117 Mass. 91 | Mass. | 1875
This case presents the question whether when a trustee has filed his answer upon oath, either denying that he has any goods, effects or credits of the principal defendant in his possession, or admitting his liability for a certain sum, and no further interrogatories or allegations are filed to or against him, no claimant of the fund intervenes, and the litigation proceeds between the principal parties for several terms before the entry of a formal judgment charging or discharging the trustee upon his answer, the trustee is entitled to costs after the term at which his answer was filed.
This is an important question of practice, the decision of which requires a careful examination of the statutes and cases upon the subject.
The St. of 1794, c. 65, § 3, provided that if any supposed trustee should come into court at the first term, and declare that he had no goods, effects or credits of the principal defendant in his hands or possession, and submit himself to an examination upon oath, and upon such examination his declaration should appear tc the court to be true, “ the court shall award him his legal costs,
While that statute was in force, it was adjudged by this court that when a trustee appeared at the first term and admitted funds, and no interrogatories were afterwards filed, and the trustee was not again called upon, and the litigation proceeded altogether between the principal parties, the trustee was not entitled to costs after the first term ; for the reason, as stated by Chief Justice Shaw, that “ it would be unjust in principle, and required by no necessary or reasonable construction of the statute, that a trustee should be allowed costs during the whole of a protracted litigation, between other parties, in relation to which he has no concern and can incur no responsibility.” Hoyt v. Sprague, 12 Pick. 407, 415.
There is nothing in the later statutes or adjudications, which affects the force of that decision as a precedent, although there are some obiter dicta, which, at first sight and without regard to the facts of the cases in which they were uttered, might seem to have such a tendency.
In Crocker v. Baker, 18 Pick. 407, 413, in which discharged trustees were allowed full costs taxed according to the common fee bill, the defendant had been defaulted, and the case had been continued in court for the sole purpose of determining whether the trustees were or were not chargeable; and Mr. Justice Morton, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “ When trustees are charged or discharged, they cease to have any further interest in the suit, and afterwards they can in no light be regarded as parties or have any claim for costs.” His support of this proposition by a reference to Hoyt v. Sprague shows that he meant to include the case of trustees appearing on the face of their answers to be charged or discharged; just as the St. of 1794, c. 65, § 5, spoke of those who had “ discharged themselves upon oath of being trustees.”
By the Rev. Sts. c. 109, §§ 49-51, it was enacted that “ if any person, summoned as trustee, shall appear at the first term, and submit himself to an. examination upon oath, as before provided,
In Holbrook v. Waters, 19 Pick. 354, in which,- as in Crocker v. Baker, the litigation was upon the question whether the trustees were or were not chargeable, it was observed by Chief Justice Shaw that the Revised Statutes differed from the St. of 1794 : 1st. in giving costs at all events and in all cases to trustees who appeared at the first term, the old statute having included only those who discharged themselves upon their answers ; 2d. in allowing them, if charged as trustees, to deduct their costs from the funds in their hands — which they could not do before; 3d. in not limiting the provision for an allowance beyond the taxable costs to trustees summoned out of their county. Compare Cleveland v. Clap, 5 Mass. 201; Adams v. Cordis, 8 Pick. 260. Those changes fully justified the remark of the Chief Justice, that “ there is certainly a strong inducement, on the part of trustees, as the law now stands, to keep the cause pending.” And he cautiously reserved his opinion upon the question whether the Revised Statutes had affected the point decided in Hoyt v. Sprague.
Upon consideration of the provisions of both statutes, the court is of opinion that no change was made in this respect. The substitution of the words “ costs for travel and attendance,” for the more general phrase “ legal costs,” appears to have been intended to define the items of costs which might be allowed, and to have no bearing upon the time during which the trustee should be entitled to costs. And the reasons, upon which Hoyt v. Sprague was decided, apply under the Revised Statutes with equal force to the case of a trustee who is discharged upon his answers; and with increased force to the case of a trustee who is charged, and deducts his costs out of the funds in his hands, whereby the defendant,'who has no control over the time when formal judgment shall be rendered on the trustee’s answer, might have the whole fund exhausted by allowing the costs of a merely formal attendance of the trustee.
In Croxford v. Massachusetts Cotton Mills, 15 Gray, 70, a claim ant of the fund had intervened, and the question whether the
In the General Statutes, the only changes which regard the question before us are derived from the new practice act of 1852. That act substituted term fees in place of costs for attendance. St. 1852, o. 312, § 81. And the Gen. Sts. e. 142, § 60, accordingly substitute “ travel and" term fees,” in the reenactment of the Rev. Sts. e. 109, § 49. The Rev. Sts. o. 109, §§ 11-13, like the St. of 1794, c. 65, § 3, allowed the first answer of the trustee to be general in form and not under oath; and did not prescribe the term of filing that answer, nor the time or manner of his further examination. The St. of 1852,ee. 312, §§ 56, 57, and the Gen. Sts. c. 142, §§ 8, 9, require any person summoned as trustee to appear and file his answer under oath at the return term; and in such answer to disclose, as plainly, fully and particularly as practicable, what goods, effects or credits, if any, of the principal defendant, were in the hands or possession of the supposed trustee; and oblige him to answer further, only after seven days’ notice of the filing of interrogatories by the plaintiff in the clerk’s office. If the trustee does not seasonably file his first answer, he is not entitled to costs. Phillips v. Flanders, 14 Gray, 453.
There is nothing in these provisions,which manifests any intention in the Legislature to extend the time during which costs shall be allowed to a trustee, who has filed an answer under oath, positively and unqualifiedly denying or admitting funds in his hands, and has had no notice of any purpose of the plaintiff to examine him further or to allege any facts not covered by his answer.
In Morrison v. McDermott, 6 Allen, 122, as in Croxford v. Massachusetts Cotton Mills, above cited, the intervention of a claimant deferred the period at which the liability of the trustee could be determined; upon referring to the papers on file, it appears that an assignment to the claimant was set forth in the answer of the trustee ; and the point decided was that the Gen. Sts. c. 142, § 73, reenacting the Rev. Sts. a. 109, § 21, sub