1. A decree in chancery will be reversed if rendered against a
woman who is shown by the bill to be both a minor and
feme
covert where no appearance by or for her has been entered, and
no guardian
ad litem appointed.
2. It is error to render a final decree for want of appearance
at the first term after service of subpoena (Equity Rules, 18, 19)
unless another rule day has intervened.
3. Where the object is to divest a
feme covert or minor
of an interest in real estate the title of which is in a trustee
for her use, the trust being an active one, it is error to decree
against her without making the trustee a party to the suit.
4. The making of the conveyance as ordered by the decree does
not deprive the defendant of the right of appeal.
5. Neither a subsequent petition in the nature of a bill of
review nor anything set up in the answer to such petition on which
no action was had by the court can prevent a party from appealing
from the original decree.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Michael O'Hara was adjudged a bankrupt Dec. 9, 1867, and the
appellees duly appointed assignees, to whom an assignment of his
effects was made in due form. As such assignees, they filed in the
Circuit Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania the bill in
chancery on which the decree was rendered from which the present
appeal is taken. The bill alleges that a conveyance of certain real
estate made by said O'Hara and his wife, Frances, on the tenth day
of July, 1866, to William Harrison and G. L. B. Fetterman, in trust
for the use of the wife, was a fraud upon creditors, and prays that
the deed be
Page 93 U. S. 151
declared void, and that O'Hara, his wife, and Barr, her
guardian, be decreed to convey the land to complainants, that they
may sell it for the benefit of O'Hara's creditors, free from the
embarrassment created by said deed of trust.
The bill also alleges that Mrs. O'Hara is a minor, and that A.
M. Barri is her legal guardian.
A subpoena was issued on the fifth day of April, 1869, and
served on the 7th, on O'Hara, for himself and wife, and on Barr,
and on the seventh day of May following, without appearance and
without answer by any defendant, the bill was amended, was taken as
confessed, and a final decree rendered. This decree enjoined the
defendants from setting up any claim to the land, and ordered all
of them to convey and release the same to the assignees, and in
default of such conveyance within thirty days, Henry Sproul was
appointed commissioner to do it in their name. A copy of this
decree was served on the defendants May 10, and on the 14th of
June, the order was complied with by a deed made by O'Hara, his
wife, and Barr, which on its face purports to be in execution of
the order, and for the consideration of one dollar. It will thus be
seen that within less than five weeks from the filing of the bill,
and without any actual service of the writ or other notice on her,
a decree was entered against a woman who was both a minor and a
feme covert without the appointment of a guardian
ad
litem, without any appearance by her or for her, depriving her
of fourteen acres of land now within the limits of the City of
Pittsburgh. It is from this decree that she appeals.
By the thirteenth rule of practice of the courts of equity of
the United States, as it stood when the subpoena in this case was
served, a delivery of a copy to the husband was good where husband
and wife were sued together, but the rule was amended by this Court
in 1874 so as to require a personal service on each defendant or by
leaving a copy for each at his or her usual place of abode, with
some adult member of the family. The service in the present case
would not now be good, though it must be held to have been so at
the time it was made.
It would be very strange if a decree obtained under such
Page 93 U. S. 152
circumstances could stand the test of a critical examination. We
are of opinion that there are several errors sufficient to justify
its reversal.
1. It was the duty of the court, where the bill on its face
showed that the party whose interest was the principal one to be
affected by the decree was both a minor and a
feme covert,
and that no one appeared for her in any manner to protect her
interest, to have appointed a guardian
ad litem for that
purpose. If neither her husband nor he who is styled her guardian
in the bill appeared to defend her interest, it was the more
imperative that the court should have appointed some one to do it.
There is no evidence in the record, except the statement in the
bill, that Dr. Barr was her guardian. If he was not, then there was
no one served with notice, whose legal duty it was to defend her.
If he was her guardian, there is no evidence of the precise nature
of his duties or power, as there are several classes of guardians.
As to the particular property now in contest, she had a trustee, in
whom the title was vested for her use, and whose duty it would have
been to protect her interest in it; but, strangely enough, he was
not made a party. It was therefore error in the court to proceed to
a decree without appointing a guardian
ad litem. 1
Daniell's Ch.Pr. 160, c. 4, sec. 9;
Coughlin's Heirs v.
Brents, 1 McLean 175;
Lessee of Nelson v. Moore, 3
id. 321.
2. If Mrs. O'Hara had been under no disability, it was error to
have entered a final decree for want of appearance of the return
day of the writ, or during that term.
"According to the practice of the English Chancery Court," says
Mr. Justice Washington, in
Pendleton v. Evans' Ex'r, 4
Wash.C.C. 337,
"a bill cannot be taken
pro confesso after service of
subpoena, and even after appearance, until all the processes of
contempt to a sequestration have been exhausted, after which the
bill is taken
pro confesso and a decree passes which is
absolute in the first instance."
He then comments on the practice of the New York Chancery Court,
which, instead of a proceeding in contempt, required a rule to
answer to be served on the defendant, and if this was not obeyed,
the bill might be then taken
pro confesso. He then
adds:
"The principle which governs the practice in both these courts
is that
Page 93 U. S. 153
the defendant stall not be taken by surprise, but shall have
sufficient warning before a decree is entered against him by
default."
He then states the practice by the rules adopted by the Supreme
Court for the federal courts, as follows:
"If the answer, the subpoena being returned executed, be not
filed within three months after the day of appearance and bill
filed, then defendant is to be ruled to answer, and, failing to do
so, the bill may be taken for confessed, and the matter thereof
decreed immediately; but this decree is only
nisi, to be
made absolute at the term succeeding that to which service of a
copy of the decree shall be returned executed, unless cause to the
contrary be shown."
And in the case of
Read v. Consequa, 4 Wash.C.C. 180,
where a bill on which an injunction had been allowed had remained
unanswered and without appearance of defendant, who had been duly
served five years before, he refused to grant an order taking the
bill pro confesso because it would be irregular.
What a contrast to the speed with which the decree was entered
in the case before us!
Rules 18 and 19 of the equity practice as now existing have
modified those which are mentioned by Judge Washington, and, unless
the defendant demur, plead, or answer, on or before the rule day
next succeeding his appearance, the plaintiff may enter an
order in the order book that the bill be taken
pro
confesso and the matter thereof decreed at the next succeeding
term. But in the case before us, the final decree was entered on
the day fixed for appearance, or, at most, at the same term.
The standing rule now requires defendant to plead by the next
rule day after appearance, which is the same as if a special rule
were taken on him to do so.
It is therefore clear that final decree could not be made, even
under the present rules, until the term of the court next
succeeding the day of default.
The remarks of Mr. Justice Washington show that these rules are
not merely technical and arbitrary, but are made to prevent a
defendant from losing his rights by surprise.
3. The legal title to the property in question was held by
Fetterman, in trust for Mrs. O'Hara. The trust was not a
Page 93 U. S. 154
naked or dry trust, for he was empowered, with her consent, to
sell it and reinvest the proceeds on the same trusts, or to
mortgage it and with the money so raised purchase other real
estate.
How the decree can clear the property of this trust without
having the trustee before the court it is difficult to see. This
was the object of the suit, but how can it be made effectual for
that purpose in the absence of the person in whom the title is
vested?
We think that in a case like this, where a woman, under the
double disability of coverture and infancy, has a trustee in whom
the title of the property in controversy is vested for her use, the
court should have refused a decree until he was made a party.
It is said that after making the deed which the court ordered,
the appellant is bound by it, and cannot now prosecute this
appeal.
The principle is unsound. The deed recites on its face that it
is made under the order of the court. The parties must either have
obeyed the order of the court or taken an appeal and given a
supersedeas bond in a sum so large that they were probably unable
to do it.
"In no instance within our knowledge," said the Court in
Erwin v.
Lowry, 7 How. 184,
"has an appeal or writ of error been dismissed on the assumption
that a release of errors was implied from the fact that money or
property had changed hands by force of the judgment or decree. If
the judgment is reversed, it is the duty of the court to restore
the parties to their rights."
That was a case where the appellant received the money which by
the decree he recovered of the appellee, and is therefore a
stronger case than the present, as his action would seem to ratify
the decree.
About three years after this decree, appellants filed a petition
in the circuit court in the nature of a bill of review to set it
aside. To this petition the appellees filed an answer in which,
among other matters, they set out a copy of another deed made by
O'Hara and wife the day after (as they allege) Mrs. O'Hara became
of age, and they rely on that deed here as a bar to the appeal.
Page 93 U. S. 155
It is sufficient now to say as to that deed that it is long
subsequent to the decree and apart from it. Its validity and force
must stand or fall on its own merits, wherever and whenever they
may be tried, in any issue made on them. It has nothing to do with
the appeal which regards the errors of the decree, and which the
appellant has a right to have reversed. When this is done, and she
is placed where she ought to be in that regard, the effect of the
deed now under consideration may perhaps be decided on a
supplemental bill, setting it up as matter occurring since the
commencement of the suit, or by the appellees' dismissing their
present suit and relying on the title acquired by that deed.
Another equally conclusive reason why we cannot consider any
other matters arising under the petition and answer is that there
is no order, decree, or other action of the court on them. The
record closes with the bill and answer, the latter filed May 23,
1874, and the present appeal allowed Aug. 4, 1874.
We therefore take no notice of this subsequent pleading, but
reverse the original decree and remand the case to the circuit
court for such further proceedings as to right and justice may
appertain.
Decree reversed.