Zehnbar v. Spillman

25 Fla. 591
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 25 Fla. 591 (Zehnbar v. Spillman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zehnbar v. Spillman, 25 Fla. 591 (Fla. 1889).

Opinion

Maxwell, J.:

A statement of the main matters of this, ease will be found in 19 Fla., 500, under the title of Shalley, sheriff, Fairbanks et al. vs. Spillman et al., decided at the June term of this court, 1882 — Zehnbar having been since substituted as a party in place of Shalley, then sheriff. Referring to that statement for fuller particulars, a brief synopsis will suffice in the present appeal, with the addition of some matters set forth in an amended bill to meet the decision in the former appeal.

The original bill was for an injunction sought by appellees to restrain the sale by the sheriff' of a parcel of land known as “Saratoga.” The sheriff held two executions, one in favor of Baker, trustee, and the other in favor of Fairbanks, against Sofiela, St. Charles and Hind, trustees of St. Johns Co-operative Colony. These executions were issued in accordance with the chancery practice in this State, to satisfy unpaid balances due under the foreclosure of mortgages obtained by said Baker, trustee, and by said Fairbanks, against the said three trustees of the Colony— the mortgaged property having failed to bring enough to nay the foreclosure decrees. The Saratoga property had been conveyed to the three trustees, and the executions were put upon it under the idea that the title was still in them, and that therefore it was subject to the executions. On the other hand the appellees seek to enjoin a sale under the executions, on the ground that before any lien was acquired under them those trustees had been removed by valid proceedings of court, and thereby divested of their [593]*593title, and other trustees appointed, through whom said appellees derived title to said property, and because they are the legal owners thereof, the same having been sold and conveyed by the new trustees, Pullis, McConkey and Kelly, to- the Florida Colonization Compamv, and by the directors of that company sold and conveyed to appellees. They are in possession of the property, and the object of the injunction is to prevent a cloud from being cast on their title by the threatened sale under the executions, and also to prevent a multiplicity of suits.

When the case was here before it went off adversely to appellees, on the ground that it did not appear that the trustees.of the “St. Johns Co-operative Colony,” against whom the executions ran, had been removed, the proceedings under which it was claimed they were removed being proceedings in regard to trustees of the “St. Johns Colony ;” and because their bill to enjoin a sale as a cloud upon the title failed to show that the execution defendants ever had an interest in the land. Upon amendment of the bill made by leave of court after the case was remanded, it is shown, the allegation not being denied, but admitted by demurrer, that the “St. Johns Co-operative Colony” and the “St. Johns Colony” were one and the same organization, and that these names wrnre used interehangably, but that it was ordinarily knowu in common parlance and business transactions as the “St. Johns Colony.” That was the chief matter of amendment-. The case thus comes to us relieved of the objection to the bill on which it was decided when here before. It was heard below on the original and amended bills, the answer, which was taken as an answer to both, and a demurrer to the amended bill. As it stands now, appellants maintain that the decree removing the original trustees and appointing the new ones did not divest the former, who are defendants in the executions, of [594]*594their title to the trust property, while appellees claim that it did, and that said property vested in the new trustees appointed by the decree, through whom comes their title; and this appellants say in their brief “is the main question for consideration in the case.”

The question arises in this way: Stockholders of the Colony, of which we speak as if there were no variance o'r confusion in the name, instituted a proceeding in the Circuit Court of Duval county to have the original trustees of the Colony removed and new trustees appointed. The complaint filed, setting forth the facts on which the application for removal was asked, is styled a petition. So far as appears by the record of that proceeding, which is attached as an exhibit to the bill in this case, there was no process issued against the trustees to bring them into court, and the only showing of notice to them is an affidavit of the attorney in the case that notices of the intended application “were duly served” — one sent to St. Charles, a resident of Brazil, November 4, 1880, one served ou Soiiela about the same date, and that Hind gave his assent in writing. The decree rendered in the case has a recital of its “appearing to the court that due notice had been given said trustees.” It is insisted by appellants that the decree is void because the court had no jurisdiction to proceed by petition in such a case, and because no legal service or notice of the proceeding was ever had upon the trustees.

The general rule is that the removal of trustees and the appointment of substitutes must be by bill in chancery and not by petition. Where the proceeding has been by petition, it was because that mode was authorized by statute. Hill on Trustees, 295; Ex-parte Hussey, 2 Whar., 330; In Re. Van Wyck, 1 Bar. Ch., 565; In Re. Livingston, 34 N. Y., 569; People vs. Norton, 9 N. Y., (5 Selden) 176. In this State there is no statute authorizing the proceeding by [595]*595petition. But the case at bar is not one in which we can say that the decree of the court in removing one set of trustees and appointing another set is void because the proceeding was commenced by petition. The court was addressed as sitting “ in chancery,” and had jurisdiction of the subject matter, and it was only an irregularity in the form of proceeding, that it was presented by petition instead of bill. The matter of the petition is just what a bill would have contained, and is set forth in the usual words of a bill, except that the word petitioners is used in place of orators. A material difference, however, is in asking that notice be given to the trustees to be removed, in such manner as the court might direct, instead of a prayer for subpoena. It is conceived that this may be treated as an irregularity, inasmuch as the direction might have been for the issue of a subpoena, and publication of notice as to non-residents, in case of failure of service, the latter being authorized by statute where there are both resident and non-resident defendants in the suit. Besides, if upon getting the notice the trustees had chosen to appear, and offering no resistance, or resisting unsuccessfully, the same decree had -been rendered, we apprehend there could be no question of its binding efficacy on all parties in interest; wherefore the fact that the decree was rendered on a petition is not for that reason sufficient to stamp it as void, if the petition contains proper jurisdictional matter and makes proper parties. See People vs. Norton, supra; In Re. Livingston, supra; Ex-parte Kunst, 1 Bailey’s Eq. R., 489; Curtis vs. Smith et al., 60 Bar. Sup. Ct. R., 9; Budd vs. Hiler, 27 N. J. Law, (3 Ducher) 43—the last two cases holding further that for such defect the decree cannot be attacked collaterally.

The other ground on which it is contended that the decree is void, that is, because jurisdiction of the parties was [596]*596not acquired, there being no legal service of process or notice, has better warrant. There is no law of this State which authorizes a proceeding instituted in ch ancery to be conducted on notice. There must be a subpoena.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Fla. 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zehnbar-v-spillman-fla-1889.