Deckert's Appeal
Deckert's Appeal
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
James Lewis made his last will and testament, and among other things, devised in fee-simple to his sons James and Curtis a tract of land in the county of Berks, charged with the payment of certain legacies, to which the present claimants are entitled. James conveyed his moiety of the tract to his brother Curtis, and Curtis filed a petition in the Court of Common Pleas of Berks county, claiming damages from the Schuylkill Naviga
Two objections have been urged against the decree by which the legatees are permitted a pro rata share of the assets as specialty creditors. 1. That the court had no power to order the money to be paid into the court: and 2. That the money was paid without a rule or any authority from the court. It must be admitted that the business has been conducted with very little regard to form; and were it not from the circumstances attending the case, both objections would be decisive. But, let it be observed, this case does not come within the class of cases at common law, which regulate the practice of bringing money into court. Those are cases of contract, and do not apply to damages for injuries in the nature of a nuisance or a trespass. Tidd’s Prac. 672. This case has a much wider base, for it takes its rise from the equitable power of the court, and is indispensable, to prevent injustice. The owner of. the land, who was insolvent, had the legal right to receive the money from the company, and payment to him would have been a good payment without notice of the equitable interest. But although he was the owner of the land, yet in respect to the legacies charged on the land, he was a trustee for others who had an equitable lien on the money. Their rights would have been destroyed if the money had been suffered to pass into his hands. It therefore comes under the head of preventive justice; a beneficent and highly useful branch of chancery jurisprudence. As a Court of Chancery would restrain the company from paying the money over to the insolvent owner of the land, so, upon the
It remains to be observed, that money so paid must, from the necessity of the case, be received by the prothonotary, who is the officer of the court, and who alone can be its depository. Unless he receives it, it must be received by the court itself, which cannot be tolerated. And, in accordance with this, is the invariable practice. In some counties, where it is convenient and safe, the custody of money paid is regulated by rules of court, which require that the money be deposited in the name of the prothonotary, in some designated bank, subject to his order, countersigned by the court and allowed by them. But this practice, it is very obvious, cannot prevail in all the counties, for want of a convenient place to keep the money; and hence it follows that the prothonotary must be the depository in his official capacity. It is one of the duties of his office, for which he and his bail must be liable; for the condition of the bond is, that he will well and truly, and in all things execute and perform the duties of his office. The appellees, therefore, to whom the money was adjudged, having a remedy on the official bond of the prothonotary, must be viewed in the light of specialty creditors, and, as.such, they are entitled to a jpro rata dividend of the fund.
Decree affirmed.
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