Freedman's Savings & Trust Co. v. Earle

110 U.S. 710, 4 S. Ct. 226, 28 L. Ed. 301, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1732
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1884
Docket248
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 110 U.S. 710 (Freedman's Savings & Trust Co. v. Earle) 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
Freedman's Savings & Trust Co. v. Earle, 110 U.S. 710, 4 S. Ct. 226, 28 L. Ed. 301, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1732 (1884).

Opinion

*712 . Me. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

After reciting the facts in the foregoing language he continued:

As ground of reversal, it is assigned by the appellant that the proceeds of the sale of the equitable interest of Dodge, the judgment debtor, should have been distributed pro rata between the appellees, and the appellants, instead of having been awarded exclusively to the appellee. It is contended on behalf of the appellants that the interest of the judgment debtor in the land, being an equity merely, is not subject to execution at law;' and as it can- be reached by judgment creditors only through the intervention and by the aid of a court of equity, it becomesj'of the nature of equitable assets, and when sold, the proceeds will be applied, according to the maxim that equality is equity, ratably among the creditors.

", In the case of Morsell v. First-National Bank-, 91 U. S. 357, it was decided that, under the laws of Maryland in force in • .this District, judgments at law were not liens upon the interest of judgment debtors who had previously conveyed lands to a trustee in trust for the payment of a debt secured thereby. Mr. Justice Sway lie said (p.,361): “ The judgments in nowise affected the trust premises until the bill was filed. That created a lien in favor of the judgment creditors. There was none before.” And it was accordingly held that in the distribution of the proceeds of sale the judgments must be postponéd to debts secured by other deeds of trust made before' the filing of the bill, but subsequent to the rendition of the judgments. But that decision leaves open the question arising here between judgment, creditors seeking satisfaction in equity out of the debtor’s equitable estate. It becomes necessary, therefore, to determine the nature of the right and the principle of distribution which arises from it.

At common law executions upon judgments could not be levied upon estates merely equitable, because courts of law did •not recognize any such titles and could not deal with them. They.could not be levied upon the estate of the trustee when -the judgment was against the cestui que .trust for the same .reason; and when the judgment was-against the trustee,.if his legal estate should be levied oh, the execution -creditor could, *713 acquire no beneficial interest, and if the levy tended injuriously to affect the interest of the cestui que trust, the latter would be entitled to relief, by injunction or otherwise, in equity. Lewin on Trusts, 181, 186; 2 Spence Eq. Jur. 39.

But as courts of equity regarded the cestui que trust as the true and beneficial owner of the estate, to whose uses, according to the terms of the trust, the legal title was made subservient, so.in its eyes, the estate of the cestui que trust came to be invested with the same incidents and qualities which in a court of law belonged to a legal estate, so far as consistent with the-preservation and administration of the trust. This was by virtue of a principle of analogy, adopted because courts of equity were unwilling to interfere with the'strict course of the law, except so far as was necessary to execute the just intentions of parties, and to prevent the forms of the law from being made the means and instruments of wrong, injustice and oppression.

Thus equitable estates were held to be assignable and could be conveyed or devised; were subject to the rules of desceiit applicable to legal estates'; to the tenancy by courtesy, though not to dower, by an anomalous exception afterwards corrected by statute, 3 and 4 Will. IV.', c. 105 ; and were ordinarily governed by the rules of law which measure the duration of the enjoyment or regulate the devolution or transmission of estates; so that, in general, whatever would be the rule of law, if it were a legal estate, was applied by the court of chancery by analogy to a trust estate. 1 Spence Eq. Jur. 502.

As judgment creditors, after the statute of Westminster,, 13 Ed. I, c. 18, were entitled, by the writ of degib, to be put in the possession of a moiety of the lands of the debtor, until satisfaction of the judgment; and as it would be contrary to equity to permit a debtor to withdraw his lands from liability to his judgment creditors, this ahalogy was at an early date extended, so as to give to judgment creditors similar benefits in respect to the equitable estate of their debtors; and as the remedies in favor of judgment creditors by way of execution upon the legal estate -of their debtors have been enlarged, they have been imitated by a corresponding analogy as to equitable *714 estates by courts of equity. This is in pursuance of the principle stated in a pregnant sentence by Lord Northington, in Burgess v. Wheate, 1 Eden, 177-261, where he said ; “ For my own part, I know no instance where this court ever permitted the creation of a trust to affect the right of a third party.” Ib. 151. It is embodied in the maxim, cequitas sequitur legem,'.

It was accordingly held by Lord Nottingham, in the anonymous case cited in Batch v. Wastall, 1 P. Wms. 445,' that one who had a judgment, and had lodged & fieri facias in the sheriff’s hands, to which nulla bona was returned, might afterwards bring a bill against the defendant, or any other, to discover any of the (goods or personal estate of the defendant, and by that means to effect the same; ”. and although Lord Keeper Bridgman, in Pratt v. Colt, Freeman’s Cas. ip. Ch. by Hovenden, ■ 139, refused to permit a trust estate, which had descended to the heir, to be extended upon an elegit on a judgment against his ancestor, the reporter adds, “ but note that this hath not been taken to be a good demurrer by the old and best practisers, as little according with good reason, for the heir-át-law is ' as much chargeable with the ancestor’s judgment as the executor with the testator’s debts, and so equity ought to follow the law.” Three years subsequently to this decision, the Statute of Frauds, 29 Car. II., c. 3, was enacted, the 10th section of which made trust estates in’ fee simple assets for the payment of debts, and subject to an elegit upon judgment against the cestui que trust. But this statute did not extend to chattels real, to trusts under which the debtor had not the whole interest, to equities of redemp-. tion, or to any equitable interest -which had been parted with before execution sued out. Forth v. Duke of Norfolk, 4 Mad. 503. The statute of 5 Geo. II. C. 7, which made lands-within the English colonies chargeable with debts, and subject to the like process of' execution -as personal estate, was in force in Maryland; but as it did not interf$re With the established distinction between law and equity, it did not permit an equitable interest to be seized- under a fieri facias. ‘ Lessee of Smith v. McCann, 24 How. 398.

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110 U.S. 710, 4 S. Ct. 226, 28 L. Ed. 301, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freedmans-savings-trust-co-v-earle-scotus-1884.