1. From the decree of a state court rendered in 1874, an appeal
was in 1876 taken to the supreme court, where, in 1877, the decree
was reversed and the cause remanded
"with leave to both parties to amend pleadings as they may be
advised, and to take testimony, and for an account to be taken in
accordance with the views contained in the opinion"
of the court. On the day after the mandate was received in the
court of original jurisdiction, the defendant filed his petition,
praying that, by reason of the citizenship of the parties, the
cause be removed to the proper circuit court of the United States.
Held that neither the date when nor the stage of the cause
at which the petition was filed precluded the removal under the Act
of March 3, 1875, c. 137.
Jifkins v.
Sweetzer, 10l U.S. 177, distinguished.
2. A. and B., his wife, conveyed her separate property to a
trustee upon trust for her use during her life, and in remainder in
fee for the use of her children living at the time of her death.
The deed reserves to her the power to sell and exchange the
property, and declares
"that the trustee is to permit A. as agent for the trustee, and
as agent and trustee for said B. during her life, and as agent and
trustee for her children after her death, to superintend, possess,
manage, and control the property for the benefit of all
concerned."
The trustee was not to be responsible for the acts or conduct of
A. The latter was, however, for the purposes of the deed, to be a
co-trustee, but neither had power to charge the property for any
future liability beyond the support of A. during his life. A.
survived B. and died insolvent. A bill was filed against the
trustee and the child of B., alleging that upon A.'s order the
complainant had advanced moneys and furnished supplies which were
used for the benefit of the trust estate, and praying that it be
subjected to the payment of the claim.
Held that the bill
was properly dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the court.
Hewitt, Norton & Company, the appellants, filed their bill
in equity, April 17, 1869, in the Chancery Court of Washington
County, Mississippi, against Phelps and wife, the appellees, and
Jonathan Pearce, praying that certain real estate in that state,
which had been conveyed by Sarah Vick to Pearce upon
Page 105 U. S. 394
certain trusts, and of which Mrs. Phelps was the sole
beneficiary, be charged with certain sums, which the appellants
allege they had advanced to the trustee, and for which they claimed
that the trust estate was liable.
The appellees were served with process; Pearce was brought in by
publication. The cause having been put at issue, the bill was, for
want of equity, dismissed on final hearing, Nov. 7, 1874. From this
decree an appeal was taken, but not until March 30, 1876, when it
was thus removed to the supreme court of the state. It was disposed
of in that Court May 21, 1877, by a decree reversing the decree of
the court below, and remanding the cause,
"with leave to both parties to amend pleadings as they may be
advised, and to take testimony, and for an account to be taken in
accordance with the views contained in the opinion"
of the court, which is to be found reported under the name of
Norton v. Phelps, 54 Miss. 467. The mandate of the supreme court
was filed in the Chancery Court of Washington County, June 7, 1877,
and on the same day a petition for the removal of the cause to the
circuit court of the United states for that district was presented
by Phelps and wife, on the ground that at the time of the
commencement of the suit, they were citizens of Kentucky, and had
continued so to be at all times since, the plaintiffs during the
same period being citizens of Louisiana, which was granted, bond
given and approved, and transcript filed in the circuit court on
Aug. 4, 1877. On Nov. 20, 1877, the appellants moved to remand the
cause, which the circuit court refused to do. This ruling of the
court is first assigned for error under the present appeal.
The contention of the appellants is that the circuit court had
no jurisdiction to proceed with the cause, because, first, the suit
was not pending at the time of the passage of the act of March 3,
1875, c. 137, nor thereafter brought, and therefore not within the
purview of that act, and second because, at the time the removal
was effected, the trial of the cause in the state court had already
taken place, or at least begun and was in progress, whereas the act
requires that the petition for removal shall be filed before the
trial thereof.
In our opinion neither of these positions is tenable.
Whether,
Page 105 U. S. 395
after final decree and before appeal is perfected, a purchaser
of the subject of the suit is affected with the notice of
lis
pendens may be a question, although a distinction in this
respect is made by some of the authorities between an appeal in
equity and a writ of error, the latter being considered a new
proceeding, not pending until service of citation, while the former
is regarded as a step in the progress of the cause. But, in
contemplation of the act above mentioned, there are and can be but
two classes of suits, one those pending at the time of its passage,
the other those thereafter brought. Of course, a suit terminated
has ceased to be a suit. Confessedly the present is a suit, and
could not be said, at the time the act was passed, to have ended,
although the decree was final in respect to the court of chancery
which had rendered it, and would have become so between the parties
if no appeal had been taken within the time limited by law. But
until that period had elapsed it was still a
lis pendens,
in the sense that the party against whom the decree had been
rendered had the right by an appeal further to prosecute it. It was
not the beginning of a new suit; it was but one additional step in
the progress of an existing one.
The second ground of exception to the removal of the cause is
maintained in argument upon the authority of
Jifkins v.
Sweetzer, 102 U. S. 177; but
that case does not govern this. That decision turned upon the fact
that the judgment of the supreme court of the state
"disposed of the case finally upon its merits, and nothing
remained to be done but to continue the hearing already begun until
the necessary accounts could be taken, and the details of a final
decree settled."
But here, although the Supreme Court of Mississippi passed in
its opinion upon the merits of the case, as disclosed by the record
then before it, nevertheless, in remanding the cause, "with leave
to both parties to amend pleadings as they may be advised, and to
take testimony," the whole matter was open and at large, as though
the cause had never been at issue, and the clause providing "for an
account to be taken in accordance with the views contained in the
opinion rendered herein," must be understood as qualified by the
previous part of the order, and as obligatory upon the Court of
Chancery only as a declaration of general
Page 105 U. S. 396
principles, to be applied as the facts should thereafter appear.
It was not a judgment which operated as an estoppel between the
parties. It was neither final nor conclusive. In point of fact,
after the removal of the cause into the circuit court the parties
availed themselves of the leave granted, and filed new and amended
pleadings. The cause then stood in that court just as it would have
stood in the state court, but for the removal;
i.e., for a
rehearing upon the merits, and not for the purpose of merely
executing the judgment of the appellate court, as in the case
Duncan v. Gegan, 101 U. S. 810.
Being properly removed, the parties are subject to that
administration of law which is approved in the judicial tribunals
of the United states, whose jurisdiction is thus invoked, as was
held in
King v. Worthington, 104 U. S.
44.
The circuit court having acquired jurisdiction, on final
hearing, upon demurrer, dismissed the bill. We are now required by
the appeal to review that decree.
The allegations upon which the alleged equity of the appellants
is supposed to arise are, in substance, as follows:
On May 4, 1850, Sarah Vick and Henry W. Vick, her husband,
executed and delivered to Jonathan Pearce a deed, conveying to him
all the property which she then owned as separate property,
including a plantation, slaves, utensils, and stock in Washington
County, Mississippi, the subject of the present suit, upon trust,
nevertheless, for her sole and separate use during her life, and in
remainder in fee for the use of her children living at the time of
her death. It was provided that the proceeds of the property in
Washington and Issaquena Counties, and such parts of it as might be
sold, should be applied to the payment of a debt due to the Bank of
the United states, after the payment of which, the proceeds, over
what was necessary to support the plantation and family, were to be
invested for the benefit of all her children living at the time of
her death. It was also provided that she should retain possession
of the property during her life, with power to sell or exchange any
part, but any property received in exchange to be subject to the
trusts; "provided further," the deed continued,
"that said trustee is to permit the said Henry W. Vick, as agent
for said trustee, and as agent and trustee for said Sarah
Page 105 U. S. 397
Vick, during her life, and as agent and trustee for her children
after her death, to superintend, possess, manage, and control said
property for the benefit of all concerned; said Henry W. Vick is to
have power to sell and exchange said property after the death of
said Sarah Vick, and apply the proceeds to the payment of the debt
due to the trustee of the Bank of the United states, or, if the
said debt is paid, the proceeds of the debt to be reinvested and be
subject to the trusts of this deed."
Provision is then made for applying a fund due to her from
property in the hands of Colonel Durden, held by him in trust for
creditors of Colonel Vick, to the payment of certain debts due from
Henry W. Vick, but, it is added,
"all the debts (aforesaid) to be paid by Colonel Vick if he is
able to do so, and it is only in case he is not able that it is to
be paid out of said fund; provided further that said property is
always to stand charged for the payment of such amount for the
liberal support and maintenance of the said Henry W. Vick during
his natural life."
The concluding clause in the deed is as follows:
"My intention is that said Henry W. Vick shall be regarded for
the purposes of this deed, not merely as an agent, but also a
co-trustee, and I desire he may be required to give no security for
the performance of his duties, and the said Jonathan Pearce is not
in any manner to be responsible for the acts or conduct of said
Henry W. Vick."
Henry W. Vick carried on the business of the plantation until he
died in 1861, when Pearce, as trustee, took possession of the trust
property; Mrs. Vick, having previously died, leaving no issue
surviving her, except Mrs. Phelps, one of the appellees.
Hewitt, Norton, & Co., commission merchants in New Orleans,
claim a balance due to them from Pearce, as trustee, of $7,631.16,
which they insist is a charge in equity upon the trust estate. From
statements of the account, contained in the bill and amendments and
exhibits, it appears that the whole of this balance resulted from
transactions with H. W. Vick, while conducting the business of the
plantation, prior to April 25, 1861. In a petition addressed by
Pearce to the judge of the Probate Court of Washington County, Nov.
28, 1865, and made
Page 105 U. S. 398
an exhibit to the original bill, he states those transactions as
resulting in a balance of $6,145.99, due to the appellants, which,
with $4,231.82, accruing from transactions with himself as trustee,
make $10,377.81, the amount of the balance of the account which
they state as due them June 30, 1862. The subsequent credits were
all for moneys received from Pearce, and reduced the balance, Oct.
3, 1866, to the amount claimed in the bill, being less than the
amount due at the death of Vick, with interest added. This analysis
of the accounts shows that the whole claim is covered by the
transactions with Vick, and is not embraced in those had with
Pearce, all the debts incurred by the latter being cancelled by
payments made by him. It is alleged, however, that the balance due
at Vick's death was carried forward in account with Pearce as a
charge against him, with his consent and approval; and that when he
took possession of the trust estate he received and used for the
benefit of the estate, clothing, provisions, and other supplies
which had been furnished or paid for by the firm upon Vick's
orders, and it is charged in the bill
"that all the items charged in your orators' said account for
money loaned and supplies furnished were necessary and proper under
the deed of Sarah Vick, and the said money and supplies were
applied to the use and benefit of the trust estate, and upon a
settlement of the accounts of the said Jonathan Pearce he would
have had the right to charge the same against the said estate, and
the balance due to him by said estate would have been and would now
be, equal in amount to the debt now claimed by your orators,"
&c. It is also alleged that Henry W. Vick, at the date of
the deed, was a man of no means, property, or credit; that he
continued in the same condition until his death; and that Pearce,
when he took possession, was in the same financial condition, and a
resident citizen of the state of Kentucky.
At the death of Mrs. Vick her daughter, now Mrs. Phelps, was
unmarried and a minor, and Jonathan Pearce became her guardian. On
Nov. 28, 1865, he filed his final account as guardian and trustee
in the Probate Court of Washington County, showing a balance due to
the estate from him of $2,939.40, and reporting, as heretofore
stated, the account
Page 105 U. S. 399
between himself, as trustee, and the appellants. His account as
guardian was settled by an order of the court in January, 1866, and
he received credit for an allowance by way of compensation for his
services in excess of the balance due from him. It is charged in
the bill that at this settlement Pearce admitted the balance to be
due to the appellants as claimed, and that he surrendered
possession to Phelps and wife upon an understanding and agreement
with them that the debt should be paid out of the cotton crop then
growing on the lands.
It is manifest that the deed of trust from Mrs. Vick to Jonathan
Pearce does not confer upon him or upon Henry W. Vick any power to
charge the estate directly with the payment of any sums of money
for any purpose whatever, with the single exception of a personal
support and maintenance for the latter. The grantor charges it with
the payment of certain specified obligations, and there is no
evidence of an intention to permit it to be encumbered by the
trustee or by Vick.
It is to be noted also that Jonathan Pearce is a trustee merely
of the title, without any active duties in regard to the estate.
The power to sell or exchange during his own lifetime the grantor
reserves to herself, and after her death directs that it be
exercised solely by her husband surviving her. All powers to
superintend, possess, manage, and control the property are
conferred exclusively upon Henry W. Vick, "as agent for said
trustee and as agent and trustee for said Sarah Vick during her
life, and as agent and trustee for her children after her death;"
but to be regarded for the purposes of this deed, not merely as an
agent, but also as a co-trustee. "And the said Jonathan Pearce is
not in any manner to be responsible for the acts or conduct of said
Henry W. Vick." So that, while Pearce was trustee of the title
merely, Vick was a co-trustee, having no title or estate in the
property, but charged with all the active duties of management.
After the death of Mrs. Vick, Pearce's sole duty in regard to the
trust estate was to convey the title to the surviving children. By
these provisions the power of either to create a charge upon the
trust estate seems to be effectually excluded.
It follows also from these provisions of the deed of trust, and
the facts recited as to the origin and nature of the
appellants'
Page 105 U. S. 400
account, that no equitable charge against the estate can be
established through the supposed liability of Pearce. It is quite
plain that he was never personally answerable for the obligations
created by Vick, and his alleged assumption of the account may be
rejected as incompetent to create any such liability upon his part.
Neither his admission nor that of the appellees could, in
contemplation of law, create any charge upon the estate; and, as
trustee, he could not establish it as necessary to his own
exoneration.
The appellants, then, can reach the estate only, if at all,
through their claim against Vick. For this purpose he may be
regarded as an independent trustee, authorized to do whatever was
necessary and proper in the performance of his duty to superintend
and manage the trust property. He was undoubtedly personally bound
for all his contracts made in that character. The question is, does
his insolvency create an equity in behalf of the appellants, to
reach the estate, for the benefit of which the advances are
admitted to have been made?
On this point the law prevailing in Mississippi, and governing
the case, was well declared, we have no doubt, by the supreme court
of that state in
Norton v. Phelps, 54 Miss. 467, 471:
"In the case of
Clopton v. Gholson, 53
id.
466, we announced the principles applicable to this case. These
are, that persons dealing with a trustee must look to him for
payment of their demands, and that, ordinarily, the creditor has no
right to resort to the trust estate to enforce his demand for
advances made or services rendered for the benefit of the trust
estate. But, while this is the rule, there are exceptions to it;
and where expenditures have been made for the benefit of the trust
estate, and it has not paid for them, directly or indirectly, and
the estate is either indebted to the trustee or would have been if
the trustee had paid, or would be if he should pay the demand, and
the trustee is insolvent or nonresident, so that the creditor
cannot recover his demand from him, or will be compelled to follow
him to a foreign jurisdiction, the trust estate may be reached
directly by a proceeding in chancery."
The ground and reason for this rule are, that the trustee has an
equity of his own, for reimbursement for all the necessary expenses
to which he has been put in the administration of his
Page 105 U. S. 401
trust, which he can enforce by means of the legal title to the
trust estate vested in him; and that his creditor, in the cases
supposed of his insolvency or absence from the jurisdiction, may
resort to the equity of the trustee, upon a principle of equitable
substitution or attachment, for his own security. It would not
apply against the trust estate in this case for the enforcement of
a debt created by Vick, for the reason that he had no title to the
property; but adopting it and applying it as though he had, it is
equally plain that the appellants have established no right to the
relief prayed for. What, at the time of his death, may have been
the state of the account between the trust estate and Henry W. Vick
does not appear. There is no allegation on the subject in the
record. For aught that appears, he may have had in his hands means
enough belonging to the estate to satisfy all demands against it;
he may indeed have been largely in debt to it. The case, in any of
its aspects, clearly is not within the rule, and the effort to
reach the estate through Pearce, instead of Vick, for the reasons
already stated, must fail.
These are the grounds upon which the circuit court proceeded in
the decree complained of. We find no error in the record, and the
decree is accordingly.
Affirmed.