Detroit Trust Co. v. Blakely

103 N.W.2d 413, 359 Mich. 621, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 483
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1960
DocketDocket 43, Calendar 48,295
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 103 N.W.2d 413 (Detroit Trust Co. v. Blakely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Detroit Trust Co. v. Blakely, 103 N.W.2d 413, 359 Mich. 621, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 483 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Black, J.

(for dismissal of appeal). Pour years ago, in the case of In re Fitch Drain No. 129, 346 Mich 81, 91, an overdue acknowledgment of this Court’s immediate procedural debt to the profession was written — en solitaire — for the record of the future. * Our continued inaction since then rises to haunt us now.

The obligation — so cast upon us by the mounting mass of perplexity section 1 of Court Bule No 60 {1945) has generated — remains past due .and unpaid. To prove out this compound of contradiction I need but expose (for comparison with Mr. Justice Carr’s opinion as written in this case) the record of our unpublished doings in another case where, as here, the Wayne circuit in chancery has assumed long-continuant supervisory jurisdiction over the assigned work of an appointed arm of the court.

I refer to Harvey v. Lewis, 357 Mich 305. The opinion in that case does not tell today’s story. It does, however, serve as an introduction to our internal record of steady dismissal, in the same cause, of a series of appeals claimed of right from a series *624 of like interlocutory orders. * Such orders are temporal duplicates of the order before us, as we shall see.

In Harvey v. Lewis one of the parties in interest claimed (January 31, 1959) an appeal of right from an order of the chancellor directing operation of the Brookdale Cemetery (described and considered in Harvey v. Lewis, supra). Under date of January 7, 1960 (our No. 48,164), such appeal was dismissed by this Court for want of application and grant of leave.

In the same cause one of the parties in interest claimed (May 21, 1959) an appeal of right from an order of the chancellor determining that a certain mortgage affecting the subject matter had been discharged. Under date of November 24, 1959 (our No. 48,279), such appeal was dismissed by this Court for want of application and grant of leave.

In the same cause one of the parties in interest claimed (June 12, 1959) an appeal of right from an order authorizing the payment of compensation to the receiver (and to counsel for the receiver). Under date of November 24,1959 (our No. 48,332), such appeal was dismissed by this Court for want of application and grant of leave.

In the same cause one of the parties in interest claimed (June 22, 1959) an appeal of right from an order authorizing the receiver to erect a permanent building in the Brookdale Cemetery. Under date of January 7,1960 (our No. 48,336), such appeal was dismissed by this Court for want of application and grant of leave.

In the same cause one of the parties in interest claimed (July 16, 1959) appeal of right from an order instructing the receiver to defend title to the Brookdale Cemetery (as was thereafter done in *625 Harvey v. Lewis, supra). Under date of January 7, 1960 (our No. 48,376), such appeal was dismissed by this Court for want of application and grant of leave.

What was said in In re Fitch Drain is as true today as in 1956. The only difference is that 4 more years of inexcusable lethargy on the part of this Court have intervened to aggravate the uncertainty of judges here and counsel below when the problem question is recurrently presented: Is this order, this judgment, this decree, appealable of right? This Court only can answer the question with tape-measured certainty. Until our membership rises in unison to rewrite said section 1 (of Court Rule No 60) in terms of blunt simplicity, the question will continue to receive dough-baked answers — good only for the day and case.

Turning now to the appeal before us. I would dismiss it for want of application and grant of leave. The appealed order is by no means final. It amounts to no more than a determination of the chancellor that he will not — on this single beneficiary’s petition —surcharge the cotrustee to the extent of the fee paid its counsel (Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone). Save only as to one beneficiary of the trust (the petitioner herself, Muriel J. Paul), that order cannot in any conceivable way bind the parties in interest, adult and minor. The reason is that such remaining beneficiaries were not brought before the court on the occasion of entry of such order, as they previously were — with religious regularity— throughout the pendency of this continuing-since-1951 chancery proceeding.

I suggest that my venerable Brother has confused the petition for instructions, which was filed June 27, 1958 (and proceedings pursuant thereto which culminated in the chancellor’s order of instructions entered July 8,1958), with the instant petition (filed *626 May 18, 1959) to require the cotrustee “to replace or repay trust funds.” Such former petition came to hearing only after due proceedings had been taken to bring before the court all interested parties, including the presently absent beneficiaries. * Nothing-like that was done in pursuance of the instant petition, and no pretense to the contrary is made or indicated in the briefs before us or in the original circuit court record.

Mrs. Paul’s petition brought before the court one only of the many interlocutory matters which, in the course of this continuing-over-the-years chancery proceeding of supervisory nature, has been brought and will be brought to judicial surveillance. In this instance the chancellor might well have dismissed the petition with suggestion that the presented issue be submitted when the next account of the trustees— showing the questioned disbursement to counsel — is formally offered up for judicial allowance and approval. Why! Because that is the proper way— and the proper time — to question an allegedly improper disbursement by a fiduciary; a time when all parties in interest are standing at the bar of the court.

In connection with this last observation, I would note that the “Eighth Account” of the trustees, reflecting as it should the questioned disbursement to counsel, was filed below since this appeal was *627 claimed. Such account, plus a series of preceding accounts of the trustees as filed, yet awaits due pressentation to the chancellor for adjudicatory approval. Which is to say that Mrs. Paul’s petition was quite out of order and that the order of denial thereof left in its wake no prejudice to ultimate objection assigning the same reasons in support.

Justice Carr notes that no motion to dismiss this appeal has been submitted. That is true. It is equally true of numerous other instances where appeals to this Court are claimed of right (where of right they have no business here save on granted leave); with appellee counsel agreeably willing that the appealed matter come here for decision (with consequent involvement of appellate work which some person, some trust, some receivership, or some other client, must pay for). *

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.W.2d 413, 359 Mich. 621, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/detroit-trust-co-v-blakely-mich-1960.