Hoffman v. McClelland

264 U.S. 552, 44 S. Ct. 407, 68 L. Ed. 845, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2537
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 21, 1924
Docket190
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 264 U.S. 552 (Hoffman v. McClelland) 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
Hoffman v. McClelland, 264 U.S. 552, 44 S. Ct. 407, 68 L. Ed. 845, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2537 (1924).

Opinion

*555 Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the District Court for the Western District of Texas refusing leave to file a bill proffered as a petition of intervention in a designated suit in that court. The appeal was taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals and was by that court transferred here according to § 238a of the Judicial Code, c. 305, 42 Stat. 837, on the ground that it should have been taken directly to this Court under § 238. 284 Fed. 837.

The suit in which intervention was sought already had been prosecuted to a final decree; but the decree contained a provision whereby jurisdiction was retained for limited purposes, one of which will be hereinafter shown. The suit arose out of conflicting claims asserted under the will of Peter McClelland, Sr., a resident of McLennan County, in the Western District of Texas, who died in 1886 seized of valuable real property in that county. The will put the property in a so-called spendthrift trust of which Peter McClelland, Jr., the testator’s son and only child, was the beneficiary. Through an order of the state court in McLennan County, John K. Rose, a citizen .of Texas, became the substituted trustee under the will, and as such was holding the property and administering the trust when the suit was begun. The son, who was a citizen of California, was the plaintiff, and the substituted trustee and the testator’s collateral kin were the defendants. Diverse citizenship was the sole basis of., the District Court’s jurisdiction. The object of the suit was to obtain a construction of the will, to have that construction made binding on the trustee, and to establish the son’s ownership, subject to the trust, of all the property as against the collateral kin. The proceedings and the decree are shown in McClelland v. Rose, 208 Fed. 503; 222 Fed. 67; and 247 Fed. 721; and Rose v. McClelland, 241 U. S. 668. The decree determined that the trust was to. con *556 tinue fox’ the natural life of the son; that the trustee was to hold the property, collect the, rents and make discretionary advances to the son during that period, and that the son was the true and sole owner, subject to the trust, of all the property. One paragraph of the decree read as follows:

“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court, that the said John K. Rose, as substitute trustee aforesaid, may, without further order of this court, make from time to time such advances to said plaintiff, Peter McClelland, Jr., not to exceed the net rent revenues and income from the said estate, as he may think right and proper; but no portion of the corpus of the said estate shall be delivered to, or be surrendered over during the lifetime of the plaintiff to the said plaintiff, or his vendees, except upon the further order of this court; and this court hereby retains jurisdiction of this cause to the end that it may, from time to time as occasion may require, exercise its power of direction and control over said trustee in this respect.”

The persons who sought to intervene were creditors of the son, and were citizens of Texas. They had brought an action on their claim in the state court for McLennan County, had caused a writ of attachment to be issued in that action and levied on part of the real property in the possession of the trustee, and had prosecuted'the action to a judgment directing that the son’s interest in the attached property be sold to satisfy their claim. The son had not been served with process in that action, nor had he appeared therein; so the judgment had no force save such as may have arisen from the attachment. After-wards, in a suit by the trustee against the attaching creditors and the sheriff, the same state court granted a permanent injunction against a sale under the judgment, — the grounds assigned for granting the injunction being that the son’s interest in the property 'could not be *557 sold to pay his debts while he was living, and that the trustee was entitled to prevent such a sale' in the son’s lifetime, even though there was no purpose to disturb the trustee’s possession or the administration of the trust. On an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals that decision was affirmed, Hoffman v. Rose, 217 S. W. 424, and an application for a further review was denied by the Supreme Court of the State.

It was after these proceedings that the creditors sought to intervene in the suit in the District Court. They set forth in their proffered bill all that was done in the state court, including the attachment and judgment and the subsequent injunction, and also alleged that by the attachment and judgment they had acquired a lien on the attached property which was in no way avoided or affected by the injunction; that by the prior proceedings in the District Court the property had been drawn into that court’s custody and control and thereby effectually impounded; that they had no means of enforcing their lien during the life of the son, save' through the interposition and aid of the District Court; that the lien probably would be lost unless that court recognized and protected it, and that to postpone its enforcement until after the death of the son would not be equitable. The relief prayed was that the lien be recognized and protected and the remainder interest of the son in the attached property be ordered sold under the lien to satisfy their claim.

In refusing leave to file the bill the District Court put its decision on the ground that it was without jurisdiction to entertain the bill in that (a) the bill was not ancillary or dependent in the sense that it could be entertained in virtue of the jurisdiction acquired in the earlier suit, and (b) the citizenship of the parties and the nature of the matter presented were not such that the bill could be dealt with as an original and independent bill.

As leave to.file the bill was not refused as a matter of discretion but on the theory that there was no basis on *558 which the court, as a federal tribunal, could proceed to an adjudication of the matter presented, it is apparent that the petitioning creditors were shut out on a jurisdictional ground in the sense of §238 of the Judicial Code, and so were entitled to bring that ruling here for review by a direct appeal.

The record makes it plain and counsel agree that there was an absence of jurisdictional requisites for dealing with the bill as an original and independent bill; SO' we come at once to the question whether it could be entertained as an ancillary or dependent bill.

It is settled that where in the progress of a suit in a federal court property has been drawn into the court’s custody and control, third persons claiming interests in or liens upon the property may be permitted to come into that court for the purpose of setting up, protecting and enforcing their claims, — although the court could not consider or adjudicate their claims if it had not impounded the property. Power to deal with such claims is incident to the jurisdiction acquired in the suit wherein' the impounding occurs, and may be invoked by a petition to intervene pro interesse suo

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 U.S. 552, 44 S. Ct. 407, 68 L. Ed. 845, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-mcclelland-scotus-1924.