177 Iowa 567 | Iowa | 1916
Plaintiff Elizabeth McNeill is the widow of Hobart W. McNeill, now deceased, and her coplaintiff is the daughter and only heir at law of the said deceased. It is averred, in the petition, that the said deceased, with his brother, W. A. McNeill, and defendant J. F. McNeill, were engaged in various enterprises, both in this country and in Canada, and closely connected in interest; that they organized a corporation known as “McNeill Brothers, Incorporated,” and issued stock therein to each other; and that they organized and promoted many other corporations, for mining, the
It is claimed that the 2,000 shares of stock, as well as a controlling interest in the various other corporations in which
It is also averred that, upon the death of H. W. McNeill, the said brothers fraudulently concealed the facts relating to the trusteeship of W. A. McNeill, and deceitfully and wrongfully claimed that H. W. McNeill had executed a will, whereby he had devised all his property, including the stock in controversy, to his brother W. A. McNeill; and that the said W. A. McNeill, who was appointed administrator, or executor, of his brother’s estate, fraudulently failed and neglected to inventory the property so held in trust by him, for the purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiffs out of their share of the estate of H. W. McNeill; and that they did not learn of this fraud until after the death of W. A. McNeill, when they discovered that the instrument attempted to be probated as the will of H. W. McNeill, deceased, was not his will at all,
It was further averred that the paper purporting to be the will of H. W. McNeill was executed at the request of his brothers, W. A. and Jas. F., for the sole purpose of avoiding a" showing as to the exact value of H. W.’s estate, to defeat taxation, and for other purposes, and was not intended to be the will of H. W. McNeill, and that the same was never acted upon as a will, save for the purpose of defrauding these plaintiffs.
It was also averred that plaintiffs did not know of the aforesaid trusteeship until after the death of W. A. McNeill. It is also claimed that, after the death of H. W. McNeill, W. A. McNeill fraudulently represented to plaintiff Elizabeth McNeill that he had 800 shares of the capital stock of McNeill Brothers, of the value of $80,000, in trust for her, and secured a settlement with her on that basis; that, in truth, this was not so, and that the settlement should be set aside and held for naught; and she demands, as widow, the full one third of the said stock and other property held in trust by W. A. McNeill at the time of his death, and now held by defendant Jas. F. McNeill.
It is further averred that, down to the time of the death of W. A. McNeill, plaintiff and her brothers-in-law, W. A. and Jas. F. McNeill, were on the most intimate terms; that she relied upon their representations as to the property of Ií. W. McNeill at the time of his death, and as to the value thereof, and as to how he had disposed of the same, and did not learn of thé truth until after the death of W. A. McNeill, when an examination disclosed the truth of the matter alleged in the petition. The prayer of the petition was for the establishment of a trust estate in the hands of Jas. F. McNeill in some
The allegations are sufficient, to show that the deceased, W. A. McNeill, held the property in trust for the benefit of the plaintiffs, and that his representative may be compelled to account for such of this property as came into his hands, and a trust may be fastened upon it in his hands. Again, under the allegations of the petition, plaintiffs were entitled to have a trust established in the property in the hands of Jas. F. McNeill, individually, under the facts recited, upon
A motion to dismiss the appeal has also been submitted with the eases. In view of the disposition we make of it, it is unnecessary to do more than say that the motion is without merit, and that it is overruled.
The order on the motion must be reversed, and the cause remanded for one in harmony with this opinion. — Reversed and Remanded.