90 Neb. 754 | Neb. | 1912
The district court sustained demurrers to the petition, and from a judgment of dismissal plaintiff appeais. In substance the petition alleges" Regnar M. Aabel and Regnar F. Aabel, Jr., are father and sonthat ivhile Aabel, Jr., was employed by plaintiff he ivas, in charge and full control of a stock of merchandise belonging to plaintiff, as manager; that while so employed he fraudulently appropriated to his own use plaintiff’s goods and merchandise of about
The petition, while in some respects inartistically drawn, seems sufficient to state a cause of action.
The defendánt Aabel, Jr., is charged with having, while in a position of trust and confidence, converted the goods and money of the plaintiff to his own use and invested the proceeds in land, while the other defendant is charged with having full knowledge of the fraudulent origin of the .property and with receiving it with the intent to carry out the fraudulent purpose. These facts make the case one with which a court of equity is alone fitted to deal in such a manner as to do justice. There is an allegation that the
Where one person obtains the property of another by theft or fraud, equity will raise a constructive trust in favor of the defrauded party, and he may follow the property into the hands of third persons taking it with knowledge. Tecumseh Nat. Bank v. Russell, 50 Neb. 277; Nebraska Nat. Bank v. Johnson, 51 Neb. 546; Lamb v. Rooney, 72 Neb. 322. Another court has aptly said: “The true, owner of property has the right to have his property restored to him, not as a debt due and owing, but because it is his property wrongfully withheld. As between the cestuis que trustent and the trustee and all persons claiming under the trustee, except jiurchasers for value and without notice, all the property belonging to the trust, however much it may have been changed in its form or its nature or character, and all the fruits of such property, whether in its original or altered state, continues to be subject to and affected by the trust. * * * It was formerly held that these rules came to an end the moment the means of ascertaining the identity of the trust property failed. * * * In the case of trust moneys commingled by the trustee with Ms own moneys, it was held that money has no earmarks, and when so commingled the whole became an indistinguishable mass and the means of ascertainment failed. But equity, adapting itself to the exigencies of such conditions, finally determined that the whole mass of money with which the trust funds were commingled should be treated as a trust.” Windstanley v. Second Nat. Bank, 13 Ind. App. 544.
We think the demurrers should have been overruled. The judgment of the district court must, therefore, be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.