112 Cal. 476 | Cal. | 1896
Lead Opinion
This is an action against the trustees of the estate of William Sharon, deceased, to compel an accounting of the trust estate of W. C. Balston, deceased, of which estate said William Sharon was trustee in his lifetime, and which, it is alleged, has come into the hands of these defendants, as volunteers and with notice of the trust.
In the superior court a demurrer to the amended complaint was sustained without leave further to amend, and judgment thereupon entered in favor of defendants, from which plaintiffs appeal.
The principal ground of demurrer was, that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and, as we understand, this was the ground upon which it was sustained, and leave to amend refused. It is also the ground upon which the respondents have mainly relied in their oral and printed arguments
It is alleged that William Sharon and W. C. Ralston were, for a number of years prior to the death of Ralston, partners under the firm name of William Sharon & Co., and as such jointly interested in various corporations and business enterprises, and owners of large interests in real and personal property. Prior to 1873, Ralston was cashier of the Bank of California at San Francisco, and Sharon its agent at Virginia City, Nevada. In July, 1873, Ralston became president of the bank, and Sharon, having removed to San Francisco, became a director. Both prior and subsequent to this time, according to the allegations of the complaint, the affairs of the bank were grossly misconducted by its directors and other officers, and, on the twenty-sixth day of August, 1875, it failed, and on the next day Ralston was accidentally drowned. Just prior to his death he executed and delivered to Sharon a deed in the following terms:
“William C. Ralston to William Sharon. Know all men by these presents: That I, William C. Ralston, of the city and county of San Francisco, state of California, in consideration of the sum of-dollars, gold coin of the United States, to me in hand paid by William Sharon of the same place, and other good and valuable considerations, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby give, grant, convey, and transfer unto the said William Sharon, his heirs and assigns, all and singular, my property, both real and personal, in
“ To have and to hold, all and singular, the above mentioned and described premises, together with the appurtenances, unto the said Wm. Sharon, his heirs and assigns, forever.
“ In witness whereof, I have, on this twenty-seventh day of August, 1875, hereunto set my hand and seal.
[Seal] “W. C. Ralston.”
It is of the trust created by this deed that the plaintiffs seek an accounting, basing their claim upon the theory that it was an express trust to pay the debts of Ralston, and that their testator and assignor were creditors. The facts alleged in support of the claim that they were creditors are, that Ralston, prior to 1872, employed William Burling, a broker, to borrow money for him to a large amount, Burling giving his own notes to the lenders and Ralston furnishing the necessary collaterals, consisting principally of stock of the Bank of California, estimated, apparently, for the purpose of security, at $100 per share. In 1872 William Burling and James W. Burling became partners under the firm name of Burling and Brother, after which time moneys were procured for Ralston by said firm in the same manner that William Burling had procured them before. When Ralston died, there were outstanding notes of this character given by William Burling to the amount of $155,000, and notes of Burling and Brother to the amount of $1,613,000; in all $1,768,000, secured to the extent of $1,253,000, by 12,530 shares of the stock of the Bank of California, and to the extent of $515,000,
Neither of the Burling brothers ever knew or sought to know for whom they were borrowing these moneys. They dealt exclusively with Ralston, and delivered the proceeds of all loans to him, but received from him no evidence of indebtedness. These are all the material facts bearing upon the question whether the Burlings were creditors of Ralston at the date of his death, and of the execution of the trust deed to Sharon.
The plaintiffs in this action sue as executor and executrix of William Burling, who died in 1877, and as assignee of James W. Burling, who subsequently became an insolvent debtor. The partnership affairs of Burling and Brother were wound up and settled in 1879. Relief is sought upon the ground of fraud, alleged to have been practiced by Sharon as follows:
On the 27th of August, 1875—the day of the execution of the trust deed and of Ralston’s death—Sharon called on the Burlings for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of their promissory notes outstanding for moneys supplied to Ralston as above detailed, and was furnished with a schedule of the notes and securities. On the following day he called on them again and informed them that all the shares of the stock of the Bank of California pledged as collateral for their notes were false and fictitious, having been fraudulently overissued by Ralston, and stated that they would be compelled to pay the full amount of all notes so secured. To this they replied, among other things, that they would dispose of the other stocks and bonds deposited as security for the other notes, and, after applying any surplus of their proceeds to the payment of the notes secured by the bank stock, they would pay or settle the deficiency, and resort to the estate of Ralston for the balance of their claims, including their commissions for brokerage, etc. Sharon thereupon informed them that the stock and bonds of the Spring Valley Water Company, and of the said mining companies, held as security for the
It is to be inferred from the allegations of the complaint, but is not clearly stated, that at the time of this interview the Burlings knew of the trust deed to Sharon, and of its terms, as well as the circumstances surrounding its execution so far as they affected its construction, and their rights under it. Having made these representations as to the amount of Ralston’s indebtedness, the condition of his estate, and the criminal practices in which he had been engaged, Sharon proposed to the Burlings that if they would give him $500,000, he would have D. O. Mills join him in assuming and paying their outstanding notes, but if they would not accede to this proposition they would themselves be compelled to pay whatever deficiency might remain after application of the proceeds of the securities (which he represented as generally worthless), and this, as he pointed out to them, would result in their bankruptcy and ruin.
All these statements of Sharon were believed by the Burlings to be true. He was a man prominent in business, reputed to be very wealthy, a director of the Bank of California, and fully entitled to credit in such matters.
Induced by their belief in these representations the Burlings, on the twenty-fourth day of December, 1875, finally agreed to pay to Sharon the sum of $200,000, and to assign to him a verified claim against the estate of Ralston for the amount of their outstanding notes, in consideration of which Sharon agreed that he and D. O. Mills would unite in assuming payment of the Burlings’ notes, and would relieve them of all liability arising therefrom. In pursuance of this agreement, said sum of $200,000 was paid to Sharon on said date, as follows: William Burling, on account of his individual notes for $155,000, paid the sum of $17,533.94, and Burling and Brother, on account of the firm notes for $1,613,000, paid the sum of $182,466.06, and they did make and verify claims against the estate of W. C. Ralston for the full amount of all their promissory notes, and assigned the same to Sharon.
It is alleged that all the representations of Sharon by which the Burlings were induced to make this payment were false, and made by Sharon with full knowledge of their falsity for the purpose of defrauding the Burlings out of the sum demanded by Sharon as a condition of his assumption of their obligations. It is alleged that Ralston’s individual indebtedness was comparatively small; that he was a partner of Sharon; that the money
These are, in general terms, the facts constituting the fraud alleged to have been consummated by Sharon on the twenty-fourth day of December, 1875, on account of which the plaintiffs are seeking relief in this action. But the action was not commenced until October, 1886, nearly eleven years after the cause of action arose, and a large part of the complaint is composed of allegations excusing the failure of the Burlings and their successors to make an earlier discovery of the fraud, and thereby to escape the effect of the statute of limitations and the doctrine of loches. The substance of the general allegations under this head is that neither William nor James W. Burling, nor their successors and representatives, the plaintiffs in this action, ever had any knowledge of the falsity of Sharon’s representations, or of any fact to arouse their suspicions or put them upon inquiry, or supplying any clue to the ascertainment of the truth, until within one year prior to the commencement of the action; that Sharon continued from the date of the settlement of their indebtedness until the day of his death, in November, 1885, by active misrepresentation, and by
In order to charge these defendants it is alleged that Sharon, in his lifetime, conveyed all his property to them in trust, to .collect the income, pay his debts, and afterward to distribute, first the income, and finally the body of the estate to his children and certain other beneficiaries designated in the deed; that under said conveyance the defendants have taken into their possession, as part of the Sharon estate, a surplus of some millions belonging to the trust estate of Ralston, which they hold upon the same trust with which it was charged in the hands of Sharon. The prayer is for an accounting of the Ralston estate, and for a decree that defendants pay to the plaintiffs out of any surplus thereof the sum of $200,000, with interest from December, 1875.
The theory of plaintiffs’ action, as disclosed by the whole frame and tenor of their complaint, as well as by the repeated declarations of counsel in the course of the argument, is simply this: That on the twenty-seventh day of August, 1875, they were creditors of Ralston in the sum of $1,768,000, and so continued until December 24, 1875; that by Ralston’s deed to Sharon of August 27, 1875, all of Ralston’s estate was transferred to Sharon for the benefit of Ralston’s creditors, or, in other words, that Sharon, by accepting the deed and transfer, became the trustee of an express trust, of which all of Ralston’s creditors, including William and James Burling, were the beneficiaries with a vested interest in the trust estate; that their claims to the extent of $200,000, with interest from December 24, 1875, remain unpaid, and therefore that they are entitled to an accounting by the successors of Sharon in
In the first place it is contended that it does not appear from the complaint that the Burlings were creditors of Ralston when his trust deed was executed, while it does appear that if they were creditors in any sense at that time they ceased to be such on the twenty-fourth day of December, 1875, when they assigned their claims to Sharon-.
This contention cannot be upheld. There can be no doubt that the Burlings were creditors of Ralston. They dealt with him alone, and he did not assume to be acting as agent for any other person. The credit was given to him, and when the Burlings advanced him money at his request a promise to repay it was implied, if not made in express terms. They were creditors to the amoufit of their advances, and their advances equaled the amount of their notes. This would be true, independent of any provisions of the code; and is clearly so under its definition of debtor and creditor. (Oiv. Code, secs. 3429, 3430.) Nor did the Burlings cease to be creditors by reason of their assignment to Sharon, for they have a right to repudiate an assignment procured by fraud. Still less did the settlement of their notes, and the extinguishment of their liability on that account destroy their status as creditors, for they contributed $200,000 toward the payment of their notes, and the fact that the notes had already been paid, which was concealed from them, and purposely concealed in order to induce them to make the payment, cannot be used to their disadvantage by Sharon or his successors in the trust. The effect of the transaction as to them was just the same as if they had themselves paid their notes to the extent of $200,000, and the advantage to Ralston’s estate was even greater, for it appears that Sharon was
For the purpose of the argument, upon this point counsel assume, and I am assuming, that Ralston’s deed created a trust for the benefit of his creditors, and that Sharon was not only his trustee, but a trustee of all his creditors. This being so, the Burlings had a right to deal with him on the credit of the trust estate. If they paid their notes directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, they had an undoubted right to look to the trust estate for reimbursement; and, if they were induced by a fraud of the trustee, practiced for the benefit of the trust estate, to part with their claims against it, they had a right, upon discovery of the fraud, to reassert their claims, and were not compelled to rely upon the personal liability of the trustee for his deceit. If they had known, what is now alleged to be the fact, that Ralston’s estate was ample for the payment of all his debts, undoubtedly they would have looked to it for reimbursement. Being induced by a fraudulent concealment of that fact, and of the fact that their notes had been already taken up, to part with $200,000—which went into the trust fund—the course they then pursued in consequence of that fraud ought not to shut them out from any benefit they would have enjoyed if the deception had not been practiced. The fact that Sharon and his estate have always been amply sufficient to respond to a personal claim against him for the $200,000, which he induced the Burlings to pay, can make no difference. The right of the plaintiffs in the trust fund and the rule of law is the same as if Sharon had been a man of no means, or insolvent.
Another point made by respondents in support of their general demurrer is, that the plaintiffs are not entitled to equitable relief, because they do not come into court with clean hands. It is contended that by making out and assigning to Sharon a verified claim against
It is further contended in support of the general demurrer that the Burlings could not retract their assignment to Sharon and regain the position of creditors of Ralston’s estate without a rescission of the contract by which Sharon assumed and paid their notes; that they cannot rescind without putting him in statu quo, and that they not only have not restored or offered to restore him to his former position, but they cannot possibly do so. It is a sufficient answer to this proposition to say that on the case made by the complaint there was nothing to be restored to Sharon. In paying the Bur-lings’ notes he simply discharged his duty as trustee, and they were all settled before he received the $200,-000. He, therefore, received that sum without parting with anything. What, under these circumstances, were the Burlings to tender back as a condition of reclaiming their $200,000?
Upon the assumption of the creation of an express trust for the benefit of Ralston’s creditors by his deed to Sharon (upon which the argument has thus far been considered), and aside from the question of loches or the statute of limitations, there is not, in my opinion, any failure to state a cause of action.
But was there such a trust?
As to this proposition, which is fundamental to the case, we have been favored with very little argument by counsel for appellants. In their opening brief they content themselves with saying: “That Sharon was a trustee of an express trust, and that William and James W. Burling and the firm of Burling Brothers were bene
But counsel for respondents contend that there never was any express trust in favor of creditors, and that neither of the Burlings has ever had any interest in the trust estate by virtue of the trust deed or any declaration of Sharon made thereunder.
The mistake of counsel for appellants in treating this as a conceded proposition seems to have arisen in part from his notion that the repeated allegations in the complaint, that Sharon was such a trustee and the Bur-lings such beneficiaries, were confessed by the demurrer. But a demurrer does not confess a conclusion of law or the construction of a written instrument which is set out in terms, together with the circumstances surrounding its execution. As to these matters the court looks to the terms of the instrument and the facts alleged, and draws its own conclusions and places its own construction. Now here a reference to the terms of Ralston’s deed above set forth will show that it does not mention either of the Burlings by name, or the creditors of Ralston as a class. Looking to its terms alone no one could infer that Ralston had a thought of creditors in his mind. But the circumstances by which he was surrounded give a clue to his motives, and they may be resorted to for the purpose of determining what his intentions were.
What, then, is the intention which they disclose?
In my opinion they add nothing to the intention manifested by the deed itself, and that is an intention on the part of Ralston to create a trust for his own benefit. He was, according to the theory of the complaint, the possessor of an ample fortune—more than sufficient to pay all his debts. He was president of a bank which had just failed as a consequence of his mismanagement, but he had not been guilty of the crimi
As to this point, counsel for appellants, at the close of the oral argument upon the rehearing, asked and obtained leave to file authorities in support of his proposition that the Burlings were beneficiaries of an express trust, but he has failed to produce any that are in point. He cites the provisions of the Civil Code relative to voluntary assignments for the benefit of creditors (Civ. Code, sec. 8449, et seq.), but it is clear that they have
Considered without reference to the statute, and in the absence of any citation of decided cases or text-writers, it would seem to be sufficient to quote the language of Professor Pomeroy in his discussion of the question as to what words or dispositions are sufficient to create a trust. “ No precise form of words is necessary to create a trust, but the intention must be clear. The fact that a trust of lands is created must not only be-manifested and proved by a writing properly executed, but it must also be manifested and proved by such a writing what the trust is. The declaration of trust, whether written or oral, must be reasonably certain in its material terms, and this requisite of certainty includes the subject matter or property embraced within the trust, the beneficiaries or persons in whose behalf it was created, the nature ánd quantity of the interests which they are to have, and the manner in which the trust is to be performed. If the language is so vague,, general, or equivocal that any of these necessary elements of the trust is left in real uncertainty, then tlietrust must fail.” (Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 1009.) In view of this doctrine, there seems to be no foundation for the claim that Ralston’s deed created a trust for creditors, though it did undoubtedly create a trust for Ralston. It empowered Sharon to sell and dispose of the property for his benefit, to advance money to prevent it from being sacrificed, and, generally, to deal with it as if it were his own, but Sharon was bound to restore the surplus to Ralston on his demand, and to-account to him for the entire estate.
If this was the effect of the deed according to its-terms, how was it changed by Sharon’s subsequent declarations? These declarations are referred to in various-
These declarations are perfectly consistent with the deed as above construed. The deed certainly did create a trust, and one of the objects of its creation and a necessary incident to its execution was payment or settlement of Ralston’s debts, but the sole beneficiary was Ralston, and after his death his widow. The creditors did not become .beneficiaries with a vested interest in the estate merely because, as an incident to the execution of the trust, their claims must be settled.
But even if these declarations had been more certain and definite than they were, to the effect that the trust was for the benefit of the creditors, they must have been ineffectual because this trust was created by a deed exe
My conclusion is that neither by the trust deed nor by Sharon’s declarations did the Burlings become beneficiaries of the Ralston trust, with such an interest in the trust estate as entitled them to demand an accounting of the trustees.
It is not clear, from the argument of appellants’ counsel, that he relies upon the use of the $200,000 obtained from the Burlings to clear off the liens upon the trust estate as a fact constituting the Burlings beneficiaries. He cites no authority to sustain such a claim, and the authorities cited by respondents are against him. The $200,000 is not ear-marked or followed into any property in the hands of the trustees; and, although used for the benefit of the trust estate, there was no agreement that it should constitute a lien, and without such agreement by the trustee there could be no lien. (New v. Nicoll, 73 N. Y. 127; 29 Am. Rep. 111, and cases cited.)
This disposes of all the grounds relied upon by counsel to establish an express trust of the Ralston estate for the benefit of the Burlings, and it remains only to notice some general arguments in support of the sufficiency of the complaint.
It is much insisted upon that the allegations confessed by the demurrer disclose a case of gross fraud practiced upon William and James W. Burling, for which a court of equity should be eager to afford relief.
This is entirely true. Accepting the complaint as a correct statement of the facts, it appears that William Sharon did defraud the Burlings of $200,000, for the recovery of which I have no doubt a cause or- causes of action accrued to them immediately upon the pay
This, however, is not an action against Sharon’s representatives; for although the defendants are designated in the title of the complaint as trustees of William Sharon, all its allegations, its frame and theory, not to mention the repeated declarations and disclaimers of counsel throughout the argument, demonstrate that they are sued, and that the intention is to charge them, not as representatives of Sharon, but as trustees of W. C. Ralston’s estate. In that capacity they are clearly not liable.
This conclusion renders it unnecessary to discuss the question of loches or the bar of the statute of limitations, for, irrespective of those questions, it must be held that the demurrer was properly sustained.
Appellants have made no point in the argument upon the refusal of leave to amend, probably for the reason that they have never specified either in the superior court, or in this court, any amendment that they could make, or that they desired to make.
In the absence of such a specification it cannot be held that the superior court abused its discretion in de
Judgment affirmed.
Henshaw, J., Temple, J., Van Fleet, J., Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.—I concur in the judgment of affirmance. I also concur in the conclusion that the deed from Ralston to Sharon did not create a trust in favor of Ralston’s creditors, and the only action which the Burlings had, if any, was- against Sharon personally. In this view it is not important whether or not the Burlings were creditors of Ralston. Upon the question of the statute of limitations and loches I adhere to my former opinion (39 Pac. Rep. 49), as follows:
“ Moreover, we think that the action is barred by the statute of limitations, and is stale from loches. Of course, the statutory period has run two or three times unless the case is saved by the clause of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that in an action based upon alleged fraud, the statute does not commence to run until the discovery of the facts constituting the fraud. This action is founded upon the contract between the Burlings and William Sharon, made on December 24, 1875, which was an executed contract; and the statute commenced to run on that day, except so far as its running was delayed by a want of knowledge of the fraud by which said contract is alleged to have been procured. But ‘ the means of knowledge are the same thing, in effect, as knowledge itself’ (Wood v. Carpenter, 101 U. S. 143), and one who makes a charge of fraud for the first time, many years after its alleged perpetration, must show that within a reasonable time he has used due diligence to discover it, has followed up circumstances which would have put a prudent man upon inquiry, and has not slept upon his rights until the lapse of time and the death of parties
“ In the case at bar sufficient facts are not stated to show that the alleged fraud could not, with requisite diligence, have been sooner discovered. There was great-opportunity for discovering the fraud, if any such existed, before the contract between the Burlings and William Sharon was made. That contract was not made in a hurry. Sharon’s representations, alleged now to have been false, were not immediately accepted as true and promptly acted upon. Negotiations were continued for four months. Ralston, as appears from the complaint, was widely known in business circles, and had been accredited with great wealth. It is averred in the complaint that he was perfectly solvent, and that he had real and personal property, which passed to Sharon under the deed, of the aggregate value of $9,000,000. It is averred, also, that he had real property of the value of $6,000,000. If that was the fact, and the Burlings really had a legal claim against Ralston, it is almost beyond comprehension why they did not discover it, if not before the $200,000 contract, at least before the death of William Burling, or before the lapse of the statutory period of limitation. The slightest examination of public records would have put them on the trail of the fact. It does not appear that they demanded an examination of the books, papers, etc., of Ralston. But no discovery was made, and it does not appear that any reasonable
. “ Moreover, apart from the question of strict statutory limitation, the claim of appellants is too stale to be enforced in a court of equity. ‘No rule of law is better settled than that a court of equity will not aid a party whose application is destitute of conscience, good faith, and reasonable diligence, but will discourage stale demands, for the peace of society, by refusing to interfere when there has been gross loches in prosecuting rights, or where long acquiescence in the assertion of adverse rights has accrued. The rule is peculiarly applicable where the difficulty of doing entire justice arises through the death of the principal participants in the transactions complained of, or of the witness or witnesses, or by reason of the original transaction having become so obscured by time as to render the ascertainment of the exact facts impossible.’ (Hammond v. Hopkins, 143 U. S. 250.) In speaking of this rule, this court, in Bell v. Hudson, 73 Cal. 288, 2 Am. St. Rep. 791, said: ‘ It is a material circumstance that the claim was not made until after the death of those who could have explained the transaction.’ In the case at bar William Burling and William Sharon, ‘the principal participants in the transactions complained of,’ were both dead before the commencement
It is a claim which equity should not now entertain.”
Rehearing denied.