118 Cal. 102 | Cal. | 1897
Plaintiff filed bis bill seeking an accounting from tbe defendants because of matters bereinafter set forth. Tbe defendant Newlands was alone served with summons, and he appeared and interposed a demurrer to tbe bill: 1. Upon tbe ground that it failed to state a cause of action; and 2. That tbe cause of action stated was barred by tbe statute of hmitations. Tbe trial court held that tbe cause of action was so barred, and rendered judgment accordingly. From that judgment plaintiff appeals. -
Tbe bill is of great length, but tbe facts essential to this consideration may be thus summarized: In January, 1874, plaintiff Nougues, Henry F. Williams, one of tbe defendants, and William C. Balston, by agreement associated themselves together in a joint venture for tbe purpose of purchasing, improving, and selling certain lands in tbe city and county of San Francisco. To this venture Balston was to contribute money to purchase the lands in a sum not exceeding one hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars. Nougues and Williams were to improve these lands by bulkheading them and filling them in, and to contribute for this purpose an equal amount of money. Balston’s interest in tbe venture was to be one-half; that of Nougues and Williams one-fourth each. Maurice Dore was to act as trustee of tbe parties, was to purchase and contract for tbe purchase of tbe'lands in bis own name, and take tbe legal title thereto. If any lands were leased, tbe leases were to be taken in tbe name of Williams
“William Sharon in his lifetime always recognized and admitted the interest of said defendant Henry F. Williams and
Sharon thus continued to hold the legal title to this property, saving the title to certain of the lots which he sold, until his death. He died upon November 15, 1885. In contemplation of death, upon November 4, 1885, he made a trust deed of all the property here in controversy, and of all the property of the estate of Ralston, to F. G.. Newlands and F. W. Sharon. The trustees last named accepted the trust and entered upon its conduct. Thereafter, upon March 23, 1883, F. W. Sharon resigned as trustee, and Newlands became and ever since has been the sole trustee. No part of the lands in controversy has been disposed of by the trustees.
All the beneficiaries under the Sharon trust are without the jurisdiction of the court. Defendant Newlands is a nonresident of the state and a citizen of another state, and since the execution and delivery of the Sharon trust deed, upon November 4, 1885, has been absent from the state for four years, and at the time of the commencement of this action was absent'from the state. This action was commenced upon January 29, 1892, more than thirteen years after the date of the Dore deed, nearly seventeen years after Ralston’s death, and seven years after Sharon’s death.
The questions coming here for consideration upon demurrer, and the matters well pleaded in the bill thus being taken as true,
When Dore conveyed to Sharon he committed a clear violation of his trust, which, as pleaded, was to hold the legal title in his own name until a sale of the property, and then to dispose rat-ably of the proceeds of the sale. Sharon, taking the deed from Dore and the earlier deed from Eeis with full knowledge of the trust, became an involuntary trustee of a trust east upon him by operation of law. (Civ. Code, secs. 2223, 2224, 2244; Lathrop v. Bampton, 31 Cal. 17; 89 Am. Dec. 141.) That Nougues recognized that the Dore deed was in violation of the trust is shown by his protest against the making of it. Ealston’s trust deed to Sharon did not create Nougues and Williams beneficiaries thereunder, and Sharon’s acts and declarations concerning that trust deed could not enlarge its scope. (Burling v. Newlands, 112 Cal. 476.) In the case last cited the trust deed from Ealston to Sharon is set out in extenso. To what is there said there need be added for the purposes of this case no more than this, that, considering the relations which are pleaded to have existed between Eals-ton, Nougues, Williams, and Dore, Sharon by that deed occupied Ealston’s place and succeeded to Ealston’s rights in the venture. His right was to a share in the proceeds arising from the sale of the property. Ealston himself would have had no right to demand a conveyance from Dore, and Sharon as trustee acquired no better right.
From every point of view, then, Sharon became an involuntary trustee upon his acceptance of the Dore deed, and the statute of limitations commences to run against one who with knowledge of the facts has thus taken property in violation of an express trust immediately when the wrong complained of is done, and the limitation which bars the right of action is four years from the date of the act. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 343; Piller v. Southern Pac. R. R. Co., 52 Cal. 42.) In Hecht v. Slaney, 72 Cal. 363, it is said: “Whatever may once have been the rule, it is now well settled that the statute of limitations runs in favor of a defendant chargeable as trustee of an implied trust, and it is not necessary in order to set the statute in motion that he should have attacked or repudiated the trust.”
The amendments proposed by plaintiff were not such as would have relieved the complaint from the operation of the statute. It was not error, therefore, for the court to refuse leave to incorporate them in the pleading.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.