Dodd v. Giuselin

27 F. 405
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri
DecidedApril 12, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 F. 405 (Dodd v. Giuselin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodd v. Giuselin, 27 F. 405 (circtedmo 1886).

Opinion

Brewer, J.,

(orally.) In the case of Dodd and others against Ghiselin, administrator with the will annexed, there is a demurrer to the bill—First, on the ground that this court has no jurisdiction, by reason of the citizenship of the parties; second, that there is a defect of parties; third, that there is no equity in the bill.

The bill is brought by two minors, citizens of the state of Texas, by their next friend and curator, the latter being a citizen of the state of Missouri, against the defendant, a citizen of Missouri, and the claim is that the parties litigant are the curator on the one side and the administrator on the other, both citizens of Missouri. The case of Coal Co. v. Blatchford, 11 Wall. 172, is cited, which holds that trustees and executors, suing for others’ benefits, are the parties holding the legal title and the ones whose citizenship determines the jurisdiction of the federal court. But the title to the property of a minor is in the minor. The curator or guardian represents him, but does not have the title; and in the leading case of Lamar v. Micou, 112 U. S. 452, S. C. 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 221, the supreme court notices the distinction:

“ The case of such a guardian differs from that of an executor of, or a trustee under, a will. In the one case the title is in the executor or the trustee; in the other, tlie title in the property is in the ward, and the guardian has only the custody and management of it, with power to change its investment.”

The bill alleges that the judgments rendered in the state court, upon which this suit is founded, were rendered in favor of the minors. Before this bill was filed the curator was, by this court, appointed as-next friend, with power to bring this suit. That ground of the de-. murrer is not well taken.

I pass to the third question; that is, whether there is any equity,in the bill. The facts as stated are these: One Jamison was curator of the estate of these minors. As such he defaulted. A new curator, Mr. Scudder, was appointed in his place. Judgments were rendered in the probate court on July 21, 1885, in favor of these minors, and against. Jamison, their former curator. William F. Ferguson was the bondsman of this curator. He died in 1883, and Mr. Ghiselin was appointed as administrator with the will annexed. This was done September 19, 1883. Statutory notice was published, and the estate is now' in process of settlement in the probate court. "The bill charges, that the estate of Ferguson will not pay all the claims allowed against it,—will not pay even all the claims allowed and classed in the fifth class. It charges that there are about $65,000 of claims which have been allowed and classed in the fifth class. The claims of these minors were not exhibited until one year had elapsed, and could not be, because they had not passed into judgment against their former-curator; and so, not having been presented until after the expiration of the first year, were allowed and classed in the sixth class. As the estate will not pay all the fifth-class claims they will get nothing.. [407]*407It further charges that two of the»claims, amounting to about $40,-000, which wore allowed and classed in the fifth class, were not in fact exhibited to the administrator within one year; but by his collusion, and by connivance between him and with the claimants thereof, were reported to the court as exhibited during the first year, and allowed and classed in tho fifth class.

Upon these facts counsel asserts—First, that, notwithstanding the law of Missouri provides that claims presented within one year shall be allowed and classed in the fifth class, and those presented after-wards shall be allowed and classed in the sixth class, and that the fifth-class claims shall be paid in full before any payment on the sixth-class claims, this court, sitting as a court of equity, is not bound by that law; that equality is equity; that the two claims of forty thousand and odd dollars, which were allowed and classed in the fifth class, being of the same nature, are of only equal equity with the claims in favor of the plaintiffs. In fact, those were claims against the testator as bondsman of the same William F. Ferguson, though as curator of another estate.

I should have stated one further fact as charged in the bill, and that is that although an order has been made to pay 20 per cent, upon tho fifth-class claims, the administrator has in his hands enough assets undistributed to pay these claimants (the plaintiffs) pro rata with the other holders of fifth-class claims. So, it is insisted that as the administrator has not made distribution of all the assets, as equality is equity, that this court should adjudge against him that lie distribute pro rata between these parties who have sixth-class claims and those having fifth-class claims of the same nature. Let us see to what that would lead: The administrator is an officer of the probate court, and bound to obey its orders. This court lias no power fco control the actions of that court, or direct what its judgments shall be. The law of Missouri requires that fifth-class claims be paid before sixth-class claims. The due and orderly administration of affairs in the probate court will necessarily lead to an order upon tho administrator that he pay these fifth-class claims. If he does not pay them in full before lie pays any on the sixth-class claims, judgment will be rendered against him, to which he and his bondsmen will be liable. Can it be that, discharging his duty in strict obedience to the orders of the court which appointed him, and to the law of the state of which he is an officer, he can be held liable to a judgment in tilia court. The only way out from such a result would lie to hold that this court has power to interfere and take from the probate court the possession of those assets, and itself administer the estate, and that, tho supreme court has held, cannot be dono. Yonley v. Lavender, 21 Wall. 276.

Take another illustration: In some of the states attachments have priority as lions according to the dates of the levies. Suppose there are two creditors, one having a matured claim, and the other one not [408]*408yet due; the former sues out his Efttachment, and makes his levy; the other cannot, in time for a contemporaneous levy. Can it be that a court of equity of the United States will interfere or take from the sheriff the attached property, and distribute it equally between the two creditors upon the doctrine that “equality is equity ?” The whole theory of this claim is that the administrator is liable to a decree in this court because he is obeying the laws of the state of Missouri, and that these non-resident minors have a right to insist upon a disregard of those laws by this court. There is no such right. This court does not sit here to overturn the laws of the state of Missouri, but to enforce them. So far as those laws are valid and constitutional, and there is no question of validity in this case, they are just as binding upon this court as upon the state courts. Obedience to the laws of the state of Missouri is no basis for liability to an action in this court. I find in the authorities nothing which justifies this claim.

The various cases cited are these: The first is that of Union Bank of Tennessee v. Jolly’s Adm’rs, reported in 18 How. 503.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodd-v-giuselin-circtedmo-1886.