44 Minn. 76 | Minn. | 1890
March 27, 1883, the railroad company, relator» executed to the firm of Bliss & Elliott a contract to convey to them 20,390.84 acres of land in the county of Carlton for the price of $153,147.63, secured by the notes of the firm, the last of which was-, to become due May 1, 1892. The contract contained conditions im respect to cutting and sawing into lumber the timber standing on the-land, which gave it its chief value. Upon compliance with the terms, of the contract, and payment of the purchase price, the vendor agreecL to convey the land; but in case of default the vendor was to have the-right, at its election, to declare the contract void. August 14, 1884» Bliss & Elliott, having become insolvent, made a general assignment,, under the laws of the state, of their property, for the benefit of all their creditors, to one Dodge. The assignment was filed in the district court in Hennepin county; and, Dodge having .failed to qualify, the court appointed as assignee or receiver, in bis stead, one Lyman, who accepted and qualified, and administered in part the insolvent, estate. At this time, as appears, the railroad company claimed the right, by reason of defaults on the part of the vendees, to declare the-contract to convey the real estate void. After some negotiation, all the parties interested — the assignors in the assignment, the assignee-Lyman, the trustee named, and all the creditors who had filed their claims, and the railroad company, which had not filed any claim—
On December 3,1884, Lyman, the assignee in insolvency, presented to the court a petition, accompanied with a copy of said trust-deed, stating that it had been agreed on by all the parties, and stating that in his opinion it would be for the best interests of all parties that the insolvent estate should be administered under some form of voluntary trust, and presented also a communication from the railroad company, consenting that a trustee be appointed by the court to take and administer said trust. Upon a hearing had, and the consent of the parties interested, the court ordered the assignee to execute the •deed; and, he and the other parties having executed it, the court allowed his accounts and discharged him. The trustee entered- upon the discharge of the trust, and has ever since continued in it. In
The relators seek to sustain the writ on two grounds: First, the-respondent, or the district court in Hennepin county, had no jurisdiction to entertain the application for the restraining order, nor to-issue said order, nor of the proceedings to try the parties for the alleged contempt; second, by the appeal from the restraining order with the stay-bond, the effect of the order was suspended pending the-appeal, and the court in Hennepin county was ousted of further jurisdiction.
In the case of trusts created by contract, the jurisdiction of the court to enforce the duties of the trustees, and protect the interests of thé cestuis que trustent, is acquired only by proceeding in a civil action. Such a trust is not a proceeding in court. It is not within the jurisdiction until the parties are brought into court by process such as the statutes provide in civil actions. This is not disputed. But it is claimed, in effect, that by the filing of the assignment, and the appointment by the court of Lyman as assignee, the estate of the insolvent debtors was brought within the jurisdietion and under the control of the court, and that the assignee had no power to convey the property to the trustee except by order of the court, and the trustee derives his title through the action of the court, and therefore the trustee holds the property, as the assignee did, as the officer of the court, and he is subject to the same control of, and entitled to the same protection from, the court as the assignee, had the conveyance to the trustee not been made. Which amounts to about this: That the creation of the trust was part of the proceedings in insolvency, and that the trust, and the holding of the title by the trustee for the purpose of it, and whatever he may do in execution of it, are a continuation of those proceedings. If not a contin-
The respondent, in his memorandum of decision, lays much stress upon the proposition that the title to the property was in the court, and that the trustee must derive his title through the assignee’s deed made by direction of the court, from which it seems to be inferred that he holds the title for the court, and as its officer. Such would, undoubtedly, be the ease, had the assignee been directed to convey to another as successor to his powers and duties, whether designated “assignee,” “receiver,” or “trustee;” for by such a conveyance the court would not let go its hold upon the property. But such would not be the case with a conveyance by direction of the court to a purchaser, though he, also, would derive his title through the order of the court. No question can be made of the authority of the insolvent court, with the consent of all the parties interested, to restore the property to the debtor, or to direct it to be conveyed to the creditors in satisfaction of their debts, or to be conveyed to them, or to any one agreed upon by all the parties, to be disposed of, and the proceeds applied upon the debts. In other words, the court may permit the parties to compromise on such terms as they may agree upon. That was all that was done in the insolvency proceedings of Bliss & Elliott. The parties compromised by agreeing that, in discharge of the debts, the property should be transferred to a trustee of their choice, with powers and duties agreed on by them such as do not pertain to an assignee or receiver in insolvency, and such as the court could not vest in nor impose upon him; and to this the court, by its order, consented. And, thus having surrendered the property to the parties, there were not only no debts for it to see paid, but no property for it to administer under the insolvent law. It thereupon dis
Let the writ of prohibition absolute issue.