137 Ky. 283 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion of the Court by
— Reversing.
Prior to February, 1898, M. M. Hanberry was trustee of a fund, the net income of which belonged to Mrs. V. K. Blakley for life, with remainder to her children. In February, 1898, Hanberry resigned as trustee, and John W. Kelley was appointed in his stead. The new trustee discovered that Hanberry had wasted or lost $484.97 of the principal of the trust fund. Tie thereupon at once instituted suit against Hanberry and his bondsmen to recover the sum so lost. Pending the action, Kelley was removed and the Planters’ Bank & Trust Company appointed'in his stead, and the suit was prosecuted to judgment by the last-named trustee. From the judgment in the circuit court against him, Hanberry and his sureties prosecuted an appeal’to this court) where the judgment was affirmed, under the style of Bogard et al. v. Planters’ Bank & Trust Company, 112 S. W. 872.
The view we have taken of thé defense based upon the statute of limitations precludes the necessity of our considering any other question. Section 2515, Ky. St., provides, among other things: “An action for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake * * * shall be commenced within five years next after the cause of action accrued. ’ ’ Section 2519 provides: “In actions for relief for fraud or mistake, or damages for either, the cause of action shall not be deemed to have accrued until the discovery of the
It is insisted for appellee Hansberry that he and his sureties did not discover the mistake until the final adjudication of this court that there was a mistake in the payment of the money; and, therefore, the statute did not commence until that time. This position is obviously untenable. The trustee was bound to know that he could not dissipate the body of the trust fund. He was bound to know, and he did know, that Mrs. Blakley was only entitled to receive the net income of the trust fund, and that the body of it belonged to the remaindermen, her children. He was bound to know, and he did know, at the time he paid over to her the money that he claims to have paid, that he was turning over to her a part of the body of the trust fund. His cause of action to recover from her the amount paid by mistake arose as soon as the payment was made, and we think the five years’ statute applies to his claim against her. But without resting the opinion altogether upon this view, there can be no doubt that the ten years’ statute bars his right of recovery. We have often decided that, after the expiration of ten
Appellant also insists that the statute of limitations does not apply, because this was a trust fund, and limitation does not run or bar claims in matters of trust. This, generally, is true concerning all express trusts; but the same rule does not prevail as to resulting or constructive trusts. It may be true that Mrs. Blakley, when she received the money paid her by mistake, held it constructively as trustee either for the estate or for Hanherry; but money so held by constructive trust is subject to the operation of the statute of limitations. In Commonwealth v. Clark, 119 Ky. 85, 83 S. W. 100, 26 Ky. Law Rep. 993, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 750 this very question was involved, and this court, speaking through Judge Set-lie, said: “It is well settled that limitation does not run during the existence of an express trust; but it is equally well settled that it does run during the existence, of a constructive trust.” And in the opinion section 865 (4th Ed.) Perry on Trusts, was quoted with approval. The excerpt is as follows: “It has been urged that the statute can not apply in favor, of persons who become trustees by construction of law, as where one is construed to be a trustee of property fraudulently obtained, or where a trust estate is traced into his hands, or where a resulting trust arises; and that the cestui que trust is not precluded, in such cases, from his remedy by lapse of time. But the later authorities establish the doctrine that the statute applies in such cases. * # * All trusts arising by operation of law, whether im
The foregoing authorities are conclusive of the question before us. Hanberry was certainly notified by the action instituted against him by Kelley, the succeeding trustee, that he had paid over the money by mistake to Mrs. Blakley,, and he knew then that he was to be held liable for this error. All relation of trust-between him and the estate or between him and Mrs. Bláldey had ceased, and he was bound to know that, if he would recover from Mrs. Blakley the money so paid by mistake, he must at all hazards bring suit within the statutory time. Mrs. Blakley was not holding the money paid to her as a part of the trust fund. She claimed then, and she has claimed all the time since, that the money paid to her was her own, and that she had a right to keep it and use it. Her position with reference to both the trustee and the trust fund was antagonistic from the very beginning, and, therefore, if the statute of limitations ever applies to fraud or mistake, it bars the claim against her in this action.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to dismiss the petition.