Court Opinion

ID: 6614886
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:21:13.433711+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:29.505826
License: Public Domain

Philips, P. J.
The principal and most important question discussed by appellants on this appeal is, as to whether the circuit court had jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action. Their contention is, that under the constitution and statute laws of the state, in force when the action was brought, the circuit courts had no power to set aside such a judgment of the court of probate. The earnestness with which counsel press this point renders it respectful, if not important, to give it full consideration.
The jurisdiction of courts of' chancery to enquire into the frauds, accidents, mistakes and concealments by which judgments at law are obtained and unconscionable advantages thereby are sought, constitutes their “most ancient foundation.” This jurisdiction has been universally recognized by the courts and the profession of this state since their organization to reside in our circuit *198courts. That distinguished jurist, Judge Napton, whose research and learning shed so much light for half a century upon our judicial history and decisions, in Clark et al. v. Henry’s Adm’r (9 Mo. 339), reviewed this matter fully. He said: “The jurisdiction of our courts of equity rests upon the same foundation as that of courts of common law, however the jurisdiction of either may have been acquired. It is not to statutory provisions that we look for ascertaining the limits of either. Long usage, the decisions of the courts, and the treatises of learned writers, are the chief sources to which we have recourse, where legislative enactments are silent, for the purpose of learning the province of either courts of law or equity. *** If interpreted strictly, as has been urged at the bar in the present case, to what narrow limits would our courts of equity be confined! Entire branches of equity jurisprudence heretofore exercised without dispute or question, would be lopped off from the system. The whole subject of fraud, a most prolific source of equity jurisdiction, may now be fully investigated in the common law courts. * * * Yet courts of equity in this state have continued to exercise their accustomed jurisdiction on these and other subjects similarly situated, notwithstanding the general provision in our code restricting them to cases where adequate relief cannot be had at law. To say the least, it would be highly impolitic at this late day, to attempt to cut off the sources of jurisdiction, without a more express and definite declaration from the legislative department of the government. It would be a bold step on the part of this court to undertake now to correct this communis error.”
Our supreme court reports abound in cases where this jurisdiction has been time and again exercised, without challenge, by the circuit courts. Dobyns v. McGovern, 15 Mo. 662; Oldham v. Trimble, 15 Mo. 225; Jones v. Brinker, 20 Mo. 87; Sullivan Co. v. Bates et al., 39 Mo. 292; Clyce v. Anderson, 49 Mo. 37; Lewis v. Williams 54 Mo. 200; Sheetz v. Kirtly, 62 Mo. 417; Garton v. Botts, 73 Mo. 274; Smith v. Sims, 77 Mo. 264; McClain *199v. Birgner, 80 Mo. 414 ; Mayberry v. McClurg, 51 Mo. 256, reported again in 74 Mo. 575.
Some of these cases were proceedings to set aside judgments of the probate courts allowing demands against estates, and others were to set aside judgments of said courts on final settlements. And so recent as the last term of the supreme court, Sherwood, J., in State ex rel. Phelan v. Englemann, recognized in broadest terms this ancient prerogative of our circuit courts.
Counsel feeling the force of this long line of adjudications and unbroken usage, seek to evade or parry it by the assumption that the state constitution of 1875 has so enlarged upon the jurisdiction of the probate courts as to exclude that of the circuit courts. The only observable difference in the corresponding sections in the constitutions of 1820, 1865, and 1875, respecting the judiciary, is that the first two, after enumerating the supreme court and circuit courts as depositaries of judicial power, adds: “And in such inferior tribunals as the general assembly may, from time to time, ordain and establish;” while that of 1875, after circuit courts, adds: “Criminal courts, probate courts, county courts and municipal, corporation courts.” Section 22, Art. 6, of the constitution of 1875 provides that: “Tire circuit courts shall have jurisdiction over all criminal cases not otherwise provided by law; exclusive original jurisdiction in all civil cases not otherwise provided for; and such concurrent jurisdiction with, and appellate jurisdiction from inferior tribunals and justices' of the peace as is or may be provided by law.”
Section thirty-four declares that the probate courts “shall have jurisdiction over all matters pertaining to probate business, to granting letters testamentary, etc., the appointment of guardians, etc., of minors, etc., settling the accounts of executors and administrators, guardians, etc., and the sale or leasing of lands by administrators, curators and guardians; and, also, jurisdiction over all matters relating to apprentices.”
*200We wholly fail to discover in any of these provisions of the present constitution anything which, on sound rules of construction, could be held to oust the circuit courts of one atom of their ancient equity jurisdiction. Said section twenty-two, in employing the language, “ and such concurrent jurisdiction with, and appellate jurisdiction from inferior tribunals, etc'., as is or may be provided by law,” for which appellants’ counsel set up the claim of novelty, can, by no rational rule, be regarded as a limitation upon the former functions of the circuit courts. Its only office is to confer upon the legislature power to give certain concurrent jurisdiction to the latter courts. There is no provision of the statute either enlarging or restricting the jurisdiction of the circuit courts in any of these particulars.
As there is nothing in the terms of either the constitution or the statute law professing to give to the probate courts exclusive jurisdiction over actions of the character in question, the utmost that could be claimed is that their jurisdiction is concurrent with that of the circuit courts. The rule is well settled, as a principle of chancery jurisdiction, “that when a court of equity has cognizance of a subject, its authority over it is not lost by reason of a concurrent jurisdiction being assumed by or conferred, upon another tribunal.” Dobyns v. McGovern, 15 Mo., supra; Clarke v. Henry, 9 Mo., supra.
As is observed, in substance, in Hume v. Mo. P. R. R. Co. (82 Mo.) in view of the long usage in the exercise of this jurisdiction by the circuit courts, if it had been the mind of the framers of the constitution of 1875 to strike down this prerogative of the court, they would' have done so in such plain and explicit terms as to leave no ground, for intelligent dispute.
And when we consider the machinery and methods of procedure in, and the qualifications of the judges who preside over, the respective courts, we would be loth to believe it the purpose’of the men who made the constitution to prefer the courts of probate to the circuit *201courts for the exercise of a so important branch of equity-jurisprudence. The enquiry into the paeans, the agencies and involved circumstances by and under which judgments are obtained against conscience and sound policy is a most delicate' one. It summons to its aid the nicest discrimination in legal ethics, a profound and thorough knowledge of the extent of and limitations on the rules of equity, coupled with a high sense of right and justice. Such an office should be entrusted to the wisest and best. In a judicial sense, it is not too much to say that by comparison the preference should be given to our circuit judges.
It is further worthy of observation, that some of the cases in which the circuit courts have exercised this jurisdiction, as shown by the supreme court reports, originated since the adoption of the constitution of 1875 ; and it does not seem to have occurred to either the eminent counsel engaged in them or to the supreme court that the circuit courts are without jurisdiction over such subjects.
II. It is further- insisted in this connection, that the court exceeded the equity rule in setting aside the judgment of allowance by the probate court, that the action of the equity court can only be directed to the person of the judgment, creditor etc. It is true that the equity practice was generally deemed to be to enjoin the inequitable judgment. But it would be a narrow office to the remedial powers of courts of equity if they were limited solely to one method of procedure. Rules cease with the reason that gave them being. If the remedy were restricted in this case alone to enjoining the judgment of allowance it would be inoperative, because it has been paid by the administrator of the one estate to that of the other estate. There is nothing to enjoin. But aside from this we have abundant authority in our reported adjudications for the action of the circuit court. This question is directly presented in Mayberry v. McClurg et al. (51 Mo. 255), reported again in 74 Mo. 576. One of the objects sought was the vacation of a judg*202ment of allowance by the probate court, and it was granted. On demurrer to the petition, the supreme court say: “A judgment collusively or fraudulently procured should be set aside at the instance of the party against whom it was rendered.” Appellants’ counsel attempt to impair the force of this direct authority by the suggestion that the petition there sought also to vacate certain sales made under the allowance, and this is what gave the circuit court jurisdiction. This is a mere assumption, unsupported by authority or reason. As an initial and indispensable pre-requisite it sought and had to set aside the judgment, and the court did set it aside. (74 Mo. 576). If the circuit court had no jurisdiction to set aside the judgment of probate, by what sort of logic can it be maintained that this jurisdiction attached merely as auxiliary to the doing of something else dependent on the first action ? The better logic and authority would be, that the chancery court having* power to set aside the judgment, and having acquired jurisdiction over the subject matter would retain its exercise until complete justice was done between the party wronged and the wrong doer.
Again, if the circuit court may, which no one would have the temerity to question, set aside a judgment of final settlement and discharge of an administrator or executor, which is a judgment final of the probate court (Caldwell v. Lockridge, 9 Mo. 362), by what reason or principle can it be maintained that it has not the power to set aside a judgment allowing a claim against the estate, which is also a final judgment. Jones v. Brinker, supra.
This precise question was again before the supreme court in Stewart v. Caldwell (54 Mo. 536), where the jurisdiction of the circuit court was recognized in its fullest extent to vacate such a judgment, and that, too, notwithstanding there be a remedy at law. It has never been overruled, or even trenched upon.
We are referred by counsel to the case of Lademan v. Lewis (13 Mo. App. 585). The full opinion in manu*203script has been furnished ns. It is too palpable for argument that the case is not pertinent. The bill, in the first place, contained no equity in its averments, and in the second place it sought, not to vacate a judgment of allowance, but to have a judgment of disallowance set aside, and as Thompson, J., very pointedly remarked, it invokes some unknown process directed to the probate court itself commanding it to set aside a judgment which it rendered long since and adjourned. Of what avail would have been the decree of the equity court to set aside the judgment of disallowance, when it had no power to command the probate court to reconsider and allow it % Its jurisdiction in such a case would be merely appellate.
We are of opinion that the jurisdiction of the circuit court is unquestionable over the subject matter of this action.
III. It is next insisted that’the defendant, Gault, is not a necessary party to this action. The question is not free from embarrassment. The general rule is, that no one need be made a party defendant against whom the plaintiff is entitled to no relief, and against whom he could take no dectee. But the relation of Gault, as administrator, to the subject matter of this litigation is so peculiar, as in my opinion to have rendered his retention as a party defendant proper. He is the administrator of the estate, alleged to be defrauded by his connivance and co-operation. His administration is not yet concluded, and when he comes to make his final settlement the decree made in this action will affect the matter of his allowance as a credit for the sum so paid the Nickell estate. There is, therefore, an eminent fitness in making him a party to the record to nullify that allowance so that the decree here made may be an effectual estoppel of record on all the parties to that fraudulent judgment. Had the false allowance been consummated without the fraudulent co-operation of the administrator, Gault, he would have been the proper party to maintain this action to vacate it, as it concerns *204the assets to be administered by him. But, by reason of his participation in the fraud and waste, he could not, on the maxim, nemo allegans suam turpitudinem audiens est, be expected or heard to institute a suit alleging his own depravity or fraud; ánd, therefore, equity, rather than that the heir shall be despoiled of his inheritance, will permit the distributees to bring the bill. The petition discloses on its face the facts of Gault’s disqualification as a plaintiff, and the reason for his being joined as a co-defendant we think sufficiently appears. Ordinarily, where one’s fraudulent conduct requires' investigation, he ought to be made a party defendant. Gaylord v. Kelshaw, 1 Wall. 81.
IV. It is also objected to the decree that the court did not go far enough, in that it failed to set aside the final settlement made by Nickell’s executor. We perceive no legal necessity for such decree in this case. The gravamen of plaintiff’s complaint is, that their interest as distributees has been injured by the fraudulent allowance against their father’s estate. Justice to them is done by the annulment of that judgment, and consequent duty of the administrator of their ancestor’s estate on final settlement to account for the sum misappropriated, if he has paid it over. They have no concern with the attitude in which this may leave the despoilers. They may rectify and adjust their accounts among themselves.
V. It is further objected to the judgment of the circuit court that Robinson is sued merely as an individual and not as executor. Conceding that he should been described in the caption of the petition as such executor, it clearly enough appears from the allegations of the petition in what capacity he acted and the character of the relief sought. This, too, is a defect which could be remedied by appropriate amendment in this court, and in such case such omission does not constitute reversible error. Cruchon. Adm'r, v. Brown, 57 Mo. 38; Daily v. Houston, 58 Mo. 361.
VI. The petition states a good cause of action, and *205we have carefully examined the evidence preserved in the record. Aside from the deference which appellate courts give to the conclusions reached by trial judges on questions of fact, even in equity causes, we are satisfied that the proofs amply warranted the conclusion. They unfold a state of facts quite discreditable to the parties concerned. It would add nothing to their- comfort or their reputations to put it to record by a review in detail.
VII. Other matters are urged by appellants, but they are unimportant. On the whole case the decree is just and for the right party.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
So say all the judges.