61 F. 865 | 6th Cir. | 1894
This bill was filed in the chancery court for Cumberland county, Tenn. The object of the bill was to have an accounting with'the defendant, Schwerin, as attorney in fact for Samuel Newman. The power of attorney was as follows:
“State of Mississippi, County of Hinds.
“Be it known that, J, 'Samuel Newman, of the county and state above named, do hereby constitute and appoint M. Schwerin, of the city of Newark, state of New Jersey, my attorney in fact, with the following powers: (1) To sell, convey, lease, or rent any and all the land 1hat 1 own, or in which I have any interest, situated and being in the counties of White, De Kalb, and*866 Putnam, in the state of Tennessee. (2) To sell, assign, execute, or enforce a certain judgment or decree rendered in the year 1860 in my favor, against the North American Goal & Transportation Company, hy the chancery court of White couhty, in the state of Tennessee, or any other judgment or decree rendered hy said court in my favor, condemning the sale of any land. (3) In case it should he necessary to resort to legal proceedings in order to recover possession of said land, or to enforce or to execute said decree or decrees, the said Schwerin is hereby authorized to sue in my name, and to do all things necessary to accomplish these desired ends. (4) It is, however, expressly stipulated and agreed that the said Schwerin is to receive no pay from me for his services, and he is to pay and he responsible for all costs, expenses, and risks incurred hy him while in the execution of his powers. (5) In case the said Schwerin should he successful in the enterprise by us contemplated, and he able to sell said lands and enforce said decrees, then he is to reimburse himself for all legitimate expenses hy him incurred; and the rest of the proceeds I hereby hind myself, and promise, to divide into four equal parts, three of which shall he distributed among the heirs of my deceased brother, Charles Newman, and one shall I retain myself.
“Witness my signature, this the sixth day of February, 1886.
“Samuel Newman.”
The bill, in substance, alleged that, in pursuance of the power therein conferred, the defendant had instituted a suit upon the judgment mentioned therein in the chancery court of White county, Tenn., and that on May 12,1886, a decree had been obtained in favor of said Samuel Newmán and against the said North American Coal & Transportation Company for the sum of $58,000 and costs of suit; that said Schwerin, still acting under his said agency and trust, had caused an execution issuing on said judgment to be levied on a number of tracts,of land in Cumberland county, Tenn., as the property of the judgment debtor; that at the sale thereof under said' writ and levy the lands thus levied on had been sold for a sum aggregating $38,710, and sheriff’s deed executed to the several purchasers; that said Schwerin had by virtue of his said agency credited on the said judgment an amount equal to the aggregate of the sums bid on said lands, and paid to the sheriff, in money, a sum equal to the costs and expenses of sale; that parts of the lands thus sold had been bought by one Gr. J. Kemp, tvhose bid aggregated $13,600, another part had been sold to one B. F. Newman for the sum of $10,150, and the remainder had been sold tp the defendant Schwerin, who bid them in for the sum of $11,960; that none of the purchasers had paid to either the sheriff or said Schwerin any part of their said bids,—the said Schwerin, as attorney in fact, waiving such payment, and crediting the decree as if.the money had been paid; that under instructions from said Schwerin, the sheriff had executed deeds to. the several purchasers, reciting the facts as to amount of bid and manner of payment; that, subsequently, both Kemp and Newman had conveyed the parcels so bid in by them to the defendant, who, the bill charges, “now claims to be the owner of all of said lands, in fee simple, free from all equitable claims or liens in behalf of any person.” It further alleges that Schwerin has never accounted for the proceeds of said sale, “and utterly refuses to recognize the right of Samuel Newman to any money paid thereon, or any claim to or lien upon the said lands.”
The prayer of the bill was that Morris Schwerin be made a party defendant by publication, he being a nonresident of the state of Tennessee, and a citizen and resident of the state of New Jersey; that she have decree against him for the sum of $38,740, and interest thereon, that being the aggregate sum for which the lands levied on had been sold, and tiie sum credited on said judgment a.s the result of said sales, less such sums of money as said Schwerin had properly expended in and about the execution of his power of attorney; and that an equitable lien be declared to exist in favor of complainant in the lands so acquired by said Bchwerin. Publication was accordingly made. The defendant appeared, and filed a demurrer, which was as follows:
“Lena Newman vs. Morris Schwerin.
“In the chancery court, at Orossville, Tennessee, the defendant, Morris Schwerin, comes and demurs to the hill riled against him in the above-styled cause, and assigns the following grounds of demurrer: (1) This court lias no jurisdiction of the, cause, the defendant being a nonresident of the state of Tennessee, and there being no attachment of properly against him. (2) The suit is brought to recover a debt alleged Lo be due Samuel Newman from the defendant, Morris Schwerin, and should have been brought by said Newman’s administrator or personal representative. His widow or heir has no right of action. (3) Tin; bill alleges that the defendant holds the lands described in the bill in trust for Samuel Newman; and, if that be true, then the right of action would descend to said Newman’s heirs at law, and complainant could only maintain her suit if her husband had died, leaving no heirs at law capable of inheriting, which the bill does not charge. Wherefore, the defendant prays the judgment of the court whether he shall make any other or further defense to complainant’s hill.”
Before the demurrer was finally disposed of, the complainant, under leave, amended her bill by a prayer for an attachment, and upon her application she was appointed administratrix ad litem of the said Samuel Newman. From thence she seems to have been regarded as complainant in her character as administratrix ad litem, as well as in her character as distributee, though no formal order was made so amending her bill. Presumably as a consequence of this appointment, the demurrer of defendant was then overruled- After this action of the court an order was made that upon the return of
The ground upon which this decree was based does not appear in the decree, and no opinion was filed. The contention of counsel for appellee is that the suit cannot be maintained, for want of proper parties, and that tbe second and third grounds of demurrer should have been sustained. We are clearly of opinion that the complainant cannot sustain this hill as sole distributee. The claim she asserts is an asset belonging to the estate of Samuel Newman. A distributee, as such, cannot maintain a suit against one indebted to an intestate. This is the well-settled general rule in Tennessee. The supreme court of that state, in the case of Thurman v. Shelton, 10 Yerg. 382, upon this question, said:
“Can distributees recover tbeir distributive porfious without an administrator of tbe estate of tbeir intestate? We are clearly of opinion that tbey cannot. Personal property was, by tho common law, considered of so little value that no provision was made for its descent to tbe heirs at law of tbe owner. Indeed, up to 22 and 23 Charles II.,—the date of the passage of the statute of distributions,—an administrator was entitled exclusively to en.joy the residue of the intestate’s effects, after the payment of the debts and funeral expenses. 2 Williams, Ex’rs, 906. This being the case, whoever can get possession of personal property upon the owner’s dying intestate can hold it against any person, save a creditor or administrator. To the first, he is liable as an executor de son tort; to the second, because he is the representative of the deceased, upon whom the law casts his rights to the personal estate, to be held by him for the payment of debts, and, since the passage of the statutes of' distributions, for distribution among tbe next of kin of the intestate. t A distributee stands in neither of these relations, and therefore cánnot sue for the personal property of the intestate, nor demand a distribution of it from aiiy person save the administrator.”
To tbe same effect is tne ease of Brown v. Bibb, 2 Cold. 439.
In the case of Brandon v. Mason, 1 Lea, 616, and Christian v. Clark, 10 Lea, 630, it is said that tbe principal reason wby a distributee cannot maintain suit to recover assets belonging to an intestate’s estate is the interest of creditors, and tbeir prior right to protection, and that in equity a distributee might, under special circumstances, maintain suit as such, where it was clearly shown there were no creditors. Tbe doctrine of those cases is relied upon by complainant. Tbe cases are not applicable. In tbe first place, tbe bill does not show that there is no administrator, and, in tbe second place, there is no allegation that there are no creditors. Neither are there any. special circumstances which justify any court
“May 6, 1891.
“Lena Newman, Complainant, vs. Morris Schwerin, Defendant.
“In this cause, it appearing that there is no administrator of the estate or executor of the will of Samuel Newman, deceased, named in the hill herein, the above-named complainant, Lena Newman, is hereby appointed administratrix ad litem of such estate for the above-entitled cause, and that no bond be required of her as such administratrix, but said administratrix shall receive or tafee into her possession noi funds or moneys arising from this pro ceeding until the further order of the court.”
The recital in this decree that, “it appearing that there is no administrator,” is unsupported by any fact in the transcript. No such, allegation is made in the bill, and no such fact appears by affidavit or otherwise. .
Under the law of Tennessee the general subject of administrations is committed to the county courts, which, as probate courts, are courts of general jurisdiction, with all the powers formerly exercised by the ordinary under the English law. Under the general grant of authority, it has been held that the county courts of that state had the power to appoint an administrator ad litem, or for any other special andlimited purpose authorized by the practice of the English probate courts. McNairy v. Bell, 6 Yerg. 302; Jordan v. Polk, 1 Sneed, 428. By act passed in 1889, special power was conferred upon the chancery courts of the state to appoint an administrator ad litem “in any proceeding” in a chancery court “where the estate of a deceased person must be represented, and there is no executor or administrator of such estate, or the executor or administrator thereof is interested adversely thereto. * * * Such appointment to he made whenever the facts rendering it necessary shall appear in the record of such case, or shall be made known to the court by the affidavit of any person interested therein.” The hill in this case did constitute “a proceeding” in the chancery court, “where the estate of a deceased person must he represented,” within the meaning of the act. Denning v. Todd, 91 Tenn. 422, 19 S. W. 228; Pritch. Wills, § 569. The entire absence from the transcript of any allegation or evidence that there was no administrator, or that he was interested adversely, is fatal to the interlocutory decree appointing complainant administratrix ad litem. It may he that, upon a collateral attack, it would he presumed that the court had made the appointment upon sufficient and proper evidence. But upon a direct appeal the transcript should show a state of facts making it proper that such an appointment should he made. The appointment of a general administrator operates to vest in him the
There is another objection to proceeding in the present state of this record. The fifth paragraph of the power of attorney under which defendant was acting contains a provision whereby the maker of the instrument, after all legitimate expenses have been paid, binds himself to divide the proceeds of all lands recovered or moneys realized “into four equal parts, three of which shall be distributed among the heirs of my [his] deceased brother, Charles Newman, and one shall I retain myself.” The record shows that the persons described as heirs of Ms brother, Charles, are the same persons who, under the law of descent of Tennessee, are the heirs at law of Samuel Newman. Whether the lands sought to be subjected under complainant’s bill be regarded as personalty or realty, for purposes of descent and distribution, the persons in whose favor a trust is de* dared by the fifth clause of the power of attorney, and the persons answering to the description of heirs of Charles Newman under the Tennessee statute of descent, should be parties.
It was suggested at the bar that the petition for removal was filed too late; that, after the interposition of a defense in the state court by demurrer, it was too late, under the act of 1887, to apply for removal to the federal court. The suit was one between citizens of different states, and therefore within the general jurisdiction of the circuit court. The objection that the right of removal from the state court was not asserted within the time required by the act of 1887 is an objection which may be waived. No motion to remand having been made in the circuit court, the objection canngt for the first time be made here. Railway Co. v. McBride, 141 U. S. 127, 11 Sup. Ct. 982; Railway Co. v. Cox, 145 U. S. 593,12 Sup. Ct. 905. This very question arose in the case of Gerling v. Railroad Co. (decided Feb. 5, 1894), the opinion being by Mr. Justice Gray, who said:
“The time of filing a petition for removal of a case from a state court into the circuit court of the United States for trial is not a fact in. its nature, essential to the jurisdiction of the national court, under the constitution of the United States, like the fundamental condition of a controversy betweep citizens of different states. But the direction as tc the time of filing the petition is more analogous to the direction that a civil suit within the original jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United States shall he brought in a certain district, a noncompliance with which is waived by a defendant who does not seasonably object that the suit is brought in the wrong district.*871 Grade v. Palmer, 8 Wheat. 699; Taylor v. Longworth. 14 Pet. 172, 174; Trust Co. v. McGeorge, 151 U. S. 129, 14 Sup. Ct. 286. That tho jurisdiction, of the circuit court of the United States over a case removed into it from a state court cannot be defeated upon the ground (hat the petition for removal was filed too late, if the objection is not taken until after the cause has proceeded to trial in the circuit court of the United Slates, has been distinctly decided by this court.” 14 Sup. Ct. 539; French v. Hay, 22 Wall. 238.
The decree oí the circuit court should be so modified as to dismiss the bill, because Mrs. Newman, as distributee, has no such right or title as enables her to maintain this suit, whether the recovery-sought be a money decree, or a recovery of the land, or an interest therein, as realty. The administrator of Samuel Xewman, as well as the heirs of both Samuel and Charles Newman, are proper and necessary parties to any suit involving the matters presented hy the present bill. The costs of this court will be divided between the appellant and appellee.