164 Ga. 609 | Ga. | 1927
A motion was made to dismiss the bill of exceptions in this case, upon the grounds: (a) that a general demurrer to the original petition and the amendment filed June 7, 1926, the same being designated as the first count, was overruled, to which ruling no exception was taken, and which in consequence was a conclusive determination of the right of the plaintiffs to recover under said count on substantial proof of the facts therein set forth; (b) that the plaintiffs in error do not except to the final judgment and decree of the court; and (c) that while a general demurrer to the second count was overruled, no recovery was had thereon; and the court having found against the relief prayed therein, and having rendered its judgment solely upon the first count, the correctness or incorrectness of the court’s ruling on the demurrer to the second count is entirely immaterial.
We are likewise of the opinion that the second ground of the motion to dismiss, that is, that the plaintiff in error does not
Does the petition set forth a cause of action ? The demurrer admits only such facts as are issuable and well pleaded. Alexander v. Sutlive, 3 Ga. 27; Williams v. Stewart, 115 Ga. 864 (42 S. E. 256). The demurrer does not admit conclusions either of law or fact, where the facts are not averred upon which such conclusions are supposed to rest-. Graham v. Marks, 98 Ga. 67, 73 (25 S. E. 931). Both counts in the petition rest upon the existence of an implied trust in favor of the plaintiffs. Do the well pleaded and issuable facts make a case of an implied trust? A mortgage or trust deed given by the Appalachian Corporation to the Central Dnion Trust Company, upon 5000 acres of land on which there was a large apple orchard, to secure an issue of about $1,250,000 of bonds, was foreclosed in the TJ. S. District Court. On March 14, 1922, pending such foreclosure proceeding, petitioners and others, who were holders of a large amount of these bonds, by an agreement in writing created and appointed a reorganization committee to handle their bonds and look after their interests in said foreclosure suit, and deposited with said committee $1,098,800 of said bonds. This committee was “vested under the terms of this agreement, as trustee of an express.trust, with the legal title to” the bonds so deposited, and the holders thereby did “assign and transfer the same to the committee.” By this agreement the committee -was “fully authorized and empowered, in the name of the committee as owner, or otherwise, to take or cause to be taken all
The court directed its receiver to sell this property under the decree of foreclosure; and on July 1, 1925, the property was sold
Then Douglas, on behalf of the committee, filed in the U. S. District Court, in the foreclosure suit, his petition in which he alleged, that on July 1, 1924, on behalf of the bondholders5 committee, he purchased the property in dispute under the sale thereof by the court; that the sale had been confirmed; that under the order of confirmation the purchaser at said sale was authorized to assign his purchase and rights; that by authority of the committee
Stripped of conclusions of law and fact, the above statement contains the well-pleaded facts set out in the petition. The petitioners assert that this property is impressed with an' implied trust in their favor to the extent of $131,856, which was the value of their bonds so deposited with the receiver and used by Magid in payment therefor, and that Magid holds this property as their trustee to this extent. They prayed that the property be sold and the proceeds divided in the proportion which the cash paid by Magid for this property bears to the said value of the bonds so deposited by them and their associates with the committee. Under these circumstances did an implied trust arise in favor of the plaintiffs P Implied trusts arise in the following cases: (1) Whenever the legal title is in one person, and the beneficial interest, arising from the payment of the purchase-money, either wholly or partially, is in another. (2) Where, from any fraud, one person obtains the title to property which rightly belongs to another. (3)' Where from the nature of the transaction it is manifest that it was the intention of the parties that the person taking the legal title shall have no beneficial interest. Civil Code (1910), § 3739. In the first paragraph of this section, the person in whose favor a trust is claimed to result must have paid the purchase-money as his own. If he merely advances the whole or a part of the purchase-money as a loan, no implied trust arises. Johnston v. Coney, 120 Ga. 767, 776 (48 S. E. 373). The second paragraph of this section deals with trusts which arise ex maleficio. Such a trust “occurs whenever a person acquires the legal title to land, or other property by means of an intentionally false and fraudulent verbal promise to hold the same for a certain specified purpose, . . or to reconvey it to the grantor, and the like, and,
Furthermore, under the terms of this agreement, even if we should hold that Magid became a substituted trustee for these bondholders, he acted in complying with this bid, under this theory, not for himself but for these bondholders. Under this theory he assumed this bid of the committee and complied therewith, not .for himself, but for these bondholders, not for himself and these
Did an implied trust arise ex maleficio under the facts of this case? In.the second count the petitioners assert that Magid converted their bonds when he used them in payment in part of the purchase-money of this property. Under the agreement between him and the committee, which undertook to act in this matter in behalf of these bondholders, he was expressly authorized to use
In the agreement between the committee and Magid, as we have seen, he was expressly authorized to use the bonds deposited with the committee by the bondholders, in part payment of the purchase-price of this property. This agreement does not state in what capacity he was to use these bonds, or, whether he'was to account therefor to the bondholders, or was to pay them for the value of these bonds. If we treat this use of the bonds by Magid as a loan to him by the holders of these bonds, he would be liable to account to these holders for their value, although, as we have seen, such use of the bonds would not create an implied trust in behalf of these holders. Treating the second count of the petition as seeking to recover from Magid the value of these bonds upon the theory that the use thereof was in effect a loan, then the second count was subject to the ground of demurrer urged against it, that it set forth a new and distinct cause of action. The original petition as amended seeks to set up and have enforced an implied trust. This was one- cause of action. To recover their value upon the theory that the use thereof by Magid was in effect a loan from the bondholders to him, and that he was liable to account on this theory for their value, was another and distinct cause of action ; and rendered the second count amenable to the ground of demurrer that it set forth a separate and distinct cause of action and one not germane to the cause set out -in the original petition. No
The case was tried by the presiding judge without the intervention of a jury. After the hearing a decree was rendered in favor of plaintiffs, by which an implied trust was impressed upon this property in their favor. To this decree Magid excepted. Certain facts appear in the evidence introduced on' the trial of the case which are vitally important in determining whether this decree was right. When Douglas for the committee bid in this property for the depositing bondholders, and the same was confirmed by the decree of the U. S. District Court, with the requirement that a cash payment of $50,000 be made upon the property within a given time, the committee notified the depositing bondholders of their action in bidding in the property for them, and of the requirement of this cash payment on the purchase-price bid'by the committee. The bondholders wholly ignored the request of the committee to advance the money necessary to make this cash payment and to acquire title for themselves to this property. The committee made diligent efforts to borrow on the property funds sufficient to make this payment. Their efforts failed. They tried in vain to sell the property so as to/make this cash payment, and to save, if possible, something for the bondholders. It was in this situation that the committee made the contract with Magid, the terms of which are substantially set out in the second division of this opinion. Contemporaneously with that agreement Magid and the committee entered into another agreement. Under the latter agreement Magid agreed to pay to the committee, contemporaneously with paying the portion of the purchase-price required to be paid in cash under the decree of confirmation, the $3500 which the committee had deposited with the receiver to qualify as bidder. He further agreed that after titb to said property had been vested in him he would cause the same to be transferred to a'corporation, to be organized under the laws of Georgia, with a capital stock of $500,000, of which amount Magid was to deliver to the committee ■ $35,000 par value, full paid, and non-assessable. The holders of this $35,000 of stock should at all
So we are of the opinion that the court below erred in holding that this property was impressed with a trust in behalf of petitioners, and in granting the relief prayed by them.
Judgment reversed.