delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff below has appealed from an order entered by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, sitting as a Court of Equity, in a special case by consent.
The petition requested the trial judge to determine two questions:
(1) Is all, or any portion of the $5,850 now held by defendant Montgomery Title Company for the estate оf Leo A. Bryer, held in trust for plaintiff by virtue of a written agreement dated October 1, 1956, between plaintiff and Leo A. Bryer?; (2) If the answer to the preceding question is in the affirmative, is such trust property the sole property of plaintiff, and not subject to claims of third parties against the trustee, Leo A. Bryer, or his legal reprеsentative?
The agreement between Bryer and the plaintiff, mentioned in question 1 above, contained the following paragraph:
“5. * * * In no case shall the Broker be personally liable to the Salesman for any commission, nor shall said Salesman be personally liable to said Broker for any commissions, but when the commission shall have been collected from the party or parties for whom the service was performed, said Broker, in the event such cоmmissions are paid to him, shall hold the same in trust for said Salesman and himself to be divided according to the terms of this agreement, * *
The parties then stipulated:
“(1) Of the $5,850.00 held for Leo A. Bryer by Montgomery Title Company, $4,950 represents sales commissions on homes sold in 1959 by Grace Wills Klein while acting as a salesman for Leo A. Bryer, pursuant to an employment аgreement filed as Exhibit I herein.
“(2) According to the terms of said agreement,Grace Wills Klein’s commissions on the aforementioned sales amount to 50% of $4,950, or $2,475, and were never received by her.”
This was follоwed by an agreement of the parties that, if questions 1 and 2, above, were answered in the affirmative, the court should enforce the trust and order the Title Company to pay the plaintiff the amount due her, and direct that any funds remaining in the hands of the Title Company be paid to the representative of the еstate of Leo A. Bryer; but in the event that the answers were in the negative, the whole sum held by the Title Company should be paid to the estate of Leo A. Bryer.
Thе trial judge determined that both questions should be answered in the negative, and ordered the Title Company to pay the full amount of $5,850 to the said estate.
This is the entire record as the case is presented to us. The appellant contends it discloses that $2,475 of the $5,850 held by the Title Company for the estate of Leo A. Bryer is impressed by an express trust for her benefit; the appellees, in their brief, content themselves by claiming the record fails to show any question or decision made by the trial judge, and, therefore, it raises no question for our decision.
With this proposition of the appellees, we are unable to аgree. Maryland Rule 886 a specifically provides that when an action has been “tried by the lower court without a jury,” this Court will review the case upon both the law and the evidence.
Thus, the simple question for our determination is whether any portion of the fund held by the Title Company to the credit of the Leo A. Bryer еstate is impressed with a trust for the benefit of the appellant. The decision turns upon a careful analysis of the provisions of the contract quoted above, which will be made below, after a very brief reference to the law.
The facts do not call for a lengthy or elaborate discussion of thе law relating to trusts. It will suffice, at this point, to say that they may be created for any purpose, not illegal; and, in a broad sense, they are either express, or the result of the operation of law. Restatement,
Trusts, 2d,
§ 2, says a
We turn now to a consideration of the contract. Of course, every trust must have a trust
res,
and it is obvious thаt when the contract was executed, there was no trust property in existence and ascertainable; hence our problem is to determine the relationship between the appellant and Bryer (or his agent) when the commissions were collected. The situation here is not the same as that in
Century Indemnity Co. v. State,
A careful reading of the provisions of paragraph 5 discloses that Bryer did not promise to create in the future a trust in property owned by him. Such a situation is discussed and considered in 1
Scott, Trusts
(2d Ed.), § 26.5, and in Restatement,
op. cit.,
§§ 26, 30. Nor did he promise to create in the future a trust in a
res
to be then brought forth by him.
Hence, the trial judge’s answer to question (1) should have been in the affirmative. And, as we have held that a valid trust was created instead of a debtor-creditor relationship between Bryer (or his estate) and the appellant, the answer to question (2) also should have been in the affirmative, for the rights of the appellant in the trust property are superior to the rights of Bryer’s general creditors. Restatement, op. cit., § 74, comment a.
Order reversed, and case remanded for the entry of a decree not inconsistent with this opinion; the appellee, Bryer, to pay the costs.
