First Wisconsin Mortgage Trust v. Wyman's, Inc.

428 A.2d 1119, 139 Vt. 350, 1981 Vt. LEXIS 469
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 10, 1981
Docket19-80
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 428 A.2d 1119 (First Wisconsin Mortgage Trust v. Wyman's, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Wisconsin Mortgage Trust v. Wyman's, Inc., 428 A.2d 1119, 139 Vt. 350, 1981 Vt. LEXIS 469 (Vt. 1981).

Opinion

Barney, C.J.

Defendant Wyman’s, Inc., was a creditor of defendant Mt. Snow Development Corporation. The defendant Catamount National Bank had money on deposit in the name of the Mt. Snow Development Corporation. Wyman’s obtained a default judgment against Mt. Snow in Washington Superior Court and, as a result, trustee process was served on Cata-mount on June 4,1976.

On June 14, 1976, Catamount made disclosure that it had money on deposit in the name of Mt. Snow, but that the account, “by virtue of certain documents of transfer,” was claimed by plaintiff First Wisconsin Mortgage Trust. Among those documents put in evidence was a corporate resolution directing that the name of the account be in the following form: “Mt. Snow Development Corporation as Managing Agent for First Wisconsin Mortgage Trust.” This resolution represented action taken at a meeting of the Board of Directors held on June 14, 1976. The Catamount Bank had in fact changed the name of the account on June 10, 1976. Cata-mount’s disclosure contended that it ought not to be adjudged trustee. In August, 1976, First Wisconsin moved to intervene in the trustee suit, but the trial court denied First Wisconsin’s motion, on the ground that First Wisconsin was not properly registered in Vermont and therefore could not maintain an action in Vermont. First Wisconsin subsequently registered properly on August 18, 1976, after its motion for reconsideration of the denial was denied.

In August of 1977, Wyman’s moved for judgment against the trustee based on the assets disclosed. This was followed by a reply filed by Catamount stating it had no objection to such a judgment, but asking for counsel fees and costs. Judgment against the account in Catamount was entered in favor of Wyman’s on September 13, 1977.

A year prior to that judgment, in August of 1976, this action had been commenced in Bennington Superior Court to present First Wisconsin’s claim of ownership in the funds in the Catamount Bank and to challenge their disbursement to Wyman’s. Catamount timely responded to the complaint, but Wyman’s answer was not filed until the next year, in No *353 vember of 1977, after the judgment against Catamount as trustee had issued in the Washington Superior Court.

The matter was heard in December, 1978, by court, and all of the foregoing facts are set out in the findings or appear from the record on file. The hearing resulted in a judgment dismissing First Wisconsin’s action, and dismissing the counterclaim of Catamount seeking judgment as to ownership of the funds in question, on the basis that Catamount had been adjudged to have no liability to First Wisconsin. First Wisconsin has appealed from the order dismissing its action.

To avoid unnecessarily complicating the recitation of the dispute between the parties, a number of ancillary facts have not been stated. We will refer to them as necessary in dealing with the issues before us. They relate generally to the effect of attempts to intervene and to the binding effect of trustee adjudications involving this plaintiff, this trustee and this very account in other cases brought to the attention of the trial court in this action.

The resort by a creditor to an asset held by another and owed to his debtor, known as “trustee process,” dates back to the earliest days of Vermont. In 1835 it was changed from an independent writ available only against absconding debtors or concealed assets to a regular incident of a writ of attachment. Divoll v. Nichols, 70 Vt. 537, 538, 41 A. 972, 972-73 (1898). Since then, although procedures have been refined and clarified from time to time by statutory amendment and court rule to bring* those procedures into line with enlarged constitutional concerns, the basic process has remained essentially the same. 12 V.S.A. § 3011, V.R.C.P. 4.2.

Trustee process is a device by which a judgment creditor may, by process, reach certain obligations due the judgment debtor. The logic of this resort needs no explanation, but there is concern in the statutory pattern, as there should be, for the protection of the third-party trustee, and perhaps other claimants who may be affected by the litigation.

A close definition of the right that can be reached, and also of the obligation of the debtor-trustee when brought into the litigation, is essential. Both the statutes and our cases emphasize that the debt must be one actually owed to the defendant at the time of service of trustee process, or which *354 comes into his hands before he files his disclosure. Island Pond National Bank v. Chase, 101 Vt. 60, 62, 141 A. 474, 474-75 (1928); 12 V.S.A. §§ 3013, 3018 and 3019. The. exception'is when the trustee fails to fulfill his responsibilities under the law and therefore puts his own resources at stake for the benefit of the plaintiff. State v. Rogers, 123 Vt. 422, 425-26; 193 A.2d 920, 923 (1963).

..Otherwise the reach, of trustee process is directed to kh debtedness in fact due the defendant: 12 V.S.A. § 3018.. The principal controversies have involved alleged attemptsvto change the: ownership of the debt after service of the trustee process, and controversies about the eligibility of the ¡debt under the applicable statutes. This last issue is not in this casé¡ :

An examination of the evidence and findings below discloses that the lower court saw the problem as an attempt to transfer title after service of the trustee process. This 'decision rested on a determination that the deposit involved belonged to the Mt. Snow Development Corporation at the time process was served on the Catamount Bank, and that the change in designation by the corporate resolution of June 14, 1976, already noted, represented a change in title. This is not supportable.

The trial court and some of the witnesses and attorneys viewed the following provision of the management agreement as requiring that the deposit account in question be in an account maintained by First Wisconsin:

(b) All gross revenues from the business operated on the Property shall be promptly deposited by MSDC in an account maintained with First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee, Milwaukee Wisconsin or any other bank designated by FWMT, and all expenditures made by MSDC for the operation and management of the business on the Property shall be in the form of disbursements from such account. All checks or other disbursements from such account shall be countersigned by FWMT or its designee.

Since construction of the unambiguous provisions of a contract is done by the court as a matter of law, we so review *355 it here. William Feinstein Brothers, Inc. v. L. Z. Hotte Granite Co., 123 Vt. 167, 170, 184 A.2d 540, 542 (1962). The quoted provision required Mt. Snow Development Corporation to deposit the money in an account in the First Wisconsin National Bank itself, or any other bank designated by First Wisconsin Mortgage Trust. It does not require that the account be joint With or maintained in the name of First Wisconsin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
428 A.2d 1119, 139 Vt. 350, 1981 Vt. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-wisconsin-mortgage-trust-v-wymans-inc-vt-1981.