A devise
"I give and devise to my beloved son, E.W.G., two-third parts of
that my ferry farm, so called . . . to him, the said E.W.G. and to
his heirs and assigns forever, he, my said son E.W.G. paying all my
just debts out of said estate. And I do hereby order and it is my
will that my son E.W.G. shall pay all my just debts out of the
estate herein given to him as aforesaid"
creates a charge upon the estate in the hands of the
devisee.
A
bona fide purchaser who pays the purchase money to a
person authorized to sell is not bound to look to its application,
whether in the case of funds charged in the hands of an heir or
devisee with the payment of debts or lands devised to a trustee for
the payment of debts.
But if the money be misapplied by the devisee or trustee with
the cooperation of the purchaser, he remains liable to the
creditors for the sum so misapplied.
On a bill filed by an executor against a devisee of lands
charged with the payment of debts for an account of the trust fund
&c., the creditors are not indispensable parties to the suit.
The fund may be brought into court and distributed under its
direction according to the rights of those who may apply for
it.
Page 25 U. S. 499
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the
Court.
The case was this:
On 7 July, 1817, Peleg Gardner made his last will, in which,
among other things, he devised as follows:
"I give and devise to my beloved son Ezekiel W. Gardner two
third parts of all that my ferry farm, so called, . . . to him the
said Ezekiel W. Gardner, and to his heirs and assigns forever, he,
my said son Ezekiel W. Gardner, paying all my just debts out of
said estate. And I do hereby order, and it is my will that my son
Ezekiel W. Gardner shall pay all my just debts out of the estate
herein given to him as aforesaid."
The testator gives to his wife, the plaintiff, Hannah, a part of
his real and personal estate for life in lieu of dower, and to his
daughter, the other plaintiff, other parts of his real and personal
estate.
Peleg Gardner died soon after the making of his will, and his
several devisees entered into the estates devised to them
respectively.
On 13 July, 1818, the court of probates for the
Page 25 U. S. 500
county, in pursuance of a statute made for that purpose,
appointed commissioners to receive and examine the claims of the
creditors, who made a report on 10 July, 1820, from which it
appears that the debts proved against the estate and allowed,
amount to $7,593.14, exclusive of a claim of $1,000 exhibited by
one Mann, which was disallowed and for which a suit has been
commenced against the executrix.
The testator had devised the remaining third part of his ferry
estate to his daughter Isabel who had sold and conveyed the same to
her brother Ezekiel. After which Ezekiel agreed to sell the whole
estate to the appellant, Elisha R. Potter, for the amount of
$15,000.
This bill is filed by the executrix and devisees of Peleg
Gardner to subject the purchase money of the ferry estate to the
payment of the testator's debts. The decree of the circuit court
was in favor of the plaintiffs below, and from that decree Elisha
R. Potter has appealed to this Court.
The bill contains many charges of fraudulent combination between
Ezekiel W. Gardner and Elisha R. Potter which it would be waste of
time to review in detail because they are not sustained and because
the case rests on principles of equity which are believed to be
well settled.
The first objection made to the decree is that the plaintiffs
have no right to ask the aid of a court equity, because they cannot
assert the claims of the creditors who could have proceeded at law
against the estate in the hands of Ezekiel, and may now proceed at
law against the remaining estate of Peleg. That the plaintiffs can
give no discharge which will extinguish the rights of the
creditors, and that the creditors ought for that reason to have
been made parties to the suit.
The bill states, and so is the fact, that the whole estate of
Peleg Gardner, both real and personal, was disposed of by his will,
and as the ferry estate devised to Ezekiel was the fund provided
for the payment of his debts, his devisees and legatees took
immediate possession of the property bequeathed to them
respectively, and nothing remains in the hands of the executrix
wherewith to satisfy the creditors. The
Page 25 U. S. 501
bill also states that Ezekiel W. Gardner is insolvent or in very
doubtful circumstances, that a considerable part of the purchase
money has been applied to the payment of his own debts, and that
the plaintiffs have cause to fear that the residue will be
misapplied in the like manner, so that the whole trust fund will be
wasted and the property bequeathed to them be taken by the
creditors. These allegations are not controverted, and make, we
think, a very clear case for an application to a court of equity.
It is true that the creditors might have been made parties
defendants, but we do not think them parties who may not be
dispensed with. So much of the fund as yet remains may be brought
into court, and may be distributed according to the rights of those
who may apply for it. We have, then, no doubt of the jurisdiction
of the court.
We have as little doubt of the liability of the ferry estate
while in the hands of Ezekiel to the creditors of the testator. The
words of the will create an express charge. "I give and devise to
my beloved son, Ezekiel W. Gardner, and his heirs, forever,
two-thirds of my ferry farm, he paying all my just debts out of
said estate." More explicit words could not have been used. It is
admitted by the counsel for the appellant that these words would
charge the estate in a country where the law did not previously
charge it, but since, in Rhode Island, lands are liable by law to
the debts of the testator, the will superadds nothing to this legal
charge.
It may be admitted that, as between the devisee and the
creditor, no charge is superadded by the will, but the relation of
the devisees to each other is materially affected by it. A testator
cannot by his will withdraw from his creditors any property which
the law subjects to their claims, but he may provide a particular
fund for his debts, and if the creditors resort to a different
fund, those to whom the property so taken by them was given are
entitled to compensation out of the fund provided for debts.
Examples of this principle abound in the books. Personal property
is universally liable for debts. If the particular fund provided by
the testator for that object be of that description and a specific
thing bequeathed to another be taken in execution
Page 25 U. S. 502
by a creditor, it has never been doubted that the legatee whose
property has been taken may resort to the trust fund for
compensation. The principle is too well settled to be now a subject
for discussion. The law of Rhode island, then, subjecting lands to
the payment of debts can have no influence on the case before the
Court. The ferry estate, had it remained in the possession of the
devisees, would not only have been liable to the creditors but
would have been liable to the other devisees and legatees for such
portions of their property as had been applied in payment of the
debts of the testator.
What change has been made by the sale to Elisha R. Potter?
Although this question has been argued with great earnestness
and at considerable length, scarcely any real difference exists
between the parties. The appellees seem to yield to the authority
of those modern decisions which deny the distinction between lands
charged in the hands of an heir or devisee with the payment of
debts and lands devised to a trustee for the payment of debts. They
admit that in either case the purchaser who pays the purchase money
to the person authorized to sell is not bound to look to its
application. But they contend that if the purchase money be
misapplied with the cooperation of the purchaser, he remains liable
to the creditors for the sum so misapplied. The counsel for the
appellants assent to this proposition. It is scarcely necessary to
say that so much of the purchase money as remained unpaid when this
suit was instituted is liable to the creditors and is applicable by
the court to the purposes of the trust. What then is really in
dispute between the parties? Nothing but the questions how much of
the purchase money remains unpaid, and how much of it has been
applied to the debts of Ezekiel with the cooperation of Mr.
Potter.
The whole purchase made by Mr. Potter amounted to $15,800, of
which $15,000 were given for the ferry estate, and $800 for a lot
in Jamestown, purchased by Ezekiel from his sister Isabel.
One-third of the ferry estate had also been purchased by Ezekiel
from Isabel, so that $5,800 of the whole purchase money was
given
Page 25 U. S. 503
for property not charged by the will of Peleg Gardner with his
debts, and the remaining $10,000 for property which was so charged.
That sum constituted the trust fund.
In the arrangement between the parties, Mr. Potter retained
$3,500 for a debt due to himself, and paid debts due from Ezekiel,
to the amount, as stated in the answers, of $1,830, making, in the
whole, $5,330. On a subsequent agreement between the parties,
Potter paid a debt of Ezekiel, amounting to $800, so that Potter
has himself paid the debts of Ezekiel to the amount of $6,330,
being $330 out of the trust fund. His cash payments, at that time,
are stated at $318.66.
In June, 1820, the parties came to a settlement, when a balance
of $7,729.62 was found to be in the hands of Potter, for which he
says he gave his note, payable to order, in good mortgages in South
Kingston, or in the State of New York, and a negotiable cash note,
payable to the defendant's order, for $4,000, on 25 March,
1822.
The cash payments stated by the defendants amount to $4,318.64.
The residue of the purchase money has either been applied by Potter
himself to the payment of Ezekiel's debts or is comprehended in the
note payable in mortgages or remains in his hands unaccounted for.
In either case, it is liable, so far as it exceeds the sum of
$5,800, which is not charged by the will, to the creditors of Peleg
Gardner. This Court does not enter into minute calculations to
ascertain the precise sum due. An account, if it be found
necessary, comprehending the necessary calculations of interest may
be taken in the circuit court. The note payable in mortgages is not
alleged to be paid, and, not being negotiable, would pass to an
assignee, subject to the equity which was attached to it when in
the hands of Ezekiel W. Gardner.
The defendant, Elisha R. Potter, has been stated to be liable
for the debts of Peleg Gardner for so much of the purchase money of
the trust estate as remains in his hands. So far he is liable
directly and immediately, and is properly
Page 25 U. S. 504
decreed to pay the money into court. But so far as he has
applied the money to the debts of Ezekiel, his responsibility is
not, we think, immediate, but depends on the failure of Ezekiel to
pay; the decree ought in the first instance to be against Ezekiel,
and if the money cannot be obtained from him, then against Elisha
R. Potter.
No doubt exists of the right of any of the parties to contest
the claim of any creditor. The report of the commissioners may be
prima facie but is not conclusive evidence of the claim.
The creditor may ascertain his debt by a suit in the state court or
the executrix may contest it in the court of the United States. If
Elisha R. Potter or Ezekiel W. Gardner suppose the executrix to be
unfaithful to her duty in this respect, the court will permit
either of them to use her name in opposition to the claim.
We are of opinion that so much of the decree as may subject
Elisha R. Potter to the debts of Peleg Gardner beyond the purchase
money remaining in his hands and beyond the money paid by him in
discharge of the debts of Ezekiel W. Gardner, after deducting
therefrom the amount of the estates purchased by the said Ezekiel
from his sister Isabel, ought to be reversed and that in all other
things it ought to be affirmed.
DECREE. This cause came on, &c., on consideration whereof
this Court is of opinion that there is error in so much of the
decree of the said circuit court as subjects Elisha R. Potter to
the payment of a larger sum of money than now remains in his bands
of the original purchase money, added to the sum he has applied to
the payment of the debts of Ezekiel W. Gardner, after deducting
therefrom the amount given for the estates purchased from Isabel
Gardner, and in so much of the said decree as directs the said
Elisha R. Potter to pay the sums he has misapplied to the debts of
Ezekiel W. Gardner and for which he, the said Ezekiel, is liable in
the first instance before he, the said Ezekiel, shall have failed
to pay the same. It is therefore the opinion of this Court that so
much of the said decree as is contrary to this opinion be REVERSED
and ANNULLED, and that the same be in all other
Page 25 U. S. 505
respects, AFFIRMED, and the cause is remanded to the said
circuit court with directions to reform the said decree according
to this opinion and to do all other things therein as equity and
justice may require. In taking any account between any of the
parties which may be necessary for giving effect to this order,
interest is to be computed according to law and usage.