Cherpes v. Cherpes

185 So. 2d 137, 279 Ala. 346, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1017
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 31, 1966
Docket6 Div. 154
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 185 So. 2d 137 (Cherpes v. Cherpes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherpes v. Cherpes, 185 So. 2d 137, 279 Ala. 346, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1017 (Ala. 1966).

Opinion

HARWOOD, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree establishing a constructive trust in an undivided one-half interest in an apartment building and decreeing that an undivided one-half interest in said apartment building be vested in the complainant as of the purchase date, 26 August 1948. The court further referred the cause to the Register for an accounting as to rents and profits received from said apartment building by the respondent since date of its purchase to the date of the decree, and that said accounting shall include interest at 6% from 31 May 1962, upon the undivided one-half interest declared to be in the complainant, not to include that portion of the proceeds applied to the payment of the mortgage on the apartment building.

The cause was reserved by the court for further orders upon the report of the accounting from the Register.

The complaint below was filed on 21 June 1962. It averred that from 1940 until 194.8, the complainant and respondent were [348]*348husband and wife; that they both worked and earned and jointly saved sums of money which they treated and recognized as being their j'oint property and that these savings were the product of earnings of each, and that these joint monies and savings were used to purchase the apartment building in question, said apartment building having been purchased on 26 August 1948; that at the time the apartment building was purchased the complainant and respondent agreed that they would take their joint savings and accumulation of money and make a down payment, and from rentals from the apartments they would pay the balance due.

The bill further averred that the complainant and respondent delivered to the sellers of the apartment building $9,000 as down payment which sum was the joint property of the complainant and respondent, earned by them jointly.

The complaint avers that at the time of the execution of the deed to said apartment building, title of said building was taken in the respondent, the complainant at all times during their marriage having trusted and permitted the respondent to manage and in all manner control the joint properties and monies accumulated by them; that the complainant and respondent had an agreement between themselves and at all times treated the purchase of the apartment building as a joint venture, and that said purchase was for the purpose of providing for them a livelihood for their future life and through their old age together.

It is further averred that complainant.and respondent jointly worked around and maintained . said apartment building and eventually paid the mortgage on said building; that at all times until the year 1961, the respondent recognized the rights in and to the said property and never held said property adversely to said complainant but treated said property as the joint property' of the complainant and respondent.

The bill prayed that a resulting trust or a constructive trust be established in favor of the complainant to one-half interest in the apartment building.

The respondent’s answer denied the material allegations of the bill and averred that title was taken in the name of the respondent; that the down payment on the property was paid with money which was the sole and exclusive property of the respondent who executed the notes and mortgage securing said notes for the balance of the purchase price; that the complainant did not contribute any money toward the down payment and was not bound or obligated to pay the balance or any portion of the balance of the purchase price, and that said balance was paid with money in which the complainant had no interest.

The answer further averred that the complainant and respondent had not ever mixed their separate property or money, but each kept his or her own money separate from that of the other; that there was no implied agreement that the parties would be joint owners of the apartment building.

The evidence introduced below tended to show that the complainant and respondent were married on 4 July .1940, and lived in Birmingham. Neither had assets at the time of their marriage though Mr. Cherpes was operating a small grocery store which went into bankruptcy a few months after the marriage. Shortly after this Mr. Cherpes secured a job as a salesman for a meat packing company, and Mrs. Cherpes secured work as a cashier in a restaurant.

During the Second World War, due to the shortage of meat products Mr. Cherpes’ job as salesman for the packing company occupied very little of his time, though he still drew his salary of $25.00 per week. During this period Mrs. Cherpes’ earnings were from $15.00 to $22.00 per week. Mrs. Cherpes testified that each week they brought their money home and put it together on a table, then she “always let him handle it and keep it for us.” Mr/'Cherpes testified that they always kept their money separately.

[349]*349Mrs. Cherpes testified that during 1943, they had accumulated $900.00 and that she suggested that they enter into some sort of business and eventually suggested that they operate a boarding house. They did purchase a boarding house business in 1943. Mr. Cherpes handled the arrangements for the purchase and executed a mortgage to secure the balance, $500.00 being the down payment. A bill of sale to the furnishings in the purchased boarding house was executed to Mr. Cherpes, and he alone signed the lease to the building in which the boarding house was located. Everything in connection with this boarding house business such as to contracts for utilities, the insurance, the returns for withholding taxes, were made in the name of Mr. Cherpes.

Both parties worked in and around the boarding house, and by 1948, some additional boarding houses were acquired and operated by the Cherpes. Again, in each instance, the documentary evidence showed that the businesses were operated in the name of Mr. Cherpes.

By 1948, according to Mrs. Cherpes, they accumulated $10,000, this sum being the result of their joint labors in and around the boarding houses, though it was Mr. Cherpes’ contention that the money was the result of his separate earnings.

There is a contradiction in the testimony as to the acquisition of the apartment house. Essie Mae Ellis, formerly Essie Mae DiGiorgio, one of the grantors, testified that Mr. Cherpes came to see her on several occasions about purchasing the building and stated that he had learned that she was the owner from the courthouse records. She and Mr. Cherpes negotiated over the price of the building and during one conversation Mr. Cherpes stated that the money that would be used to purchase the apartment house was a joint savings of his wife and himself that they had accumulated by their joint labor. On the other hand, the testimony of Mr. Cherpes and H. K. Priest, a real estate agent, was to the effect that Mr. Priest negotiated the sale, and that he dealt with Mr. Cherpes and Mr. DiGiorgio solely.

In this regard it was Mrs. Cherpes’ testimony that the $10,000 which they had accumulated had come from the operation of the boarding houses, that she and Mr. Cherpes discussed investing the money and “I had in mind getting an apartment and we collected the rent so my husband don’t have to work.” Mrs. Cherpes was familiar with the apartment house in question and told her husband to find out the owner, and “he came home and told me, T went to the courthouse and find out the owners of this apartment.’ ” She and Mr. Cherpes and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
185 So. 2d 137, 279 Ala. 346, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1017, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherpes-v-cherpes-ala-1966.