115 Ala. 406 | Ala. | 1896
The case is before us on demurrer to the bill and motion to dismiss for the want of equity, both sustained by the chancellor in vacation, without granting leave to amend.
The case made is substantially, that the county of Fayette, owning a described lot of land with a court-house thereon, the county commissioners sold the same at public auction, and it was bid off by the respondent, Hamner, at the price of $215, and an absolute conveyance of the property was executed to him by the commissioners. Whether the mandatory provisions of section 888 of the Code of 1886, which are essential to a disposition of county xiroperty bj^ the commissioners, were complied with or not, does not appear, either by the recitals of the
The bill alleges that this purchase by respondent was made at the instance' and request, and for the use and benefit, of the municipal corporation of Fayetteville, within whose limits the property was situated, for use as a council chamber ; that he acted as such agent throughout the transaction and used the funds of the corporation, furnished to him for that purpose, in making a cash payment of one-half of the purchase money ; that for the residue of the purchase money (there being some doubt expressed of the power of the municipality to give a binding obligation therefor) ,the complainant, Sanford, the respondent and one J. H. Moore gave their individual notes for for the same, for the accommodation of the town ; that the town went into immediate possession and after using the property for some time as a council chamber, determined to sell the same, and did expose the same to sale at public auction. To this point, the bill avers, the respondent had made no claim whatever to the property, but treated and recognized it, always, since the sale by the county commissioners, as the property of the town. The town, before its sale, was ready and endeavored to pay the county the balance of the purchase money, and did not do so because one of the notes could not be found. The complainant, Sanford, desiring to purchase the property at the sale to be made by the town, procured the respondent to act for him in making the purchase, and he, accordingly, attended the sale and bid off the property for complainant at the price of $1,600, which sum complainant paid to the town, and, for the same, received the deed of the municipal authorities and went into immediate, actual, adverse possession of the properly and has continued therein ever since. To the time of this purchase, payment of the purchase money, and taking possession, which occurred in February, 1895, and up to about the middle of April following, respondent still made no claim to the property, but about the latter date set up a claim that he had a half interest in complainant's purchase, and sought to enforce it in chancery, but was defeated. About the time of making this claim
On August 5, 1895, the respondent instituted, against complainant, an action of trespass quare clausum fregit and trover, joined in separate counts, claiming damages, in the count of trespass for pulling down and destroying the buildings on the lot; and in the count of trover, for the conversion of 75,000 bricks taken therefrom; the alleged wrongs occurring subsequent to complainant’s purchase and entry into possession. This action is still pending. The bill avers that respondent, claiming said property, has moved a large quantity of said property from the premises, against the protest of complainant; and that complainant is informed and verily believes that he is likely to remove and convert to his own use, more of said property, if not restrained, &c. The insolvency of respondent and his inability to respond in damages are averred. The bill insists that respondent is estopped in equity to assert his legal title against complainant, and prays that he be divested of, and complainant invested with, that title; and that the deed from the county commissioners to respondent be can-celled. The bill also prays prevention of further trespasses, by injunction; for account of damages already committed, injunction of the action at law, and for general relief.
The demurrers and motion to dismiss appear to proceed upon the theory that the scope and purpose of the bill are only to establish and enforce, in behalf of complainant, as the purchaser from the town, an express parol trust in the land; or a resulting trust therein, arising from the payment of the purchase-money -by the town ; and respondent insists upon the inhibition of the statute upon the creation of such an express trust in lands, and. contends that the averments do not make a case of resulting trust, enforceable by complainant.
We find, however, that the bill takes a step beyond this, and, in addition, stands for relief upon the equity of estoppel by conduct, or equitable estoppel, as it is called. We will proceed to notice, first, this feature of
. We are of opinion that, upon the facts averred in the' bill, the respondent is estopped, in a court of equity, to set up against the complainant his legal title to the property, upon the complainant paying, or offering in his bill to pay, to him the amount of the purchase-money, with interest, which he, respondent, paid to the county with his own funds. The estoppel rests upon a course of conduct, on his part, averred in the bill, which renders it inequitable for him now to say that the. town was not the real owner of the property, and that its sale to complainant did not pass that ownership to him. Treating the deed of the county commissioners as we have said we would, it passed the legal title to respondent, and no express trust can be engrafted upon it; but it is nevertheless true, that, known to the town authorities, including the complainant, who was then mayor of the town, and who joined in the notes for the deferred payments of the purchase-money, he accepted an agency to purchase for the town; accepted from the town the money to make the cash payment; permitted the town to take possession and use the property, as its council chamber, for more than two years, under claim of absolute ownership; made no claim whatever to the property, but, at all times recognized and treated it as the property of the town ; and, most material of all, and upon which the estoppel mainly depends, when the town determined to sell, he not only stood by and made no claim whatever, but, knowing that the town was claiming and selling as absolute owner in its own right, he consented with the complainant that he would attend the sale and act as the complainant’s agent, as an intending purchaser; and did actually attend, as such agent, and, for the complainant, became the highest bidder at $1,600, and suffered the complainant to pay the purchase-money, receive the deed of the town authorities and go into actual possession, as absolute owner, without asserting any claim in his own behalf; and, thereafter, set up the claim that the purchase made at the sale by the town was for the use of both himself and complainant, filed his bill in chancery to
Under the circumstances disclosed by the bill, equity requires that the complainant offer to refund, as a condition of relief, that portion of the purchase money which respondent paid the county, with his own funds! The bill attempts to relieve itself of this requirement by taking the position that the payment was voluntary and against the protest of the town ; but the position is untenable. ' Respondent had, with others, legally bound himself to pay the amounts, by the promissory notes he executed, and it was his legal right and duty to pay the same. Complainant, being also bound, was at liberty to relieve this situation by anticipating the respondent, in making the payment. When the complainant purchased,
Again, the facts averred establish, in complainant’s favor, a trust arising by operation of law, giving the bill an equity as broad as the estoppel above discussed. It is not a resulting trust, though resembling it in some respects. It is a trust by construction of law, so long known and recognized in the books as a “constructive trust,” and arising from a breach by the respondent of a duty imposed by a fiduciary relation subsisting between him and the town of Fayetteville. The bill shows, as we have seen, that the respondent accepted an agency to purchase the property for the town, and was furnished by the town with the necessary funds to pay, in cash, one-half of the purchase money; that in the execution of such agency, he concluded the purchase and paid, with the funds so furnished him, the required cash payment. Instead of taking the title in the name of the town, or his own name as express trustee of the town, he took it in his own name as absolute purchaser and owner, in his own right. The case is thus brought squarely within a well defined, well understood class of constructive trusts, which does not, like a resulting trust proper
Again, in section 1049, he says: “Another important form of the trust arises from the acts of persons already possessing some fiduciary character or standing in some fiduciary relation. Whenever a trustee or other person in fiduciary capacity, acting apparently within the scope of his powers — that is, having authority to do what he does — purchases property with trust funds and takes the title thereto in his own name without any declaration of trust, a trust arises with respect to such property in favor of the cestui que trust or other beneficiary. Equity regards such a purchase as made in trust for the person beneficially interested, independently of any imputation of fraud, and without requiring any proof of an intention to violate the existing fiduciary obligation, because that it assumes that the purchaser intended to act in pursuance of his fiduciary duty, and not in violation of it. This doctrine is of wide application ; it extends to trustees, executors and administrators, directors of corporations, guardians, committees of lunatics, agents using money of their principals, partners using partnership funds, husbands purchasing property with money belonging to the separate estate of
It is the settled doctrine of this court, (as it is well nigh of all the rest) that the general statute of frauds, in reference to the requirement of writings, has no application to trusts of this character, and that they may be established by parol evidence, showing the existence, nature and incidents of the fiduciary relation, and its violation, and the nature and effect thereof. Indeed, section 1845 of the Code, which forbids the creation of express trusts, except by writing, expressly excepts such trusts as “result by implication or construction of law, or which may be transferred or extinguished by operation of law.”
There can be no doubt, therefore, that the town of Fayetteville was invested with an equity of the constructive character of which we have been speaking, by which it could have acquired, in a court of equity, the legal title.
This equity is not merely a right or cause of action, personal to the beneficiary, authorizing him to sue for, and thereby acquire an estate in the land, but, like a resulting trust proper, or the equity of redemption of a mortgagor, after forfeiture, it is, in and of itself, an equitable estate; vendible and descendible as any other interest in lands, and capable of being executed into a legal estate by the decree . of a court of equity, at the .suit of the beneficiary, or any one in privity with him, in blood or estate. — 1 Pom. Eq. Juris., § 375; 2 lb., § 1043. This, equity, arising from the wrongful purchase in his own name using the town’s funds, was the only estate the town held in the premises, and that passed by its deed to the complainant, -by virtue of which he is entitled to maintain this bill.
The respondent was special agent to purchase this particular property for the town, at the commissioners’ sale. He could not in equity, therefore, buy for himself and hold absolutely against the town, even though he had paid the entire purchase, money with his own funds. Any purchase he could have made of this property, so long as occupying the relation of agent, afore
Injunction of threatened trespasses, by the respondent, upon the possession of the complainant, and an account of the damage committed, as well as injunction of pending suits for torts against complainant in respect of the property, though they may not be of such character as, of themselves alone, would give equity to the bill, are yet proper incidents to enforcement of the equity which the bill otherwise contains.
These considerations, we think, dispose of the material questions presented by the record. The chancellor erred in sustaining the motion to dismiss for want of equity. The demurrer was properly sustained, on the ground, and for the reason herein pointed out, but there was error in failing to grant leave to amend, the decretal order having been made in vacation. The decree will be reversed and a decree here rendered overruling the motion to dismiss for want of equity, and directing that the chancellor sustain the demurrers to the bill, unless it shall be amended in conformity to this ■ opinion, within such time as the chancellor may prescribe.
Reversed, rendered and remanded.