80 Cal. 378 | Cal. | 1889
Defendants' demurrer to plaintiffs’ complaint was sustained, with leave to plaintiffs to amend. For failure to do so within the time granted, their default was entered, and judgment in favor of the defendants was thereupon rendered, from which plaintiffs appeal.
From the complaint it appears that in 1860 one John G. McClure, a resident of Tehama County, died intestate, leaving as his separate estate eighteen hundred dollars in money, and other personal property of the value of four hundred dollars, and surviving him as his successors the plaintiffs, aged at the time, respectively, ten and eight years, and his widow, now the wife of her co-defendant herein. There were no claims against the decedent or his estate, and no administration was had, but his widow took possesssion of the money and personal property for the benefit of herself and her children, the plaintiffs in this cause. She sold the personal property, realizing four hundred dollars therefor, and retained the whole two thousand two hundred dollars until she married her co-defendant, in 1861. During this year she, with her co-defendant, invested the money in business, and thereafter, with the money and its proceeds, bought the realty described in the complaint, and took the title thereto in the name of the defendant John G. Colyear, in whose name it still appears of record. Both defendants knew that the plaintiffs were the owners each of one third of this money.
Quoad their respective shares, this fund was an express trust in the hands of the mother. The character of the trust was not, and could not, be changed by the act of the defendants in investing it in lands, although the
The complaint expressly avers that both defendants knew of and always acknowledged the rights of plaintiffs until within sixty days next before the commencement of this action.
The demurrer was sustained on the ground that the complaint was indefinite and uncertain, hut we think it sufficiently certain and definite to put the defendants to their answer.
Defendants also demurred on the ground that the claim was barred by the statute of limitations. Against such a trust the statute does not begin to run until the trustee repudiates the trust by clear and unequivocal acts or words, and claims thenceforth to hold the estate as his own, not subject to any trust, and such repudiation and claim are brought to the knowledge of the cestui que trust. (Janes v. Throckmorton, 57 Cal. 368.) The plaintiffs were not guilty of laches in failing to assert their rights until the defendants had taken some steps to dispute or disturb them. (Barriolhet v. Anspacher, 68 Cal. 116.) In addition to this, the plaintiffs and the defendant Amanda have been at all times and still are tenants in common in the ownership of the fund, or the equitable ownership of the property in which the fund is invested, and she has been and is in possession. Her possession was their possession, so that in that view of the case the statute has never commenced to run against them until their rights were denied, and she claimed to hold in hostility to them. Treating her husband as the holder of the legal title, holding it in trust for the benefit of his wife and her co-owners in the money which she furnished for the purchase of the property, then we find that she has been in possession with him all the time, and through her the plaintiffs, her co-owners in the equitable title, have also been in possession. In such
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings.
Works, J., Sharpstein, J., Beatty, C. J., McFarland, J., Thornton, J., and Paterson, J., concurred.