a matter of public record on the files of the court. All parties to the suit, certainly after the order of notice, were chargeable with knowledge of its contents. It was before the court for consideration and for such action as was demanded by the law in the determination of the trial judge. There was a hearing upon it. At that hearing the Trustees, having filed their “ Answer of Objection,” were fully heard. ■
9. The original appointment of the special master in the case at bar was made by decree of March 18, 1927. That decree was entered by way of modification of earlier injunctions against the collection and payment of the indebtedness alleged in the Cochrane suit against the Trustees. He was appointed to receive and hold all that might be collected or paid in .that suit. There was no appeal from that decree. In recognition of the force of that decree and as an extension of the authority thereby conferred, when that suit went to final decree establishing the large indebtedness to Cochrane from the Trustees, that final decree contained a clause to the effect that execution for the amount found due should issue to and in
10. It seems plain from the report of the special master and the findings of the judge that there was ample .ground for the conclusion that the Trustees as such were .Unfit to prosecute the claims set forth in the special report against themselves as individuals. Specifications on that point were in the report. The Trustees had notice of them. They did not believe that the claims existed. They had failed for a long time to institute proceedings of any nature for their enforcement. The claims were founded on their own individual misconduct. The attitude of mind and the personal interest of the Trustees were sufficient basis for the decision of the judge on this point. It was futile for them to offer to sue themselves if pleadings to that end should be furnished them by others. Bremer v. Williams, 210 Mass. 256, 258.
' 11. The decree of December 24, 1929, as amended, was within the jurisdiction of the court. The theory of the
It is not germane to the issues here raised to interpret articles VIII, XII and XIII of the Declaration of Trust under which the Trustees were appointed and have acted. It is only necessary to decide, as we do, that a case against the Trustees as individuals appears to be outlined on the record such as to justify and to require judicial inquiry. No intimation is here made concerning the merits of that case as it may appear upon trial, or upon the force and effect of the declaration of trust as a defence to the Trustees as individuals to the facts as they may ultimately be found to be. Every defence open under the law will be available to the Trustees as individuals if and when they are brought into court as defendants pursuant to authority granted by the decree of December 24, 1929. Nothing here decided is prejudicial to such full and complete presentation of defence by them. The declaration of trust can be interpreted with more intelligence and justice when the facts as to which it may be invoked are all ascertained.
12. We are of opinion that no constitutional right of the Trustees has been infringed by the actions of the court reported for decision. The Trustees contend in this connection that their property has been taken without due process of law. In our opinion this contention cannot be supported. It is to be noted again that the Trustees are not before the court as individuals but only in their capacity as Trustees. Questions that might be open to them as individuals are not now open to them as Trustees. Parties alone can raise constitutional questions, and even parties in a case like the present are confined to constitutional questions affecting their rights and interests. New
The rulings of law requested by the Trustees in our opinion were denied rightly. They need not be set out but are covered fully by what has been said.
Every argument put forward in behalf of the Trustees has been fully considered. It is not necessary to discuss their contentions in further detail. We are unable to discover any error in the judicial actions reported for our determination.
It follows that the decree of December 24, 1929, as modified by interlocutory decree entered on February 13, 1930, is affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.