Carkonen v. Alberts

83 P.2d 899, 196 Wash. 575
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1938
DocketNo. 27115. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 83 P.2d 899 (Carkonen v. Alberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carkonen v. Alberts, 83 P.2d 899, 196 Wash. 575 (Wash. 1938).

Opinions

Millard, J.

— Plaintiff verbally employed J. F. Al-berts, one of the copartners operating as real estate brokers under the firm name Alberts-Gingrich, to negotiate, on behalf of plaintiff, the purchase of certain real property in King county. Alberts purchased that property with his own money and subsequently sold same at a profit. This action was instituted to establish a trust for the plaintiff in the proceeds from the sale of the property. The appeal is from the judgment of dismissal rendered upon plaintiff’s refusal to plead further, after a demurrer had been sustained to the complaint on the ground that the alleged agreement, not being in writing, is not enforcible because of the statute of frauds.

The material allegations of the complaint, admitted by the demurrer to be true, are, briefly, as follows:

Alberts, on behalf of his copartnership, orally agreed with appellant to act as the agent of the latter in negotiating for appellant the purchase of certain real *577 property in King county owned by one Eugina Angel— with whom none of the respondents was acquainted —for a commission to be paid by the appellant to the respondents in such sum as should be reasonable, which commission appellant agreed to pay upon the conclusion of the purchase. The parties orally agreed that Alberts would approach Angel and endeavor to purchase the property from him for appellant at a price of approximately five thousand dollars, or such lesser sum at which the land might be purchased, or at such sum in excess of five thousand dollars as appellant might authorize if that be the best price at which the land could be purchased. Appellant agreed to supply the money with which to pay the purchase price of the land upon the purchase being effected.

Appellant took Alberts to the property, concerning which none of the respondents possessed any knowledge or knew that the same could be purchased, and the two made an investigation of the condition and situation of the land. Alberts entered into negotiations with Angel, to whom he did not disclose his agency for appellant, for the purchase of the property. Pursuant to an oral agreement with Alberts to accept three thousand dollars for the property and pay to Al-berts a commission on such sale when effected, Angel conveyed the land to one Joseph Francis, who was in fact appellant’s agent, J. F. Alberts. Thereafter, “as a part and parcel of the same transaction,” Alberts under the name of “Joseph Francis” conveyed the property to one Koch for a consideration of seven thousand dollars.

If a real estate broker, orally employed as an agent to negotiate for his principal the purchase of land, violates the principal’s confidence and purchases the land with his own money and thereafter sells the land at a profit, may a trust be established for the *578 principal’s benefit in the proceeds received by such agent from his sale of the land? That is the only question presented by this appeal.

In Farrell v. Mentzer, 102 Wash. 629, 174 Pac. 482, we reviewed our cases on the subject of trusts and restated the fundamental characteristics of the several varieties of trusts: Express trusts, which are created by contract of the parties and intentionally; implied or resulting and constructive trusts, which are created by operation of law, where the acts of the parties have no intentional reference to the existence of any trust.

The trust which appellant seeks to establish must be an express trust, a resulting trust, or a constructive trust. An express trust in real estate cannot be established by parol evidence. Zioncheck v. Nadeau, ante p. 33, 81 P. (2d) 811. A resulting trust is a trust raised by implication of law and presumed to exist from the supposed intention of the parties and the nature of the transaction. If appellant had paid the consideration for the purchase and the title had been taken in the name of another, a presumptive or resulting trust would have been raised by implication or construction of law. That situation, however, is not presented by the admitted facts before us. If, pursuant to an oral agreement, respondents purchased the land for appellant with funds supplied by appellant, or if, pursuant to an oral agreement, respondents advanced the purchase price as a loan to appellant to secure the payment of which respondents took legal title to the property in their name, in either case such purchase would give rise to a resulting trust.

The authorities are uniform, however, that it is necessary, in the creation of a resulting trust, that the principal must have paid over his money at or before the execution of the conveyance from the vendor to the agent, or that the principal incur, at that time, an ab *579 solute obligation to pay as part of the original consideration of the purchase. The trust can not be created by an advance of the purchase money after the purchase has been made by the other with his own funds or on his own credit. A resulting trust must grow out of the facts existing at the time of the conveyance and can not arise from a mere parol agreement that the purchase should be for the benefit of another. Hunt v. Friedman, 63 Cal. 510; Milner v. Stanford, 102 Ala. 277, 14 So. 644.

Constructive trusts, which are also known as trusts' ex maleficio or ex delicto, are those which arise purely by construction of equity and are entirely independent of any actual or presumed intention of the parties. Resulting and constructive trusts are clearly distinguishable. In the case of the former, there is always the element, although it is an implied one, of an intention to create a trust, by reason of which, although it is by no means an express trust, it approaches more nearly thereto. In the definition of resulting and constructive trusts in 39 Cyc. 26 et seq., is the following language respecting constructive trusts:

“Constructive trusts on the other hand have none of the elements of an express trust, but arise entirely by operation of law without reference to any actual or supposed intention of creating a trust, and often directly contrary to such intention. They are entirely in invitum, and are forced upon the conscience of the trustee for the purpose of working out right and justice or frustrating fraud.”

Counsel for appellant contend that a trust ex male-ficio arose by reason of the secret purchase and sale of the land by respondents while agents of appellant, as that constituted a violation of the relationship of trust and confidence created by the oral agreement between appellant and respondents. It is argued that respondents were not employed by appellant to pur *580 chase the land and give appellant the benefit of the purchase by conveying the land to appellant at the price at which the property was acquired, but that respondents were employed

“. . . merely to act as agents for the appellant with Angel, the owner, to the end that appellant should become the purchaser direct from the owner, Angel.”

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Bluebook (online)
83 P.2d 899, 196 Wash. 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carkonen-v-alberts-wash-1938.