Weller v. Weller

18 Vt. 55
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedSeptember 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Vt. 55 (Weller v. Weller) 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
Weller v. Weller, 18 Vt. 55 (Vt. 1844).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Royce, J.

The trustees now before the court, in payment for the estate of Nathan Weller the elder, which they purchased of Jonathan Weller, executed their promissory notes, which were lodged in the hands of Vail by order of the judge of probate, and made payable to the heirs respectively, for the value of their several shares in that estate. Among those heirs were John H. Weller, (the principal defendant) Harry Weller, and Nathan Weller the younger. The shares of the two latter had been purchased and paid for by John H. Weller, before the estate was set to Jonathan Weller by the court of probate. Consequently, John H. had the legal property and right of action in the note made payable to himself, and became substantially the owner of those made payable to his brothers, Harry and Nathan. But as the shares of those three persons were bound by the decree in chancery in favour of McDaniels, and the trustees had paid more than their value to redeem them, it was rightly decided that these notes no longer constituted any indebtedness against the trustees. And it is not material, for the present purpose, whether the decision went upon the ground of an indirect payment of the notes in redeeming the shares, or on the ground of a total failure of consideration.

Among the notes, so executed by the trustees, was also one made [61]*61payable to Hiram and Catharine Warden for the sum of one hundred and thirty three dollars and thirty three cents, that being the value of said Catharine’s share in the estate. John H. Weller had also contracted to purchase that share, and had paid to Warden and wife one hundred and sixteen dollars towards it. That share, not being bound by McDaniels’ decree, was held by the trustees in an unincumbered state, by force of the conveyance from Jonathan Weller to them, and continued to form a valid consideration for this last note. By this note they are still indebted, and the question is, whether the debt, or a portion of it, is due in such a sense to John-H. Weller, that they can be adjudged his trustees.

It has long been the settled doctrine in this state, that, to render a person liable as trustee under this kind of process, on account of rights or credits in his hands, it is necessary that he should be legally indebted to the principal defendant, or indebted by some legal demand belonging to him. Sargeant v. Leland, 2 Vt. 277; Hutchins v. Hawley & Tr., 9 Vt. 295. It has been considered, that the attaching creditor was merely enabled to avail himself of the defendant’s legal rights in relation to the trustee, and hold him liable for such demands, only, as the defendant could have enforced by an action at luw. 9 Vt. 295 above cited; Baxter & et al. v. Currier & Tr., 13 Vt. 615. It is even said incidentally, in Hoyt v. Ball & Tr., 13 Vt. 129, that the demand must be one which the defendant could have prosecuted in his own name. But this, I apprehend, cannot be received as a rule of universal application. For it was decided in Newell v. Adams, 1 D. Chip. 346, (and the doctrine has never been changed,) that after a bona fide assignment of a demand not negotiable, and due notice thereof given, the debtor could not be charged as the trustee of the assignor. He must, then, be capable of becoming the trustee of the assignee, or else the assignment of such a demand places it beyond the reach of the trustee process. Hence it has been sufficient, under all our trustee statutes, that the claim upon the trustee was a legal debt by contract, — that it belonged to the principal defendant, — and that he had a right to have it enforced by an action at law if necessary. And if an action by him might be defeated by reason of fraud between himself and the trustee, that difficulty is removed, in favor of the attaching creditor, by chap. 29, sec. 34, of the Revised Statutes. Now [62]*62the note last mentioned is a legal demand against the trustees, and is chiefly owned by John H. Weller, the defendant. Had the money been paid upon it into the hands of Vail, he would not have been justified, if fully apprised of the facts, in paying the defendant’s share over to Warden and wife. And in respect of his interest in the note, the defendant might doubtless have required it to be prosecuted for his benefit. Upon these views, in which we are substantially supported by the case of Camp v. Scott & Tr., 14 Vt. 387, we consider that the makers of the note are liable to this process, as trustees of the present defendant.

The next inquiry is, whether the trustees are entitled to retain for all or any of the claims set up in their disclosure. The claim to be subrogated to the original rights of McDaniels, as against this defendant, is clearly of equity jurisdiction, and could not be enforced by any known action at law. And the same is manifestly true of the demand against Harry Weller, when treated as in any sense the debt of this defendant. Nor is it perceived that the payment of McDaniel’s bill of cost, under the circumstances attending it, could legally be treated as a payment of the defendant’s debt upon his express or implied request. But the reasons assigned by Collamer, J., in Hoyt v. Ball & Tr., to show that the creditor cannot, by this process, pursue a mere equity claim against the trustee, are equally applicable, when such a claim is asserted by the trustee against the defendant. The powers of a court of law, under the statute, are alike inadequate to the purposes of complete justice in both cases. The consequence is, that these several claims, being of equity cognizance, if sustainable at all, were properly disallowed by the county court.

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Related

Newell v. Adams
1 D. Chip. 346 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1815)
Jun v. Leland
2 Vt. 277 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1828)
Hutchins v. Hawley
9 Vt. 295 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1837)
Hoyt v. Swift
13 Vt. 129 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1841)
Baxter v. Currier
13 Vt. 615 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1841)
Camp v. Scott
14 Vt. 387 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1842)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Vt. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weller-v-weller-vt-1844.