51 S.W. 844 | Tex. | 1899
The Court of Civil Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial District has certified to this court the following statement and question:
"This is a suit on appeal now pending in the Court of Civil Appeals of the Third Supreme Judicial District of Texas.
"The action is one by the appellees as the heirs at law and as legatees and devisees under the will of S.S. Ward, deceased, against the appellants, for a decree declaring a general warranty deed, absolute in form, executed by S.S. Ward to William Rice, of date March 19, 1868, to be in fact a mortgage; and to recover from the appellants the land described in that instrument. In order to a correct understanding of the question herein certified, the Court of Civil Appeals finds the following facts:
"That on the 19th of March, 1868, S.S. Ward executed and delivered to appellant, William Rice, the deed in question, which, upon its face, conveys the land in controversy — 1280 acres located in Falls County, Texas. At the time of the execution of the deed, S.S. Ward was indebted to William M. Rice Co., and the deed was in fact, as between the parties thereto, intended as a mortgage to secure a debt of $600 due the appellant. There are no words of defeasance upon the face of the deed, nor anything recited therein indicating that it was intended as a mortgage; but there is evidence in the record which warrants the conclusion that it was in reality a mortgage to secure the $600 indebtedness.
"S.S. Ward died on the 5th day of May, 1873, and at the time of his death the debt secured by the instrument in question had not been paid off or discharged, and up to the time of his death there was no conduct of the appellants which amounted to a repudiation of their relationship as mortgagees.
"This suit was instituted on the 19th of June, 1895, and the appellees did not, before January of that year, become aware of the fact that the deed in question was a mortgage. They had no knowledge or information before January of 1895 that the deed in question was other than its terms imported. Ward, before his death, had not informed them that the deed was a mortgage, nor did the appellants furnish them any information upon that subject; but there was conduct of the appellants after the death of Ward of a character which had a tendency to lead the appellees to believe that the instrument was in reality an absolute deed and conveyance of the land, and the facts in the record warrant the conclusion that from the time of the death of S.S. Ward to January, 1895, nothing occurred of a nature calculated to excite any inquiry upon the part of the appellees, in order to ascertain that the deed was a *707 mortgage. The trial court, in effect, submitted to the jury the question of fact, whether the plaintiffs became aware of their rights, or might, by the exercise of diligence, have discovered such rights. And further, in order that the repudiation of the trust on the part of William Rice, if any existed, should affect the plaintiffs, it would be necessary for the plaintiffs to be aware of the trust relation or be chargeable with such notice.
"With this statement and findings, the Court of Civil Appeals of the Third Supreme Judicial District of Texas certifies to the Supreme Court of Texas the following question, which arises from the record in this case:
"Was the knowledge possessed by S.S. Ward that the deed was really intended as a mortgage imputed to the appellees who hold under him as his heirs or as legatees and devisees under his will?
"This question is important, because the appellants have pleaded limitation and stale demand, and assert the proposition that the knowledge possessed by Ward is imputable to the plaintiffs. And, in this connection, it is well to state that there is evidence of conduct upon the part of the appellants shortly after the death of Ward of a nature tending to show a repudiation of their relationship as mortgagees."
We answer the question in the negative.
If, after the death of S.S. Ward, Rice did acts which would have amounted to a repudiation of the trust relation, if the heirs, devisees, or legatees had known of its existence, the fact that Ward, the ancestor, knew that the deed, which was absolute in form, was in fact a mortgage would not put the statute of limitations in operation against the heirs, who were in fact ignorant of the trust which had been reposed in Rice by their father. Chalmer v. Bradley, 1 J. W., 51; Bennett v. Colley, 2 M. K., 225.
In the case of Chalmer v. Bradley, above cited, the testator by his will created in his executors a trust in favor of his heirs. The executors repudiated the trust and applied the property to a different use, by which one of them became the owner of it. Forty-five years after the act of repudiation, some of the heirs of the testator brought suit to enforce the trust and to recover the property, alleging that they were ignorant of its existence. The question was whether the plaintiffs were barred of their action by the lapse of time, and the chancellor caused. inquiry to be made as to whether or not they knew of the provisions of the will which created the trust in their favor. The question certified in this case was involved in the decision of that, although it was not discussed. In that case the trust was created by the ancestor by will, of which the heirs were ignorant; in this case the trust was created by parol agreement, of which the heirs were ignorant. In both cases, the acts of the trustees were consistent with the rights of the heirs as known to them, but in both cases the acts were inconsistent with the rights of the heirs as known to the ancestor in his lifetime. If the *708 knowledge of the ancestor that the trust was created is imputable to heirs, then in the case of Chalmers v. Bradley the court did a useless thing when it ordered inquiry into the fact of actual knowledge on the part of the heirs. Before the court would have made such an order, it must have decided that the knowledge of the testator did affect the heir. That case is directly in point and supports our conclusion.
The reason that the statute of limitations begins to run against a cestui que trust when the trustee repudiates the trust and the act of repudiation is known to the beneficiary, is that the latter is thereby notified that the trustee no longer holds the property for him, and if he claims the existence of the trust relation, it becomes his duty to assert his right with reasonable diligence, — that is, within the time prescribed by law for prosecuting such suits, otherwise his claim will be barred by the statute of limitations. If, however, the act of the trustee is not inconsistent with any right of the beneficiary which is known to the latter, then there is no cause for his bringing a suit, there being no violation of any known right. If the heirs of Ward knew that Rice held the property as mortgagee and Rice so used it as to show to them that he claimed it as his own, then it became their duty to assert their right within the time prescribed by the statute. If, however, the heirs did not know of the existence of trust, how could it be possible that they would sue Rice for using property as his own which appeared to them to belong to him? The knowledge of their father could furnish no reason why they should sue. Acquiescence in the acts of the trustee can not be predicated upon the knowledge of one who is dead at the time the acts are done and which knowledge was not communicated to those who inherited his rights. It is the duty of one who holds property in trust for another to execute the trust and not to conceal either its existence or any material fact connected with it. It comes with bad grace from such a one to say to the heir, "Your father trusted me, which confidence I have concealed from you and violated so long that the trust fund has become mine, the reward of my fraudulent concealment." If the doctrine contended for by the appellant be maintained, then every minor whose parent creates such a trust and dies without communicating the fact to his heir can be defrauded of the right by the trustee using the property as his own and thus setting the statute of limitations in motion against his cestui que trust, who was ignorant of the relation and of his rights.
If Ward, in his lifetime, had created a nuisance upon the land in question for which he was liable to pay damages, and had died, the heirs who inherited the land in ignorance of the existence of the nuisance would not be liable for damages until knowledge of the fact was brought home to them. The knowledge of the ancestor would not be imputed to the heir in such case. Ahern v. Steele,