A bill of interpleader will not lie if the complainant sets up
an interest in the subject matter of the suit and the relief sought
relates to that interest.
A bill in the nature of a bill of interpleader cannot be
maintained unless the relief sought is equitable relief.
A bill in equity will not lie if it is in substance and effect
an ejectment bill, and if the relief it seeks can be obtained at
law by an action in ejectment.
This was a suit in equity commenced by defendant in error as
plaintiff below, against persons in possession of a tract of land
in Washington and claiming title, to have a trust declared in the
plaintiff below as to said land, and the legal beneficiaries under
the trust ascertained. The defendants below denied the trust and
set up adverse title. The decree below was in favor of the
plaintiff there, from which the defendants below appealed.
MR. JUSTICE WOODS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill in this case was filed by John W. Ebbinghaus, the
appellee, as trustee for the German Calvanist Society and their
legal representatives. His appointment as trustee was brought about
in the following manner:
On July 16, 1877, August Sievers, Edward Kolb, and Ludwig
Freund, as trustees of the First German Reformed Church of
Washington, District of Columbia, filed their petition in the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in which they represented
that on June 28, 1793, one D. Reintzel held, as trustee, in trust
for the German Calvanist Society, lot 9, in square 80, of the City
of Washington; that the German Reformed Church was the legal
counterpart and successor of the German Calvanist Society, and that
the
Page 110 U. S. 569
petitioners were the only beneficiaries of the trust estate;
that Reintzel, the trustee, was dead, and no successor had been
appointed. They therefore prayed that John W. Ebbinghaus, the
pastor of the First Reformed Church of the City of Washington,
might be appointed trustee, as the successor of Reintzel.
On the day on which the petition was filed, the Supreme Court of
the District, without notice or service of process, appointed
Ebbinghaus trustee in the place of Reintzel, to hold, as trustee,
the said property "for the German Calvanist Society and their legal
successors, in accordance with the intent of Jacob Funk, the
original donor."
Ebbinghaus believed, for he so testifies, that the real estate
in question was the property of the First Reformed Church. When
giving his deposition in this case, he was asked, "Do you consider
that this lot belongs to your church?" His answer was, "Yes sir,
most emphatically."
With this belief, on the day next after his appointment as
trustee, and in pursuance of an understanding entered into with the
trustees of his church before his appointment, he filed the bill in
this case.
It alleged that the appellee, Ebbinghaus, was the trustee and
legal owner of lot 9, in square 80, in the City of Washington, in
the District of Columbia; that the property mentioned was given in
trust by one Jacob Funk to D. Reintzel, as trustee, to hold for the
use and benefit of the German Calvanist Society, and that he held
the property as the successor to D. Reintzel, deceased, for said
society and their legal representatives, in accordance with the
intent of Jacob Funk, the original donor.
The bill further averred that Ebbinghaus held the property in
trust for the legal successors and beneficiaries of the trust,
whoever they might be, and was ready to pay the rents, issues, and
profits arising therefrom into court, to be disposed of as the
court might direct, and faithfully perform the duties of trustee,
and that he brought his bill to have the court decide who were the
legal beneficiaries under said trust.
The bill further averred that the defendants John G. Killian,
John Schenck, and John Schneider, trustees of the German
Page 110 U. S. 570
Evangelical Concordia Church of the City of Washington, claimed
to be the legal beneficiaries and entitled to the rents and profits
of the trust property for religious purposes, and had already
received and converted to their own use a large sum of money, the
rents of the property, without the consent of Reintzel or his legal
representative or of the appellee.
The bill also averred that the defendants August Sievers, Edward
Kolb, and Ludwig Freund, trustees of the First Reformed Church of
the City of Washington, claimed to be the legal successors of the
German Calvanist Society, and the legal beneficiaries of the trust,
and entitled to the rents, profits, and estate of and in said
property, and were "expected to sue the complainant for the
recovery of their supposed rights."
The prayer of the bill was for an account of the rents and
profits of the trust estate received by the trustees of the German
Evangelical Concordia Church and for the payment into court of the
amount found due from them; that the trustees of the two church
societies mentioned in the bill might be respectively enjoined from
bringing suit against Ebbinghaus on account of, and from further
interference with, the trust property during the pendency of the
present suit, and that they might be required to interplead
together, and that Ebbinghaus might be indemnified.
The defendants Schenck and Schneider filed their joint answer,
in which they denied that Ebbinghaus was the trustee and legal
owner of the real estate described in the bill, and averred that
they and the defendant John G. Killian, their associate trustee,
were the only lawful and equitable trustees of the property. They
denied that Ebbinghaus, whom they averred to be an interloper, held
the property as trustee or successor to D. Reintzel, or as
successor of anyone having title thereto, or that he held it for
the benefit of the legal successors and beneficiaries of the
trust.
The defendants Siever, Kolb, and Freund, styling themselves
trustees of the First Reformed Church, filed their joint answer,
admitting all the averments of the bill.
Upon final hearing of the case, upon the pleadings and evidence,
the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, in special
Page 110 U. S. 571
term, dismissed the bill without prejudice. Upon appeal to the
Supreme Court of the District, in general term, the decree of the
special term was reversed, and the court decreed that Ebbinghaus,
as trustee as aforesaid, be authorized and empowered to take
possession of the property described in the bill, and hold the same
as trustee for the First Reformed Church, in the City of
Washington, District of Columbia, and receive the rents and profits
thereof, and account therefor as such trustee to said First
Reformed Church; that the trustees of the German Evangelical
Concordia Church be enjoined from further interfering with said
real estate, or with the receipt of the rents and profits thereof
by Ebbinghaus, and that they account to him for the rents received
by them since the filing of the bill in this case. The present
appeal brings this decree under review.
The appellants contend that the decree of the court below should
be reversed because the suit is not one of which a court of equity
could take jurisdiction, and the decree is not one which it was
competent for such a court to make. We think this contention is
well founded.
The bill is either a bill of interpleader or a bill in the
nature of a bill of interpleader. It is clear that it cannot be
sustained as a bill of interpleader. In such a bill it is necessary
to aver that the complainant has no interest in the subject matter
of the suit; he must admit title in the claimants and aver that he
is indifferent between them, and he cannot seek relief in the
premises against either of them.
Langston v. Boylston, 2
Ves.Jr. 103;
Angell v. Hadden, 15 Ves.Jr. 244;
Mitchell v. Hayne, 2 Sim. & Stuart 63;
Aldrich v.
Thompson, 2 Bro.Ch. 149;
Metcalf v. Hervey, 1 Ves.Sr.
248;
Darthez v. Winter, 2 Sim. & Stuart 536;
Bedall v. Hoffman, 2 Paige Ch. 20;
Atkinson v.
Manks, 1 Cowen 691. In this case, the bill fails to comply
with any of these requirements.
If the complainant were in possession of the property in
question, holding it for the party beneficially interested, and had
custody of rents and profits derived therefrom, and the two sets of
defendants asserted conflicting claims to the property and to the
rents, the facts might sustain a bill of interpleader. But the
complainant is out of possession; he has no
Page 110 U. S. 572
rents in his custody. He is therefore in no jeopardy from the
conflicting claims of the defendants, and cannot call on them to
interplead. Instead of admitting title in the two sets of
claimants, and asking the court to decide between them, he sets up
title in himself for the benefit of one set, and seeks relief
against the other.
To avoid these obstacles to the maintenance of the suit, the
appellee insists that it can be maintained as a bill in the nature
of a bill of interpleader. In support of this view, his counsel
cites ยง 824, Story's Equity Jurisprudence (11th ed.), where it is
said that
"there are many cases where a bill in the nature of a bill of
interpleader will lie by a party in interest to ascertain and
establish his own rights, when there are other conflicting rights
between third persons."
But in all such cases, the relief sought is equitable relief.
Mohawk &c., Railroad v. Clutz, 4 Paige 384;
Parks
v. Jackson, 11 Wend. 443;
McHenry v. Hazard, 45 N.Y.
580. The authority cited by the appellee does not therefore aid the
bill in this case, which is that of a party out of possession
claiming the legal title to real estate, seeking to oust the
parties in possession, who also claim the legal title, and compel
them to pay over the rents and profits.
The fatal objection to the suit is that it is in fact an attempt
by the party claiming the legal title to use a bill in equity in
the nature of a bill of interpleader as an action of ejectment. The
record makes this apparent. At the instance of the trustees of the
First Reformed Church, the appellee was appointed by the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia to hold the property in trust for
that church. His appointment was obtained that he might bring this
suit in the interest of the First Reformed Church against the
trustees of the German Evangelical Concordia Church. He alleges in
his bill that he has the legal title to the premises in
controversy, of which it is clear from the record that he is out of
possession. Having no rents or profits in his keeping, he seeks to
recover them from one body of trustees, and asks the court to
decide to which of the two bodies of trustees claiming the property
he shall pay them when he has recovered them.
Page 110 U. S. 573
The answer of Schenck and Schneider denies that the appellee is
the legal owner of the property, or that he holds it as trustee.
They aver that the title to the property is in them, as trustees of
the German Evangelical Concordia Church. Upon the filing of the
answer the point of controversy between the parties plainly
appeared. Both claimed to own the legal title, and the defendants
were in possession. The issue thus raised could only be tried in an
action at law. The decree of the court below is the equivalent of
the judgment of a court of law in an action of ejectment, namely,
that the plaintiff recover possession of the premises, and also of
the judgment of a court of law in an action of trespass for mesne
profits, that he recover rents and profits. There is no ground for
calling such a suit a bill of interpleader of any kind.
There are no averments in the bill which disclose any other
grounds of equity jurisdiction. It is clear that an action of
ejectment would have afforded the appellee a plain and adequate
remedy.
The case is similar to the leading case of
Hipp v.
Babin, 19 How. 271, which was dismissed by the
circuit court on the ground that there was an adequate remedy at
law. Upon appeal to this Court the decree was affirmed. This Court,
speaking by Mr. Justice Campbell, described the case as
follows:
"The bill in this case is in substance and legal effect an
ejectment bill. The title appears by the bill to be merely legal.
The evidence to support it appears from documents accessible to
either party, and no particular necessity of the courts
interfering, either necessity of the courts interfering, either for
preventing suits or other vexation, or for preventing an injustice
irremediable at law."
And the court declared, as a result of the argument,
"that whenever a court of law is competent to take cognizance of
a right, and has power to proceed to a judgment which affords a
plain, adequate, and complete remedy, without the aid of a court of
equity, the plaintiff must proceed at law, because the defendant
has a constitutional right to a trial by a jury."
See also Parker v. Winnepiseogee Lake
Cotton & Woolen Manufacturing
Page 110 U. S. 574
Company, 2 Black 545;
Grand
Chute v. Winegar, 15 Wall. 373;
Lewis v.
Cocks, 23 Wall. 466.
And this objection to the jurisdiction may be enforced by the
court
sua sponte, though not raised by the pleadings or
suggested by counsel.
Parker v. Winnepiseogee Lake Cotton &
Woolen Manufacturing Company, and
Lewis v. Cocks, ubi
supra.
These and many similar authorities, which it is unnecessary to
cite, are applicable to the case in hand. They show that the court
below was without jurisdiction to entertain the suit and render the
decree appealed from.
Its decree is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded,
with directions to dismiss the bill without prejudice.