Eastern Maine General Hospital v. Harrison

193 A. 246, 135 Me. 190, 1937 Me. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 13, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 A. 246 (Eastern Maine General Hospital v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastern Maine General Hospital v. Harrison, 193 A. 246, 135 Me. 190, 1937 Me. LEXIS 34 (Me. 1937).

Opinion

Dunn, C. J.

The only problem the report presents is the determination whether the Superior Court in equity may appoint a successor testamentary trustee, where the will of the testator neither confers authority, nor provides a method to be pursued to fill a vacancy. If that court has such power, the propriety of its exercise is not here involved.

[191]*191James C. Stodder, late of Bangor, Maine, died March 6, 1917, testate. The probate court of original jurisdiction over the subject matter of the settlement of the estate of the decedent took proof, and allowed his last will. The will created a trust which attached ; testator’s widow, who is still living, is beneficiary for life; there is gift over. The property of the trust is worth around $1,000,000.

The three trustees the will named, the Probate -Court duly confirmed. They accepted the-trust, and in May, 1917, on letters issuing, entered upon the discharge of their duties.

Seven years later, one of the trustees (testator’s brother) died. On petition of the testator’s widow, as beneficiary, and of the surviving trustees, she being one, the Probate Court, after notice by publication, and hearing, appointed the Eastern Trust & Banking Company a trustee in succession. That company has since acted in such capacity.

Hugh R. Chaplin, Esquire, another of the trustees nominated in the will, is now deceased; his death occurred on September 22,1935.

Mrs. Stodder, as beneficiary and as trustee, and all other persons and institutions having any vested rights in the trust estate, have joined as plaintiffs in the present bill. They ask that, to maintain the number of trustees the will prescribes, Edgar M. Simpson, Esquire, be of that personnel, in the place of Mr. Chaplin.

Children of some of the plaintiffs are made defendants. They, being minors, are represented by a guardian- ad litem.

The Eastern Trust & Banking Company, trustee, is the only other defendant.

The report stipulates, in sum, that if, “on this record,” the Superior Court may not take cognizance of the bill and appoint a trustee, the bill shall be dismissed; otherwise, the case is to be sent back for further proceedings.

The record comprises the bill, answer, decree appointing and admitting the guardian ad litem, replication, report of the guardian, sundry exhibits, and transcript of the oral evidence.

Testimony goes to reinforce allegations in the bill, that, (a) the objects of the trust are not yet accomplished; (b) there is desirability of selection, by the Superior Court, under statutory provision, of a new trustee.

[192]*192Ordinarily, courts of probate take jurisprudence in these matters. Huston v. Dodge, 111 Me., 246, 255, 88 A., 888. Authority so to do was first conferred by Public Laws of 1821, Chapter 51, Section 61.

The provision was carried forward, as of the body of the law, in the 1840 revision of the statutes, and that of 1857. R. S. 1840, Chap. 111, Sec. 7; R. S. 1857, Chap. 68, Sec. 5. Likewise, in R. S. 1871, Chap. 68, Sec. 5.

In the revision of 1883, Chapter 68, Section 5, the 1871 section just cited, is replaced by Public Laws of 1878, Chapter 8.

Section 1 of that chapter reads as follows:

“When a trustee under a written instrument, declines, resigns, dies, or is removed, before the objects thereof are accomplished, if no adequate provision is made therein for supplying the vacancy, the probate court or supreme judicial court shall, after notice to all persons interested, appoint a new trustee-to act alone or jointly with the others, as the case may be. Such new trustee, upon giving bonds and security required, shall have and exercise the same powers, rights and duties, whether as a sole or joint trustee, as if he had been originally appointed, and the trust estate shall vest in him in like manner as it had or would have vested in the trustee in whose place he is substituted.”

Such legislation has been re-enacted, without essential change, in the revisions of 1903 and 1916. R. S. 1903, Chap. 70, Sec. 17; R. S. 1916, Chap. 73, Sec. 18. In 1930, “Superior Court” was substituted for “Supreme Judicial Court.” R. S. 1930, Chap. 82, Sec. 18.

Jurisdictional rights, specifically provided by statute to the probate court, as a distinct tribunal for the administration of the estates of men dying either with or without wills, are not of relation to the instant question.

A will is, within the meaning of the 1878 statute (now in R. S. 1930, Chapter 82, Section 18,) extended above, a written instrument. Huston v. Dodge, supra.

Legislation in Massachusetts (Massachusetts General Laws, 1860, Chapter 100, Section 9,) from which our own was taken, has, [193]*193in supplying testamentary trustees, on information in equity, been regarded as the foundation of proceedings. Attorney General v. Barbour, 121 Mass., 568.

The Maine court, as a court of equity, has appointed trustees. In Pillsbury v. European & North American Railway Company, 69 Maine, 394, vacancy under a deed of trust was filled. Judge Appleton, delivering the opinion, said that “the cumberous proceedings of a bill are rendered unnecessary by the provisions of our statute.”

Inhabitants of Anson et al., Petrs., 85 Me., 79, 26 A., 996, which mentions the very statute, had to do with choosing a new trustee under a railroad mortgage.

In Huston v. Dodge, supra, the Law Court, that is, the Supreme Judicial Court, in banco, construing the statute, after pointing the empowerment of the Probate Court, states explicitly that, in proper cases, the Supreme Judicial Court will appoint testamentary trustees. The Superior Court now occupies the statutory space wherein the Supreme Judicial Court had been designated. R. S. 1930, supra.

Statutes have conferred upon the Superior Court a general jurisdiction in equity, coextensive with that of the Supreme Judicial Court. Original powers are concurrently exercised by justices of these common-law courts, according to the usage and practice in chancery. R. S. 1930, Chap. 91, Sec. 35, 36. Concurrent jurisdiction means joint and equal jurisdiction. State v. Sinnott, 89 Me., 41, 35 A., 1007. In cases of trusts, authority is specifically given. R. S., supra, (Sec. 36, sub-paragraph IV) ; Brackenbury v. Hodgkin, 116 Me., 399, 102 A., 106; Caverly v. Small, 119 Me., 291, 111 A., 300.

The rule which limits courts of equity to cases where there is no adequate remedy at law, does not, speaking generally, apply to trusts, as there equity has a natural and primary office, superadded to any legal rights. McCampbell v. Brown, 48 Fed., 795; First Congregational Society v. Trustees, 23 Pick., 148.

Equitable jurisdiction, a succinctly worded headnote says, does not depend upon the want of a common-law remedy, for, while there may be such a remedy, it may be inadequate to meet all the requirements of a given case, or to effect complete justice between the contending parties. The granting of relief must often depend upon the [194]*194sound discretion of the court. Appeal of Brush Electric Co., 114 Pa., 574, 7 A., 794.

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Bluebook (online)
193 A. 246, 135 Me. 190, 1937 Me. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastern-maine-general-hospital-v-harrison-me-1937.