26 Wash. 89 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The material facts alleged in the amended complaint in this cause are that on the 21st day of February, 1885, and for some time prior thereto, the appellant was the owner of certain real estate in Whitman county, which was then covered by a mortgage to one Plimpton to secure a note for $300, with accrued interest. At the same time the appellant was indebted to the First Rational Bank of Colfax on a promissory note for $750 and accrued interest. At the time of the execution of the last named note respondent signed it as surety for appellant. It is alleged that on the date first above mentioned appellant and respondent entered into a contract by which appellant agreed to convey to the respondent the said lands in trust; that respondent would take possession thereof, sell the same in such manner as to derive the greatest consideration obtainable therefor, and out of the proceeds
It is assigned as error that the court sustained the demurrer to both the original and the amended complaint, but we will confine our discussion to the amended complaint. This is an action to compel an accounting between a trustee and his cestui que trust. The complaint alleges a contract which created a fiduciary relation between the parties and expressly cast upon respondent the duties and obligations of a trustee to account for the proceeds of sales of the real estate conveyed to him. We understand -the demurrer was sustained by the court below on the theory that the action is barred by the statute of limitations. Respondent’s position is that, if this is an action for an accounting, then, under the agreement between the parties,
“The evidence of both parties indicates that the deed was given and received to liquidate the debt, but as the defendant proposed to sell the property, not wishing to keep it, but to secure his money, he agreed if he could sell it for more than his debt and expense, that he would be responsible for the surplus to-the plaintiff, and as evidence of his promise gave the plaintiff the writing to that effect.”
The action seems to have been brought upon the theory that the transaction was a mortgage, and carried with it a power of sale. The court held otherwise, and to the effect that the writing was given by the defendant of his own accord; that he was not a trustee, but his liability was confined entirely to the written promise, which he had voluntarily given; and the remedy was, therefore, hv action at law. In the case at bar the conveyance was not made absolutely to pay the debts. Their payment was -a mere incident to the purposes contemplated by the conveyance, and there was no mere voluntary promise on the part of respondent. But the whole transaction, as alleged, was that of merely turning over the real estate to the respondent with authority to sell it, and he was then instructed by appellant to pay the debts, and account to him for the excess. We think he was clearly a trustee, and that the relationship between the parties differed material
‘ In Re Sanderson, 74 Cal. 199 (15 Pac. 753), which involved the liability of an executor, it is said at pages 215 and 216:
“His obligation to account was continuous and he cannot claim that his failure to do so at any moment of time set the statute in motion, or cast upon the respondents the duty to demand an accounting; since their right to demand it ran with his duty, and could be asserted so long as his duty remained unperformed. . . . He did not and could not ‘repudiate his trust’ entirely by his mere failure to account. He failed to perform a specific duty which still continued imposed upon him until his accounts were settled.”
In Constable v. Camp, 87 Md. 173, 178 (39 Atl. 807), it is said:
“It is manifest, then, that so long as this fund remained ■ in the hands of Mrs. Hurtt undistributed her possession of it, if it belonged to her deceased husband’s estate, was according to her title, and, therefore, could not have been adverse thereto; and this being so, the statute of limitations never began to run in her favor and could not have been invoked by her as a bar to proceedings instituted by her husband’s next of kin against her in her representative capacity.”
In Davis v. Eastman, 60 Vt. 651, 654 (30 Atl. 1), it is said:
“A period of limitation will not commence to run in favor of trustees of this character until the trust relation is terminated or repudiated. . . . The settlement of an estate on what purports to be a final account is not necessarily a termination of the trust. If assets remain*96 in the hands of the accountant undisclosed he continues to hold them in his fiduciary capacity. It cannot he said that this executrix ever repudiated the trust relation. She fraudulently kept from the heirs the knowledge which might have given to her conduct the effect of a repudiation. They cannot he charged with knowledge that she claimed the estate remaining in her hands, for they did not know that there was any such estate.”
In the case now before this court it is alleged that respondent fraudulently concealed from appellant knowledge of the fact that other moneys remained in his hands. If the truth had been disclosed by him at any time, then his intention to withhold the remaining funds would have been apparent. His repudiation of the trust would thereby have been brought home to the appellant, and the statute would doubtless then have commenced to run. The complaint alleges, however, that knowledge of such fraudulent concealment did not come to appellant until August, 1897. Should the complaint allege facts amounting to diligence on appellant’s part in his efforts to sooner discover the fraud? This question was fully discussed by this court in Stearns v. Hochbrunn, 24 Wash. 206 (64 Pac. 165). It is there held that a complaint in an action for relief on the ground of fraud, containing a direct statement of the time of the discovery of the fraud, without negativing the idea that it might have been sooner discovered, is sufficient to bring the case within the saving clause of the statute of limitations, which provides that the cause of action shall not be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of .the facts constituting the fraud. The statute referred to as found in Bal. Oode, § 4800, subd. 4, is as follows:
“An action for relief upon the ground of fraud, the cause of action in such case not to be deemed to have ac*97 crued until tlie discovery by tlie aggrieved party of the facts constituting' tlie fraud.”
The court, in its opinion, in the above case, says:
“While it is true that the foundation principle of courts of equity in granting relief on the ground of fraud was that the party defrauded was not affected by the lapse of time so long as he remained in ignorance of the fraud that had been committed, yet equity aided the diligent, and not the negligent, and the conduct of the party defrauded in determining his right to relief, was as important as the conduct of the party perpetrating the fraud. The courts, therefore, held that the plaintiff, in order to put a defendant on his defense, must negative the presumption of negligence which arose from the mere lapse of time. In accordance with this principle, and the principle that means of discovery is actual discovery, the earliest English statute relating to relief on the ground of fraud applicable to suits in equity (that of 3 and 4 Wm. TV.) enacted that The cause of action is deemed to have accrued at, and not before, the time at which such fraud shall, or with reasonable diligence might have been, first known or discovered.’ By our Code all forms of pleading are abolished. The complaint is sufficient when it contains a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action; and the rules by which the sufficiency of a pleading is to be determined are those prescribed therein. The statute, too, it will be noticed, omits the italicized portion of the English statute above quoted. It would seem from this that the statute intended that a complaint should be deemed sufficient when it contained a direct and positive statement of the time of the discovery of the fraud, without further negativing the idea that the fraud might have been discovered sooner; leaving it rather a rule of evidence than a rule of pleading, if it still be the rule that means of discovery is equivalent to actual discovery.”
We think the above case must be decisive of this one, as the allegations of the complaint in this case come clearly within the rule there announced. The action was com
Reavis, C. J., and Dunbar, Anders, Mount and White, JJ., concur.
Fullerton, J., not sitting.