237 P. 542 | Cal. | 1925
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *262 This appeal is prosecuted by the plaintiff from a judgment of the superior court in favor of the defendant after entry of an order sustaining the defendant's demurrer to the amended complaint. The facts upon which the plaintiff's alleged right of action is founded as set forth in said amended complaint are briefly these: Sophia R. Winslow died testate on May 1, 1919. In her last will and testament Harry D. Skellinger and Mary D. England *263 were named as executor and executrix respectively thereof. Said Skellinger failed to apply for letters testamentary but Mary D. England did so apply, presenting said will and petitioning for its probate and the appointment of herself as executrix thereof. The court duly admitted said will to probate and appointed said Mary D. England the executrix thereof on June 17, 1919, and she thereafter duly qualified as such executrix and has since been acting as such. Belonging to said decedent at the time of her death was certain real estate in the city and county of San Francisco, occupied by six family apartments or flats, and which was the separate property of the decedent, in which the defendant herein, who was the husband and surviving spouse of the decedent, had no interest and was given no share by the terms of said will. The amended complaint proceeds to allege that the defendant, "during the month of May, 1919, and after the death of Sophia R. Winslow, knowing that plaintiff was one of the persons named in said will to execute the same agreed with plaintiff that he would collect the rents due from tenants occupying said premises during such time as plaintiff desired him to do so, pay the water rates and other expenses necessary to be paid on account of the use and occupancy of said premises, and to hold in trust the net proceeds of such collections until said will should be admitted to probate and plaintiff or some other person be appointed to execute said will, and thereafter in trust until such time as plaintiff or such other person so appointed, should demand of said defendant that he pay over to plaintiff or said other person, all of said net proceeds, less a compensation to be paid to defendant for his said services as such collector and trustee, amounting to the sum of (50) fifty cents for each monthly installment of rent collected by defendant from each of said tenants; that pursuant to said agreement defendant, after the death of said Sophia R. Winslow, collected from persons occupying said premises during the months of May, June, July, August and September of said year 1919, various sums of money which were paid to said defendant by said occupants as rent for the use and occupation of said premises during said months; that the exact amount of moneys so collected and held in trust by defendant is unknown to plaintiff, but plaintiff alleges that the aggregate amount thereof is *264 in excess of the sum of three hundred dollars ($300). That plaintiff made no demand upon defendant for said accounting and payment over by defendant until the year 1922, but during said year, and prior to the commencement of this action plaintiff demanded of the defendant that he account for, and pay over to plaintiff the moneys so collected by him as rents for the use and occupation of said premises, in accordance with said agreement, but said defendant has at all times refused and still refuses so to do; and has not done so. That the rents so collected by defendant are the rentals of said premises earned and accrued during said months and constitute the only rentals paid for the use and occupation of said premises during such period. Wherefore, plaintiff prays that defendant be required by the order of this honorable court to account for and pay over to plaintiff all moneys collected by him from tenants and persons having the use and occupation of the properties herein described since the death of said Sophia R. Winslow, in accordance with the terms of said agreement; that plaintiff have judgment against the defendant for the amount of said moneys so collected by him less said expenses and compensation, together with her costs and disbursements herein incurred, and that she have such other and further relief as to the court shall seem just and proper."
To the plaintiff's said amended complaint the defendant interposed a demurrer upon several grounds, but the two grounds upon which the respondent's reliance is placed upon this appeal are that said complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and that said action is barred by several designated sections of the Code of Civil Procedure. The trial court sustained the defendant's demurrer and ordered judgment accordingly, and the correctness of its ruling in so doing is the sole issue presented upon this appeal.
The plaintiff's amended complaint is upon the face thereof one wherein the plaintiff as executrix of the estate of Sophia R. Winslow, deceased, seeks to have established a trust created for the benefit of said estate in certain money originally and at all times the property of said estate and of which the defendant became by virtue of the agreement above set forth the voluntary trustee; and to have an accounting as to the proceeds of such trust and general relief. It is the *265
estate of Winslow and not Mary D. England individually which is a party plaintiff in this action. (Sterrett v. Barker,
There is another reason why the defendant herein must respond to the estate of Winslow for this money which he has received and holds in the admitted relation of trustee. One who has assumed the relation and undertaken to act in the capacity of a trustee and who has thereby come into the possession and control of the money or property of another cannot be heard to deny the validity of the trust under which he has admittedly acted and the benefits of which he has received and holds. (1 Perry on Trusts, sec. 433.) "Under no circumstances," says this author, "can a trustee claim or set up a claim to the trust property adverse to the cestui que trust, nor can he deny his title." This author further states (section 245) that a person may become a trustee by construction by intermeddling with and assuming the management of property without authority, and that during the possession and management thereof by such constructive trustees they are subject to the same rules and remedies as other trustees, and cannot avoid their liability as such by showing that they were not in fact trustees, nor can they set up the statute of limitations. The same learned author declares (section 265) that if a person by mistake or otherwise assumes the character of trustee and acts as such when the office does not belong to him, he thereby becomes a trustee de son tort and he may be called upon to account by the cestui que trust for the assets received under color of the trust. The cases cited in support of these doctrines under the various sections referred to fully sustain the text. In the case of Easterly v. Barber et al.,
"It is a well settled rule in the law of trusts that if a person not being in fact a trustee acts as such by mistake or intentionally, he thereby becomes a trustee de son tort. The rule is thus laid down by a recent writer: `A person may become a trustee by construction, by intermeddling with and assuming the management of property without authority. Such persons are trustees de son tort as persons who *268 assume to deal with a deceased person's estate without authority are administrators de son tort, . . . During the possession and management by such constructive trustees they are subject to the same rules and remedies as other trustees.' (Perry on Trusts, secs. 245, 265, 288; Lewin on Trusts, 244; Hill on Trustees, 173.) So if a person without authority, enters upon an infant's land and takes the rents and profits he may be charged as a guardian or trustee, and so if he takes personal property. (Wyllie v. Ellice, 6 Hare (Eng.), 506; Drury v. Conner, 1 Har. G. (Md.) 220; Blomfield v. Eyre, 8 Beav. 250.) It is plain that this branch of the law does not rest on the strict ground of estoppel as usually expounded in the law books. It rather depends upon a principle of public policy connected with the right administration of justice. (1 Greenl. on Ev., sec. 210.) The principle to be extracted from the cases is that the party acting as trustee shall not be allowed, in a court of justice, to set up, as against parties interested in the administration of the trust, a state of things inconsistent with his assumed character."
In the case of Damouth v. Klock,
It follows irresistibly that the defendant, by virtue of his said agreement whereby he voluntarily assumed the relation of trustee with relation to the moneys to presently come into his hands in the course of its execution, became as to such moneys the voluntary trustee of the estate of Winslow with respect to such moneys which were at all times the property of the estate; and hence that the said estate as the beneficiary of said trustee had a right to establish and enforce the same in this form of action.
It is, however, the contention of the defendant that the trust which the estate is by this action seeking to enforce as a result of said agreement between himself and Mary D. England is unenforceable against him at the suit of the estate, for the reason that the estate is not bound by the portion of said agreement relating to his compensation and hence he cannot be bound to respond to the estate for the moneys belonging to it which he has collected and received by virtue of the other terms of said agreement. There are two answers to this contention. The first is that as between the defendant and Mary D. England the agreement is good and is enforceable as to all its parts, and if the defendant has performed any services thereunder he has his remedy against the latter for the value of such services according to the terms of said agreement; and the other answer is that parties entering into contracts of this character do so with knowledge of the law, and that the parties to this agreement therefore knew that the defendant could have primarily no recourse thereunder to the estate of Winslow for his compensation for services performed for the use and benefit of the estate, but must look to the prospective or actual executrix of said estate in her individual capacity for his reward; and hence that he agreed and undertook to act as a trustee for the benefit of said estate without the right or expectation of compensation directly from it. Having received its property as such trustee and under such understanding he cannot refuse to render an accounting for such property and to pay the *271 same over to its legal representative on demand and upon the ground stated. In this respect he is in no better or worse position than an attorney for the estate would be who had collected some of its money or property upon an agreement with a prospective or appointive executrix as to the amount of his attorney's fees. In either case the agent or attorney is acting as a trustee of the estate with relation to any of its moneys which may come into his hands as such and must pay the same over to it, looking for his compensation to the executrix individually with whom the agreement was made.
The next question presented for consideration is that of the defendant's plea of the statute of limitations. But if our foregoing conclusions are correct to the extent of holding that the defendant is the trustee of a voluntary trust and that he received and held the moneys of the said estate in that capacity and not otherwise, the authorities are uniform in holding that the statute of limitations does not begin to run in favor of such a trustee until there has been a repudiation of his trust. (Schroeder v. Jahns,
The defendant, however, makes the further contention that conceding that he came lawfully into the possession of the said moneys of the estate it was his duty to turn the same over to the estate or to the legal representative thereof as soon as the latter was appointed and qualified and that his possession of such moneys became wrongful immediately upon his violation of his duty and trust in that regard; and hence that the statute of limitations immediately commenced to run. To admit the soundness of this contention would be not only to violate a cardinal maxim of jurisprudence which forbids any person from taking advantage of his own wrong (Civ. Code, sec.
Finally, it is urged that the plea of the statute of limitations is to be favored as a statute of repose. While this is a true doctrine as to those persons who are standing at arm's-length in their dealings with each other, it has never been given application to voluntary trusts, since to do so would be to render such statute not a beneficent statute of repose but a vile instrument of wrong in relation to those who are standing and continuing in voluntarily assumed confidential relations to each other. It has therefore no application to the facts of the instant case.
The judgment is reversed.
Seawell, J., Shenk, J., and Waste, J., concurred.