135 Mo. App. 50 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
This is an action on a covenant in an assignment of a lease. Tbe judgment in the trial court was for the plaintiff.
Edward Coultier was the owner of a tract of land thought to have gas and oil beneath the surface. He and his wife executed under seal a paper which is called a “permit” to the Belton Oil and Mining Company, permitting that company to drill for gas or oil or numeral, for one dollar and certain royalties. Afterwards the defendants Mastin, Goodbar and Jerard were appointed trustees of the Oil Company by the circuit court in a proceeding for that purpose instituted to dissolve the corporation. [R. S. 1899, secs. 976-980.] This permit was found by the trustees among the company’s assets. Thereafter they executed an assignment of it to this plaintiff.
Afterwards Coultier, considering that he had grounds to forfeit the lease or permit, brought an action for its forfeiture against these defendants and this' plaintiff. All of them were served with process but this plaintiff did not appear. The defendants appeared and filed an answer setting up that they had assigned the lease to this plaintiff (their codefendant in that case) and that they had no further interest in it. They were discharged with their costs. Judgment was rendered forfeiting the lease.
After the beginning of that action by Coultier, but before judgment, the plaintiff began this action for breach of the covenant, alleging the price he paid as his damages. The original petition was against these defendants as trustees only; the amended petition made them also defendants in their individual capacity. At the trial the record and judgment in the case annulling
In construing the contract it is proper to consider the capacity in which it was made as well as for whom it was made. These defendants are not private trustees. They are mere instruments of the court in which the affairs of the corporation were being administered and if we call them either ministerial or fiduciary trustees, they are not owners of the property and they made no pretense of conveying or assigning anything of their own. It is quite true that, generally, an ordinary trustee, although describing himself as such and who signs as trustee, will - nevertheless be bound personally unless he limit the contract so as to exclude himself personally, the official designation being held to be mere words of description. [Koken Iron Works v. Kinealy, supra; Taylor v. Davis, supra.] But this is not so with that large class of trustees who are but the arm of a court in the exercise of a power in which
It is not meant to say that such character of trustee cannot enter into a personal covenant in dealing with the trust property, for that he may do (Barnard v. Duncan, 38 Mo. 170, 183), but the contract must show an intention to do so and dependence should not be placed on implications.
By keeping in view the foregoing considerations we are better prepared to ascertain the true intent and meaning of the covenant upon which plaintiff bases his claim against defendants. First, we will assume, for the moment, that the words of the covenant are the same as if the technical words “good right to convey” had been used. The latter expression in covenants in a deed is generally the same as a covenant of seizin, though sometimes of even wider significance. Yet, considering the official character of these defendants, and for whom they were acting, it is clear, in the light of the foregoing authorities, that a personal covenant cannot be made out.
There Avas, therefore, no covenant made by these defendants as trastees. And having already shown that there was no covenants made by them as individuals, it follows that plaintiff is without a right to maintain this action against defendants as trustees or as individuals, and the judgment must be reversed.