Austin v. Wilcoxson

84 P. 417, 149 Cal. 24, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 211
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1906
DocketSac. No. 1272.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 84 P. 417 (Austin v. Wilcoxson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Wilcoxson, 84 P. 417, 149 Cal. 24, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 211 (Cal. 1906).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

Plaintiff’s complaint alleged that Jackson Wilcoxson and Jefferson Wilcoxson were her granduncles ; that on or about the tenth day of March, 1885, Jackson Wilcoxson delivered to Jefferson Wilcoxson the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars, to be held in trust for, and to be paid to, plaintiff at the time of the death of Jefferson Wilcoxson; that Jefferson Wilcoxson accepted the trust and took possession of the seventy-five thousand dollars; that Jefferson Wilcoxson died in the city and county of Sacramento on the eighth day of April, 1898; that he did not deliver to plaintiff in his lifetime, nor at his death, the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars; that immediately after his death the defendant George H. Wilcoxson “took possession of said sum of $75,000 held in trust for plaintiff as aforesaid, and ever since has withheld and now withholds the sum from the plaintiff”; that after demand defendant has refused and still refuses to deliver the money to plaintiff. Plaintiff prayed judgment that defendant deliver to her the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars, and that in the mean time he be restrained from disposing of any part of it. Defendant answered first by denial. For a second defense he alleged that Jefferson Wilcoxson died leaving a last will and testament by which he bequeathed all of his estate; that defendant was named executor therein and thereunder, and was appointed, qualified, and acted as executor; that as executor he proceeded to take possession of all the property, real and personal, belonging to the estate, and that he took possession of these properties in no other way than as executor. The moneys which plaintiff seeks to recover defendant personally makes no claim to, and has not converted to his own use, but has taken and held the same only in his capacity as executor as money belonging to the estate of Jefferson Wilcoxson, deceased; that he did not know and had no means of knowing that plaintiff laid claim to the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars, or any other sum, as having been held in trust by his testator for her benefit until the eighteenth day of Janu *26 ary, 1900, when for the first time plaintiff notified defendant of her claim, and demanded of him the payment of the said' sum of seventy-five thousand dollars. Upon this defendant then proceeds to set forth matters from which he contends that plaintiff is estopped by her conduct from asserting a claim to this money, matters which need not here be set forth with any particularity. Upon the issues thus joined trial was had before the court, which found against the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint and affirmatively in favor of defendant’s plea in estoppel, and rendered its judgment accordingly. Plaintiff appeals, and upon her appeal urges that the complaint is “purely a bill in equity to have declared and enforced a trust,” and that it was the duty of the court therefore to have found on all of the issues by special findings, whereas the findings in fact made were that “the allegations of the second, third and sixth subdivisions of the amended complaint are not, nor are any of them, true, and the allegations of the second subdivision of the answer of the defendant are true.” We think, however, that plaintiff misconceives the legal effect of her complaint. It is not an action to declare and enforce a trust. She sues at law to recover moneys which she alleges have come into the hands of the defendant and which upon her demand he has refused to turn over to her. Her action may indifferently be called one in trover, in assumpsit, or for money had and received. It is true that to make out her title to the money she alleges that it was given by one of her granduncles to another granduncle in trust for her, but the allegation as to this defendant’s connection with the fund is simply that he “took possession of it” and refuses after demand to pay it over. The same allegation would be good against a thief who had actually stolen the money, and assuredly it cannot be said that a demand upon one whom it is alleged has wrongfully taken and wrongfully holds money constitutes an equitable action to enforce a trust. The enforcement of a trust in equity has in contemplation the terms, conduct, and management of the trust, the settlement of the trustee’s accounts, compensation to the trustee, the order of payment over and his discharge from his trusteeship. None of these matters is here in contemplation. It is not even charged that the defendant obtained and holds the money as executor of the estate of his *27 deceased uncle. Nor is its recovery in any way to be had out of the funds of the estate. The demand is for a personal judgment against the defendant in his individual capacity. Equity will, of course, enforce a trust against the executor of the deceased trustee. (Walkerly v. Bacon’s Executors, 85 Cal. 137, [24 Pac. 638]; McGrath v. Carroll, 110 Cal. 79, [42 Pac. 466]; Byrne v. Byrne, 113 Cal. 291, [45 Pac. 536]), but such is not the action here brought. The findings which the court made are supported by the decisions of this court from the eases of McEwen v. Johnson, 7 Cal. 258, uniformly down to the case of McLennan v. Wilcox, 126 Cal. 51, [58 Pac. 305].

The principal point presented in argument upon this appeal, however, is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the findings of the court to the effect that Jackson Wilcoxson did not deliver to Jefferson Wilcoxson the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars to be held in trust and to be paid to plaintiff at the time of the death of Jefferson Wilcoxson, and that Jefferson Wilcoxson did not accept in trust, and did not take and hold in possession, the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars, or any other sum in trust for the plaintiff. A consideration of this proposition necessitates the following statement of facts: The deceased Jefferson Wilcoxson was a very wealthy bachelor. Upon his death he left an estate of a value exceeding one million dollars. Over two hundred thousand dollars of this was personal property, the principal part of which was money. In his safe at the time of his death were found moneys to the amount of sixty-odd thousand dollars, partly in paper money, partly in coin, the packages wrapped and labeled with the amount of moneys which they contained and the deceased’s name, all in his own handwriting. In another part of the safe was an envelope on the outside of which in the handwriting of Jefferson Wilcoxson was written “1,000 shares Amanda P. Austin.” Inside of the envelope was found a certificate for a thousand shares of stock in a mining company issued to Jefferson Wilcoxson, and indorsed by him to Amanda P. Austin. There were certificates of deposit also found in the safe. These certificates of deposit bore no indicia of a trust, but were one and all in favor of Jefferson Wilcoxson. The plaintiff, as has been said, was the grandniece of Jefferson Wilcoxson and lived *28 with him much as though she were his own daughter. It is contended that in so living with him and devoting herself to him the plaintiff made large personal sacrifices, forbore entering into the marriage state, and in all ways effaced herself to the comfort and happiness of her uncle.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 P. 417, 149 Cal. 24, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-wilcoxson-cal-1906.