88 Kan. 495 | Kan. | 1913
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The petition alleged in substance that the plaintiff and defendant James M. Blackwéll, his brother, were on and prior to January 28, 1895, the joint owners of a half section of.land in Lyon county; that the defendants -were husband and wife, with whom the plaintiff, not married, was making his home on this land, farming and cultivating the same and using the proceeds for their support and that of the parents of the two brothers who also lived with them; that on
The second clause of action included the allegations of the first and alleged that there was left on the premises about $1500 worth of personal property, the result of the joint efforts of the plaintiff and his brother in equal shares; that defendant James M. Blackwell took possession thereof and converted it to his own use about April 11, 1902, and that the plaintiff had never received any part thereof or proceeds therefrom.
He argues that the facts stated in the first cause of action show the creation of an equitable trust which need not be in writing, under section 9694 of General Statutes of 1909. That as there was -already a joint ownership of the land and a joint obligation to support the parents and a like obligation to take care of the mortgage, having received his conveyance and having refused to reconvey upon his request, the presumption arises that the defendants took it with fraudulent intent and purpose and therefore ought not to be heard to assert that the absence of a written agreement preeludes the plaintiff from obtaining relief. The defendants insist that the situation comes squarely within the provision of the statute referred to, and that the plainiff can not be heard to claim a trust unless he can show written evidence thereof.
As to the second cause of action the defendants assert that the bar of the statute of limitations precludes recovery, while the plaintiff contends that by making the first cause a part of the second a personal trust was alleged upon which a cause of action would not accrue until demand and refusal; that the action was not in tort but on an implied contract, and having been begun within three years was in time.
As to the third the plaintiff argues that the action
. The language of the statute is:
“No trust concerning lands except such as may arise by implication of law shall be created, unless in writing signed by the party creating the same, or by his attorney thereto lawfully authorized in writing.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 9694.)
What is a trust?
“A trust has been variously defined as ... a holding of property, subject to a duty of employing it or applying its proceeds according to directions given by the person from whom it was derived; a right of property, real or personal, held by one party for the benefit of another; and an equitable right, title, or interest in property, real or personal, distinct from the legal ownership thereof. ... In its simplest elements a trust is a confidence reposed in one person, called the trustee, for the benefit of another, called the cestui que trust, with respect to property held by the former for the benefit of the latter. It implies two estates or interests, one equitable and one legal, and is said to exist where property is conferred upon and accepted by one person on terms of holding, using, or disposing of it for the benefit of another.” (39 Cyc. 17, 18.)
In National Bank v. Ellicott, Assignee, 31 Kan. 173, 1 Pac. 593, it was said (p. 175) that a trust is an equitable right, title or interest in property, real or personal, the legal title being in some other person. Express trusts are those created by direct and positive act of the parties evidenced by some writing. Implied trusts are those which are dedúcible from the transactions of the parties. (Caldwell v. Matthewson, 57 Kan. 262, 45 Pac. 614.) Bouvier. defines an implied trust as one deducible from the nature of the transaction as matter of intent, or which is superinduced upon the transaction
“The letter and deed, however, in connection with all the circumstances, are sufficient to show a trust by implication of law. The appellants having asked for the conveyance for the purposes stated in their letter,*500 and their request having been complied with, a trust may fairly be implied to hold the legal title for the purposes named.” (p. 770.)
In De Mallagh v. De Mallagh, 77 Cal. 126, 19 Pac. 256, an agent intrusted with a farm for sale received the proceeds of the produce thereof and redeemed or purchased a lot belonging to his principal, and it was held that he should be deemed a trustee. Kimball v. Tripp, 136 Cal. 631, 69 Pac. 428, is another case of a conveyance being made to an agent whereby a trust was implied, although not expressed in writing. In Koefoed v. Thompson, 73 Neb. 128, 102 N. W. 268, the parties had been partners and had jointly purchased the land in question, each contributing one-half of the first payment, then afterwards borrowed money to complete the payment, taking a joint deed, giving two notes secured by mortgage. The defendant went into sole possession, and the plaintiff left with him a considerable amount of personal property to be sold and applied to the payment of his half of the mortgage debt and then went on a visit. When the balance of the debt became due he executed a quitclaim to the defendant for the sole purpose of enabling him to renew the mortgage, upon a verbal agreement that he would secure the money and redeem the land from the mortgage foreclosure for their joint benefit and account for one-half the rents and profits and in due time reconvey to the plaintiff his half interest. It was held that this series of transactions involved not only a trusteeship but an agency, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover; that the betrayal of the confidence reposed by the plaintiff was sufficient to raise the presumption that the defendant intended from the first to defraud his partner out of his interest in the land and to give rise to a constructive trust. In Brison v. Brison, 75 Cal. 525, 17 Pac. 689, a husband was the owner of property on which there was a mortgage, and in
The foregoing are the cases mainly relied on by the plaintiff, and, except the last one, are all instances of the conveyance of the mere legal title with no intention that the actual ownership should pass. A careful examination of the petition now under consideration shows that the plaintiff made an absolute conveyance to the defendants upon the verbal agreement to reconvey if he should so request, which, technically speaking, amounts to a conveyance upon verbal conditions subsequent. While he pleads that he desired.the defendants to' have the property in case he should not return, still he alleges the agreement to have been that they were to reconvey if he should so request. There is no allegation that it was the intention or understanding that the property should remain his equitably and that they should hold the mere legal title until something was done or some condition fulfilled. The relations were as confidential on one side as on the other, and while it is suggested, though not alleged, that the parents were dependent on the parties for their support and that the refusal to reconvey indicates an original intention to defraud the plaintiff, it might with equal consistency be regarded as a decision on the part of the brother to go to another country to seek his fortune, and by turning the property over to
If, as the plaintiff alleges, the personal property was converted by the defendants in 1902, the action begun in 1910 was barred. Had the plaintiff alleged and relied upon a continued partnership ownership of this personalty and simply prayed for an accounting, a different rule might apply, but having elected to treat his share of the personal property as converted by the defendant more than three years before the suit, it must be held to have been begun too late. The prayer at the close of the petition for an accounting may have been intended to refer only to the money raised by the renewal mortgage, but if intended to ask for an accounting as to the personal property, it was incon
The third cause of action being bound up with the first, there was no error in sustaining the demurrer to the entire petition.,
The judgment is affirmed.