8 N.W.2d 104 | Mich. | 1943
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *378
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *379 Arthur D. Eddy, an old resident of Saginaw, Michigan, died testate in 1925. The principal asset of his very large estate consisted of the entire capital stock of C.K. Eddy Sons, a holding company owning stocks, bonds, real estate, et cetera. Although its capital was only $125,000, represented by 12,500 shares of a par value of $10 each, its capital and surplus amounted to at least $3,600,000 at the time of Mr. Eddy's death. In his will, he directed his executors to take all necessary legal steps to declare cash dividends with which to pay debts, taxes, expenses of administration, and cash legacies, etcetera, and after their payment, he bequeathed *380 certificates representing one third of the capital stock to Charlotte H. Eddy, his wife (now Charlotte Eddy Morgan), those representing another one third to the trustees under paragraph 9 of the will, and those representing the remaining one third to the trustees under paragraph 10 of the will. The Second National Bank of Saginaw and George L. Humphrey were appointed trustees of the trusts respectively created under paragraphs 9 and 10. George L. Humphrey subsequently died and the corporation trustee became the Second National Bank Trust Company of Saginaw, sole trustee, as provided in the will. Under the provisions of the trust in paragraph 9 of the will, payments were to be made to certain legatees not parties to this litigation or any longer interested in the trust and the balance of the income from the third trusteed under paragraph 9 was to be paid to a sister, Lila Eddy Doebler, of Baltimore, Maryland, and upon her death one half of the corpus of the portion trusteed under paragraph 9 was to belong to and be turned over to her daughter, Cynthia Mills Cleveland, and the other half was to belong to and be turned over to the trustees under the trust created under paragraph 10 of the will, referred to as the "charitable trust," and devoted wholly to charitable, public and educational purposes. Paragraph 10 contained a provision that in case of any losses in the principal of the trust estate, such losses should be made good out of the income of the trust estate before the distribution of any further income to the beneficiaries.
The will gave the trustees complete powers to hold, sell, invest and reinvest without any restrictions to investments that were legal for trustees under the laws of the State of Michigan. It also provided that it was the testator's desire that the "trust estates" be kept in the form they were in *381 unless the trustees found it financially advisable to discontinue the corporation, due consideration, however, to be given to the interest of the widow.
In June, 1934, the trustee under paragraphs 9 and 10 of the will filed a bill in the circuit court for the county of Saginaw in chancery against Lila Eddy Doebler, Cynthia Mills Cleveland, Richard Cleveland, the latter's son, and any other issue of Mrs. Cleveland surviving Mrs. Doebler. In its form as finally amended, it asked for a construction of the will so that the trustee could properly allocate moneys received. It alleged that certain shares of stock had been transferred to the trustee under paragraph 9 of the will, that the trustee had treated the dividends from the stock as income and had distributed them as such, that there would be further dividends paid; that at the time of Mr. Eddy's death, the Eddy corporation was engaged in a large number of businesses; also that it had been buying and selling and investing and reinvesting in bonds and stocks; that it owned large parcels of real estate, that at the time of Mr. Eddy's death the assets of the corporation were worth $3,600,000; that the assets of the estate had fluctuated owing to the world-wide depression and the general economic conditions that followed, but that there still remained a substantial portion of its assets, appraised at the time at $2,817,000; that the trustee was unable to determine, except at its peril, what was income and what was principal, whether Mrs. Doebler, the life tenant, was entitled to the moneys realized from certain dividends, or whether such amounts should be retained for Mrs. Cleveland, the remainderman, and her children; that the corporation had exchanged 1,320 shares of stock of the Second National Bank of Saginaw for 7,920 shares of stock in the Guardian Detroit Union Group, Inc., in a *382 bank merger; that the latter stock had become worthless, that the corporation had been forced to pay a large assessment, and that in all it had suffered a loss of $174,261.58 in this investment; that on the other hand it had realized the amount of $117,454.25, in excess of the appraised value of the preferred stock of the Saginaw Milling Company held by the corporation; that since Mr. Eddy's death, the corporation had paid out $1,387,250 in dividends which were partly used to pay debts, taxes, expenses,et cetera, and the trustee under paragraph 9 had received its share. The bill set forth the provision of paragraph 10 of the will directing the trustee to make good any losses before distributing any further income. The bill asked the court to hold that there had been no impairment of the capital stock of the Eddy corporation, and to determine whether the large sums paid out by the corporation were to be charged to the income or the corpus of the trust fund; that paragraph 9 of the will be construed and the trustee directed to whom dividends from the Eddy corporation belong. There was uncertainty in the will and the description and nature of the assets so as to require a judicial construction.
Upon the petition of Mrs. Cleveland, showing diversity of citizenship, the case was removed to the United States district court for the eastern district of Michigan, northern division. She filed an answer and cross bill, in which she alleged that at the time of Mr. Eddy's death the assets of the corporation were worth at least $4,500,000, and at least $4,000,000 after proper payments were made; that she and her children would be entitled to one sixth of the net assets of the Eddy Corporation upon the death of her mother, Mrs. Doebler. She asked *383 that the corporation itself, George B. Morley and R. Perry Shorts, who managed it, be also made cross defendants; that Charlotte H. Eddy, the widow, also be made a cross defendant on the ground that she actively assisted in and approved of the acts of the corporation; that all of them be held liable for gross mismanagement, and failure of duty in not selling the stock of the Guardian Detroit Union Group, Inc., when it was received so that a very large loss was suffered, instead of a profit of $800,000 being realized on this item alone. She further charged that other losses were incurred through the failure to sell stocks and securities shortly after Mr. Eddy's death, or at a higher market in the succeeding years. She asked that all the cross defendants be held jointly and severally liable for all such losses in the assets of the corporation to the extent of one sixth thereof, that being the share she was interested in under paragraph 9, and that the trustee and other cross defendants be charged with such amount. She asked that the court administer the trust until the death of Mrs. Doebler so that one half of the corpus under paragraph 9 might then be delivered to Mrs. Cleveland or her children without loss or depletion and at its former value at the time of testator's death; that in addition the court determine whether upon the vesting of the trust cross plaintiff might not only recover for all losses caused through the failure of the trustee to dispose of all speculative stocks and assets within a reasonable time, but also have the benefit of the increase in value of all stocks and securities as should have been disposed of to advantage within such reasonable time, and before their decrease in value later on. Mrs. Cleveland asked for a judicial determination that she be entitled to *384 one sixth of the assets of the corporation and not of the shares of stock belonging to the estate. No objection was made to the jurisdiction of the court.
Mrs. Doebler died May 10, 1938, and Howell Van Auken was appointed ancillary administrator with the will annexed by the probate court of the county of Saginaw, Michigan. He intervened and in an answer and a counterclaim signed and sworn to by Mrs. Cleveland's attorney, acting as Mr. Van Auken's attorney in fact, charges of fraud were made against Mrs. Doebler's brothers, the late Arthur D. Eddy and the late Walter S. Eddy. The charges related to transactions that occurred in 1908 and succeeding years, but many years before the death of the Eddy brothers and Mrs. Doebler. Mrs. Cleveland was permitted to join as a counterclaimant. We need not discuss these countercharges. The court in a separate opinion and judgment dismissed them as without any foundation whatsoever.
On April 11, 1936, in an interlocutory order entered by the United States district court in the main case involving the construction of the will, it was ordered that the Eddy corporation be considered as not having any corporate existence, but merely as a fiction in the administration of the trusts under paragraphs 9 and 10 of the will; that the corpus of each trust was its respective share in the assets of the corporation; that all depreciation and losses in buying or selling of assets were chargeable to corpus, and any appreciation was to be credited to corpus; that the trustee file a full and complete account of its management of the trust since the death of the testator, such account to be made up in accordance with the findings made in construing the will. The court added that the order was interlocutory and until final decree any party might move for its modification. *385
After the taking of testimony at the hearing of the main case the trial judge completely set aside the interlocutory order, and held that the corporate form was not used as a sham or a fraud but that the Eddy corporation was a valid, existing corporation, and that the trust estate (created by paragraph 9 of the will) consisted of its share in the capital stock of the corporation, not in the corporate assets. He further held that the charges in Mrs. Cleveland's cross bill were absolutely groundless; that the cross defendants had acted with the highest degree of care and integrity. He commended them for their careful management and found that the only criticism that could be leveled against them was their failure to foresee the depression and the depreciation that followed; that they continued to hold the bank stock as the late Arthur D. Eddy would have wished; that the payment of dividends by the corporation was proper notwithstanding the fluctuation in the value of the stock. In a judgment entered February 7, 1939, the interlocutory order of April 11, 1936, was vacated except as to accounts and reports filed thereunder; all others filed by the trustee were also approved; the cross bill and counterclaim against the respective parties were dismissed and they were allowed their taxable costs. It further provided that the trustee file with the court a report of its disbursements in the case together with a statement of the accounts of its auditors and counsel, and upon approval thereof by the court, the amounts thereof should be paid out of the dividends due and to become due on the shares of stock in the corporation, that were to be turned over to Mrs. Cleveland, but that the trustee hold such shares until the payment of such amounts, except that $1,000 of this amount should be paid by the trustee under paragraph 10 of the will. It further *386 provided that all amounts that became due Mrs. Doebler during her lifetime were paid to and received by Mrs. Doebler or the Mercantile Trust Company of Baltimore under a deed of trust. The Mercantile Trust Company had intervened in the case and in the judgment it was also awarded taxable costs against Mrs. Cleveland.
Cross claimants Van Auken and Mrs. Cleveland took an appeal from the judgment disallowing their counterclaim to the United States circuit court of appeals, 6th circuit, and the judgment of the district court was affirmed. Van Auken v. Second NationalBank Trust Co. (C.C.A.), 117 F.2d 938. Certiorari was denied by the United States supreme court,
On consideration of a petition filed by Mrs. Cleveland in the probate court for the county of Saginaw, Michigan, the court entered an order on January 22, 1942, refusing to direct the trustee to turn over to her a one sixth share in the estate and stating that the United States district court had ordered that she was not entitled to such share until payment of the trustee's disbursements and that the district court had set February 3, 1942, for fixing the amount of the expenses to be charged against the stock she would be entitled to, that the probate court had no jurisdiction in the premises, and it was ordered, adjudged and decreed that her petition be dismissed. *387
About May 1, 1942, the trustee filed an annual account in the probate court showing income and disbursements of the trust, and that it had paid out the sum of $45,520.89, approximately $39,000 of which it had paid out for attorneys' fees, and the balance for auditors' fees and other expenses. These amounts have not yet been approved by the United States district court, or considered because of the new litigation that was begun and the temporary injunction that was issued.
In the instant case, Cynthia Mills Cleveland, on January 15, 1942, filed a bill in the circuit court for the county of Saginaw in chancery, alleging that in the first case the court had never acquired jurisdiction of the subject matter of the suit when, in 1934, the trustee filed its bill hereinbefore outlined, and Mrs. Cleveland removed the cause to the United States district court wherein she filed answer and cross bill, et cetera, as hereinbefore more fully set forth. She further alleged that all the proceedings by the trustee were so vitiated with fraud that they must be totally disregarded and held to be void. She asked for an order restraining all parties to the former litigation from any and all further proceedings under the judgment rendered therein and from bringing on for hearing or allowance in, or submitting or contending for any and all written or oral claims for counsel fees, auditors' expenses, fees or services, and from asserting any rights for such fees and expenses or prosecuting such claims in any other tribunal except the probate court for the county of Saginaw until the further order of the chancery court. After an order to show cause had been duly issued and served, the chancery court issued a temporary injunction as prayed for. Thereupon the trustees, the Eddy corporation and *388 R. Perry Shorts, one of its directors, made a motion to dismiss. This was denied without prejudice. Thereupon the bank, as trustee under paragraphs 9 and 10, and Charlotte Eddy Morgan, as plaintiffs, applied to this court for writs of prohibition and mandamus for the purpose of restraining any further action by the Hon. Neil E. Reid, circuit judge, sitting in Saginaw county in this new chancery case brought by Cynthia Mills Cleveland, except to dismiss the bill. We issued an order to show cause and Judge Reid filed an answer. There are attached to plaintiffs' petition in the instant case copies of pleadings, with exhibits attached, consisting of orders, findings of the district court, judgments and other records in the previous litigation and due reference is made thereto. Defendant's attorney has also submitted copies of additional records. From all of them, we can determine the question now before us. Are plaintiffs entitled to writs of prohibition and mandamus?
Plaintiffs in their petition made a complete prima facie
showing upon which we issued an order to show cause. Plaintiffs claim that the main questions raised in Mrs. Cleveland's bill of complaint are res judicata and that her other claims have no merit in either law or fact as shown by the records. If plaintiffs are correct, they are entitled to the writs prayed for. Bates v. Alpena Circuit Judge,
We shall consider only the main questions raised. Limitations of time and space preclude us from going into unimportant details or discussing such questions raised as we regard as of no consequence, or many of the voluminous authorities cited and which we regard as being neither relevant nor pertinent. We shall refer to the chancery suit begun in 1934 as the "first suit," that begun in 1942 as the "second suit," the petition for the writs and answer as the "instant case." We shall refer to the trustee bank and Charlotte Eddy Morgan as "plaintiffs," and to Mrs. Cleveland and the circuit judge interchangeably as "defendant," unless otherwise stated.
(1) Defendant claims that mandamus cannot issue, as proper leave to appeal in the nature of mandamus was not first obtained, and there was no application in proper form in accordance with Court Rule No. 60 (1933), as amended. This objection was not made in the answer of defendant circuit judge. The writ of mandamus herein is only sought as ancillary to the writ of prohibition if plaintiffs are entitled to the latter writ.
(2) Defendant contends that the issues presented in the second suit on account of which plaintiff seeks the writs are not resjudicata; that the court never at any time acquired any jurisdiction over the subject matter in the first suit; that jurisdiction cannot be conferred by consent of parties in cases where the court has no jurisdiction over such subject matter; that, therefore, the judgments rendered in the first suit are nullities and of no effect whatsoever. *390
In the first suit a construction of the Eddy will was sought and, dependent upon it, the approval of the trustee's accounts. Mrs. Cleveland, after causing the removal of the case to the Federal courts, filed a cross bill making Mr. Eddy's widow and others cross defendants. She also joined with the ancillary administrator de bonis non in asserting a claim arising out of transactions between people, all of whom had died prior to the assertion of the claim. Having failed in all phases of the litigation, Mrs. Cleveland undertook in the instant suit to litigate all over again questions that had been determined by the previous judgments. The principle of estoppel would apply in the fullest force if the questions decided in the first suit were notres judicata. The first suit resulted in numerous disputed questions being raised and many new parties, in addition to the trustee, being brought in. For that reason alone, if for no other, equity was a proper forum. Scripps v. Sweeney,
(3) While it is true that under subdivision 2 of section 15519, 3 Comp. Laws 1929 (Stat. Ann. § 27.2619), the probate judge was given jurisdiction over testamentary trusts and trustees, subdivision 6 of the same section contained the distinct proviso that the section did not deprive the circuit court of concurrent jurisdiction as originally exercised over the same matter. Prior to the enactment of the testamentary trust act (Act No. 253, Pub. Acts 1899), the chancery court had jurisdiction over *391 testamentary trustees. Section 46 of Act No. 253, Pub. Acts 1899, was the same as at present except that the word "chapter" has been substituted for the word "act." As it reads now, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 15905 (Stat. Ann. § 27.3084), provides that:
"The provisions of this chapter shall not be construed to in any manner limit, change, modify or abolish the jurisdiction as it now exists, of the courts of chancery of this State, of, over or concerning such trustees and trust estates, but the same shall remain and continue in all respects as though this chapter had not been passed."
Attention is specifically called to Kundinger v. Kundinger,
"The case does not fall within Act No.
We need not discuss the effect of the repeal of the foregoing section by the probate code, Act No. 288, Pub. Acts 1939 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 16289-1[1] et seq., Stat. Ann. 1942 Cum. Supp. § 27.3178[1] et seq.). The effective date, September 29, 1939, was subsequent to the judgments in the first suit. The code contains a saving clause in chapter 13, § 5 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 16289-13[5], Stat. Ann. 1942 Cum. Supp. § 27.3178[615]).
Defendant has cited many cases in support of his contentions. It is unnecessary to discuss all of them as we do not find them applicable. However, we briefly refer to some of them especially emphasized. *392
In Lambert Run Coal Co. v. Baltimore Ohio R. Co.,
(4) In view of what we have heretofore stated, it becomes unnecessary to discuss the doctrine of res judicata invoked by plaintiffs and which applies in the instant case. We but recently discussed this doctrine in Auditor General v. Olezniczak,
(5) Mrs. Cleveland, however, claims that the judgments in the first case were obtained by fraud *393 and, therefore, she is not bound by them and defendant in the second suit should be enjoined from taking any action under the judgments rendered therein. We shall briefly refer to the claims of fraud made in the answer of the circuit judge in the instant case.
(a) It is charged that the purpose of filing the first bill by plaintiff trustee was to secure a judgment to the effect that the corpus of the trust estate consisted of the "mere par value shares" of the family corporation, and thus relieve the trustee from liability from heavy losses in the surplus of the said corporation and, of necessity, in the corpus of said trusts. A reading of the amended bill of complaint, the interlocutory order, the findings of the district judge, the judgments, shows that the charge of fraud in this respect is utterly unfounded.
(b) It is charged that in the argument of February 4, 1941, before the United States circuit court, 6th circuit, on the appeal by defendants and cross plaintiffs in the first case, the attorney for the appellee made the statement that Mrs. Cleveland's one sixth interest was worth $616,000 at the time of Mr. Eddy's death in April, 1925, and was worth as much or more at the time of the argument. The record before the court showed the heavy losses so that the attorney for the appellee was in error in making such statement. However, the statement did not go unchallenged for the attention of the United States court of appeals was called to its incorrectness in a petition for rehearing, which the court denied. The record plainly shows that the fastening of responsibility for the heavy losses was one of the main purposes of appellant's cross bill. The district judge discussed this question in his findings. The record submitted to the court of appeals showed such losses. The court of appeals affirmed *394 the judgments and denied the rehearing after its attention was specifically called to the alleged misstatement of counsel.
(c) Defendant claims that the Mercantile Trust Company of Baltimore, in filing a brief in the United States supreme court in opposition to appellants' petition for certiorari, connived with appellee. The Mercantile Trust Company had been appointed trustee by Mrs. Doebler to collect the income due her during her lifetime from the trust created for her under the ninth paragraph of the will. To just what extent the Mercantile Trust Company was involved in the litigation is not shown, but it did intervene in the first suit. In the answer and counterclaim of Howell Van Auken, ancillary administrator with the will annexed, and in which Mrs. Cleveland joined as a counterclaimant, it is alleged that Mrs. Cleveland had instituted suit in Maryland against the Mercantile Trust Company. The latter's position obviously was antagonistic to Mrs. Cleveland for the district judge awarded it taxable costs against her. The record shows that the Mercantile Trust Company had been put to large expense on account of the litigation. We find no fraud in its filing a brief in the United States supreme court. The facts disclosed by the record show that the charges of connivance have no basis. Connivance as a rule denotes silence or secrecy; filing a brief in the United States supreme court does not.
(6) Mrs. Cleveland further contends that the Federal judgments are void and of no effect, because the "charitable trust" was not represented by the prosecuting attorney and attorney general. Her complaint is somewhat untimely and, if of any merit, comes too late. After she had the first case removed to the United States district court, and filed a cross *395 bill, she impleaded a number of other parties, but not public officials, representing the "charitable trust." Possibly this is explained by one of the items of relief asked in her bill in her second suit, and in which she asks it be decreed and adjudged that she be entitled to a full contribution from the "charitable trust" for three fourths of any and all attorneys' fees or counsel or auditors' expenses and fees she may have incurred or be finally required to pay, including those in the first suit as required by the judgments therein. At most, it might be claimed that the "charitable trust" was not bound by the judgments in the previous suit. This in no respect releases Mrs. Cleveland from the judgments against her.
(7) Defendant rightfully contends that on a motion to dismiss all proper allegations of fraud must be assumed to be true in considering such motion or petition for writ of prohibition. Defendant refers repeatedly to Brachman v. Hyman,
(8) Defendant further claims that plaintiff trustee waived or abandoned its rights under the judgment because it filed an annual account of its trust under paragraph 9 for the period from July 1, 1941, to April 30, 1942, but also showing some previous disbursements. All of them were made on account of the "Doebler-Cleveland" litigation and aggregate $45,520.89. The account states:
"The assets of this trust are held subject to the terms of the final judgment filed February 7, 1939, in the United States district court in Bay City, *396 Michigan, in Case No. 540, in equity, and the dividends on the shares of stock eventually to be turned over to Cynthia Mills Cleveland are to be applied on the expenses of the trustee incurred in said litigation, and said trustee under said decree is authorized to retain her shares of stock, hold the legal title thereto, vote the same, and collect the dividends thereon until the aforesaid expenses are paid."
By the terms of this judgment the disbursements are to be approved by the United States district court. The filing of the account was no waiver. It expressly referred to the judgment, which it relied upon.
(9) Mrs. Cleveland further claims that the large sums she would be charged with for costs and expenses are wholly illegal and improper; that under Davidson v. Young,
(10) Defendant further claims that by filing an answer in the second suit the corporate trustee has abandoned its petition for mandamus filed in this court. Plaintiff trustee states that it was obliged to do this in order to prevent a default being taken against it. We do not believe there was any abandonment so as to preclude the filing of the petition for the writs prayed for. *397
Writ of prohibition and ancillary writ of mandamus will issue, with costs to plaintiffs.
BOYLES, C.J., and CHANDLER, NORTH, STARR, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, and SHARPE, JJ., concurred.