Gorny v. Trustees of Milwaukee County Orphans Board

14 F. Supp. 450, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1334
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 17, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 F. Supp. 450 (Gorny v. Trustees of Milwaukee County Orphans Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorny v. Trustees of Milwaukee County Orphans Board, 14 F. Supp. 450, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1334 (E.D. Wis. 1936).

Opinion

GEIGER, District Judge.

The parties, by consent, submit questions of law arising on the pleadings; and, although not so announced, it would seem that in effect they have submitted to a consideration of the case as upon motions for judgment upon or demurrers to pleadings. That is to say, the questions touch vital elements of plaintiffs’ asserted cause of action, and the defenses set up in thesanswer; and the court is willing to consider them as appropriately raised.

The facts, not in dispute, are:

Mary Bulewicz, a resident of Milwaukee county, died May 13, 1920. Her estate was administered in the county court by the public administrator, and on February 26, 1926, the residue in the hands of such administrator, by a final judgment of said court, was escheated, and paid to the defendant herein under the provisions of section 2 of chapter 471, Private and Local Laws of 1871 of Wisconsin. Such defendant is a body corporate created by chapter 124 of the Private and Local Laws of 1871; and, as such, is composed of the judges of the various courts of Milwaukee county; and the corporation through them holds the property in trust for the use, benefit, and support of orphans under fourteen years of age living in the several chartered orphan asylums of that county. The act contains provisions respecting the duties of the trustees.

The amended complaint, after reciting in substance the foregoing, avers that Mary Bulewicz was survived by “neither issue, husband, father or mother, but by the fifteen plaintiffs, as heirs bearing relationship as brothers, nephews, nieces, grandnieces, or otherwise, as in detail alleged.”

That on February 25, 1931, certain of plaintiffs, referred to as foreign heirs, presented to the county court of Milwaukee county a petition representing .themselves to be heirs of Mary Bulewicz and “praying for a refund to them of said escheated estate of Mary Bulewicz, as her heirs”; and that such petition, having been served upon the defendant, came to hearing, whereon defendant appeared, and testimony was taken “in proof of the heirship of plaintiffs to said estate.”

On June 21, 1932, certain other plaintiffs, referred to in the complaint as “American heirs,” filed their petition in the county court of Milwaukee county, “praying for a refund to them of one half of the said estate of Mary Bulewicz, deceased, as her heirs”; that such petition [452]*452was served upon the defendant, but it did not appear.

On October 14, 1932, the county court dismissed both of the petitions “for the reason that said court (by reason of the decision of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in Re Lillian Payne’s Estate, 208 Wis. 142, 242 N.W. 553), was without jurisdiction to hear and determine said petitions”; that on appeal from the ruling—a want of jurisdiction—the Supreme Court of Wisconsin on June 29, 1933, affirmed it, and further again ruled that the law of Wisconsin, above noted, providing for escheat to the defendant of personal estates of Milwaukee county, was in contravention of the State Constitution. In re Bulewicz’s Estate, 212 Wis. 426, 249 N.W. 534. The complaint proceeds: “That after the decision of In re Lillian Payne’s -Estate, 208 Wis. 142, 242 N.W. 553, the State of Wisconsin began an action against the defendant herein in the Circuit Court of Milwaukee County to cover into the treasury of the state of Wisconsin the entire fund received by the defendant by virtue of section 2 of chapter 471 Priyate and Local Laws of 1871; that after the decision of In re Mary Bulewicz’s Estate, 212 Wis. 426, 249 N.W. 534 (last supra), these plaintiffs filed a petition for leave to intervene and tendered answer in the case brought by the state of Wisconsin against this defendant; that such leave was denied by the Circuit Court of Milwaukee County, but the judgment thereafter entered in said cause, awarding said fund to the state of Wisconsin, reserved to these plaintiffs the right to prosecute an action to recover said fund in any court; that this defendant appealed to the Supreme Court of Wisconsin and plaintiffs’ attorney secured leave and filed a brief amicus curiae supporting the claim of the state of Wisconsin to such fund in an effort to have such fund paid into the treasury of- the state of Wisconsin so as to be available to these plaintiffs as provided in section 318.03, Statutes of Wisconsin hereinafter set forth; that the judgment of the Circuit Court of Wisconsin was reversed by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin on the grounds that the Attorney General of Wisconsin had notice of the proceedings in the County Court which resulted in the funds being paid to this defendant; and that the several judgments of the County Court transferring the escheated estate to this defendant, although rendered under an unconstitutional statute were res adjudicata as to the state of Wisconsin. State v. Trustees of Milwaukee County Orphans’ Board, 218 Wis. 518, 261 N.W. 676.”

The complaint alleges the trust character of funds received by defendant board; and that such trust comprehended the heirs to whom refund was obligatory during the period of the section authorizing payment to defendant of escheats; and further alleges the existence, at the time of the transfer of the estate, and of the making of claims for refund, of section 318.03, declaring the right of refund.

The plaintiffs, averring that “the remedies given by the statutes of Wisconsin having failed, and plaintiffs being without due and adequate remedies at law,” pray, (1) for subpcena; (2) that plaintiffs be decreed to be the heirs of Mary Bulewicz, deceased, and entitled to her estate; (3) that defendant be decreed to account for the estate and its increment since October 14, 1932; (4) general relief.

It is assumed that in this complaint the pleader intended not argumentatively to discuss mere matters of law, but by reference to the law and the decisions, to disclose facts bearing pertinently upon the escheat fund in' the hands of the defendant; that is to say, it is intended to disclose the facts upon plaintiff’s contention that such escheat is a trust fund whereof they may have the benefit; and which, because of the course of ruling indicated, has come wholly within the cognizance of a court of general equitable jurisdiction.

It therefore appears both from the complaint and from the law and decisions referred to that the Private and Local Laws of 1871 made provision in substance for the assignment by the county court of Milwaukee county to the defendant orphan’s board whose corporate existence was also enacted, of all escheats arising in Milwaukee county. On May 10, 1932, after sixty years of recognition and application, such law was held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the state because in violation of section 2, article 10, of the State Constitution prescribing that es-cheats be “set apart as a separate fund to be called ‘the school fund.’ ” This was held in the case of In re Estate of Payne, 208 Wis. 142, 242 N.W. 553j involving initially the question whether such constitutional provision comprehended both lands and personalty; and such question was answered affirmatively.

[453]*453Obediently to such decision, and the allegation of the complaint is in conformity with that and subsequent rulings, two phases of the situation developed.

(1) That the county court of Milwaukee county was held to be without jurisdiction to entertain proceedings for a refund of escheated estates.

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Related

Gorny v. Trustees of Milwaukee County Orphans Board
93 F.2d 107 (Seventh Circuit, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F. Supp. 450, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorny-v-trustees-of-milwaukee-county-orphans-board-wied-1936.