Catlin v. Wheeler

5 N.W. 935, 49 Wis. 507, 1880 Wisc. LEXIS 74
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 5 N.W. 935 (Catlin v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catlin v. Wheeler, 5 N.W. 935, 49 Wis. 507, 1880 Wisc. LEXIS 74 (Wis. 1880).

Opinion

Orton, J.

This suit is properly brought jointly by the legatees whose legacies depend ripon the same right, and would be alike affected by the judgment. All of the legatees and the executors are necessary parties to such, a suit, either as plaintiffs or defendants, because interested in the subject matter of the litigation; and those who seek the same relief are properly made plaintiffs, and those who controvert their right to the relief demanded are properly made defendants. These propositions are too obvious to admit of argument, and are sanctioned by elementary authority, as well as by the uniform decisions of this and other courts. Story’s Eq. Plead., §§ 103, 104; McLachlan v. Staples, 13 Wis., 458; Bassett v. Warner, 23 Wis., 673; Lentilhon v. Moffat, 1 Edw. Ch., 451; Shields v. Thomas, 18 How., 253.

The relief demanded by the plaintiffs is, that their right to the full legacies made to them by the will be established notwithstanding the payment to them of a part only of such legacies upon the supposition' and understanding that it was the whole, and a receipt in full given therefor by them.

That such a complaint is not multifarious, when each legatee is entitled to the same identical relief, is too plain to be questioned. The nature of the relief demanded also disposes of another question, viz.: that the payment of these legacies, or the residue of them unpaid, cannot be enforced by the circuit court, when so established, by ordering a sale of the lands — the only remaining property of the estate — and converting them into assets and a fund for that purpose. It is sufficient to say that no such judgment is asked. "When the rights of the parties have been adjudicated and determined by the proper judgment in this case, the county court, sitting in probate, may proceed, at the instance of these plaintiffs or the execu[520]*520tors, to execute such judgment in the manner directed by the statute.

As to the jurisdiction of the circuit court in equity in such a case, the statute and its various provisions relating to the jurisdiction of county courts of the administration and settlement of estates of deceased persons, need not be specially recited and particularly considered; but, once for all, it may be said that the statute, in any of its provisions, will not bear any such construction as to divest the circuit court, as a court of equity, of jurisdiction of a suit of this nature. The jurisdiction of a court of chancery of the execution of trusts, and the payment of legacies which are in the nature of trusts, has been too long exercised to be now questioned; and no court except one of plenary and general jurisdiction in equity, and gov-» erned by the established rules and practice of such courts, can so well and so fully exercise it in such a case, to the end sought. It has already been decided by this court that the county courts have jurisdiction in such matters concurrent with the circuit court, or court of chancery proper, by force of the statute; but it will require the strongest, clearest and most unequivocal language of the statute to make such a jurisdiction of the county courts in probate exclusive, and no such language is found in the present statute.

But, without further discussion, this court has virtually decided the question in Brook et al. v. Chappell, 34 Wis., 405, where legatees under the codicil of a will sought to have their legacies established by proof of such codicil, in the county court. Chief Justice DixoN, in discussing the jurisdiction of the county court in such a case, uses the terms “ county court” and court of chancery ” in contradistinction, as separate courts, and the terms court of chancery ” or “ equity ” as the circuit court, and then says: “ It (the county court) may grant equitable relief, or enforce a trust in a case of this nature, the same as a court of equity; and, although the jurisdiction of a court of equity still exists, it does not oust that of the county [521]*521court in a proper case. The doctrine of equitable estoppel may be recognized, and its principles enforced, as well by the county court as by the court of chancery, the jurisdiction of the latter bei/ng concurrent merely, in any matter pertaining to the settlement, of the estates of deceased persons.”

This decision on the point in question, and this distinction between the courts as a .county court and a court of equity, are recognized and approved by Mr. Justice Lyon in Appeal of Edward Schaeffner, 41 Wis., 260.

In Wheeler et al. v. Catlin et al., 44 Wis., 464, this court refused to taire cognizance of the matters of this suit, on motion to dismiss the appeal; and in the opinion of Mr. Justice LyoN it is said: “ On the final settlement of their accounts as executors, or in any appropriate 'proceeding, the respondents are left free to maintain, as against the present appellants or aivy of them, that they have fully administered the estate of their testator, or that the appellants are estopped to assert that their legacies have not been fully paitl, notwithstanding our judgment on this appeal.” Here, the proper proceeding before the county court is upon the final settlement of the accounts of the executors, “ and any appropriate proceeding,” in contradistinction to this method of procedure in the county court, must be in a court of equity; and to such a proceeding it was intended to refer the rights of these plaintiffs at their election. This meaning is the more, obvious by the previous language of the opinion: “It involves the determination of disputed facts, and demands co judicial trial, in which full opportunity to examine and cross-examine witnesses will be given to all parties.”

The plaintiffs in this suit may have very properly considered themselves encouraged to bring their suit in this form in the circuit court or court of equity, by these intimations of this court in that case. 'Whether the statute making the jurisdiction of the county courts exclusive ought to be so construed as to relate only to the presentation of claims, prop[522]*522erly so called,, against deceased persons, and not to include actions of any other nature, as contended by the learned cotinsel of the respondent, we do not decide, because we are not called upon to decide a question so broad and, comprehensive; but we do decide that, as to such matters of legacy and trust as are embraced in this suit, the jurisdiction of the circuit court is not taken away by the statute.

The only remaining question is, the conclusiveness of the receipts in full given by the legatee plaintiffs to the executors, upon the actual receipt by them of only a part of their legacies given by the will, according to the construction of the will and the determination of the amount of such legacies by this court on appeal. The legacies of the plaintiffs were paid in manner and amount strictly according to their determination and the construction of the will by the circuit court before any appeal from such judgment of construction was taken to this court, and while such judgment was in full force and effect, and binding upon the executors and other parties in the suit, including these plaintiffs. According to such judgment these legacies were at the time actually and lawfully paid in full, and the receipts in such terms were accordingly and properly so given.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 N.W. 935, 49 Wis. 507, 1880 Wisc. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catlin-v-wheeler-wis-1880.