Boone v. Wachovia Bank & Trust Co.

163 F.2d 809, 173 A.L.R. 1285, 82 U.S. App. D.C. 317, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2322
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedSeptember 22, 1947
Docket9442, 9443
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 163 F.2d 809 (Boone v. Wachovia Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boone v. Wachovia Bank & Trust Co., 163 F.2d 809, 173 A.L.R. 1285, 82 U.S. App. D.C. 317, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2322 (D.C. Cir. 1947).

Opinion

WILBUR K. MILLER, Associate Justice.

These appeals involve the validity of a judgment removing a testamentary trustee whic'h was entered, pursuant to the application of the beneficiaries, by a North Carolina court which had admitted the will to probate, established the trust thereunder and appointed the trustee, and was exercising supervision over the administration. The order of removal is attacked by the deposed trustee because process on the application for removal was not served on him in North Carolina and he did not appear or answer.

Prior to 1940' Frances M. Lightner died testate, a resident of and; domiciled in North Carolina. She nominated her son-in-law, Daniel F. Boone, as executor of her will and as trustee thereunder. Boone was also a North Carolinian at that time. The will was duly admitted to probate in the Superior Court of Polk County, North *811 Carolina, and Boone qualified as executor and trustee. Later he sued in the Superior Court for a construction of the will with respect to the trust imposed upon certain personalty and, having obtained the court’s opinion, proceeded with the administration of the trust.

In the same court, on November 25, 1942, the beneficiaries of the trust filed a complaint against the trustee, seeking his removal. Boone had left North Carolina in 1940 and had taken the trust assets with him to the District of Columbia. Service was had on him in the removal proceeding by publication and, in addition, a summons was served on him in the District of Columbia by a United States marshal, both notifications being authorized by North Carolina statutes. He was not served in North Carolina, however, and did not appear or plead in response to the removal petition; but, more than a year after the filing of that petition, Boone filed in the court in which it was pending his fourth annual accounting as trustee.

The Superior Court entered judgment on February 7, 1944, removing Boone as trustee and appointing Wachovia Bank & Trust Company as his successor. As a basis for its decree, the court found as facts that Boone’s misconduct in handling the trust fund had resulted in a loss of $11,490.56, for which judgment against him personally had theretofore been rendered by the Superior Court, and affirmed by the Supreme Court of North Carolina and the Supreme Court of the United States; that without the approval or authority of the court or any court he had removed the trust fund to the District of Columbia; and that in other respects he had acted improperly. It determined that he was an unfit, unsuitable and improper person to act as trustee. The successor trustee was expressly authorized and directed to institute and prosecute in any jurisdiction such actions as might be necessary to obtain possession of the trust assets.

Pursuant to that authority, the successor trustee sued Boone on April 2, 1945, in the District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia to recover all assets of the trust estate and to obtain an accounting. He answered, 1 stating that he was testamentary trustee under the will of Frances M. Lightner, and that the proceeding in North Carolina to remove him as trustee had been instituted after he had moved his domicile from that state to the District of Columbia, and after he had brought, the trust assets to the District. He pleaded that he had not appeared in the removal proceeding and had not been served in North Carolina with respect thereto; that, therefore, the alleged successor trustee had no power or authority to maintain in any jurisdiction an action for the recovery of the trust assets.

Summary judgment was granted to Wa-chovia, 2 and Boone was ordered to surrender to it all assets which he held as trustee. The action having also been referred to the District Court’s auditor, Boone filed with him on July 29, 1946, a verified account. Later the District Court confirmed the auditor’s report, which disallowed commissions claimed by Boone, without prejudice to his right to claim them in the North Carolina court.

The appellant assigns as error the District Court’s refusal to dismiss the complaint, its grant of summary judgment to Wachovia, and its denial of commissions.

It is thus seen that we are called upon to decide whether the North Carolina removal judgment was entitled to full faith and credit in the District Court, as the appellee contends, or was not so entitled because, as the appellant argues, he was denied due process of law.

*812 If a judgment of a state court is to be accorded full faith and credit by a court of the United States, 3 it must have been rendered by a tribunal competent by the law of its creation to pass upon the subject matter. The Superior Court of Polk County, North Carolina, being a court of equity, had the inherent power to establish and supervise trusts, to appoint and remove trustees. Such power is not dependent upon statutory authorization nor upon a direction of the instrument of trust, 4 and is as broad and comprehensive as the exigencies of any case may require. 5 Consequently, the Superior Court had the basic right to deal with such a situation.

A court’s power to pronounce judgment depends not only on its constituted authority to deal with cases such as that before it, but also upon its actual jurisdiction over the particular subject matter involved; and, in actions not strictly in rem, upon having the defendant before it by appearance or by service of process, either actual or constructive, as the nature of the proceeding may require or permit.

The Superior Court initially had complete control of the trust relationship, the trust assets, the beneficiaries and the trustee. Had that status remained unchanged, there could be no challenge here of its judgment removing the trustee. It did remain unaltered except for Boone’s act of establishing a domicile in the District of Columbia and taking the assets with him, without authority to do so, either from the will or from an order of the appointing court. Such removal of the assets was wrongful. 6 It was the trustee’s duty to administer the trust according to the law of North Carolina, and under the supervision of the court of that state which had established the trust and appointed him as trustee. 7

The Superior Court of Polk County, having exercised its inherent power as a court of equity to establish a trust over assets subject to its control, and being engaged in supervising the administration thereof by its appointed trustee, did not lose jurisdiction over the trust or the trust assets merely because the trustee wrongfully removed the assets to his new domicile in the District of Columbia, 8 nor did the trustee’s absence from North Carolina impair or destroy such jurisdiction. 9 Boone’s contention that he had deprived the Superi- or Court of Polk County of jurisdiction over the trust assets by carrying them to the District of Columbia is thus seen to be unsound.

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163 F.2d 809, 173 A.L.R. 1285, 82 U.S. App. D.C. 317, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boone-v-wachovia-bank-trust-co-cadc-1947.