Campau v. Campau

Chrtstiancy, Ch-. J.

By a decree of the circuit -court in chancery for the county of Wayne, in the above entitled cause, a partition of the real estate of the late Joseph Campau, deceased, was made among his heirs (which was affirmed by this court, 19 Mich., 116), by which the shares of the complainants (who were the children of James J. Campau, one of the sons of the deceased,) were set off to them jointly and in common, subject to the dower of their mother (widow of James J. Campau, and now, by a subsequent marriage, Mrs. Yates), the shares of all the other heirs of said Joseph Campau, deceased, being set off to them in severalty.

Subsequent to this decree, the portion so set off to •complainants, subject to their mother’s dower, was partitioned among them by a decree of the same court, by which the share of each of them was set off in severalty; and the dower of the widow was assigned and set off to her. In the last named suit, the widow (then Mrs. Yates), who had become the trustee of her son, Joseph, was complainant, and Theodore J. Campau (one of the administrators mentioned below), who had purchased the undivided share of one of her sons, was made a defendant, but only in his individual capacity.

The decrees in both cases required possession to be delivered to the parties, respectively, of the shares set off to each by the decree; but, though Theodore J. and Dennis J. (sons of Joseph, deceased,) were made parties defendant to the original bill, they were made such only in their individual capacity as heirs, and not as administrators.

Prior to, and at the time of, these .partition suits, they were, and still continue to be, administrators on the estate of Joseph Campau (the common ancestor through whom all the heirs claimed), and, as such administrators, had, prior *129to the presentation of the petitions mentioned below, taken possession of the real estate set off to the petitioners on partition, which they still claim to hold’in that capacity; and haying refused to give up the possession, the petitioners, Mrs. Yates (the widow), and Elizabeth Brown, and Alexander T. Campau, (heirs, to whom, as defendants in the original bill of .partition, shares had been assigned), severally presented their petitions in the original partition cause to the circuit court in chancery, praying for an order requiring said Theodore J. and Dennis J. to deliver possession, and that a writ of possession be issued for that purpose.

To these petitions, Theodore J. Campau and Dennis J. Campau put in their answer, setting up, — among other things (not now relied upon or necessary to be noticed)— that they are the administrators on the estate of said Joseph Campau, deceased; that as such administrators, appointed and qualified years ago, they have a right to the possession of the real estate of the decedent, and that they took possession, and still hold it, in that capacity; that their accounts as administrators have not been settled, but are now contested in the probate court for the county of Wayne, and that said probate court has made no order for the delivery over by them of said estate. They insist that petitioners have no right to the possession of the real estate as now situated, and that the circuit court in chancery is not the proper tribunal for settling the question and making the order, and that this is nob the proper form of relief.

The only question necessary to the decision of the case is, whether the administrators, at the time of the filing of the petitions (November, and December, 1871), had the right to possession of the real estate, as against the petitioners, two of whom are heirs and the others standing in the right *130pf an heir, to whom the land had been thus set off by partition in severalty.

By the law, as it stood prior to July 18, 1871 (when the act of March 29, 1871, took effect), the administrator had the right to the possession of the real, as well as the persona], estate, and to the rent and profits, until the estate should be settled, or until delivered over by order of the probate court to the heirs or devisees. — Oonip. L. (1857), § %904~

■ It is not necessary to decide whether, under this statute, which was in force at the time of the decree in the original partition suit, the administrators would have been estopped by that decree from claiming the possession of the land set off to the parties in severalty, or whether they would be left to their right of applying for a license to sell, should it become necessary. Granting they would, still have had the. right of possession under that statute, still this right was not an estate or right of property, nor (as we held in this ease in 19 Mich., 1%J¡) did it constitute an interest in the administrators, which they could sell or dispose of as Such. It was a mere statute power, given them only for the benefit of creditors, and properly to be exercised only as the exigencies of the estate might require. Created only by the . statute, it owed its existence to that alone. It pertained only to the remedy for the benefit of creditors, and was not of the essence of, but merely auxiliary to, that. Without it the statute gave and still gives an adequate remedy in the power to sell any of the real estáte of the deceased for the payment of debts by obtaining a license for that purpose from the probate court, a power the exercise of which creditors in a proper case have a right to compel, and which is in no way impaired by the partition nor by taking away from the administrators the right of possession with rents and profits, though in cases *131of such sale a new partition might become necessary. It was, therefore, entirely competent for the legislature' to take away from the administrators the power of taking or holding the possession, rents and profits, by the repeal of those provisions of the statute upon which alone . the power depended; and this, as well after as before they had taken the possession. No vested right would be disturbed by such repeal. This is precisely what was done by the amendment of the section by the act of March 29,1871. — S&ss. L. 1871, p. 80. This act contains no saving clause, nor was any necessary; and when it took effect, July 18,1871, the power in question was gone.

The right of possession, therefore, was not one of which the probate court had exclusive jurisdiction, or any jurisdiction at all.

The orders made by the circuit court in chancery were? therefore, proper and valid, and must be affirmed, with costs to the petitioners. And as these proceedings were not instituted against respondents as administrators, but as individuals, and they have failed to show any facts from which we can infer that they took or held the possession in good faith, or for any legitimate purpose of administration, and we are not satisfied that they did so, the estate must not be burdened with the costs, but these must be awarded against them in their individual capacity.

The records must be remitted to the circuit court in chancery to enable that court to carry into effect the orders appealed from.

Campbell and Cooley, JJ., concurred. , Graves, J., did not sit in this case.

Afterwards the complainants moved for special damages under the statute, for vexation and delay, on the ground *132that tbe appeal was frivolous. It appeared also that similar appeals were pending in two other cases against the same defendants, — one upon the petition of Elizabeth Brown, and the other upon that of Alexander T. Campau.

D. 0. IIoTbroolc, for the motion. Theodore Romeyn, contra. The Court

awarded fifty dollars damages in each of the three cases.