18 Del. Ch. 15 | New York Court of Chancery | 1931
The complainant did not move to vacate the order permitting the receiver of the Middletown bank to intervene within the five day period allowed by the order. After the cause was heard on bill, answers and stipulation, and while I held it under advisement, the so
I entertain no doubt upon the proposition that the order should not have been entered. The administratrix sustains the person of the intestate and defends the estate for creditors and legatees. DeLong v. Weldin, Exr., 16 Del. Ch. 97, 141 A. 223; Wiser v. Blachly, 1 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 438; Coster v. Clarke, 3 Edw. Ch. (N. Y.) 428; Dandridge v. Washington, 2 Pet. 377, 7 L. Ed. 454. A simple creditor with no specific right or equity in his favor is not entitled to elbow himself into a controversy over another’s claim against his debtor’s estate and either oust from, or share with, the personal representative the duty of defending against the claim. If one creditor could do this, so could another, to the utter confusion of litigation. In 123 Am. St. Rep., page 305, the following extract from an elaborate and valuable note is to be found:
“The case of a creditor who has no lien for the security of his debt and has not reduced it to judgment, forms the most frequent illustration of a third person who may gain or lose by a judgment between others and yet whose gain or loss is of so indirect a char-' acter that it cannot entitle him to intervention.” (Citing many authorities.)
" If Betts himself were alive and the defendant in this cause, certainly the receiver would not be entitled to intervene. Postal Tel. Cable Co. v. Snowden, 68 Md. 118, 12 A. 549; In re Printup, 87 Ala. 148, 6 So. 418; Wightman v. Evanson Yaryan Co., et al., 217 Ill. 371, 75 N. E. 502, 108 Am. St. Rep. 258, 3 Ann. Cas. 1089. The receiver has no greater right simply because Betts’ personal representative stands in his place. In Ehrenstrom v. Phillips, 9 Del. Ch. 74, 77 A. 80, the Chancellor noted two exceptions to the rule against intervention by third persons as defendants without the consent of the complainant. One is where a person is interested in a fund which is being administered by the court, and the other is in the case of
The intervention was unjustified. Does the fact that the complainant interposed no objection until now, serve to save it? I think not. There is power in the court to vacate an order permitting intervention where it has been imprudently entered. Grand Rapids v. Consumers Power Co., 216 Mich. 409, 185 N. W. 852; Harlan v. Eureka Mining Co., 10 Nev. 92. In the latter case an order admitting an intervenor who had been admitted as a defendant without objection, was vacated after proofs had been taken on the issues raised by the intervenor. In the cases cited by the solicitor for the intervenor which seem to bear on the point, it appeared that the intervenor had a direct interest of some kind in the subject matter of the suit; whereas in this cause whatever interest the intervenor can have is indirect and at the most only consequential. His sole claim is to keep the complainant from enjoying an equitable lien upon funds in the' estate to the end that the estate might have more of cash for payment of general creditors of whom the intervenor claims to be one (though I find nowhere in the record an admission or proof that the intervenor is a creditor). Such an interest, so far as my investigation discloses, has been nowhere recognized as sufficiently connected with the subject matter of a suit by a claimant against a personal representative as to warrant its presentation by way of intervention.
The motion to vacate will be granted.
The granting of the motion leaves the case for final hearing on the bill and the answer, of the administratrix.
The delay of the complainant in not compelling Betts in his life time to assign the insurance as agreed prejudiced no other person. There is therefore no ground for a contention of loches.
In the foregoing, I have, notwithstanding the intervener was improperly, before the court, nevertheless taken notice of the principal contentions made by him and briefly stated my views with respect to them in the light of the pleadings between the complainant and the administratrix.
Order on the motion and decree on the bill and answer, in accordance with the foregoing.