84 F. 127 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California | 1897
This action was brought by the plaintiff against James G. Fair, now deceased, to recover the amount of money paid by William Irvine in liquidation of assessments regularly levied upon 4,998¿ shares of stock of the Morgan Mining Company, which shares, at the time of the assessments, stood of record on the books of that corporation in the name of Irvine, but were, in fact, the property of James G. Fair. The assessments, five in number, wore paid between the 24th day of December, 1879, and May, 1884. The complaint in this action was filed April 13,1886. It is alleged in the complaint that the shares of stock upon which the assessments were paid were held in trust by Irvine for Fair, and that in May, 1884, Irvine transferred the stock to Fair, surrendered his trust, and there
Section 2217 of the Civil Code of this state provides that “an involuntary trust is one which is created by operation of law.” See, also, sections 2223, 2224. Section 2275 provides that “an involuntary trustee who becomes such through his own fault, has none of the rights mentioned in this article.” At the trial the plaintiff moved for judgment on the pleadings, which motion is hereby denied. The case will be considered upon its merits.
It is contended by the plaintiff that, inasmuch as the decree in Irvine v. Dunham established ihe fact that Irvine held the shares of stock as trustee, it became his duty, during the pendency of the appeal, to protect the property from sale; that the payments of the assessments were never made by Irvine until the Iasi: hour of the day of sale, and could not, therefore, he claimed to have been voluntary payments on his part; that Irvine was not: required by the decree to transfer the shares of stock to Dunham, or his assignee, until the amount of money therein mentioned was paid over to him, which money was not paid until after the mandate of the supreme court, affirming the decree in that case, was filed in this court, and hence it became his duty, as trustee, to pay the assessments on the stock. In support of his contention, he relies upon the principles announced in
“The appellant [Irvine] next contends that he is entitled, under the terms of the trust, to hold onto the stock, which he received as a consideration for the conveyance of the trust property, until there has heen an accounting and the expenses and counsel fees have been paid. But by his answer he denies the trust, he claims to hold the stock for himself alone, he wants no accounting, and does not offer to account, or to hand over any net proceeds of the property after an accounting. In other words, he seeks to hold onto the trust property until it suits him to execute a trust, the existence of which he denies. * * * When, therefore, appellant denied that he held in trust the stock claimed by the appellee, the latter, having established the trust, was entitled to have, if he demanded it, a new trustee appointed, or, if the appointment of a new trustee were not necessary for the preservation of his rights, to have an account taken by the court of the expenses and assessments with which his share of the trust property was chargeable, and upon their payment to have a transfer to himself of his share of the stock. The decree of the circuit court has given him these rights. There has been an accounting, and the sum with which the appellee’s interest in the stock is chargeable-has been ascertained; and when the sum so found is paid by appellee, and not till then, the decree of the court requires a transfer to him of his share of the stock. The decree of the court simply executes and winds up a trust, the existence of which it finds, but which the trustee denies and refuses to execute. Both parties got their rights under the decree.”
When Irvine took his appeal from that decree he took the chances of procuring a reversal. Whatever assessments he paid after that time he paid at his own peril, or, at least, to protect his own interest, not the interest of Fair, whose rights in the- premises he continued to deny. His obligation to pay the assessments after he had taken the appeal did not arise from the nature of the relations theretofore existing between the parties. He was not charged by the decree with any other duty than to turn over the shares of stock, which the court declared he had held in trust for Dunham, upon the payment of the amount of money by Dunham or his assignee, as required by the decree. He could not thereafter create any additional charge or indebtedness against the property. He gained no additional rights by taking an appeal from the decree. His payment of the assessments thereafter levied must be treated as having been voluntarily made, and although the payments thereof resulted beneficially to Fair, whose duty it undoubtedly was to have paid the assessments, the plaintiff cannot, by such acts, hold Fair responsible for the money thus voluntarily advanced; this, upon the familiar principle that one person cannot make another his debtor by voluntarily paying his debts.
“It seems that the appellants, during this litigation, paid the taxes on a portion of these lands, and claim to be reimbursed for this expenditure in case the title is adjudged to be in the defendants, on the ground that they paid the taxes in good faith and in ignorance of the law. But ignorance of the law is no ground for recovery, and the element of good faith will not sustain an action where the payment has been voluntary, without any request from the true owners of the land, and with a full knowledge of all the facts. It is an elementary proposition, which does not require support from adjudged cases, that one person cannot make another his debtor by paying the debt of the latter without his request or assent. It is true, in accordance with our decision, the taxes on these lands were the debt of Ihe defendants, which they should have paid; but their refusal or neglect to do this did not authorize a contestant of their title to make them its debtor by stepping in and paying the taxes for them, without being requested so to do. Nor can a request be implied in the relation which the parties sustained to each other. There is nothing to take the case out of the well-established rule as to voluntary payments. If the appellants, owing to their too great confidence in their title, have risked too much, it is their misfortune; but they are not, on that account, entitled to have the taxes voluntarily paid by them refunded by the successful party in this suit”
In Litchfield v. County of Webster, 101 U. S. 773, 778, the court, in the course of its opinion, referring to the payment of taxes upon land, said:
“If one of the contesting claimants paid them, supposing the lands were his, he could not, if he finally failed to maintain his title, recover from the real owner what he thus advanced. We so held in Homestead Co. v. Valley R., 17 Wall. 153.”
The defendants are entitled to judgment for their costs.