Colt v. Colt

111 U.S. 566, 4 S. Ct. 553, 28 L. Ed. 520, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1816
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 5, 1884
Docket343
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 111 U.S. 566 (Colt v. Colt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colt v. Colt, 111 U.S. 566, 4 S. Ct. 553, 28 L. Ed. 520, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1816 (1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court. He stated the facts in the foregoing language, and continued:

*578 The first inquiry upon this appeal manifestly, is, as to the effect to be given in this sujt to the decree of the Suprior Court of. Connecticut; for, if as set up and claimed by the appellees, it is an estoppel by record, the matter of the bill is res judicata, and we cannot open it.

• And in considering the grounds on which it is sought to repel the bar .of this decree, we must disregard at once all that do not attack the jurisdiction of the court over the cause or the parties. It cannot be assailed collaterally for mere error. It follows, therefore, that we cannot notice the allegation that appellants were minor defendants, for whom a general, guardian only, and not a guardian ad litem, appeared to defend; for the infants, having been properly served, were before the court, and are bound by its- action, even if erroneous; the failure to appoint a guardian ad litem, at most, is error merely, and does not defeat the jurisdiction.

■ "What was the proper method of proceeding against defendants, whether by general guardian or guardian ad litem, is a question local to the law of the jurisdiction, and, in the proceeding under review, was passed,on by the State court. It found in the decree that “ the said thinors were duly represented by their guardians,” and that finding cannot be questioned collaterally, as it is not a question of jurisdiction. Coit v. Haven, 30 Conn. 190; Christmas v. Russell, 5 Wall. 290; Thompson v. Whitman, 18 Wall. 457.

It seems to be in accordance with the general practice in Cpnneeticut for a general guardian to be made a party and to defend for his ward, and that, in such cases, the appointment and appearance of a guardian ad litem .are not necessary. Reeves’ Domestic Relations, 267; 1 Swift’s System, 217; 1 Swift’s Digest, 61; Wilford v. Grant, Kirby, 114.

We dismiss, also, without further remark, those grounds of objection which seem to proceed upon some supposed breach of duty or trust on the part of the executors and.general guardian in not making proper defence. The bill does not charge any such breach of trust, or seek relief on that ground; and any suggestions, of that character, cannot affect the integrity and effect of the decree of the Superior Court.

*579 The objection that no question could be passed upon in that case affecting the rights of the complainants to the interest claimed by them in the residuary stock, because the time for the actual enjoyment of the legacy was postponed by the will until the youngest attained the age of majority, is equally un-' tenable and has not been insisted • upon. The interest was vested, and the question of distributipn in right, if not in possession, was before the court.

This leaves, as the single ground on which the estoppel is opposed, that the executors, who by the will were trustees of the 500 shares bequeathed to the complainants, were not parties to the cause, nor before the court in their capacity, as .trustees, but only as executors; that, consequently, the title and estate held by them as trustees were not represented by any one competent to do so, and that, consequently, the decree, not binding the legal title of the trust estate, cannot operate upon the beneficial interest of the cestuis que trust.

This argument proceeds upon the assumption that,.by the terms of the will, the natural persons who were appointed as executors of. the will were also, but with a distinct title, made trustees for the appellant of the legacies • given for their benefit; that there was vested in these trustees a separate and independent legal title and estate in the subject of the legacies, as much so as if they had been different natural persons; that that title and estate could not be affected by any judicial proceedings to which they were not parties as such trustees; and that the beneficial interest of the appellants is equally protected, as it was for that very purpose that the legal estate was vested in others as their trustees; and that consequently the decree-set up as an estoppel is not an adjudication between the same parties as are now before the court in the present siiit.

The language of the original- bequest of the five hundred shares of stock is: “I also give and bequeath to my executors and their successors in said office,” . . . “in trust for the issue of said James B. Colt, lawfully begotten, the profits and dividends thereof to be applied to the education of his said issue, so far as the same may be necessary for that purpose, until the youngest surviving of said. issue shall have *580 reached the age of twenty-one years, when said stock and all accumulations thereof, if any, shall go to said issue, in equal proportions, as an absolute estate.” And the codicil,' which revokes that bequest, gives the same property “ to the other children of my said brother,” . . . “to have and to hold to said other children of the said Christopher in equal proportions. This last bequest is in trust for said children, and the property hereby bequeathed is to be held by my said executors for said children in the same manner and subject to the same limitations as are provided in said original will in the bequest to the children of the said James 13. Colt,” &c:

We have no difficulty, notwithstanding the language of, this bequest, giving the property, in the first instance, directly to the children, in holding, that it creates a trust for their benefit; but we have as little in holding, both as to it and the original bequest which it displaced, that the trust constituted was vested in the executors, in their official capacity as such, so that in case one or all of them had at any time ceased to be executors, he or they would, at the same time, have ceased to be trustees; and that in case a vacancy in the office of either of the executors had occurred and been filled, as provided in the will, by the appointment' of a successor by the remaining executors, the trust would have devolved upon the new executors, mrtute ■officii, so that the executors for the time being would always be the trustees, and so that whatever in their official capacity, .as executors, they did in respect to the subject of this legacy, is to be imputed to them also, in their character as trustees, and • equally affected and bound the trust and its beneficiaries. • The •five hundred shares came into their hands as executors. It remained there for the general trusts of the administration of the estate until they were fully served. The possession of them, thereafter, the law imputed to them still as executors, but in trust for the special purposes, to which by'the will they were appropriated. There was no change of possession; there was no change of the legal title; there Was but a succession of ; uses, according to the terms of the will. They continued to 1 hold this stock as executors, although in trust, until its actual payment to the legatees.

*581 In.

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Bluebook (online)
111 U.S. 566, 4 S. Ct. 553, 28 L. Ed. 520, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colt-v-colt-scotus-1884.