323 Mass. 508 | Mass. | 1948
The judge of probate has reserved and reported for our consideration certain questions arising upon the eighth to twelfth accounts, inclusive, óf the trustees under the will of Benjamin Sewall, late of Weston. These questions relate to the sufficiency of notice given by publication and mailing by registered mail to certain persons and to the appointment of a guardian ad litem.
The evidence is not reported. Consequently the only facts for our consideration are those found by the judge. The findings of a guardian ad litem in his report to the Probate Court, which is printed with the record, are not binding upon any persons not represented by him. To what extent the judge might accept them as admissions of the persons represented by the guardian ad litem need not now be decided. A guardian ad litem is a person appointed by the court “to appear and act” in litigation in behalf of a “minor or person under disability, or a person not ascertained or not in being.” G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 201, § 34. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 206, § 24, as now appearing in St. 1938, c. 154, § 1. He is not a trier of fact like a master, whose findings, after confirmation by the court, become the factual basis of the decree. The guardian’s findings have no authoritative standing as establishing the facts in the case. The making of impartial authoritative findings would be inconsistent with the duty of the guardian to represent the parties whose interests he is appointed to protect. American Bonding Co. v. American Surety Co. 127 Va. 209, 218-219. The subject matter of his findings must?, at least as to parties not represented by the guardian ad litem, be proved by evidence
The facts found by the judge, in so far as material to the questions reported, are these: A citation was issued upon the accounts directing that notice be given by delivering or mailing a copy of the citation by registered mail to all persons interested, and that if service should be made by registered mail, unless it appeared that all persons interested had received actual notice, by publishing a copy once each week for three successive weeks in a designated newspaper. The publication was made as directed, and copies of the citation were mailed by registered mail “to all persons interested (issue of the testator) who had vested interests in the estate but notices were not mailed to nearly fifty issue having only contingent interests (many of whom are minors) nor were notices mailed to the heirs at law (unknown in name and number) of the testator’s five brothers and sisters and his son-in-law (all deceased) who by the terms of the will would take the principal in the event of failure of issue of the testator.” “Following the return day, the attorney for the accountants filed a return of service certifying to publication and to mailing by registered mail to all persons having vested
The first question reported we interpret to be whether the court had full jurisdiction to proceed to a decree upon the notice given.
The statute governing the notice required upon the allowance of accounts in the Probate Court is G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 206, § 24, as now appearing in St. 1938, c. 154, § 1. That statute provides that “such notice as the court may order shall be given to all persons interested,” and that “If the
In our opinion, on this record, the accountants have failed to show notice sufficient to warrant the court in proceeding upon the accounts. The statute required notice to “all persons interested,” without exception. The citation specified the manner of giving that notice as by delivery or by mailing by registered mail a copy to “all persons interested” and by publication, unless all persons interested received actual notice. A return showing publication but showing mailing limited to persons having vested interests is insufficient on its face. The facts found are in accord with the return and do not better it. There is nothing in the statute or in the terms of the citation that limits the notice or the mailing to persons having vested interests. There is nothing in reason to justify such a limitation. Persons having contingent interests are persons interested in the trust and in the accounts (Neafsey v. Chincholo, 225 Mass. 12; Jordan v. Turnbull, 242 Mass. 317, 320; McKay v. Audubon Society, Inc. 318 Mass. 482, 485), unless indeed such interests are so utterly unsubstantial as to amount to nothing more than “a film of mist.” Copeland v. Wheelwright, 230 Mass. 131, 137. Newburyport Society for Relief of Aged Women v. President & Fellows of Harvard College, 310 Mass. 438, 445. The interests of persons having contingent interests may be vastly greater than those of persons having vested interests, and may be readily assignable. Putnam v. Story, 132 Mass. 205. Butterfield v. Reed, 160 Mass. 361. Contingent interests may be such that they can be reached and applied in payment of debts. Clarke v. Fay, 205 Mass. 228. The contingencies upon which they depend may have become so nearly certain of fulfilment that such interests are practically equivalent to vested interests. That when the Legislature, in redrafting § 24, used the words “all persons interested” it had in mind persons having contingent as well as those having vested interests appears from the very next sentence, where it is provided that if “the interest of a
The duty imposed by,the citation to mail copies “to all persons interested” is, of course, as broad as the duty imposed by the statute to give “such notice as the court may order” “to all persons interested,” subject, however, to a reasonable construction of the citation itself as hereinafter explained. Porotto v. Fiduciary Trust Co. 321 Mass. 638, 642-643. See Bell v. Swift, 322 Mass. 145. The forms of citations established under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 215, § 30, have the force of law. Baker v. Blood, 128 Mass. 543, 545.
The argument that notice is- required only to persons
It is also argued that we should apply here the principle applied in suits in equity that it is not necessary to join every interested individual if persons fairly representative of every interested class have been joined. See Hills v. Putnam, 152 Mass. 123; Minot v. Purrington, 190 Mass. 336, 340. Passing over the difficulties that there is nothing in the present record from which we can' determine whether or not all classes of persons interested are adequately represented by those notified, and that the allowance of the accounts of trustees appointed by the Probate Court is not, in spite of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 206, § 4, a suit in equity for all procedural purposes (Lannin v. Buckley, 268 Mass. 106, 109), we are at once confronted by the statutory requirement in § 24 of such notice as the court may order “to all persons interested.” We are unable to reconcile this requirement and the command of the citation with the idea of class representation.
The construction which we give to G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 206, § 24, as appearing in St. 1938, c. 154, § 1, does not., in our view, impose an unreasonable burden upon fiduciaries. The command of the statute that notice be given “to all persons interested” admits of no exception, but the manner in which that notice is to be given is determined by the citation, and the citation must be reasonably construed. It does not demand the impossible. It is impossible to mail a copy of a citation to a person unborn, and as a practical matter it is impossible to mail one to a person whose identity cannot with reasonable diligence be ascertained. The citation does not require that either of these things be done. The court in framing the citation no doubt had in mind that there would be instances where the requirement of mailing would be ineffective and for that very reason added the requirement of publication. Publication is a recognized method of giving notice of a judicial proceeding. Tyler v. Judges of the Court of Registration, 175 Mass. 71, 78-79. Long v. Simmons Female College, 218 Mass. 135, 140-141.
One or two other questions have been argued or suggested in the briefs, but they do not seem to be included in the questions intended to be reported and are not adequately presented on the record before us. We do not know what
The cause is remanded to the Probate Court. A supplementary citation is to be issued for service by delivery or by registered mail upon all persons interested as hereinbefore defined who have not already been so served. Upon return of such service a guardian ad litem is to be appointed, or the appointment of the present guardian ad litem confirmed,
for all minors or persons under disability upon whom such additional service has been made. Thereafter the cause is to be reheard.
So ordered.
Emphasis supplied.
The briefs of the accountants and of <the guardian ad litem are framed upon the assumption that the trust here involved is the same as that before this court in Young v. Jackson, 321 Mass. 1.
This statute has been altered materially since the discussion in Dexter v. Cotting. See now G. L. (Ter. Ed.) e. 205, § 5, as amended by St. 1941, C. 45, § 2.