47 P. 702 | Or. | 1897
Opinion by
This suit was instituted November i, 1894, for the purpose of charging the defendants Cyrus W. Barger and Eliza Helm as trustees of certain lands in Multnomah County, Oregon, for the use and benefit of plaintiff. From the testimony it appears the plaintiff was the wife of John Barger, now deceased, and that Cyrus W. Barger and Eliza Helm are their children. Barger left a will by which he devised and bequeathed to plaintiff all his real and personal property for and during her natural life, or so long as she remained his widow, but in case of her marriage, then a one-third interest absolute in such property. Subject to this provision, the property went to the children in equal portions. The plaintiff and her husband settled in Marion County, near Silverton, in 1847, upon a tract of land entered by them as a donation claim, upon which they lived until 1864. In the meantime Barger was engaged in mining in California and Idaho, in freighting from the Willamette Valley to the mines
In 1865 Simeon Jennings, an uncle of the plaintiff, died in West Virginia, leaving a large estate to numerous relatives, and from this source and from her father’s estate the plaintiff received a considerable sum of money, which was paid to her from time to time, ranging from the fall of 1867 down to a time subsequent to the purchase of the land in dispute by Barger. She claims to have received two payments amounting to about $900 from her uncle’s estate prior to the purchase of the cattle, which is probably correct; and to establish the trust relations she claims that one-half of the proceeds of the donation land claim was her money, and this, she testifies, was invested in the ferry by Barger with her consent; that he expended in payment of his debts all the proceeds of the sale of the ferry except $1,000, and that this sum, together with the $900 received from Simeon Jennings'
In support of her claim it was argued that Barger was practically bankrupt at the time he purchased the cattle, and testimony is adduced touching admissions made by him from time to time to that effect, and to the further purport that the money with which he bought the cattle and the land belonged to his wife. We have stated the case thus far as strongly for the plaintiff as the facts will admit. Her testimony is weakened somewhat by the fact .that her husband’s will received her approval when made, and by the further fact that in September, 1891, she instituted another suit to declare this trust, based at that time upon an alleged express agreement and understanding that the property so purchased in his name should inure to her sole use and benefit. Other circumstances might be enumerated having the same tendency, to which it is not deemed important to refer. It is quite certain that the money borrowed by Barger from plaintiff’s father was used in the purchase of the cattle, and it is likely that
The plaintiff by the present suit seeks to establish what is claimed to be an implied trust, but it is not clear from the contention of counsel whether they regard0it as a resulting or a constructive trust. Although often confused by the authorities there is a marked distinction between the two, and this case furnishes a fair illustration of the distinction. As is said in Thomas v. Stanford, 49 Md. 184: “There is, perhaps, no principle more clearly settled by numerous authorities than that if a husband purchases an estate with the money of his wife there is a resulting trust, and the husband holds the property as trustee for the benefit of his wife.” ' This court has applied a similar doctrine: Springer v. Young, 14 Or. 280 (12 Pac. 400). But if the transaction is secretly done in violation of a fiduciary duty, the trust would be constructive rather than resulting. This latter is sometimes denominated a trust ex maleficio: 2 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 1037, note 1, p. 610; and 1 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, § 155. As applied to this case, if the plaintiff would prevail by the establishment of a trust of the latter kind, she must first establish a fiduciary or trust relation existing between her and her husband at the time of the purchase of the lands, as respects the funds which constituted the consideration therefor. That is to say, that some duty towards her had been assumed by the husband respecting these funds, which must have been the plaintiff’s, and that the purchase of the lands and the taking of the title in his name was in violation of the trust; in other words, that he acted in bad faith towards her, either in using her money in the manner designated, or in taking the title in his individual name when he ought to have taken it in hers; for if there was an express
These principles governing the establishment of implied trusts such as we are considering are in strict accord with the essential nature of the trusts themselves. The fund, or other form of property which it is sought to trace into a different form, does not lose its identity, while it may change in semblance, as, if a sum of money is expended for a parcel of land, or a band of cattle exchanged for stock in a bank, the property form is changed, but the identity of the original form is traceable and distinguishable. The same may be true where several parties have contributed in aliquot parts, the relative proportion in the changed form of the property may be traced and distinguished. That which was the property of the cestui que trust in the first instance continues to be his property in equity throughout all its metamorphoses, but when the identity is lost the trust escapes: See Perry v. McHenry, 13 Ill. 227, 228; Niver v. Crane, 98 N. Y. 47. It is, therefore, the entire ownership, speaking in an equitable sense, that must be established, and not some equitable lien upon the changed form of property;
With these premises let us ascertain whether the plaintiff has established either a resulting or constructive trust. The first step in the consideratior is the purchase of the ferry. This was probably bought with the joint funds of the husband and wife, and of equal proportions, derived from the sale of the donation land claim; and, as their relative rights stood while the husband held the legal title to the ferry, she may have been entitled to have had a trust declared in her behalf in and to an undivided one-half of this property, had it not been that she consented to the purchase with her funds, and presumably to the taking of the title in her husband’s name. Such being the case, it is questionable whether or not they did not attempt the establishment of an express trust, and the trust not having been declared in writing was within the statute of frauds, and not provable. But, it is contended that if Barger purchased the cattle with plaintiff’s money, or if he acted as her agent in making the purchase and in transporting them to eastern Washington and caring for them, using her money for the purpose, then the land, having been purchased with the proceeds of the cattle, belonged to her in equity — that
As a resultant proposition it is urged that taking the title to the land by the husband in his own name, when the consideration paid therefor was the plaintiff’s money, made him a trustee of the title for her. But this assumes that the land was purchased with her money. It is true that the purchase was made mostly with the proceeds of the sale of cattle; but, again, the husband borrowed a portion of it upon his individual responsibility. She says the purchases were made with her consent, and she probably knew from the beginning where the title stood.
The course of dealing between the plaintiff and her husband has been about this: " The husband has, with the wife’s consent, used her funds in conjunction with his own in the promotion of his business. The funds of each have been so used that they became indistinguishably intermingled and confused, but the business carried on and prosecuted with their joint funds was clearly the business of the husband. This is manifest from the fact that the title of every piece of property, whether real or personal, purchased or obtained during their married life was .taken in his own name, and while held was treated by both parties, so far as we are advised, as his property. Under these conditions it is impossible for the court to trace any particular funds of the plaintiff into the lands in dispute, or to say that the lands represent her funds, and, as a result, cannot declare the trust. There is no doubt but that she has contributed in a large measure to the promotion of her husband’s business, but the money furnished by her with that end in view must be regarded as a loan rather than the imposition of trust obligations upon him. They were apparently quite prosperous, having together accumulated a comfortable estate, and, while it may be conceded that the plaintiff
Affirmed.