Court Opinion

ID: 8792332
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 13:56:05.537176+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:03:25.581675
License: Public Domain

BAKER, Circuit Judge.
Two cases are presented on the one record. Each decree sustains a bill in equity by Cole, administrator c. t. a. of the estate of Donald Fraser, to enforce a claim against Grace Fraser and to realize upon it by sale of land in Illinois, in one case fraudulently mortgaged to E. F. Mann and fraudulently conveyed to Kather-tne Mechler, and in the other fraudulently conveyed to Gertrude Kelly. Mechler and Kelly each filed a disclaimer, and Grace Fraser defended as owner. In one case Grace Fraser alone appeals; in the other, she and Mann are appellants.
Facts common to both appeals are these: In 1895 William Fraser, husband of Grace and brother of Donald, died childless and testate. In his will William devised and bequeathed certain real and personal property to his widow in lieu of dower, but she elected to take under the law. By the next item he made a general bequest of $4,000 to his brother Donald. Other collateral kin were given in subsequent and separate items of the will general money bequests of named sums. Grace Fraser and George McDonald were nominated executors, with a direction that they should not be required to give bond, and they qualified and acted. Among the assets' were notes of Sadler to William Fraser for $25,800, secured by purchase-money mortgage of what is known in the record as the Fraser Farm. Grace Fraser, being advised that under the law she took all the estate’s personalty, bid at the sale under the executors’ foreclosure decree on the Sadler mortgage the full amount of the debt. Learning better afterwards, Grace Fraser asked the foreclosing court to set aside the sale and offer the property anew. This was done, and at the resale she acquired the farm for $10,000. Donald Fraser and the beneficiaries of the other separate bequests sued out ai writ of error from the Appellate Court of Illinois to test the right of the foreclosing court to relieve Grace Fraser from her mistake of law. In Fraser v. Fraser, 128 Ill. App. 73, the second *560sale was set aside and the original one reinstated. Thereupon the legatees petitioned the probate court to revise the final account of Grace Fraser, as executrix, which had theretofore been approved. In the order confirming the recast account the probate court ordered “said executors, and each of them, to pay to each of said legatees the several sums named in said order.” Donald Fraser’s estate, after being charged with amounts received under prior reports, was found to be entitled to $3,357; and the amounts severally due to other legatees, each less than $500, were likewise found. On appeal the recast account was confirmed. Fraser v. Fraser, 149 Ill. App. 186.
Grace Fraser owned certain real estate in her own right, known herein as the Elgin Flats. Cole, as administrator of Donald Fraser’s estate, a citizen of California, filed his bill in the court below against Grace Fraser, a citizen of Massachusetts, and Gertrude Kelly, fraudulent grantee, a citizen of New York, to reach this real estate. His bill set forth the above-stated facts, and additionally that the William Fraser estate was insolvent; that Grace Fraser and George McDonald had left the state of Illinois and had abandoned their trust as executors; that Grace Fraser was insolvent; that she had appropriated to herself all the William Fraser estate after payment of debts; and that there was no property in Illinois out of which to satisfy complainant’s claim except the real estate fraudulently conveyed by Grace Fraser. The other legatees were permitted to intervene, file their claims, and adopt the allegations of the bill. Grace Fraser, both before and after the intervention, filed certain pleas challenging the right of the trial court to entertain the suit. On the overruling of these pleas, she declined to plead further, and the decree for complainant was thereupon entered. The nature of the pleas will be understood from our statement of the reasons why the bill was properly sustained.’
[1] 1. Donald Fraser’s estate, by virtue of the legacy to Donald and the recast account in the probate court, was a creditor of Grace Fraser. McDonald v. People, 222 Ill. 325, 78 N. E. 609; Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana Bank Co., 215 U. S. 33, 30 Sup. Ct. 10, 54 E. Ed. 80.
[2] 2. Chapter 3, § 118, Hurd’s Ill. Stat. 1911, gives a legatee a right of action against an executor to recover the legatee’s share of the estate in the executor’s hands, provided an order has first been made on the executor to pay. And this right of action may of course be asserted in the federal as well as in the state court, if proper diversity of citizenship exists. Waterman’s Case, supra.
[3] 3. A creditor’s bill was therefore the character, of the bill in' question. If all the other legatees, as creditors, were indispensable parties to the bill, the requisite diversity of citizenship would be lacking. But while in any creditor’s pursuit, for himself and others who may join, of his debtor’s fraudulently conveyed property the presence of the other creditors may be necessary in order to enable the court to do exact justice in the distribution, their presence is not indispensable to jurisdiction to proceed at the sole instance of.the complainant. Payne v. Hook, 74 U. S. (7 Wall.) 425, 19 L. Ed. 260; Hotel Co. v. Wade, 97 U. S. 13, 24 E. Ed. 917; Williams v. Crabb, 117 Fed. 193, 54 C. C. A. 213. 59 L. R. A. 425: O’Neil v. Wolcott Mining Co., 174 *561Fed. 527, 98 C. C. A. 309, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 200. Donald’s claim against Grace Fraser was as separate and distinct from the claims of other legatees as if she had been a banker and he one of her depositors.
[4] 4. Jurisdiction obtained on the bill was not lost by permitting the other legatees to intervene, for they came in as proper or necessary but not indispensable parties, and the jurisdiction over them was not original but dependent or ancillary.
[5] 5. Though complainant and his counsel before filing the bill understood that the other legatees would ask leave to intervene, and by the same counsel, the right of the court in permitting intervention, the right of complainant to insist that jurisdiction be taken on his bill, and the right of the other legatees to seek intervention, were exactly the same as if there had been no such understanding. There can be no fraudulent collusion respecting jurisdiction in -presenting and maintaining legal grounds of jurisdiction. Lehigh Mining Co. v. Kelly, 160 U. S. 327, 16 Sup. Ct. 307, 40 L. Ed. 444; South Dakota v. North Carolina, 192 U. S. 286, 24 Sup. Ct. 269, 48 R. Ed. 448.
[6] 6. George McDonald, coexecutor, whose citizenship according to the averments of the plea was in New York, was not an indispensable party. His presence would not disturb the diversity of citizenship; but in the trial court, considered not as a federal court but as a court of equity, his presence was dispensable because nothing was asked against him, and because it was not only equitable but also in his interest that Grace Fraser, who had appropriated all the assets of the William Fraser estate, should be made to pay.
[7] 7. Though the order of the probate court was not a judgment on which execution could issue, the bill discloses a suit maintainable without first obtaining judgment and execution at law in Illinois, because Grace Fraser had fled from the state, was insolvent, and had fraudulently conveyed her real estate in Illinois, which was the only source from which the claim against her could be realized. Case v. Beauregard, 101 U. S. 688, 25 L. Ed. 1004; National Tube Works v. Ballou, 146 U. S. 522, 13 Sup. Ct. 165, 36 R. Ed. 1070.
[8] 8. Attachment was not an adequate remedy. Without the aid of equity in avoiding the fraudulent conveyance the legal writ would be unavailing.
[9] .9. Time consumed in the state courts by complainant in litigating with Grace Fraser to establish his claim cannot be counted by her against him as laches. Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. Boyd, 228 U. S. 482, 33 Sup. Ct. 554, 57 R. Ed. 931.
By the other bill complainant sought to reach the Fraser farm. The whole situation was disclosed; Grace Fraser filed the same pleas; and she abided by the order overruling them. Since this bill is also sustainable as a creditor’s bill, it is immaterial whether complainant has further equities as against Grace Fraser. But appellant Mann, against whom the bill as a mere creditor’s bill would not be sufficient, answered, and the issues so made were referred to the master, whose report in favor of complainant was confirmed by the chancellor.
[10] In his answer Mann’s first insistence was that, inasfnuch as *562the trust deed to him-was executed to secure Grace Fraser’s $1,500 note owned by Fisher, the court could not proceed in the absence of Fjsher. As Mann and Fisher were both citizens of Illinois, Fisher’s presence would not .affect the diversity of citizenship. If Fisher is not cut off by a proceeding in which his trustee defends in his behalf (Lewis v. Peck, 154 Fed. 273, 83 C. C. A. 211), at least Mann is bound by the decree respecting his representative defense, and the trial court has jurisdiction by ancillary bill to bring in Fisher if that should be deemed necessary or advisable (Julian v. Central Trust Co., 193 U. S. 93, 24 Sup. Ct. 399, 48 L. Ed. 629).
[11] On the merits Mann contended that the note and trust deed were given and taken in good faith and for full value. Absence of actual fraudulent intent was admitted; but, as Fisher was attorney for Grace Fraser and had full knowledge of her dealings with the assets of the William Fraser estate, his lien, taken pending the controversy, is subordinate to the equitable lien in the nature of a vendor’s lien growing out of the foreclosure sale of the Fraser farm, if such a lien accrued.
[12,13] Equitably the money Grace Fraser used in buying the farm belonged partly to the legatees. By insisting in the state courts that she abide by the purchase, they waived all claim to the title to the land through a resulting trust. But that does not mean that a purchase-money lien was waived if it in fact arose 'from the ratified purchase. A vendor’s lien may be availed of by beneficiaries who were not direct parties to the sale. Zeiser v. Cohn, 207 N. Y. 407, 101 N. E. 184, 47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 186, cited in Gerstell v. Shirk, 210 Fed. 223, 127 C. C. A. 41. Here the legal title to the money (converted into land that the executors through foreclosure sold to Grace Fraser) was in the executors; and so, in our opinion, an equitable lien accrued to the executors for the benefit of the legatees. And if in a suit by the beneficiaries against the purchasing executor the executors should have been parties, the challenge would go only to the capacity of the beneficiaries to sue in their "own names and right — a question not raised.
[14] An allowance of $1,000 solicitors’ fees was included. No law of Illinois warranted the increase of Grace Fraser’s indebtedness by such an addition. Washburne v. Burke, 84 Ill. App. 587. Nor can equity in a suit upon a creditor’s bill or a vendor’s lien bill enlarge the defendant’s debt in that way. Cole, as the original complainant] might be given such an allowance out of the recovery as against interveners ; but we assume that this is not needed because all the legatees were represented by the same counsel.
The decrees are modified by striking out the allowance of solicitors’ fees, and as modified are
Affirmed.