Court Opinion

ID: 6502109
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:14:50.549301+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:38.430716
License: Public Domain

ORMOND, J.
The act, under which the defendant in error was appointed trustee by the circuit court, was evidently intended to prevent the necessity of resorting to a court of chancery for the appointment of a trustee. The first section gives the court power to remove a trustee ; and the second, to receive the resignation of one; and in both cases, to appoint another to act in his stead. [Clay’s Dig. 581.]
The statute does not, in terms, authorize the court to appoint a trustee, when the trustee appointed by the parties dies ; but we have no doubt that the power of the circuit court so to act, is within the spirit and intention of the enactment.
This appears, not only from the general scope and design of the law, but especially from the 5th section, which provides that, “ for the prosecution or defence of any suit in any of the courts of this State, the court, before whom such suit may be pending, may, on motion, appoint a trustee or trustees to prosecute or defend the same, in all cases where the same may be necessary.” If, then, the trustee in this deed had died after the claim was inter- ■ posed, there can be no doubt that the court could have appointed another to act in his stead. It would be difficult to assign a reason for giving this power to the court to appoint a trustee to enable the suit to be carried on, and deny it for the purpose of commencing or defending one.
The act of 1843, [Clay’s Dig. 350, § 32,33,] which gives to the registers of the courts of chancery the power to receive the resignation of a trustee, and to appoint one in case of death, cannot be considered a repeal of the statute we have been considering. It does not appear that there was any intention to repeal it, nor is there any conflict between them ; but, on the contrary, both may well stand and be operative. It is an established rule in the construction of statutes, that an affirmative statute does not repeal an existing statute, except so far as it is repugnant to or inconsistent with its provisions.
Nor is there any weight in the suggestion, that the statute was repealed'when the common law judges were prevented from the exercise of chancery jurisdiction by the establishment of separate chancery courts. The power of appointing trustees was confer*77red on the courts, as courts of common law, and .was, therefore, not impaired by the transfer of the equitable jurisdiction of the court to the chancellor.
Let the judgment be affirmed.