On 20th June, 1825, Theodore Jones conveyed to Leonard Jarvis certain premises therein described in trust, "and subject to the covenants and agreements contained in certain articles of agreement between the said Theodore and Leonard bearing even date with these presents.” This deed was signed by Catherine W. Jones, his wife. The declaration of trust, signed by both parties, describes the purposes and objects of the trust, coufers upon said Jarvis entire control in the management of the trust estate, and provides that he shall appoint by will immediately a trustee, who shall succeed in case of his death, and shall manage and dispose of the trust estate then remaining, in accordance with such declaration. But no authority is given to' said Jarvis to appoint a successor by deed during his life. It provides that he may make advances upon the credit of the trust estate for its improvement as *585well as for the support of the cestui que trust, that he shall keep a regular and distinct account of his doings and sales with said trust estate, to the end that it may not be blended with his own estate,” and that " in case of the death of said Jones he will divide and distribute what he may have of the estate, whether it be land, buildings, money or securities, dr the value thereof as he shall deem proper, among said Jones’ heirs in proportion as said Jones shall direct in writing, whether it be by will or otherwise. But, should said Jones leave no written direction or will,” said Jarvis is to " distribute and divide the aforesaid estate among said Jones’ heirs, according to the law of descents of the State of Maine, &c., * * it being understood that the heirs are not to receive their shares in either of the above mentioned events until they marry or arrive at the age of twenty-one years, excepting so much as may be necessary for their maintenance and education,” &c.
On 25th June, 1825, Leonard Jarvis made his will accordingly, and by it appointed Charles Jarvis his successor as trustee, and devised to him in trust the land specifically described in the deed of June 20, 1825.
On 11th September, 1840, said Jones conveyed to Leonard Jarvis, "in trust for the purposes mentioned in a certain deed made by me and Catherine Winthrop Jones, my wife, to said Jarvis, and bearing date June 20, 1825,” * * a certain tract of land, the boundaries of which are given, "to have; and to hold the aforegranted premises in trust, as aforesaid,, with all the privileges and appurtenances thereof to the-said Leonard Jarvis, his heirs and assigns forever.”
By accepting this deed and acting under it, he became- a trustee and held the estate as such, and not in his own right.
The deeds of June 2, 1825, and of Sept. 11, 1840, were immediately recorded.
On 29th Aug., 1854, Leonard Jarvis, by deed of warranty, and for the consideration of one dollar, conveyed to Charles Jarvis certain lands described as follows : — "All my right, *586' title and interest in and unto any lands lying in the towns of Dedham and Ellsworth, in the county of Hancock, and also in the several towns in which Jarvis gore, so called, in the county.of Penobscot, has been subdivided; to have and to hold the aforementioned premises, with all the privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging, to the said Charles Jarvis, his heirs and assigns, to his and their use and behoof forever,” with the usual covenants contained in a deed of warranty!
The trust estates described in the deed of June 20, 1825, and in that of Sept. 11, Í840, from Jones to Jarvis, were situated in Ellsworth. It is insisted that, as the will of Leonard Jarvis, dated June 25, 1825, does not confer any title upon Charles Jarvis to the premises conveyed to him on Sept. 11, 1840, that the deed of Aug. 29, 1854, conveys to said Charles the trust estate which Leonard had by virtue of the deed of Jones to him of Sept. 11, 1840.
But, is it so ? Undoubtedly a trustee, in violation of his trust, may convey the trust estate and thus transfer the mere legal title. But, before he can be convicted of such a gross breách of duty, it must appear that he intended thus fraudulently to convey. In the case at bar, it is apparent, we think, that there was no such intention and no such conveyance. The grantor does not describe himself as trustee nor the premises conveyed as trust estate. The trust estate is not described by metes and bounds nor by any language specifically referring to it. The estate conveyed is, — "all my right, title and interest,” &c., but, in the ordinary use of words', these would not be held to relate to lands in trust. They include all held in his own right. They exclude all held intrust. The "right, title and interest” was to "any lands lying in the towns of Dedham and Ellsworth, in the county of Hancock, and also in the several towns- in which Jarvis gore, so called, in the county of Penobscot, has been subdivided.” But the land held in trust was situated in Ellsworth, and not in the other places to which the deed refers. The deed would seem to refer to what he might right*587fully convey, (" my right, title and interest,”) and not to what he could only wrongfully as trustee. By the deed of trust he was to see that the trust estate was not " blended with his own estate.” But, if this deed conveyed the trust estate, theu, in the conveyance, his own and the trust estate were, blended together.. Further, the consideration expressed for this large estate is but one dollar, and the conveyance of so much property for so trifling a sum would be a gross breach of trust, which is not to be presumed. As the deeds of trust were on record, the taking of such a deed, if it conveyed the trust estate, would be a fraud on the part of the grantee. Undoubtedly a court of equity would hold such fraudulent grantee as holding in trust, but that would not lessen the fraud, if such was the intention of the parties and is the true construction of the instrument. Tim description in the deed is fully and better satisfied by excluding from its operation all trust property, and holding it to convey his (my) estate only, and not that belonging beneficially to others.
It is obvious that Leonard Jarvis did not intend to convey this land in trust, because he does not so say. If he did, the deed of trust to him gave hini no authority to appoint a trustee by deed.
Further, if this language were held to convey the lands conveyed by the deed of trust of Sept. 11, 1840, from Theodore. Jones to Leonard Jarvis, it must be regarded as equally conveying those in the trust deed of June 20, 1825, between the same parties. The land first conveyed to Leonard Jarvis by Jones was as much his as that to which he acquired a title by his second conveyance. In other words, if Charles Jarvis, by the deed of Aug. 29, 1854, acquired a title to any of the trust estates, he did to the whole. If so, then nothing was acquired by the will, for he had the whole by this deed. So that Leonard Jarvis, without right, in violation of his duty as trustee, conveyed the whole estate in fraud of the cestui que trusts, or for the purpose of *588making a new trustee, — either of which would have been a gross wrong.
But this is not pretended. The position is, that the first estate in trust passed to Charles Jarvis by will, and the second by deed, under the clause "all my right, title and interest.” But the word " my” just as much embraces the first estate conveyed in trust as it does the second.
It is apparent that Charles Jarvis, neither at the date of the deed of Leonard. Jarvis to him of Aug. 29, 1854, nor since, has claimed any portion of the trust estate conveyed to Leonard by the two deeds of trust, under and by virtue of the clause " my right, title and interest.” His claim to the trust estate was under the will of Leonard Jarvis, and under that alone. To be sure, he undoubtedly supposed in the first instance, that both estates in trust were devised to him by the will of Leonard Jarvis, but, when he found he was mistaken as to this, be ceased to make any claim to the tract conveyed to Leonard Jarvis by the trust deed of. Sept. 11, 1840. Accordingly we find, as trustee, he conveyed to Munroe Young by deed of warranty on Nov. 14, 1863, all the unsold portion of the trust estate to which he had title as trustee under the will of Leonard Jarvis, to which reference had been had. On the first day of February, 1864, he released and quitclaimed to said. Young all his right, title or interest in his own right, or as devisee, trustee or heir, under the will of Leonard Jarvis, to the premises mentioned in the deed of trust of Sept. 11, 1840, "but not meaning or intending to prejudice or interfere with any right or interest which the heirs of Leonard Jarvis, or the heirs of the said Theodore Jones may have in and to the above described premises.” It is thus apparent that Charles Jarvis disclaimed all intention of conveying the trust estate which was undevised, and that Munroe Young, by receiving the deed, was aware of such disclaimer. Indeed, there is no reference whatever to the deed of Aug. 29, 1854, by which " the right, title and interest” in certain lands was conveyed to the grantee therein, but, in the deed to Young, the grantor *589expressly defines what he conveys, thus, "hereby meaning and intending to convey to said Young all the right, title and interest, if any, I may have in my own right as trustee as aforesaid, — thus making it manifest that the forced construction now attempted to be put upon the deed of Aug. 29th, was never sanctioned by the grantor.
The construction that the words, " all my right, title and interest,” will not convey trust estate, when the grantor does not act as trustee in such conveyance, is not merely in accordance with the obvious meaning of the words used, and with the intention of the grantor in using them, — but it is equally in accordance with the decisions of the Courts.
An attachment of all the debtor’s right, title and interest, in the absence of notice, holds the interest of the debtor in all lands of which he has record title. But, if he holds land as trustee and the trust is apparent of record, an attachment of his interest would be void and ineffectual, for the obvious reason that the estate attached is not his. Warren v. Ireland, 29 Maine, 62. An estate held only in trust will not be affected in equity by the judgment, or other debts or engagements, or by the bankruptcy or insolvency of the trustee. Hill on Trustees, 269.
A conveyance of " all my right, title and interest” passes, not what the grantor has of record, but what he has of right. It passes only the right, title and interest he has at the time of the conveyance. Coe v. Persons unknown, 43 Maine, 437. "The reasons,” observes Hathaway, J., in the case last cited, " why the words, ' all the right, title and interest,’ when used by an officer in his return of an attachment of real estate, have an effect different from and more enlarged than that which they have when used by a grantor in a deed of conveyance, are stated by the Court in Roberts v. Bourne, 23 Maine, 165.”
As an attachment of the debtor’s right, title and interest, would not hold the estate which the debtor held in trust, the trust' being apparent of record, much more will it not pass trust estate in a deed, when the grantor does not de*590scribe himself as trustee, nor the estate as trust estate, and when such a construction would make him guilty of a violation of his trust.
In Raikes v. Anderson, 1 Starkies’ R., 155, the premises, intended to be conveyed by a deed of mortgage, are described as the defendant’s undivided moiety, and the deed after-wards professes to convey all the defendant’s estate, &c., in the premises. This conveys the moiety only, to which the defendant was entitled in his own right, and not one-third part of the same premises in which he was interested as co-trustee with the lessors of the plaintiff. In Merrill v. Wilson, 28 Maine, 58, the general partner, in a special partnership, conducted in his name, made a general assignment of his property for the benefit of creditors, without using any words to show that partnership property was intended to be assigned. The Court held that the partnership property did not pass thereby. " When he makes a conveyance of property in his name and under his signature, how can .it be known,” asks Shepley, J., in delivering the opinion, "that the partnership property is intended to be conveyed, unless there be something found in the instrument to determine that it was ? * *' When all the language used in the instrument of conveyance is appropriate for the conveyance of one’s private property, and there is nothing in it by which it can be determined that he acted in any other than an individual capacity, that must be a conveyance of his own private property.” The same principle is equally applicable when the grantor holds an estate in trust.
The conclusion is, that Leonard Jarvis by the deed of .Aug. 29, 1854, neither conveyed nor intended to convey any estate held by him in trust, but only those lands held by himself in his own right and to which he could justly apply the possessive pronoun "my.”
As the'will of Leonard Jarvis, of June 25, 1825, refers to and specifically devises to Charles Jarvis only the land conveyed to him in trust by Theodore Jones by deed dated June 20, 1825, it is apparent that Charles Jarvis acquired *591no right by deed nor by will.to the trust estate conveyed to Leonard Jarvis by deed'dated Sept. 11, 1840, but that the same remained in him undevised, and upon his death descended to his heirs at law.
The trust estate conveyed to Leonard Jarvis, on June 20, 1825, by Jones, was by him devised to Charles Jarvis, in trust, by whom the same was sold. This portion of the trust estate is no way involved in the present litigation.
As has been seen, the estate conveyed to Leonard Jarvis, Sept. 11, 1840, was held by him under the declaration of trust of June 20,. 1825. He held it as trustee. He never sold it. He did not devise it. It descended to his heirs, who hold the legal title subject to the same trusts as when the fee was in their ancestor. As the trust was apparent upon the face of the deed to him and was upon record, whoever acquired the legal title would, having notice, be bound by the trusts referred to in the original conveyance from Theodore Jones. " If a devisor or settlor appoint a trustee, who either dies in the testator’s lifetime, or disclaims, or is incapable of taking the estate, or if the trustee otherwise fail, the trust is not defeated, but fastens on the conscience of the person upon whom the real estate has descended.” Levin on Trusts, 693. "I take it,” said Lord Chief Justice Wilmot, " to be a fundamental principle in equity, that the trust follows the legal estate wheresoever it goes, except it come into the hands of a purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice.” Attorney General v. Lady Downing, Wilm., 21. "Upon the death of one of the original trustees, the whole estate, whether real or personal, devolves upon the survivors, and so on continually to the last survivor. Upon the death of a sole or last survivor, who has made any disposition of the trust estate, it devolves, according to its legal quality, upon his heir at law, a personal representative. As a general rule, the surviving trustee, or trustees, or other personal representative of the sole or last surviving trustee, are as fully competent to act *592in the administration and management of the trust estate as the trustees originally appointed.” Hill on Trustees, 303.
The fee of the land conveyed to Leonard Jarvis, on Sept. 11, 1840, is in his legal heirs. The cestui que trusts are the heirs of Theodore Jones. The heirs of Jarvis hold the fee iu trust. If they neglect or refuse to execute the trusts upon which they hold the legal estate, they may, it would seem, with the assent of the cestui que trusts, and any others interested, convey the trust estate to a new trustee, mutually agreed upon, subject to the same trusts as declared in the original deed from Theodore Jones to Leonard Jarvis. The estate of the latter would be entitled to all its rights under the declaration of trusts of June 20, 1825.
Leonard Jarvis, in his lifetime, made large advances for the purpose of carrying out the objects of the trust-; and in pursuance of its provisions. Those advances were made upon the credit of the trust property and have never been paid, as the bill alleges, and are still outstanding against the same. The plaintiff is the administrator on the estate of Leonard Jarvis. The heirs of Jarvis, upon whom the legal estate has devolved, but clothed with the trust, decline or refuse to act. The administrator has accordingly filed this bill, seeking for the appointment of a new trustee. "A bill for the appointment of new trustees may be filed, either by the parties beneficially interested in the trust estate against the existing trustees, and this is the more usual course; or, if circumstances require it, by the existing or continuing trustees, against their cestui que trusts; or again, one or more of several trustees may join as co plaintiffs with the cestui que trusts in a suit for the removal of one of the trustees and the appointment of another in his place.” Hill on Trustees, 194. " All the parties beneficially interested must be made parties to the suit for the appointment of a new trustee.’» lb., 195.
The cestui que trusts are interested in the discreet management, as well as in the proceeds of the trust estate, and in the settlement of the claims of the estate of Leonard *593Jarvis against the same. The heirs of Jarvis hold the legal estate. They have refused to act. They should be parties to a suit in which they may be decreed to convey the legal estate, for it would not pass to the new trustee upon his appointment, but would remain in his heirs until conveyed by them. Greenleaf v. Queen, 1 Pet., (U. S.) 139. The cestui que trusts should likewise be parties, as they are mainly interested in the judicious disposition of the property if sold, and that the same be conveyed to them, when the objects of the trust shall have been accomplished.
Leonard Jarvis, in his will, after describing the trust estate, and the covenants and agreement of the trust deed, devises the trust estate as follows : — "Now, to the end that future difficulties in the management of said estate to said Jones or his heirs, as well as in compliance with his covenants and agreements aforesaid, I, the said Leonard Jarvis, give, grant, bequeath, devise and convey the above described estate as it may be at the time of my decease, unto Charles Jarvis of Surry, in said county, Esquire, upon the aforesaid terms and conditions and for the aforesaid purposes, — he paying or causing to be paid unto my heirs, executors or administrators the sum, if any, due and owing my estate from the above described estate, held by me as aforesaid; in case the said Charles neglects or refuses to accept the trust within sixty days after my decease, I then give, grant, devise, bequeath and convey the same unto Edward S. Jarvis of Surry, in said county, upon the aforesaid terms and conditions, and for the aforesaid purposes,” &c., &c.
It is insisted that Charles Jarvis, by accepting the trust, was bound to pay whatever sums the trust estate might owe the estate of Leonard Jarvis, irrespective of the value of the trust estate, or of the amount he might receive therefrom, and consequently that nothing is due from the trust estate, but that Charles is held to pay the entire indebtedness thus arising. We think not. The fair meaning is, that Charles *594Jarvis shall see that the funds coming into his hands from the trust estate shall be appropriated to the payment of the charges upon the same, — not that he should pay above the value of the estate which should come into his hands. Nobody would accept a trust estate worth five thousand dollars upon condition of paying charges against such estate to the amount of double that sum. Nor would any one think of asking another to accept a trust upon such terms.
Whatever may be the equitable rights of Young and the other purchasers from Charles Jarvis of portions of the premises conveyed to Leonard Jarvis, by deed dated Sept. 11, 1840, as against the trustee to be appointed, they, are not before us for adjudication and cannot now be determined.
The bill to be dismissed without costs and without prejudice, unless plaintiff move at nisi prius for its amendment.
Cutting, Kent, Barrows and Daneorth, JJ., concurred.