Citation Numbers: 94 N.E. 1001, 201 N.Y. 358, 1911 N.Y. LEXIS 1252
Judges: Gray, Bartlett
Filed Date: 3/28/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In this action, which was brought in the City Court of New York, the plaintiff on September 27, 1909, recovered judgment against the defendant for $727.63, upon which an execution was duly issued and *Page 361 returned unsatisfied. Thereupon the plaintiff on December 7, 1909, moved in the City Court for leave to issue an execution against ten per cent of the income derived by the judgment debtor from a testamentary trust established in his favor by the will of one Montagnie Ward, which was admitted to probate on the 6th day of December, 1879.
This application was based upon an amendment to section 1391 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which took effect on September 1, 1908. That section as then amended provides, among other things, that where a judgment has been recovered and an execution thereon has been returned unsatisfied, and where any wages, debts, earnings, salary, income from trust funds or profits are due and owing to the judgment debtor to the amount of $12 or more per week the judgment creditor may apply to the court in which the judgment was recovered, and upon satisfactory proof of such facts the court must order an execution to issue against the wages, debt, earnings, salary, income from trust funds or profits of the judgment debtor. On presentation of the execution to the person from whom the wages, debts, earnings, salary or income from trust funds or profits are due, such execution becomes a lien and remains a continuing levy to the amount specified therein, which shall not exceed ten per cent thereof until the execution and the expenses thereof are duly satisfied and paid. The appellant concedes that section 1391 as thus amended is applicable to the income from trusts which have come into being since the amendment, but contends that it cannot be applied to income from trusts previously created because if so applied it would be unconstitutional as impairing the obligation of a contract and as depriving the beneficiary of the trust of a vested right.
It is pertinent to inquire in the first place to what extent the income from trust funds was subject to the claims of creditors of the beneficiary of the trust on September 1, 1908, when the amendment to section 1391 of the Code of Civil Procedure took effect. The rights of such creditors as against the trust income were then prescribed by a provision of the *Page 362 Real Property Law and certain sections of the Code of Civil Procedure. The Real Property Law provides as follows: "Where a trust is created to receive the rents and profits of real property, and no valid direction for accumulation is given, the surplus of such rents and profits, beyond the sum necessary for the education and support of the beneficiary, shall be liable to the claims of his creditors in the same manner as other personal property, which cannot be reached by execution." (Real Property Law [chap. 547, Laws of 1896], § 78, formerly 1 R.S. 729, § 57; Real Property Law [chap. 52, Laws of 1909], § 98.) The Code of Civil Procedure, in chapter 15, title 4, article 1, entitled Judgment Creditor's Action, then provided and now provides for an action by a judgment creditor against a judgment debtor or other person to compel the discovery of any thing in action or other property belonging to the judgment debtor, and of any money, thing in action, or other property due to him or held in trust for him; but this provision was not and is not applicable to a case where the trust has been created by a person other than the judgment debtor. (Code of Civil Procedure, §§ 1871, 1879.) As the trust in the present case was created by a third party, it does not fall within the purview of section 1871 of the Code, so that when the amendment to section 1391 took effect on September 1, 1908, the provision of the Real Property Law which has been quoted was the only statutory regulation of the subject which has any application to the facts in the present litigation. In the statutory revision of 1909 the consolidators have appended a note to section 98 of the Real Property Law which is of some interest in this discussion. It is as follows: "The Code of Civil Procedure (§ 1391), as conceded, has put an end to a large ``spendthrift trust' in this state. * * * The effect of § 1391 of the Code is to permit certain creditors of beneficiaries of trusts created under the third subdivision of § 76 (§ 96 of present law) of the former Real Property Law, to have execution on their judgments. So important a reform in our domestic law of trusts deserves to be called to the attention of lawyers *Page 363 and laymen reading the statute on Uses and Trusts and such a clause might be added to this section. It ought not to be left obscurely contained in a long section of the Code of Civil Procedure."
In Laird v. Carton (
The mere fact that a statute is retrospective or retroactive is not a conclusive objection to its validity under the Federal Constitution. "It is not all retrospective laws, however," says Mr. Justice MILLER, "that are forbidden by this clause [Art. I, section 10] of the Constitution, but only such as impair the obligation of a contract. Ex post facto laws are also forbidden in the same clause, but * * * that term is only applied to criminal laws and procedure and has no reference to contracts. There is a large class of retrospective legislation which is constitutional, not inconsistent with the principles above laid down, and sometimes necessary and proper, relating to rights not dependent upon contract or affecting the individual by increasing his liability to a criminal prosecution." (Miller on the Constitution of the United States, 536; Satterlee *Page 364 v. Matthewson, 2 Peters, 380.) The theory of the dissenting opinion below is that the beneficiary of a trust fund created by a third party whose income therefrom is wholly exempt from execution at the time of the creation of the trust has a constitutional right which prohibits the legislature from making any part of such income applicable to the payment of his debts; in other words, that he has a constitutional right that the law thus exempting trust incomes from the claims of his creditors shall never be changed so as to affect him. This theory is only tenable upon the assumption that the state has entered into a contract with the cestui que trust to that effect. Certainly there is no such contract between the creator of the trust and the trustee or the beneficiary. The creator of the trust has simply appropriated a portion of his property to the use of the beneficiary. The trustee merely undertakes to pay over the income as directed, provided the law of the land permits him to do so. He enters into no engagement to withhold the trust income from the creditors of the beneficiary who may have a lawful claim against the same. If there is any contract in the case, therefore, protected by the constitutional provision it must be an implied agreement by the state that the law shall not be changed in the respect indicated.
The provisions of law which afford protection to the beneficiaries of trusts are practically simply statutes of exemption. The Revised Statutes (now the Real Property Law) by providing that the surplus income of real estate should be liable in equity for the claims of the creditors of the beneficiary provided by necessary implication that all of the income which was necessary for the education and support of the person for whose benefit the trust was created should be exempt from liability for his debts. This rule of the Revised Statutes implying a like exemption was extended by judicial construction to trusts of personal as well as trusts of real estate. (Williams v. Thorn,
The difference between a statute extending exemptions from execution and lessening exemptions from execution is fundamental. Some confusion has arisen from the failure to emphasize this distinction in discussions as to the constitutionality of exemption laws. Mr. Justice MILLER in his treatise on the Constitution of the United States, speaking of state laws enlarging exemptions from execution so as to include homesteads, says: "So far as these laws, or any of them, have had the effect to operate upon contracts in existence when they were passed they have been uniformly held by the Supreme Court of the United States, as well as by nearly all the other courts before whom the question has come, to be forbidden by the clause of the Constitution we are now considering. To the extent that they impair the obligation of contracts, or hinder the creditor from collecting his debt, they benefit the debtor and place him in a better position at the expense of the creditor and so are repugnant to this clause of the Constitution. It matters not whether the sum involved be large or small, every law which has this effect in regard to past contracts, or those in existence when the law took effect, is void." (Miller on Const. of U.S. pp. 547, 548.) This doctrine is unquestionable as applied to statutesenlarging exemptions; but the language quoted does not sustain the proposition that any change in an exemption law is unconstitutional as applied to past or existing contracts. If the change be favorable to the creditor, as it must be when exemptions are thereby lessened, it does not impair the obligation of the contract, but, on the contrary, strengthens it.
In this court, the consideration of the effect of statutesenlarging exemptions from execution began with the case ofDanks v. Quackenbush (
A different view was taken by the Supreme Court of the United States in Edwards v. Kearzey (
In a concurring opinion Mr. Justice HUNT expressed his acquiescence in the conclusion reached by Mr. Justice SWAYNE, speaking for the majority of the court, "not for the reason that any and every exemption made after entering into a contract is invalid, but that the amount here exempted is so large, as seriously to impair the creditor's remedy for the collection of his debt." (p. 610.) He referred to the New York case of Morse v. Goold (supra) as laying down the correct test, which was whether the increased exemption substantially lessened the creditor's remedy.
It does not follow, however, that because a statute enlarging exemptions from execution may be unconstitutional as applied to executions issued on judgments on pre-existing contracts, a statute reducing such exemptions is objectionable on the same ground. How can it be said that a statute of the latter class impairs the obligation of a contract as the subject-matter of litigation? To impair "is in some way to weaken or diminish the power which the courts had when the contract was made to enforce it, if enforceable specifically, or to give remedy for damages for failure to perform it." (Miller on Const. of U.S. p. 541.) "All change is not impairment. Impair means to make worse, to diminish in quantity, value, excellence or strength, to lessen in power, to weaken, to enfeeble, to deteriorate." (Holland v.Dickerson, *Page 368
If that constitutional prohibition is invoked at all in the present case it must be for the protection of some contract which is assumed to exist between the state and the creator of the trust or the beneficiary; and that I understand to be the position of the dissenting judges in the Appellate Division. They treat the trust created by the will of Mr. Montagnie Ward as a "contract, agreement or understanding" and say: "When Mr. Montagnie Ward made his will, the State, in effect, said to him, speaking through the statute, ``If you will give a portion of your property to A, in trust, and he will agree to invest the same and pay the income derived therefrom to your son, the statute under which you are permitted to thus give it will be sufficient to compel A to keep his agreement.' Mr. Montagnie Ward having given the property, and the trustees having accepted it, the Legislature could not thereafter destroy the trust in whole or in part, because to do so would violate that provision of the Federal Constitution which prohibits the state from impairing the validity of a contract. While the arrangement under which the property was given by the testator and received by the trustees may not, in a strict or technical sense, have amounted to a contract, nevertheless it was so in spirit." I am unable to see what foundation there is for this argument. There was no provision in the trust deed that the income of the beneficiary should be exempt from the claims of creditors. That was simply part of the law of the state as it stood at the time. In enacting such laws the legislature does not enter into any contract with its citizens, nor does it offer to contract with them. The statute was enacted in the exercise *Page 369
of the plenary power of the state to regulate the tenure of real and personal property within its borders. It simply said sicvolo sic jubeo, and could not limit the power of succeeding legislatures to alter or repeal such legislation. (Newton v.Commrs.,
But to what will the doctrine contended for lead? A not uncommon provision in wills grants to an equitable life tenant the power to dispose of the remainder by will. The right to make a will of real estate in this state occurs on the testator arriving at the age of 21 years. Is this provision immune from legislative change? Would the statute granting power to make a will on arriving at the age of 18 years be inoperative as to property devised under a will prior to its enactment? The real estate of an infant cannot be sold or disposed of contrary to the provisions of a will which devised it, and under our law infancy continues until the age of 21 years. Would a statute changing the age at which infancy ceases be inoperative as to land devised or given to the infant prior to the enactment of the statute? If not, why not in the cases suggested as well as the case before us? Where lies the distinction? The provision that the income of a trust fund may not be taken to satisfy the debts of the beneficiary is no inherent or necessary part of the trust. At common law the income of every trust, save that of a married woman, was *Page 370
assignable and could be subjected to the claims of creditors. As already shown, the exemption of the homestead of a debtor can be repealed. Why is not that right, especially if the homestead proceeded from the gift of a third party, as sacred as any rights accruing under a trust? It is a mistake to suppose that this court, in affirming the decision in People ex rel. RooseveltHospital v. Raymond (
But the question is really settled by authority. It was decided three-quarters of a century ago by the Court of Errors inCochran v. Van Surlay (20 Wend. 365), where it was held by the dissenting judges, as well as by the majority of the court, that a will absolute in terms and unconditional could not by any stretch of terms within the limits of legal or ordinary language be termed a contract. The authority of this case, as well as that of Leggett v. Hunter (supra), has never been impaired so far as I can find by subsequent decision. On the contrary, title to a great deal of property has been taken on the strength of these decisions. There is further curious result if the will of Montagnie Ward be treated as a contract. It never took effect until his death, and it is not very easy to see how there can be a contract with a dead man; but assuming that there were some contract rights vested in Montagnie Ward during his life, on his death he certainly did not take them to the other world. They must have passed to the devisees, legatees, next of kin or heirs at law. But these very contract rights, if he had any, passed under the residuary clause as part of the corpus of the trust of which his children *Page 371 were the equitable life tenants. Surely the remainder-men could not succeed to any right of the testator that the income should not be subjected to his debts, for they had no interest in the subject. Therefore, if there were any contract of the testator, those rights have become vested in the beneficiaries themselves. Any attempt to treat the will as a contract seems to me will involve us in a hopeless maze of incongruities from which it will be impossible to escape.
But though the will was not a contract, any person in whom under its provisions any property had vested, could not be deprived of his rights without due process of law both under the provisions of our Constitution and those of the Federal Constitution. That a trustee has no property right in the trust will be seen by the opinion of Judge GRAY in Metcalfe v. UnionTrust Co. (
It is a general rule of constitutional law that a citizen has no vested right in statutory privileges and exemptions. (Cooley's Const. Lim. [7th ed.] p. 546.) This rule has been held to apply to statutes exempting property from levy and sale on execution. Such a statute is not a contract between the judgment debtor and the state, and hence an amendment thereof altering the exemptions by lessening them does not impair the obligation of a contract. In Webb v. Moore (
In this court the constitutional aspects of legislation lessening or repealing exemptions from execution do not appear to have been considered, although the effect of a statute increasing such exemptions was passed upon as we have already shown inMorse v. Goold (supra). In Kittel v. Domeyer (
As to the suggestion that to construe the amendment as operative upon existing trusts is to deprive the beneficiary of his property without due process of law it may be said that to compel a man to apply his property to the payment of his debts is not to deprive him of his property within the meaning of the Constitution. Even before the enactment of 1908 the beneficiary was compellable thus to apply all of the trust income which was not necessary for his education and support; *Page 376 and the amendment merely measures the quantum which must go to the payment of his debts by a different standard. Instead of exempting from the claims of creditors all of the income not requisite for the education and support of the beneficiary the legislature now exempts all the income except ten per cent. Such a statute relates to the remedy of the creditor by changing its extent and in nowise impairs the obligation of any contract or destroys any vested right because the state has never contracted with the beneficiary as to the extent of the exemption which he shall enjoy or conferred upon him any right to a specified exemption, nor did the state in authorizing the creation of trusts which should be exempt to a certain extent from the claims of creditors undertake that the exemption originally prescribed should be permanent, exemption being a matter of privilege for which no consideration proceeds from the creator of the trust. The state retains the right which exists in regard to remediable legislation generally to change the remedy in favor of the creditor of the cestui que trust.
The judgment against the defendant was recovered in this case over a year subsequent to the time when the statute of 1908 took effect and it does not appear that the debt on which it was founded was not also incurred subsequent to that time. Therefore, to sustain the position of the appellant in this case it would be necessary to hold not only that the defendant had a vested right to hold the income of the trust fund exempt from the claims of his creditors prior to the enactment of the law, but that he has a vested right to incur such debts as he may see fit in the future with a similar exemption, and that the legislature can pass no statute which will, in effect, say to him, whatever may be the law as to your past debts, if hereafter you incur any you must pay them out of the income of your trust property. Such a result is rather too startling to be contemplated with equanimity. I am satisfied that there is nothing in the fundamental law either of the state or nation which obliges us to adopt a construction with such possible consequences, and I, therefore, advise that *Page 377 this order be affirmed, with costs, and the certified question answered in the affirmative.