IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CAROLINE A. KELLEY, Dеceased, WILLIAM E. WOERHEIDE, Curator of the Estate of ROSALIE ANSPACH, Respondent, v. JOSEPH M. KELLEY, Administrator of the Estate of CAROLINE A. KELLEY, Deceased, Appellant, JAMES P. NEWELL, Administrator de bonis non of the Estate of CAROLINE A. KELLEY, Deceased, Substituted Appellant.
St. Louis Court of Appeals
Opinion Filed November 6, 1923.
213 Mo. App. 492
1. TRUSTS AND TRUSTEES: Curator and Ward: Wife Curatrix of Insane Person: Ward‘s Securities Converted: Knowledge of Husband: Both Accountable as Joint and Several Trustees. Where the husband of a curatrix of an insane person knew that securities given him by his wife and by him sold and the proceeds thereof afterwards used by him and his wife in speculation and margin trades, were the property of the ward, such constituted a breach of trust of which the husband was cognizant, and both, then, became accountable as joint and several trustees.
2. ————: ————: ————: ————: Securities Substituted by Curatrix for Ward‘s Securities Converted: Evidence: Sufficiency. On petition by the curator of an insane person against the administrator husband of a deceased prior curatrix of such insane person, praying that certain property belonging to the insane person be turned over to him, evidence held to establish that the deceased curatrix, who, in conjunction with her husband, had sold securities which were the property of the ward and converted the proceeds, had substituted the securities sought to be recovered for the securities converted by them.
3. ————: ————: ————: ————: ————: Presumption. In а proceeding by a curator of an insane person to recover securities from the administrator husband of a former curatrix who together with her husband had converted and sold the insane person‘s securities, it being impossible to separate the moieties of the fund and determine with whose money the securities were bought, it will be presumed that the price was paid with the money of the ward.
5. ————: ————: ————: ————: ————: Express Trust Created. Where the curatrix of an insane person gave securities belonging to such insane person to her husband, which securities were by him sold and the proceeds thereof used in the purchase of other securities, held under the facts in evidence there was a creation of an express trust on the part of the curatrix and her husband in the substitution of the securities purchased for the converted funds.
6. ————: Evidence: Express Trusts in Personal Property: May be Shown by Parol. An express trust in personal property may be shown by parol testimony.
7. EVIDENCE: Husband Sued as Wife‘s Administrator: Declarations and Admissions: Admissibility. Where the curatrix of an insane person gave securities belonging to her ward to her husband, which werе by him sold and the funds used in the purchase of other securities, and the husband on the death of the curatrix was named as her administrator, his declarations and admissions were admissible in a proceeding by a successor curator of such insane person to recover securities substituted for those converted.
8. APPELLATE PRACTICE: Facts Admitted by Appellant Accepted as True. Facts admitted in appellant‘s written statement, brief and argument will be accepted as true by the appellate court.
9. ————: ————: Evidence: Erroneously Admitted: Not Prejudicial in View of Appellant‘s Statement, etc. An admission of evidence, if erroneous, was not prejudicial where the truth of the facts was admitted in appellant‘s written statement, brief and argument, and there was other competent testimony as to the same facts.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis. —Hon. J. Hugo Grimm, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
Randolph Laughlin for Joseph M. Kelley, appellant.
Peter T. Barrett for James P. Newell, substituted appellant.
W. W. Henderson for respondent.
DAVIS, C.—On appeal here from the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, on appeal there from the probate court. Judgment in the circuit court sustaining a motion of the curator surcharging a settlement made by
Upon the death of Caroline A. Kelley, Joseph M. Kelley, her widower, under appointment from the probate court, took charge of her estate. In due course the administrator filed his first inventory, and, under the heading “PROPERTY CLAIMED FOR ROSALIE ANSPACH,” he inventoried 100 shares of the Common Stock of the National Enameling & Stamping Company, par value of $100 per share. The certificate was issued to Caroline A. Kelley, and was not endorsed. He also inventoried one Liberty bond for $1,000 registered in the name of Caroline A. Kelley, guardian for Rosalie Anspach, and оne bond of the Helena Gas & Electric Company for $1,000.
Thereafter curator Woerheide filed a petition in the probate court praying that certain property be turned over to him, and on October 15, 1918, the parties appeared in court, and by consent the probate court ordered the National Enameling & Stamping Company stock, the Liberty bond, and the Helena Gas & Electric Company bond turned over to the curator as the property of the ward Rosalie Anspach, without prejudice to either of said parties, as to the title to the remaining stock and bonds described in the petition of said curator, theretofore filed. The receipt given the administrator, by curator Woerheide, for the above stock and bonds, omitting caption and signatures, is as follows:
“St. Louis, Mo., October 16, 1918.
“Received of Joseph M. Kelley, Administrator of Caroline A. Kelley, the following property of Rosalie Anspach, this day surrendered and turned over by him in obedience to the order of the Probate Court and entered in the above entitled cause on October 15, 1918, viz.:
Dividend declared Aug. 10th, $1.50 per share 150.00
One $1,000 registered 3½ per cent Liberty Bond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,000.00
June interest on same . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17.50
One $1,000 Helena Gas & Electric Co. first six per cent mortgage bond, including interest due April 1, 1918 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,000.00
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7,367.50
“And the said estate of Caroline A. Kelley, deceased, and the said Joseph M. Kelley, as administrator thereof, and also in his individual capacity, are now hereby released and discharged of all and all manner of liability on account of said securities and dividends, or any of them, and on account of the possession, custody and retention thereof.
“It is understood, however, that this receipt is without prejudice to the rights of any parties hereto in any matter connected with any securities not hereinabove listed.
“IN WITNESS WHEREOF we have hereunto affixed our signatures the day and year first above written.
“(Signed) WILLIAM E. WOERHEIDE,
Curator of the Estate of ROSALIE ANSPACH,
Non Compos.”
Thereafter on October 13, 1919, the curator filеd an amended petition surcharging the settlement filed by the administrator of Caroline A. Kelley, and praying that a correct balance be ascertained and that the administrator be ordered to turn over and deliver to the curator any securities now held by him as administrator of the estate of Caroline A. Kelley belonging to said Rosalie Anspach.
The cause was tried upon the testimony offered and introduced by curator Woerheide. The testimony tends to show that on March 8, 1916, Caroline A. Kelley, Pennsylvania guardian of Rosalie Anspach, through her husband Joseph M. Kelley, sold seven Western Maryland bonds for $5154.14; that on January 17, 1916, and February 24, 1916, there were sold four and eight shares of New England Power Company stock for $136.92 and and $482.39, respectively, all the property of Rosalie Anspach, and which was, with Mrs. Kelley‘s consent, credited to the personal account of Kelley. This was a speculative account covering the year 1916, during which time Kelley was engaged in gambling transactions and margin trades in divers and sundry securities. He also made a few legitimate trades, among others, buying on January 13, 1916, for $2662.50 cash, 100 shares of the National Enameling & Stamping Company stock. On February 4, 1916, he bought for $748.75 cash a Distillers bond. On July 13, 1916, fifty shares of Westinghouse stock, paid for out of the mingled fund that he had with A. G. Edwards & Sons. Kelley in his speculations in the securities lost the mоney in the account, including Rosalie Anspach‘s money, and $12,000 of his own.
At the time of Mrs. Kelley‘s death, the National Enameling stock, the Liberty bond, and the Helena Gas
The Westinghouse stock (bought July 13, 1916 for $2725 with funds from the account in which the ward‘s money had been mingled), and the Distillers bond, were put by Kelley in the safe deposit box jointly used by Kelley and his wife, but they were never put in the envelope marked “Rosalie Anspach.” Kelley testified: “These fifty shares of Westinghouse and this Distillers Security were not in this envelope I speak of. At times we gave her some dividends, so that she was always having income.” The Distillers bond was inventoried. The coupon off of that bond, found in the box and inventoried, was sent by Mrs. Kelley and credited to Miss Anspach, and dividends on Distillers bond were turned over to her by Mrs. Kelley.
E. E. Woerheide, husband of Mrs. Anna W. Woerheide, testified that Mrs. Kelley in April or May, 1917, stated that thе ward‘s money was invested in Westinghouse stock, Distillers bond, and National Enameling stock.
Kelley further testified: “I told you what actually occurred. I am telling you Mrs. Kelley turned around and said, ‘Rosalie has got $5,040 and giving her this National Enameling stock, which is paying six per cent dividend, gives her much better income than she ever got.‘”
Joseph M. Kelley further testified that the National Enameling and Stamping Company‘s certificate of stock was made out in the name of Caroline A. Kelley, and the reason she never changed same was for convenience sake. Testimony further shows that Mrs. Kelley owned one-half interest in the Helena Gas and Electric bond of $1,000 and thаt the ward owned the other one-half, and that Mrs. Kelley after selling the New England Power Company bond from which she realized a total of $619.31 gave to the ward the other half of her personal interest in said Helena Gas and Electric Company bond.
I. The first assignment of error relates to the trial court‘s failure to give defendant‘s demurrer to the evidence.
Plaintiff‘s amended pleading surcharges the settlement of Mrs. Kelley‘s administrator, claiming fifty shares of Westinghouse stock and a Distillers bond, together with converted dividends and interest, as the property of the ward.
It is contended by defendant that, with respect to the ward‘s converted securities there arose the relation of debtor and creditor between Mrs. Kelley, as curatrix, and Kelley, and not that of trustee and cestui que trust. It seems to be conceded that Kelley knew that the securities, given him by Mrs. Kelley and by him sold, and proceeds thereоf afterwards used by him and Mrs. Kelley in speculation and margin trades, were the property of the ward. This constituted a breach of trust, of which Kelley was cognizant. Both, then, became accountable as joint and several trustees. [Leach v. Gray (Ala.), 77 So. 341; 7 A. L. R. 890; Jeffray v. Towar, 63 N. J. Eq. 530, l. c. 538.]
But says the defendant, this merely gave the ward the right of election—(a) to hold the curatrix liable for principal and interest to the utmost value of the securities deposited with Kelley; or (b) to follow the converted securities as a trust fund and claim all the profits arising from their use. We do not so construe the evidence, but think a very different situation is presented. Between January 17, and March 8, 1916, Mr. and Mrs. Kelley sold securities of the ward for sums aggregating $5773.45, converting the proceeds to their own use. Mrs. Kelley, then, with the consent of Mr. Kelley, desiring
It is conceded that the Westinghouse stock was purchased with the mingled funds of Mr. and Mrs. Kelley and the ward. As it is impossible to separate the moieties of the fund and determine with whose money the stock was bought, it will be presumed that the price was paid with the money of the ward. Appellant contends, however, that inasmuch as Mr. and Mrs. Kelley lost $18,000 in their speculative account, with which the funds of the ward were mingled, in electing to take the profits, the ward must also be subjected to the losses. We do not regard the evidence as showing the ward interested in the speculative account. She is merely following trust funds. The evidence goes no further than demonstrating that Mr. and Mrs. Kelley converted funds of the ward to their own use, and, in lieu thereof, substituted and turned over to her certain other property. However, considering the facts, we do not hold to the rule that the ward is subject to losses. We prefer the rule to the effect that where the trust fund was always used by the trustee as his own, and all investments were made by him in his own name, such trustee cannot charge the trust with the losses he has sustained. [Mitchell v. Moore, 95 U. S. 587; 24 L. Ed. 492.]
II. Defendant again assigns as error the admission of the deposition and transcript of the prior examinations of Kelley in the probate court, contending that, neither as an individual nor as an administrator, could he bind the estate by declarations or admissions.
Adair v. Railroad, 282 Mo. 133, 220 S. W. 920, lays down the general rule that identity of interest, joint enterprise or conspiracy renders the declarations or admissions competent. In Armstrong v. Farrar, 8 Mo. 628, declarations of a party to the record, appearing to show the mental capacity of the deceased at the time of making his will, made after the death of the testator, were hеld competent against all the defendants since they were not only parties to the record, but identical in interest. The reasoning in this case was held good in the Adair case.
Kelley was the administrator and distributee of the estate. Moreover, he is claiming the Distillers bond as his own. In the capacity of administrator he represented, in this suit, the deceased and the other distributees. While the other distributees may have been proper, they were not necessary parties and a judgment against the decedent‘s estate binds them. They were, however, represented by the administrator. The interest of all the distributees, so far as the claim аgainst the estate goes, were identical, even though not made actual parties. The declarations and admissions, embracing the relation of facts by a participant in a breach of trust, were contained within the written deposition and transcript of the examination of Kelley, concerning which the right of cross-examination obtained.
Again, counsel for defendant stated in oral argu-
In addition, Mrs. Kelley in a letter admitted that the ward‘s money was in Westinghouse and Distillers. Under these circumstances the admission of Kelley‘s deposition and examinations was not prejudicial.
III. What we have heretofore said disposes of the assignment of error relating to the court‘s refusal to give defendant‘s declarations of law I, II, III, IV, V, VI and VII. Also to the court‘s giving one of its own motion, a modification of defendant‘s No. I declaration of law. It also disposes of the other assignments of error.
The Commissioner recommends that the judgment be affirmed.
DAVIS
COMMISSIONER
