182 Mo. App. 404 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
The relief prayed for and granted in this case in the trial court is to declare and adjudge a resulting trust in favor of plaintiffs and against the defendant, Edna Harrison, widow of A. H. Harrison, in the excess proceeds of eighty acres of land in Barry county, Missouri, over and above the amount due on a deed of trust thereon, in default of which the land was sold and such excess proceeds paid to defendant Edna Harrison. The salient facts giving rise to this controversy are that, A. H. Harrison, a route agent' of an express company, living at M'onett, originated and promoted a scheme having for' its object the purchase of this land for a fruit farm with money to be paid in monthly installments by him and his associates, the twelve plaintiffs and the other four defendants. These four defendants failed to make the’ payments and have disclaimed any interest in the fund in controversy. The execution of the plan contemplated the forming of a corporation after the land was paid for to own and hold the land, in which said Harrison and his associates, these plaintiffs, would be stockholders in proportion to the amounts paid by each. Each stock
Soon after the first payments were made to him, Harrison purchased said tract of land for $1777.50, paying $200 cash, taking the title in his own name, and executing his notes to the vendor, payable monthly, for $100, each, secured by a deed of trust on said land. Thereafter, he continued to collect the monthly payments from his associates, paid the. purchase money notes with interest as same became due each month, until eight notes with interest, in addition to the initial cash payment of $200', were paid, making $1000 and interest two dollars and eighty-five cents paid and invested in this land. Thereupon Harrison died. No one was left to manage or look after the business, monthly payments were no longer paid or collected, default was made in paying the remaining purchase money notes and in due time the deed of trust was foreclosed, the land sold thereunder for $1665, the unpaid notes and expenses of the sale paid out of such proceeds, leav
At the time of his death, the said A. H. Harrison had collected from each of his associates, the twelve plaintiffs, nine monthly payments of ten dollars each, except that one plaintiff only paid eight of such payments, making a total collected by Harrison of $1070'. He had paid out in addition to the $1002.85, paid on the purchase price of the land, other legitimate items for recording, abstract of title, postage, etc., making the total expenditures $1044.95. All these facts are shown by the books and papers kept by said' Harrison and he seems to have been careful to keep and leave a complete record of the whole transaction: There is no doubt whatever that the part of the purchase price of the land paid at and prior to Harrison’s death was paid with money furnished by these plaintiffs. The defendant; Mrs. Harrison, knew these facts and testified to the same on the witness stand. In fact, after her husband’s death, Mrs. Harrison furnished one of the plaintiffs a written statement showing the names of the parties who had furnished money to buy this land and the amounts contributed by each, making a total of $1140, but in making such statement she had figured her husband as paying to himself, which he did on paper, the same monthly payments as his associates, making ninety dollars contributed by him, and overlooked the fact that one plaintiff had taken over the share of another party after two payments of ten dollars each had been made, and thereby credited him with paying only seventy dollars instead of ninety dollars. She also stated therein that there was a balance due on the land of about $800; and referred to the receipts given to the plaintiffs and the deed to her husband for a description of the land. It is also shown and admitted that Mrs. Harrison had some negotiations after her husband’s death and
Under the facts of this case there can be no doubt but'that these plaintiffs furnished all the money that went into the purchase of this land and that in equity and good, conscience such plaintiffs are entitled to the excess proceeds arising from the sale of the same. Appellant seems to concede this by arguing and presenting nothing but cold points of law, which she asserts prevents plaintiffs’ recovering in this case. It is, therefore, for this court to determine whether there is any rule of law constituting an absolute barrier to plaintiffs’ recovering what is justly theirs.
On the theory that under the pleadings this is an action at law, defendants demanded a jury trial, which was overruled. On the same theory defendants insist here that there is a misjoinder of causes of action and parties plaintiff, in that each party has a separate and distinct interest and entitled to a separate recovery and therefore .that each should bring a separate suit. This would be true in an action at law for conversion or assumpsit, but this suit is a suit in equity to establish á resulting trust in the land and its proceeds purchased by A. H. Harrison with the money of these plaintiffs, the title to which was taken in his name instead of the true owners, these plaintiffs. While the judgment prayed for is a money judgment in favor of plaintiffs severally, the process of reaching that judgment involves the finding that the land in question was held by Harrison in trust for these.plaintiffs and the following of the proceeds of such land as a trust fund into the hands of Mrs. Harrison, with knowledge on her part of its being a trust fund. The money judgment followed as a necessary consequence because of the establishment of the trust relation existing between the plaintiffs and A. H. Harrison as to this land and that the proceeds thereof arising from the
In equity suits .every person having any m'aterial interest, legal or 'beneficial,' in the subject-matter is properly made a party regardless of whether the interests of the parties be joint or.several and it matters little whether they be joined as co-plaintiffs or brought in as defendants, the object being to settle the whole controversy and have the decree binding on all having an interest therein. [Cook v. Basom, 164 Mo. 594, 599, 65 S. W. 227; Phillips v. Hardenburg, 181 Mo. 463, 475, 80 S. W. 891; Bliss on Code Pleading (2 Ed.), Sees. 73, 74.] In Leyden v. Owen, 150 Mo. App. 102, 114, 129 S. W. 984, the court, speaking through Judge Goode, said: “It is the policy of equity to bind everybody by the decree in a suit who has any right or interest in the subject or object of the suit . . . ‘that all persons materially interested, either legally or beneficially, in the subject-matter of a suit, are to be made parties to it, either as plaintiffs or as de-' fendants, however numerous they may be, so that there may be a complete decree, which shall bind them all. ’ ’ ’ In 30 Cyc. 118, it is said: “It is sufficient if all the plaintiffs have some common interest in respect to the subject-matter of the suit and each is interested in the same relief asked by the other or some part of it.” And as to who may be a party to a suit to establish and enforce a trust, the same authority says: “All persons may join in a suit to establish and enforce a trust, who have similar interests, arising out of the same trust, and who are seeking the same relief, although their interests are not joint, and defendant may insist that all of such persons be made parties
Passing over the point that no guardian ad litem answered for certain minor defendants, for the reason that such defendants were of legal age at the time of trial, though not being so when the suit was commenced, we come to the point most earnestly pressed on our attention; that the facts proved show an express trust which is not manifested and proved by a writing signed by the party to be charged, as required by statute, section 2868, Revised Statutes 1909, and that such a trust cannot be proved by parol evidence and hence plaintiffs’ cause of action must fail for want of written evidence providing an express trust. It is conceded by both parties that a resulting trust may be proved by parol evidence but that an express trust can only be proved by a writing. [Heil v. Heil, 184 Mo. 665, 84 S. W. 45.]
A trust in real estate exists whenever the legal title is in one person and the equitable or real title in another, or, in a word, when the title is in one person and the ownership in another. “A trust is the beneficial title or ownership of property of which the legal title is in another.” [Bispham’s Principles of Equity, sec. 20.] “A trust is a relation between two persons, by virtue of which one of them (the trustee) holds property for the benefit of the other (the cestui que trust).” t Corby v. Corby, 85 Mo. 371, 388.] The real ownership of property is always in him who pays the purchase price and so where the legal title is in another, such other holds it in trust for him. [Baumgartner v. Guessfeld et al., 38 Mo. 36, 41; Wrightsman
A reading of our statutes, sections 2868 and 2869, removes much of the confusion as to what is an express trust and an implied trust. These statutes are generally treated as being a part of the statute of frauds. and merely declare what kind of trusts shall be proved by a writing. Reading these two sections together we find that all trust in land must be proved by writing and cannot be established by parol, except that, when a conveyance is made by which a trust results by implication of law, then such rule of evidence does not exist. The conveyance by which a trust results by implication of law is one where the consideration — the purchase price — is paid by a person other than the grantee in the conveyance and in such case the grantee becomes a trustee and the person or persons paying the consideration the cestui que trust. As a resulting trust arises as a matter of law from the fact that the consideration is paid by one person and the title taken in another, (Clowser v. Noland, 133 Mo. 221, 231, 34 S. W. 64) such trust arises whether in accordance with or against the intentions of the parties. [Heil v. Heil, 184 Mo. 665, 675, 84 S. W. 45; In Re Ferguson’s Estate, 124 Mo. 574, 582, 27 S. W. 513; Richardson v. Champion, 143 Mo. 538, 543, 45 S. W. 280.] It follows that a resulting trust never arises in the hands of one who is the real owner of the property but is impressed on the property by the very act and at the time of vesting the legal title to him (Smithsonian Institution v. Meech, 169 U. S. 398, 42 L. Ed. 793), and so can never arise by the act or agreement of one party who both pays the consideration and takes the title in himself, nor by any act or agreement subsequent to the conveyance. [Stevenson v. Haynes, 220 Mo. 199, 119 S. W. 346 ; Richardson v. Champion, 143 Mo. 538, 544, 45 S. W. 280.] That credit is given or the money borrowed and subsequently paid is sufficient
In this case there is no evidence of any express agreement that the title should be taken in the name of A. H. Harrison; and while it cannot be said that such was against their intentions, because the plaintiffs, who furnished the purchase money, had full confidence in said Harrison and left the whole management of the matter to him, yet, there is no such ex-, press agreement shown. Nor was there any duty imposed .on said Harrison as to the management or control of the property. In Wrightsman v. Rogers, 239 Mo. 417, 424, 144 S. W. 479, where the facts are not
In the present case there was nothing sought to be proved and nothing1 was proved except the facts establishing a resulting trust.
The defendant claims that the evidence shows more than a resulting trust in that, by ingrafting on the trust an agreement to have the land vested in a corporation to be formed by plaintiffs as stockholders, it malees the trust an express one. If this feature of the trust rests in parol then it is invalid and does not defeat a resulting trust which is legally established. But whatever evidence there is of such an agreement is in the written receipts for the money paid by plaintiffs to said trustee and is manifested and proved by a writing signed' by him. Besides, we think this relates merely to the method of carrying the trust into execution and we cannot see that it makes it any the less a resulting trust whether the land is to be held for or reconveyed to plaintiffs as individuals, a partnership, or a corporation. [Land & Improvement Co. v. Webster, 75 Mo. App. 457, 463.] When you look to substance and not form there is no difference. Certainly there was nothing to prevent the parties by mutual consent abandoning the corporation form of holding the property either before or after the death of the trustee, and the evidence shows that on Harrison’s death all the parties to the transaction abandoned the corporation project and there was neither desire nor movement by any ohe to carry out this feature of the trust. All the parties interested had before the bringing' of this suit and have by the pleadings and the
There is no serious controversy but that when the land, impressed as it was by the resulting, trust, was sold under the power given by the deed of trust, the excess proceeds were likewise trust funds and as such passed into the hands of Mrs. Harrison with her full knowledge of the trust. The evidence shows that she was executrix of her husband’s will and estate and she undertook to say that she received and expended this money in her official rather than individual capacity. As she had full knowledge of the trust character of the fund, we think this fact would not afford any defense. [Thompson v. Renoe, 12 Mo. 157, 160; Davis v. Hoffman, 167 Mo. 573, 582, 67 S. W. 234; Harrison v. Smith, 83 Mo. 210; 3 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (3 Ed.), Sec. 1080.]
We think defendant is correct in saying that the evidence afforded no basis for the court’s finding that one of the plaintiffs, Barrett, did not pay anything on the purchase price of this land. He, however, is not complaining, and, counting the amount paid by him, Harrison received more than he paid out. The error was therefore in defendant’s favor in not holding her accountable to plaintiffs for the entire surplus sum instead of awarding to her and her children a portion thereof, on the theory that Harrison paid part of the purchase money.
The error, if any, of having charged defendant with interest, in the absence of any proof of a demand on her for paying over the money, is not preserved in the motion for new trial.
It results that the judgment is affirmed.