Boteler v. Brookes
Boteler v. Brookes
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an application, by petition, to the Chancellor, to compel the sureties of a trustee, to bring into court, the proceeds of a sale of mortgaged premises, sold in pursuance of a decree of a court of Equity.
The ordinary power of a court of Chancery, to coerce obedience to its orders, at the hands of its trustee, and officer, is not the subject presented for consideration. But the question is, whether in the case before the court, it possesses any power to order the sureties of a trustee to bring into court, the monies received by their principal in the due execution of his trust.
This question, in ordinary cases, may be determined, by discovering the foundation of the authority of the court over the trustee. The trustee is an officer of the court, and as such, bound to obey its mandates, in all his fiduciary relations. His obligations are doubly secured — first, by the coercive authority of the court, and secondly, by his legal obligations, growing out of the security furnished by his bond.
But the sureties in his bond, maintain no similar relation to the court. They have no official duties to perform ; assume no responsibility to the court, but in general, enter into a merely pure legal contract of suretyship, incapable of coercion, except through the medium of the appropriate forum, for the enforcement of such contracts — a legal tribunal. Their engagement bears no affinity to a recognizance in the common law courts, which is accompanied with the solemnities and partial consequences of a judgment, and differs in nothing from the ordinary contract between man and man, in the usual transactions of society; and must, unless our statutes differently order, be enforced by the same forms, and in the same tribunals.
Such must, undoubtedly, be the results in the ordinary cases of trusteeship, created by the Chancery court, and such the differences existing between the power of enforcing the fulfilment of obligations, in the case of trustees, and their sureties.
It need scarcely be remarked that it is within the compe
It, therefore, remains for us to enquire, in what manner, and to what extent, alterations have been effected in the mode of enforcing these obligations. In examining this subject, we shall confine ourselves, as the case limits us, to such alterations as may have been produced by the third section of the act of 1785, ch. 72.
The Legislature had, no doubt, a twofold object in view, in authorizing a sale of mortgaged premises. As regarded the mortgagor himself, it was a remedy in many cases beneficial to him, as it was calculated to save a portion of his estate from passing to the mortgagee, beyond the power of redemption, while at the same time, full justice was done to the mortgagee; who obtained by a sale the amount loaned, and thus effectually reaped the fruits of his security in the most speedy and expeditious manner. The remedy by foreclosure alone, from its tedious character, was calculated to abridge very much this form of security; and with the view of avoiding difficulties sometimes growing out of foreclosures, the parties themselves had introduced, in many cases, the practice of inserting trusts for sale in mortgages. By simplifying remedies, by furnishing speedy redress, and by rendering these securities available according to the design of the parties, in entering into them, in the shortest time practicable, the Legislature, therefore no doubt designed, to encourage this kind of contract and security. While the law held out to capitalists the greatest possible facilities, to the obtension of full indemnity, through the medium of the courts, it at the same time, gave to those who might desire to take up money on such securities, much more ample means of accomplishing their object. These too, were designs well deserving the attention of the Legislative body, presiding as it does, over the interests of a commercial community, where every effort to bring into captivity unemployed capital, is necessarily calculated to advance the interests of the State.
Providing thus the means by a sale, and summary process, for the extinguishment of the mortgaged debt, it was evidently that, which was solely looked to, and not the interest of the mortgagor, or any person who might, as his assignee, be incidentally interested in any possible surplus; for as has been very justly observed, it was not contemplated, that more should be sold than was necessary to extinguish the debt due on the mortgage. And when the remedies by the third section are provided, they look only to such sum as would accomplish that object. If indeed the law could have a practical operation, by limiting the sales in all cases, to the exact amount of the mortgage debt, such a proceeding would reach with precision the object of the Legislature. But it is impossible in anticipation to know, that a given number of acres will produce a specific sum of money, and as a sum of money equivalent to the mortgage debt has to be raised, the trustee to carry the act into effect at all, even where the decree limits him to the sale of only so much, as may be necessary to satisfy the debt, must necessarily often have a surplus in hand, which must belong to the mortgagor or those, who, in the eye of a court of Equity may represent him.
But the Legislature, looking alone to the satisfaction of the mortgage debt, did not anticipate such a practical result, or why did they in language too clear for misinterpretation, direct the proceeds of sale to be paid to the mortgagee. The words of the act, after giving power to decree a sale, are, “ that the Chancellor shall have power to order that the money raised by such sale shall be brought into court to be paid to the plaintiff,” which it could not have done, if any thing had
No possible evil can grow out of the construction which we have given to this act. The mortgagor has his remedy on the bond by other sections of the law, against the principal and his sureties, if the trustee be faithless to his trust, just as all other persons; and if he desire to call for the exercise of the summary, and inherent powers of the court over the trustee, its own officer, he can have resort to them. This Construction will not at all interfere with such exercise of power. That remains as it was before the act, and the mortgagor, upon a proper occasion, may ask for its exertion, just as could a defendant in the courts of common law, have process against a sheriff, who had levied more money upon an execution than would satisfy the plaintiff’s debt, and refused to pay it over. But neither in the one court, or the other, would there be any summary remedy against the sureties of either, without positive enactment.
Having thus negatived the power to issue an attachment against the sureties, at the instance of the mortgagor, all steps preparatory to such a procedure, where they assume the character of decretal orders, must be the subject of revision by this court, and are equally invalid, as would be the process affecting the liberty of the sureties. This would seem to follow, as a necessary consequence from the first proposition.
If, therefore, the order decreeing the money to be paid into court, to be paid to the plaintiff, can be at all sustained, it must be upon other grounds.
It is accordingly insisted, that independent of the act of 1785, ch. 72, above adverted to, the appellees have an unquestionable right to the interposition of a court of Equity, upon the ground, that the original trustee’s bond was lost.
Upon this assumption, it would become necessary to decide two preliminary questions.
1st. Is the form of proceeding, which the appellees have adopted, the correct form ?
The first question is in fact settled by the construction which we put upon the act of 1785, ch. 72. It could be only ' under the appellees construction, that there could be any pretence for proceeding by petition, however clear might be their equity under other forms of proceeding. Under the construction which we give the law, the sureties are entire strangers to the cause, to which they have been introduced, and the petitioners are equally strangers to the cause, the fund not being in court, and having no means by the death of the trustee, of operating by the power of the court upon the fund, we cannot perceive upon what ground of principle, or practice, they can be allowed to obtrude themselves into the cause, and litigate a matter however equitable, which is foreign to it, and which is supposed to give rise, to an independent personal claim, arising from the execution, and loss of the bond. And where, if a recovery was had, the amount recovered would in no manner pass to the credit of the cause in which the petition was filed; but would by the decree of the court, pass directly to the petitioner, who would merely use the record in the cause, as a link in his chain of evidence, to establish his right. Further comment on this branch of the case would seem to be unnecessary.
We shall, therefore, next enquire, whether since the act of 1832, ch. 307, any objection can be taken to the form of the proceeding, which was not taken by exception in the Chancery court.
The objection to the proceeding, is, that if the appellees had an equitable remedy, it should have been by bill, and not by petition. The record shews that no such objection was taken in the court below.
The act of 1832, ch. 307, is not a general prohibition as to the raising of points in the appellate court, which were not made below; but is a well defined and specific prohibition, and extends only to the three following cases.
1. The competency of witnesses.
3. The sufficiency of the averments in the bill or petition.
This objection it is quite clear, has no affinity to either class of prohibition, but is excluded by the very terms used. It is an objection to the remedy, a case evidently, not within the contemplation of the Legislature. The law in demanding, that exceptions shall at once be taken to the averments of the bill, or petition, assumes that, the remedy adopted is the appropriate one, but supposes that it may have been defectively stated. It marks too, by its own phraseology, the distinctive remedies pursued in a court of Equity, by referring to averments in bills or petitions, and certainly was never intended, to confound these distinct remedies, by any omission of the parties to interpose their objections.
Whether such a provision would have been wise or advisable, it is not for us to say; but with the law of 1825, ch. 117, making provision both in courts of common law, and in equity, before the law-makers, which in distinct, and unequivocal language, repudiated the raising of any points whatever in the court above, which were not made in the common law courts; and which, as to auditor’s accounts in equity, contained precisely the same prohibition, it is difficult to imagine, the same idea was meant to be carried out in this law, when language so totally different has been used; which instead of generalizing, points to, and specifies particular matters, which are to be, and which need alone be, the particular objects of exception below, to enable the party to raise them above.
The views above presented, render it unnecessary to express any opinion on the right of the petitioner to recover in a different mode of proceeding.
The order of the Chancellor is reversed with costs in the Chancery court, and in this court.
Reference
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- Boteler and Belt v. John Brookes
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