71 Miss. 260 | Miss. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
On December 22, A.D. 1891, the Bank of Greenville, doing-business in Greenville, Washington county, closed its doors, and soon thereafter a receiver of its assets was appointed by the chancery court of Washington county. By an act approved. February 10, 1892 (Laws, p. 46), the district attorney of the fourth judicial district was directed to intervene and assert the claim of the state of Mississippi, of the county of Washington and of the board of levee commissioners of the Mississippi levee district to the sum of $14,906.06, which sum had been deposited in said bank by the sheriff and tax-collector of Washington county. In obedience to the direc
There are decisions by several courts of authority sustaining the right of the petitioner to subject the fund in the hands of the receiver to the payment of the demand set up, in exclusion or postponement of the creditors of the bank, but, in our opinion, they are not sound in principle, and are departures from the well-settled course of decision. That there has been a development of the equitable rule of following trust property or money, and a consequent expansion of the right of the beneficiary, so that at this day relief would be afforded under circumstances in which it would foi-merly have been denied, is certainly true; but it is not true that the courts generally have abandoned the fundamental principle which controls in the application of the rule, and have substituted another and totally different one. In the cases cited by counsel for appellant, the principle has been misapplied or overlooked; in some of them it is apparently abandoned.
“Formerly the right of following trust-property depended upon the ability of identifying it, the equity attaching only to the property misapplied. This right was first extended to the proceeds of the property — namely, to that which was procured in place of it by exchange, purchase or sale. But if it became confused with other property of the same kind, so as not to be distinguishable, without fault on the part of the possessor, the equity was lost. Finally, however, it has been held as the better doctrine that confusion does not destroy the equity entirely, but converts it into a charge on
Mr. Pomeroy says: “Equity regards the cestui que trust, although without any legal title, and perhaps without any written evidence of interest, as the real owner, and entitled to all the rights and consequences of such ownership. . . . No change in the form of the trust-property, effected by the trustee, will impede the right of the beneficial owner to reach it and to compel its transfer, provided it can be identified as a distinct fund, and is not so. mingled up with other moneys or property that it cannot be specifically separated.” The principle which controls is that a court of equity is but lending its aid to the real owner in reclaiming his own, and that, regardless of mere changes in the form of the property, the equitable title remains unimpaired so long as the res (in whatever form it exists) may be traced, and that, when identification is lost by confusion, it will give such relief as is practicable by creating a charge upon the mass for the value of the ascertainable but inseparable part of the same which belonged to the cestui que trust. Wherever, in the application of these rules, the right of the beneficial owner may be preserved, the jurisdiction of the court of chancery is supported by both principle and authority, and while, as we have said, there are cases to be found in which the mere reception and use of the trust-fund by the owner of an estate has been held to be sufficient to warrant the court in fixing an equitable charge on the whole estate, these decisions are, in our opinion, not the law.
In McLeod v. Evans, 66 Wis., 401; Peak v. Ellicott, 30 Kans., 156; Plow Co. v. Lamp, 80 Iowa, 722; Boyer v. King, Id., 497; Harrison v. Smith, 83 Mo., 210; Stoller v. Coates, 88 Mo., 514; Meyers v. Board of Education (Kans.), 32 Pac. Rep., 658; Smith v. Combs, 49 N. J. Eq., 420; People v. Bank, 96 N. Y., 32, it seems to be held, though in some of the cases
In Smith v. Combs, 49 N. J. Eq., 420, the vice-chancellor-examined the facts tending to show that the trust-fund could be traced into certain bank stock which the testator had on hand at the time of his death, and which passed into the hands of his executor. If the conclusion of the court had rested upon this fact, found to be proved, no question under any modern authority would exist as to the right of the cestui que trust to subject that specific stock to his demand. But the vice-chancellor, proceeding, quotes from Lewin on Trusts as follows: “If a sole trustee dies insolvent and indebted to the trust-estate, the personal representative of the trustee has a right of retainer in respect of the debt to the trust, as against other creditors, and, on the cestui que trust requiring him to exercise such right of retainer, he is bound to do so.” If the learned chancellor had been considering the question of the right of the personal representative to retain for a debt due him, the extract from Lewin would have been appropriate, for Lewin, in support of his text, refers to Sander v. Heathfield, 19 L. R., Eq. Cas., 21, and Crowder v. Stewart, 16 Ch. Div., 368. An examination of these cases shows that the sole question involved in them was the right of retainer by the executor. In the latter case Malius, vice-chancellor, said: “I can only repeat what I said on a former occasion, and what almost every other judge has said — that the right of retainer is a relic of old law, not founded on justice, and working the greatest possible injustice.” Now, in Smith v. Combs, the vice-chancellor, treating this extract from Lewin
The principle of following trust-funds in equity is so fully discussed in Knatchbull v. Hallett, L. R., 15 Ch. Div., 696, that it is unnecessary to cite any other English case to show the circumstances under which the jurisdiction is exercised in that country. The supreme court of the United States exhaustively considered the question in Bank v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S., 54, which case may be considered the leading American authority. The rule announced in these cases, as we understand it, is that trust-property will be followed by a court of equity through all its transmutations and forms, and that whether its identity and individuality is preserved or is merged in a mass of which it forms a part, but that the right rests upon the equitable title of the beneficiary who, seeking to recover specific property or to fix a charge upon a mass, must trace his estate, and show that the specific thing claimed is in equity his property or that his estate has gone into and remains in the mass he seeks to charge. Peters v. Bain, 163 U. S., 670 ; Perry on Trusts, §§ 836, 841, 843 and notes, where many English and American authorities are cited. See also 2 Pomeroy’s Eq., §§ 1048-1058.
The principle of following trust funds or property has been frequently applied, not only where the strict relation of trustee and cestui que trust exists, but also against other persons occupying the relation of a quasi trustee, and extends to many cases of mere fiduciaries; and, though the relation between the parties may not be of such character as to give the court of equity exclusive jurisdiction. In such instances,'the jurisdiction of equity seems to spring from the analogy to strict trusts and from the inadequacy of legal remedies. 1 Pom.
As to the general assets of the Bank of Greenville, we think the petitioner is not entitled to' relief upon the facts stated in the petition, because it is not shown that the funds deposited by the tax-collector now form a part thereof in any form. The record does not disclose to what purpose the fund was applied. For any thing that appears to the contrary, it may have been lost iir trade, appropriated to the payment of pre-existing debts or paid out to the agents and officers of the bank for services rendered, and what, if any, portion was so lost or applied could probably not be ascertained with any degree of certainty. The court, in attempting to determine what portion, if any, of the trust-fund has been lost and what yet remains as invested in and represented by the existing assets, would, from necessity, act upon mere conjecture. It may be that as to the small sum of $368.70, which was found in the vaults of the bank, a different conclusion might have been reached if an issue had been taken on the plea instead of setting it for hearing on its sufficiency. The plea avers that “ it is impossible to trace into the hands of the receiver any of the money deposited by John L. Griffin, either as constituting a part of the said sum of $368.70 received by said receiver, or as constituting any part of the other assets of the bank received by said receiver.” By setting the pleas for hearing, the petitioner admitted the truth of the facts therein stated, and upon such facts the petitioner was not entitled to relief.
In Knatchbull v. Hallett, L. R., 15 Ch. Div., 696, it was held that where a trust-fund was traced into the personal
Decree affirmed.