Shedd v. Seefeld

| Ill. | Oct 23, 1907

Mr. Justice Vickers

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellants’ first and most serious contention is, that the circuit court of Cook county sitting in chancery had no jurisdiction to try this cause, for the reason that appellees’ claim is for alleged damages growing out of a tort and is cognizable only in a court of law. The precise question presented by this assignment of error has not been decided by this court, so far as we have been able to find, and no case is cited by either side which we regard as an authoritative decision of the question. Appellants insist that the case of Brown v. Wabash Railroad Co. 96 Ill. 297" date_filed="1880-09-30" court="Ill." case_name="Brown v. Wabash Railway Co.">96 Ill. 297, is an authority supporting their contention. We do not so regard it. The Toledo, Wabash and Western Railway Company "was being operated by Jacob D. Cox as receiver, appointed by the concurrent orders of the court of commoñ pleas of Lucas county, Ohio, the circuit court of Cass county, Indiana, and the circuit court of Vermilion county, Illinois, and while so operating, Roberts, a fireman, was killed through the alleged negligence of the receiver. Under an order of the court the railroad, and all of its property and equipment, had been sold and passed into the ownership of the Wabash Railway Company. A provision in the decree under which the property was sold required the purchaser to assume and pay all liabilities incurred in respect to said railroad or its business by the receiver during the pendency of the legal proceedings relating to the receivership and the subsequent sale. Assuming that this provision in the decree created a lien upon the property in the hands of the Wabash Railway Company, the administrator of Roberts filed an original bill in equity against the Wabash Railway • Company in the Sangamon county circuit court to ascertain and establish his damages resulting from the death of Roberts and for an order requiring the Wabash Railway Company to pay it. This court, while conceding the existence of the lien, held that a court of equity would not by an original action take jurisdiction of a case involving a question of unliquidated damages arising from a tort. That case decides the familiar doctrine that a court of chancery is not the forum in which to settle purely legal questions. No question was there presented or decided as to the jurisdiction of a court of chancery, under whose direction a trust fund is being administered by its receiver, to determine an}'- legal matter that may arise ancillary to the due administration of the trust property. A careful examination of that case shows that it has no application to the question involved in the case at bar.

Knickerbocker v. Benes, 195 Ill. 434" date_filed="1902-02-21" court="Ill." case_name="Knickerbocker v. Benes">195 Ill. 434, relied on by appellees, is a case substantially like the case at bar in its facts, and this court upheld a judgment growing out of a tort against a receiver where the damages had been ascertained and assessed by the chancellor, but no question was there raised or decided in respect to'the procedure. It appears to have been conceded by the parties that the circuit court wherein the receivership was being administered properly took jurisdiction to determine the claim for damages. While this case is not a direct authority on the question here involved, it at least shows that a court of chancery did in that case take jurisdiction to hear and determine a matter sounding in damages growing out of a tort, and that its judgment has been affirmed by this court.

Appellants rely with great confidence on Palys v. Jewett, 32 N. J. Eq. 302, as supporting their position. That case was a suit against the receiver of a railway company for damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the negligence of the employees of the receiver in the management of a train of cars. The case was heard before the vice-chancellor, who found for the receiver. The report of the case which we have seen does not show how the case was brought into court. The decision of the vice-chancellor is reversed on the merits and the cause is remanded, with directions to enter a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $3000. From the report of the case it appears that the plaintiff, and not the receiver, was protesting against the trial of the case without a jury. In the course of the opinion, on page 317, it is said: “These observations constitute a pointed re-affirmation of the proper rule of practice as promulgated by Lord Eldon, establishing plainly, as they do, that in this class of cases the chancellor will not undertake to decide a purely legal question against the person who demands from him a trial at law.”

Erom this quotation we infer, though the report does not so show, that the petitioner or plaintiff in that case had applied to the chancellor for leave to bring his action at law, which being denied, he was compelled to submit his case to the vice-chancellor. We reach this conclusion more readily from the fact that in Potter v. Spa Spring Brick Co. 47 N. J. Eq. 442, that court, in commenting on its earlier decision of Palys v. Jewett, said: “Palys v. Jewett was a proceeding by a person who had been injured by a railway train run by a receiver of the court, for redress in damages for such injury, and the opinion of the learned chief justice in the court of errors and appeals 'was based on the supposed fact (5 Stew. Eq. at pp. 318, 319,) that the petitioner had asked this court for leave to proceed at law, or at least for a trial by jury, and had been refused, and so was forced, against his will, to submit his case, in all its parts, to the determination of this court.”

There are other expressions in the Palys case from which it is clear that the learned chief justice had in mind cases where the party was drawn, against his will, to litigate legal questions in a court of chancery. It is stated in that case as a reason why the court would consider the case on its merits, that no appeal had been taken from the order refusing a trial by jury. Further commenting on the Palys case, the court wherein it was decided, ten years later, in Potter v. Spa Spring Brick Co. supra, said: “These cases (Palys and others) do not apply to a case where a party who has a cause of action against a receiver of this court comes voluntarily into the court and by his petition asks the court not to permit him to sue at law but to do him justice according to his own notion of what is just, submitting himself to the jurisdiction of the court and offering to do what the court deems equitable. And I am of opinion that in such a case it is competent for this court to hear and deal with his complaint, and that it does not lie in the mouth of its receiver to object to such assumption of jurisdiction.”

It thus appears that Palys v. Jewett, supra, when carefully examined in the light of the subsequent case by the same court, cannot be regarded as an authority supporting appellants in the case at bar. Here, appellees voluntarily came into the court of chancery, not demanding a jury, but offering to submit their cause to the court for decision. No question as to the jurisdiction of the court to hear the case was made by either party in the court below and no request was made for a jury. Under such circumstances the practice has been, so far as we are able to ascertain from the adjudicated cases, for the court wherein the receiver was appointed to take jurisdiction and determine all matters ancillary to the proceeding, regardless of the character) importance or complexity of the questions involved. When a court of chancery appoints a receiver to take charge of the property and affairs of a corporation or other person, the receiver becomes, in a sense, the mere ministerial agent of the court. His possession of the property is the court’s possession, and it has often been adjudicated a contempt of court to bring a suit, or otherwise interfere or intermeddle with the receivership affairs, unless leave is obtained for that purpose from the court wherein the receivership is being administered. So complete and exclusive is the jurisdiction of the court appointing the receiver, that it is held by many high authorities, among them the United States Supreme Court, (Barton v. Barbour, 104 U.S. 126" date_filed="1881-11-14" court="SCOTUS" case_name="Barton v. Barbour">104 U. S. 126,) that a judgment rendered against a receiver by another court without leave to bring the suit is void for the want of jurisdiction. This court has not gone to that extent. The rule established by this court in Mulcahey v. Strauss, 151 Ill. 70" date_filed="1894-06-13" court="Ill." case_name="Mulcahey v. Strauss">151 Ill. 70, is, that while it is a contempt of court to bring suit against a receiver without leave and the court appointing the receiver may attach for contempt or enjoin the proceeding, the failure to obtain leave does not oust the other courts of the State of jurisdiction. This rule is, however, subject to an exception in cases where the purpose of the suit is to deprive the receiver of his possession of the property of the receivership. In such cases the judgment is void unless leave is obtained to prosecute such suit. (St. Louis, Alton and Springfield Railroad Co. v. Hamilton, 158 Ill. 366" date_filed="1895-10-14" court="Ill." case_name="St. Louis, Alton & Springfield Railroad Co. v. Hamilton">158 Ill. 366.) When, in furtherance of justice, it becomes necessary for a court of equity to lay hold of the affairs of an insolvent or failing debtor and appoint a receiver to manage, operate ' or wind up his affairs, it would be a strange restriction upon the powers of such court if it could adjust only such questions arising in the course of the administration as are ordinarily cognizable in a court of equity. The jurisdiction of the court of equity having attached in the first instance to protect the equitable rights of creditors, it will be retained to do complete justice and fully administer upon the property, and in so doing a court of chancery may, if it sees proper to do so, adjust claims against the property arising either out of tort or contract and determine the amount thereof, and make all proper orders in respect to the time and manner of their payment.

We perceive no reason why the practice in this State should not conform to and be governed by the same principles that are applied in the Federal courts, and especially as the practice existed in those courts prior to the passage of the act of Congress approved March 3, 1887, which act permits suits at law to be brought against a receiver appointed by a Federal court without obtaining leave from the court making the appointment. The rule adhered to by the Supreme Court of the United States is thus stated by Mr. Justice Woods in Barton v. Barbour, supra: “Such is not the course and practice of courts of equity in administering a trust estate. The costs and expenses of the trust are allowed by- the court upon a reference to its own master. If the adjustment of the claim involves any dispute in regard to the alleged negligence of the receiver or any other fact upon which his liability depends, or in régard to the amount of damages sustained by a party, the court, in a proper case, in the exercise of its legal discretion, either of its own mo- ■ tion or on the demand of the party injured, may allow him to sue the receiver in a court of law or direct the trial of a feigned issue to settle the contested facts. The claim of the plaintiff, which is against the receiver for a personal injury sustained by her while, traveling on the railroad managed by him, stands on precisely the same footing as any of the expenses incurred in the execution of the trust, and must be adjusted and satisfied in the same way.” We find nothing in the adjudicated cases in this State opposed to the doctrine of Barton v. Barbour, and it is supported by the weight of authority outside this State and seems to be well grounded in sound reason.

Appellants insist that the effect of sustaining the jurisdiction of chancery in cases of this character is to deprive the party of the constitutional right to a trial by a jury. The answer to this contention is, that the right of trial by jury, considered as an absolute right, does not extend to cases of equitable jurisdiction. (5 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur. sec. 171, and cases there cited.) If appellants’ argument is sound on this point there would be many cases of equitable jurisdiction that courts of equity could not settle, because, as an incident to the main controversy, some matter would arise in which the parties would be entitled to a jury if the same matter should arise as a distinct transaction in a court of law. In bills to foreclose mortgages, for an accounting and relating to partnership affairs, and in many others, matters frequently arise for determination which, if they stood alone and disconnected with other circumstances which give a court of equity jurisdiction, would be properly cognizable in a court of law and triable by a jury. But it is the constant practice of courts of chancery to adjust all questions arising between the parties relating to the subject matter of the litigation which are brought into issue by the pleadings, regardless of whether such matter is legal or equitable in its character. We have no doubt of the jurisdiction of the circuit court of Cook county, sitting as a court in chancery, to hear the evidence and adjudicate upon appellees’ claim and to make a final order for its payment.

The other assignments of error do not require elaborate discussion. It is urged that the court erred in the exclusion and admission of testimony. This being a chancery proceeding, any error in this regard is unimportant if there is competent evidence in the record sufficient to support the decree and the evidence which ought to have been considered would not, if considered, change the result. (Treleaven v. Dixon, 119 Ill. 548" date_filed="1886-11-13" court="Ill." case_name="Treleaven v. Dixon">119 Ill. 548, and cases there cited.) Without intimating any dissatisfaction with the rulings of the trial court in this regard, we are content to rest our conclusion on the ground that the competent evidence in the record is quite sufficient to support the decree, and that no evidence excluded could have led to any different result.

Other assignments of error relate to questions of fact, such as that the decree is excessive and that there is a failure of the evidence to support the findings. While the finding of the court below, and its approval by the Appellate Court, are not, in a chancery proceeding, binding on this court, still we will not reverse a decree unless it is clearly against the evidence. After a careful examination of the evidence, aided by the exhaustive briefs and the oral arguments of counsel, we are unable to find any reason for disagreeing with the trial and Appellate Courts on the questions of fact involved.

Finding no error in this record the judgment of the Appellate Co'urt for the First District is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.