52 Minn. 41 | Minn. | 1892
This was an action to determine an adverse claim of defendants to certain real estate. The defendants set up by way of counterclaim, as well as defense, facts from which they claimed that plaintiff held the title as trustee ex maleficio for defendant Mitchell. Marvin, the intervener, purchased from the plaintiff during the pendency of the action. This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff"and the intervener.
Although we have concluded that the case is controlled by the weight of the evidence upon a single issue of fact, yet, in order to fully understand the testimony, it is necessary to state briefly the history of events leading up to the particular transaction involved in that issue.
In 1872 a Mrs. Gabiou or Wright, then a married woman, and the owner of the land in controversy, sold it to one Bardon, andNexecuted to him her sole deed, and, presumably for the purpose of validating this deed, her husband shortly afterwards executed to Bardon an
After getting Mrs. Gabiou’s address, and assuring himself by wiring to a party in Detroit that she was still there, Nichols, without informing Mitchell or his agent of his intention, immediately started for Detroit, and, on arriving there, in company with a notary named Race, and one Summerville, who had just previously ascertained for him Mrs. Gabiou’s exact whereabouts, drove out to-her residence, with a draft of a deed already prepared, and procured her execution of it for the nominal consideration of $1, and a few days afterwards sold the land to the intervener for $10,000. Nichols took the deed in the name of the plaintiff, Rollins, who resided in Chicago, but it is quite apparent that the latter was a mere-figurehead. At least it was admitted on the trial that Nichols, in all he. did, represented the plaintiff, and that the latter stood in no-
With this preliminary statement explaining the situation of the parties and their relation to the property and to each other, we come to the consideration of the evidence as to what occurred at this interview at which Nichols secured this deed from Mrs. Gabiou; the question which we consider as controlling the case being whether this evidence was such as to require a finding that Nichols secured this deed by giving Mrs. Gabiou to understand that it was in support of her original conveyance to Bardon. If he did, it is clear on well-settled equitable principles that he is chargeable as trustee ex maleficio for those claiming under Bardon. No one else being pres■ent, (Mrs. Gabiou apparently living alone,) the only direct evidence •as to what occurred on the occasion referred to is the testimony of' Mrs. Gabiou, Nichols, and his two companions, Summerville and Bace. Mrs. Gabiou’s testimony is positive to the effect that Nichols told her that he had bought the land of Bardon, and that he wanted ihe deed, because he was about to sell it again. But, as the finding ■of. the court cannot be disturbed if there is a fair conflict of evidence, we must look to the testimony of Nichols, Summerville, and. Bace. . Mrs. Gabiou, who was about 58 years old, was an illiterate-woman, unable even to write her name. Nichols and his two companions were all entire strangers to her, with whom she had had no previous dealings, and who had no claim whatever ¡upon her gener■osity. Nichols denies that he told her that he had bought the land, ■of Bardon, or that he wanted the deed to fix up the Bardon title, but says that he told her that her deed to Bardon was void, and that he (Nichols) wanted to buy her interest in the land, his position being that he bought the land of her as an original purchaser. But both •he and his companions all admit that when they went into the house he opened the conversation on the subject by calling her attention to her having sold the land to Bardon, thus placing that fact, and not her •ownership of the land, in the foreground, as the basis of the inter■view. Again, Nichols admits, that he told her that Bardon had given Mm her address. It is clear that the impression which these, state
It may be said that the fact that Mrs. Gabiou presumably knew that the deed did not run to Bardon tends to show that she did not execute it to validate or support the Bardon title. But in this connection two significant facts should be noticed: First, Nichols told her that Bardon had sold the land; and, second, although he says he did not tell her that he had bought from Bardon, yet he did not tell her that he had not done so. It is also to be noticed that it nowhere appears that even after she was informed of the invalidity of her original deed to Bardon did Mrs. Gabiou assert any claim or right to the land, unless such claim is implied in the mere act of executing this second deed. On the contrary, all her remarks on the subject, so far as they go, are in the direction of a disclaimer of any interest in the land which she had sold and received her pay for, some eighteen years before, thus apparently recognizing a moral, although not legal, obligation not to assert any such claim. There are other features of the case that might be referred to if time permitted, but it is
It is not necessary that Nichols should have expressly told her that he or the party for whom he was acting had purchased of Bar-don, and that the deed was desired for the purpose of fixing up that title. It is enough to hold him chargeable as trustee if he by indirection gave her to understand, or by any means intentionally conveyed to her mind the impression, that such was the fact. A person may make a false representation or fraudulent promise by indirect as well as by direct statements, and even by keeping silence when he ought to speak. Wallgrave v. Tebbs, 2 Kay & J. 321; O’Hara v. Dudley, 95 N. Y. 403. It is urged, however, that, although a fraud may have been committed on Mrs. Gabiou, none was committed on defendant Mitchell; that to charge Nichols, as trustee for Mitchell, either the former must have sustained some fiduciary relation to the latter in respect to the title, or the latter must have had some claim to the land in the hands of Mrs. Gabiou, which he could have enforced against her. We do not so understand the law. The rights of the third person in such eases depend, not upon the fact that he had some legal or equitable claim to the property before the constructive trust was created, but upon the fact that he acquired such right by the trust, as being the party for whose benefit it was intended by the former owner. The proposition is thus tersely put by Lord Eldon in Mestaer v. Gillespie, 11 Ves. 638, where, in referring to an earlier case, in which Lord Thurlow held a trust in favor of a volunteer, he says: “In this ease, as in that, the party comes here saying he has neither a legal nor equitable title, but that he was prevented by the fraud of the defendants from having a legal title, desiring the court, on account of that fraud, to make him a good legal title.”
The most common illustration of the principle is to be found in that familiar class of cases where a party has procured a will or deed
Within this general principle, if Nichols secured this deed by giving Mrs. Gfabióu to understand that it was in support of her original conveyance to Bardon, then he is chargeable as trustee for Mitchell, who holds the Bardon title.
Marvin, the intervener,- according to his own confession, bought with actual knowledge that the title was in litigation in • this suit, and that Mitchell made -some claim to the. land -adverse to the plaintiff. It is not important that he bought before defendants .served .their answer, and consequently may not have known, the particular grounds on which the claim was .founded. He saw fit to.buy with
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered.
(Opinion published 53 N. W. Rep. 1020.)