Bell Holt McCall Co. v. Caplice

175 P.2d 416, 119 Mont. 463, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 79
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1946
Docket8647
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 175 P.2d 416 (Bell Holt McCall Co. v. Caplice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell Holt McCall Co. v. Caplice, 175 P.2d 416, 119 Mont. 463, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 79 (Mo. 1946).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff brought this action to quiet title to thirteen parcels of land in Ravalli county, being parcels designated in the pleadings as parcels 2 to 14 inclusive. By the pleadings H. 0. Bell seeks to have the title to parcel 1 quieted in him and his co-partners.

Plaintiff claimed to have acquired the property embraced in the parcels 2 to 14 and particularly described in the pleadings from the partnership of Bell, Reinbold & Viola M. Holt. In the chain of title there appears a deed made a few hours before his death by Harold L. Holt, one of the original partners, to Reinbold, another partner. It is this deed that furnishes the basis for the defense to the action. All parties to the action agree that the deed by Holt to Reinbold was not intended to be an absolute conveyance to Reinbold for his own benefit but that it was in legal effect a transfer in trust and that this fact was known by plaintiff when it acquired the property.

Plaintiff and appellant Bell contend that the conveyance was one in trust for Viola M. Holt, wife of Harold L. Holt, while defendants contend it was in trust for Viola Holt and her five minor children named as defendants.

If appellants’ contention is sustained then they are entitled to prevail because Reinbold, after securing the deed from Harold L. Holt, conveyed to Viola M. Holt and she joined with the other partners in a deed to plaintiff. On the other hand, if defendants’ contention is upheld, then their position is that the interest of the five minor children has never legally passed to plaintiff.

The court found that the original partnership was formed *466 in about tbe year 1918 and was reduced to writing in 1919, and that tbe ownership was by an agreement made in September, 1931, specified to be as follows: H. 0. Bell, 51 % ; Harold L. Holt, 24% ; Theodore Reinbold, 25%, and that upon a dissolution of the partnership the parties would share in the real estate in that proportion; that when Harold L'. Holt made the deed to Reinbold it was with the understanding that Reinbold should look after the interests of Viola Holt and the children ; that the deed was delivered to Reinbold but that it has since been lost; that a carbon copy was received in evidence except that it did not contain Mr. Holt’s signature nor that of the notary public nor a complete schedule or description of the property intended to be conveyed; after the death of Harold L. Holt a new partnership was formed by and between Bell, Reinbold and Mrs. Viola Holt but the Holt children took no part in this partnership either through a guardian or trustee; on May 3rd, 1937, Reinbold deeded the property covered by the deed from Harold L. Holt to him, to Viola M. Holt; in this deed Reinbold did not purport to act for the children of Mrs. Holt as their trustee or otherwise; the deed was taken and held by Mrs. Holt but a few months later she returned it to Reinbold. The court found it, was never finally delivered to anyone.

The court found as to parcel 1 that it was a part of the property of the original partnership and that it was agreed on October 21, 1940, that the proportion of interest and ownership was, Theodore Reinbold 10%, Viola Holt 17.3% and H. O. Bell 72.7 % ; that there was no conveyance from Mrs. Holt, nor Reinbold to Bell of the greater proportion of ownership and interest than existed at Holt’s death and no attempt to convey the interest of the five minor children to anyone; that as to none of the property were the minor children represented in the transactions affecting the title since it stood in the name of Harold L. Holt.

As conclusions of law the court found that the property described in parcels 2 to 14, inclusive, is owned by and in pro *467 portion following: Plaintiff corporation, 80 % ; Theodore Rein-bold as trustee for the five minor children, 20%. Parcel 1 is owned in the following proportion: H. 0. Bell, 51% ; Theodore Reinbold, 25 % ; Theodore Reinbold as trustee for Viola Holt and the five children, 24%. Judgment followed accordingly.

Plaintiff corporation and defendant H. 0. Bell have appealed from the judgment.

On the issue as to whether the deed from Harold L. Holt to Reinbold was in trust for only the wife, or for her and the children, the court’s finding that it was in trust for Mrs. Holt and the five minor children is sustained by the evidence. There was room for a finding either way and on well settled principles, we will not interfere with the trial court’s finding.

Our only province is to determine whether there is substantial evidence to sustain the trial court’s findings. The trial court’s finding on this issue must be and is sustained. But appellants contend that even if the finding of the court be not overturned, still the test to be applied is what was the intention of Harold L. Holt when he made the transfer.

The evidence supporting the court’s finding comes from two witnesses who were present when Mr. Holt signed the deed. One testified that Mr. Holt immediately before signing the deed said, “It is alright with me — as long as it is understood that Ted takes care of Viola and the children.” The other witness stated in substance that Mr. Holt signed after making the statement, “providing that Ted (Reinbold) looks after the interests of Viola and the children.”

In ascertaining the intention of Mr. Holt plaintiff points out that the record shows without conflict that the object to be attained was to prevent dissolution of the partnership in case of his (Mr. Holt’s) death and to avoid guardianship proceedings.

Mr. Holt was not learned in the law and doubtless supposed that these results were being accomplished by the deed which had been prepared by able counsel and presented to him for his signature. The statement which he made when he signed the deed showed that he was fully as solicitous of the welfare *468 of the children as of his wife. He placed them in exactly the same situation. The deed was not made to the wife, accompanied by a declaration showing the motive for making the gift so as to come within the rule relied upon by plaintiff and stated in Scott on Trusts, sec. 25.3.

It is conceded that Mr. Reinbold took the property in trust for Mrs. Holt, and if that be so there is no escape from the conclusion that he also took it in trust for the children because if we accept the statements which the court found he made immediately prior to signing the deed, then the children were placed in the same situation exactly as was Mrs. Holt. •

Scott on Trusts, sec. 25.3, after stating that “Property may be given to a person for the benefit of himself and his family. Whether a trust is created for the members of his family, or whether on the other hand the property is given to him absolutely, depends upon the manifestation of intention of the person who made the disposition,” continues by saying: “On the other hand, the reference to the family of the donee may be interpreted as showing an intention to create a trust for members of the family and not to make an absolute gift to the donee.” And in sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 P.2d 416, 119 Mont. 463, 1946 Mont. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-holt-mccall-co-v-caplice-mont-1946.