Johnson v. Bartlett

Shaw C. J.

afterward drew up the opinion of the Court. This is a case in equity, brought by the administrator de bonis *483non, with the will annexed, of the estate of John Brown, together with the sureties on a probate bond of a former administrator, with a view to obtain and apply, for the benefit of the estate and in relief of the sureties of the former administrator, certain real estate, which they claim as part of the assets of the estate applicable to the payment of debts and legacies, but which is claimed by the defendants, as having been duly and properly levied on, under the circumstances stated in their answers, as the estate of Clement Starr, the former administrator, or claimed and held by the defendant, George, under the will of Ann Brown. Perhaps on a strict examination, it might be found, that parties have been joined here, who have no common interest, and who are under no common liability ; still as the questions are the same, and as no objection has been taken on that account, we have not considered that point.

No direct question has been raised upon the subject of jurisdiction. The defendants claim different portions of the estate in controversy; the defendant Bartlett claims under a levy of execution upon it, as the property of Clement Starr ; Kettle and Titcomb claim another part under a like levy ; and the defendants George and Starr claim, namely, George as devisee and trustee, and Starr as having an interest as cestui que trust, under the will of Ann Brown. The plaintiffs insist, that if under these levies, conveyances and devises, the defendants take any estate or interest, they take the same clothed with a trust created by law, and arising in the settlement of an estate, and this question is one which is placed within the equity jurisdiction of this Court, by the statute.

One suggestion was made, but not much relied upon by the defendants’ counsel, that perhaps the original mortgage to Brown the testator might be deemed to be real estate, and if so, then -the estate was given to Clement Starr for life, by the Wil of Brown, and that this circumstance would settle this case. But it is very clear that there is no ground for this suggestion. Whatever doubts there may have ever been, the Si. 1788, c. 51, made expressly for removing doubts, has settled them. It declares in terms, that such mortgaged premises shall be assets in the hands of executors and administrators *484as personal estate. Here is no intimation, that the mortgagee had ever foreclosed or entered for condition broken ; but upon the evidence the contrary appears. It further appears, that the administrator, pursuant to this statute, brought his action as such administrator, and had judgment in that capacity. It is perfectly clear, then, that it could not be deemed the testator’s real estate, when his will was made, and the clause in question had no operation upon it.

Then the question recurs, what was the nature of the title of Starr the administrator, under the various proceedings stated in the case.

Starr, in 1827, recovered judgment for seisin and possession of this estate, as estate mortgaged to his testator by Ash-by. In his writ he counts upon the seisin of his testator, and on his own qualified seisin, as such administrator, with the will annexed, and recovers judgment m that capacity. Whether this was for condition broken, does not distinctly appear, and the judgment was general, and not conditional. The copy of the mortgage deed which I have, makes the money payable in June 1830, (perhaps a mistake for 1820, the mortgage having been made in 1819.) If the former was right, then the principal money was not payable when this judgment was recovered. Probably this makes no difference to the present question. Such being the state of this mortgage, the administrator alone could sue on it, it being held that by force of the statute, the heirs could not maintain an action on the title. Smith v. Dyer, 16 Mass. R. 18.

But by the terms of the statute, § 2, the executor or admin istrator so recovering, shall be seised to the sole use and be-hoof of the widow and heirs, &c., or such devisees, &c., with a proviso, that it may be distributed by the judge of probate as personal estate, unless necessary for the payment of debts, legacies, annuities or charges, in which case it may be sold, under a license, in the usual mode provided by law for granting licenses to administrators to sell for payment of debts. The obvious construction of this statute and the construction put upon it, in the case above cited, is, that all authority over mortgaged estates, not taken possession of by the mortgagee in his lifetime, is by the statute vested in his executors and *485administrators, as the trustees of the creditors and others interested in the personal estate of the deceased.

In the case of Boylston v. Carver, 4 Mass. R. 609, the Court were of opinion, that the words “ seised to the use of the widow and heirs,” both in this and another clause in the statute respecting land levied upon in satisfaction of a debt due to the estate, are not so to be construed, as to give effect to the statute of uses, and cause the estate to vest in possession, in the widow, &c., as a use executed by the statute, but to vest a tiust estate in the administrator, until certain things required by the statute shall have been performed by him. He is to hold the estate, as trustee, until the purposes, for which it is placed under his control, are accomplished. If necessary for the payment of debts, legacies or charges, he is to obtain license to sell it; if not so necessary, the judge of probate will pass a decree of distribution to the persons entitled to the intestate personal estate, in which case it may vest in the distributees, by force of such decree declaring the use and by force of the statute of uses and of the statute authorizing and directing such distribution ; or perhaps, the administrator, in the due execution of his trust, may be required to execute a deed without warranty, conformably to such decree.

In the case of Webber v. Webber, 6 Greenl. 127, the Supreme Court of Maine were of opinion, that upon that part of the statute, which applies to lands levied upon by an administrator to satisfy a debt due to the intestate, the words “ shall be seised to the use of the widow and heirs,” &c., ought to be so construed, as to vest the estate in the heirs, after the period of redemption had expired and after all the debts and legacies had been paid, all the purposes accomplished for which it is vested in the administrator in trust. This however only strengthens the position, that an executor or administrator, by obtaining seisin of premises, mortgaged to his testator or intestate, or by levying on real estate to satisfy a debt due to the estate, although he obtains a legal seisin, takes no beneficial interest, and can only dispose of the estate in the manner provided by the statute.

From these views it follows, that when Starr obtained judg*486rnent against Ashby on the mortgage, counting as administrator, and recovering as administrator, he had the qualified seisin, contemplated by the statute, in auler droit, and no other. It was an estate in trust. Was it changed by the subsequent deed of Ashby ? It is very manifest that when Starr, as administrator, recovered judgment and entered under his habere facias, Ashby had the same right of redemption for three years, that he would have had against the original mortgagee, whom the administrator represented. Starr, as administrator, had power to receive the amount due, and to discharge the mortgage. But if not redeemed, the estate would be foreclosed by the lapse of three years, and then the estate would become absolute, but still a trust estate, to be held and administered in his official capacity, as the assets of the estate, in the manner directed by statute. Having a right to foreclose the mortgage by entry, with or without judgment, and lapse of time, had he not a right to do the same thing, by another mode, as by taking a release of the equity ? It is difficult to perceive any objection to it. It does not change the nature or quality of the estate, but only extinguishes an outstanding right, or incumbrance. The estate is vested in him, by force of the deed to the original mortgagee, the judgment and entry, and the right of the mortgager is a right in equity to redeem. It then becomes necessary to look at the deed from Ashby to Starr, executed a few weeks after Starr had entered under his judgment. In consideration of one dollar he doth remise, release and for ever quitclaim to said Clement Starr, not described or named as administrator, all his right, title, interest and claim to the premises (described), adding after the description, “ meaning hereby expressly to relinquish all my right to redeem the same upon my mortgage to John Brown, late of Newburyport, deceased.” This deed, we think, must operate, according to the plain terms of it, as a release, not to create a new estate, but to enlarge an estate, already vested in the releasee, to render that, which was before defeasible and conditional, an estate absolute and unconditional. The nature and character of the estate is determined, not by the terms of the release, but by the former title to which the release enured. The position of the defendants, therefore, *487that this deed, not mentioning the releasee as administrator, created a new estate to him in his own right, is, we think, wholly untenable. But had this deed been in other terms, had it been in ever so express words a grant or other form of conveyance, it could only enure by way of release, and therefore by the rules of law should be held so to enure. A deed that s intended and made to one purpose, may enure to another, for if it will not take effect in that way it is intended, it may take effect another way. And therefore a deed made and intended for a release, may amount to a grant of a reversion, an attornment, or a surrender, and e converso. Shep. Touch. 82. As against the mortgagee or his representative, all the right which the mortgager had, was a right in equity to redeem, and this is all he could pass, by any form of deed. But there is another principle applicable to the case. If it had been the intention of Ashby to give, and Starr to take, an absolute conveyance to himself in his own right, and thus defeat the rights of those interested in the estate, it would have been a fraud ; and then the maxim is, that where an act is doubtful or equivocal, and construing it one way will show that the parties acted consistently with the rules of law, and construing it otherwise will show that they intended to violate the rules of law, it shall be presumed, that they intended to conform to the rules of law, and the transaction is to be construed and applied accordingly.

But it is not necessary to resort to the aid of this principle, because it is apparent, that the deed, upon the face of it, was intended as a release, that it operated as a release, that the legal effect of it was, to bar the equity of redemption, to foreclose the mortgage, and to put the administrator in the same situation in regard to the estate, as if it had been foreclosed yy lapse of time and the operation of law.

Such be;ng the nature of the estate held by the administrator, it is clear by the statute, that he could only make a good title to the purchaser, under a license duly obtained, and conforming to all the requisites of the law, on the'subject of sales oy license. If he was technically seised, it was a naked seism in bis official capacity, in trust and for the use of others, the execution of which trusts is directed and regulated by statute. *488It becomes therefore unnecessary to consider the subsequent conveyance by Starr to his mother, and the several conveyances and reconveyances between them ; because by that first conveyance, no estate passed to her, or if technically any estate did pass, it was clothed with the same trusts, under which the administrator held it. If the latter is the just legal view of it, then it is to be considered, that this was a trust created by law, belonging to the administrator, in right of his office, that it depended upon acts and conveyances which v ere matter of record, and apparent upon the face of the title, and therefore every person taking, or attempting to take a title, under Starr, must be deemed in law, to take with notice of these trusts. No beneficial title therefore passed by any of the conveyances or levies stated in the pleadings ; and the plaintiff, Cushing, as the present representative of the estate, is entitled to have the lands in question, discharged of all adverse title, and incumbrance created, or attempted to be created thereon, by the former administrator, in order that the proceeds may be administered and appropriated according to law, as the proper assets of the estate, and the other plaintiffs are entitled to have this done, as sureties on the bond of the former administrator and for their relief. The latter ground is strengthened by another principle of equity, that where sureties have paid, or are held liable to pay the debt of their principal, they have a right in equity, to the benefit of all funds and assets, so far as they can be specifically reached, which their principal held, as specifically applicable to the debt which the sureties have paid, and to have them placed in such a condition as to be made available for that purpose.

It has been contended, that from the settlement of the probate account, it will appear that Starr credited the amount of Ashby’s debt as a debt collected, and had an allowance of $500 for the alleged difference in value, between the nominal amount of the debt, and the value of the mortgaged estate received in satisfaction, and it is alleged in the answer, that from this decree there was no appeal. It is difficult to perceive how this account affects the question. He was bound to credit the debt, whether he received it in cash, or took the property pledged in satisfaction. This did not affect the cnar*489acter of the assets in his hands, or enable him to hold in his own right, or apply to his own use, the assets held by him to meet this balance. If he had actually paid the balance of this account, with his own funds, it might have given him at least an equitable claim on the estate ; and as all the purposes of the trust would have then been accomplished, and no one could complain, and the legal seisin was in himself, perhaps at law his title might have been good. But if it was intended to allow the amount in account, and to take the trust property liable to pay it, to his own account, and leave his sureties responsible for payment of the account thus allowed, it was a plain fraud upon them.

But supposing there had been an agreement between the legatees, and the administrator, that he should allow the amount in account, with a deduction of $500, and take the mortgaged property to himself, it would be an agreement which could not be supported, and this on many grounds. It would be a fraud upon the sureties ; it would in effect be a purchase without deed ; and it would be a sale of trust property by a trustee to himself; it would be a disposition of the assets, by an officer, whose duties are directed and governed by law, contrary to the rules of law. Such an agreement, if ever so distinctly made and clearly proved, could not be supported.

The Court are all of opinion that the plaintiffs are entitled to the relief prayed for