Collins v. Link

562 S.W.2d 131, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2462
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 3, 1978
DocketNo. 38310
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 562 S.W.2d 131 (Collins v. Link) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Link, 562 S.W.2d 131, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2462 (Mo. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

ALDEN A. STOCKARD, Special Judge.

By his petition plaintiff sought to impose a resulting trust on certain real estate which was titled in the name of defendant alone, and on certain personal property, both of which were acquired by the use of jointly owned funds. Plaintiff prayed that the court decree that the personal and real property be held by plaintiff and defendant as “joint tenants,” subject to the interest of Clayton Federal Savings and Loan Association in the real estate, that the plaintiff’s interest be declared to be 64% of the total, and that the property be sold, after the interest of the Savings and Loan Association be paid, and the proceeds be divided between plaintiff and defendant according [133]*133to their respective interests. The trial court held that plaintiff is entitled to a resulting trust in the real estate to the extent of one-half interest, that plaintiff is entitled to one-half interest in the described personal property which has a value of $22,-325, and that plaintiff have judgment against defendant in the amount of $11,-162.50, which may be satisfied by payment in cash or by the delivery to plaintiff of items of the described personal property of that value. Defendant has appealed. We affirm.

Plaintiff, John M. Collins, and defendant, Marvin Donald Link, both unmarried, lived together from September 1,1963 until September 13, 1974. At first they shared an apartment, each paying one-half of the rent and other expenses. About the first of 1965 they established a joint checking account from which all household expenses were paid. Plaintiff contributed his entire paycheck to that account, while defendant gave cash to plaintiff to be deposited in the joint account. He at first gave $100 a week, later $110 and finally $120, but defendant occasionally, but not regularly, contributed the entire amount of his check. Plaintiff usually would deposit all the money he received from defendant in the joint account, but at times he would use some of the money to pay the expenses of the household with cash and then deposit the remainder. All of plaintiff’s personal expenses, and some of defendant’s, were paid from the cash so received or from the joint account, but the evidence does not show the precise amount of personal expenses of either party.

In February, 1965 plaintiff and defendant moved to a single-family residence at 7342 Drexel Drive which was purchased in defendant’s name alone. The purchase price was paid by defendant, in part with money he received from his parents, and he executed a promissory note, secured by a deed of trust, for the balance. Plaintiff made no contribution to the down payment, and he did not sign the note representing the balance due. All installment payments on the note and the cost of at least some of the furnishings were paid from the joint account. Plaintiff testified that he considered himself “bound” to defendant to pay part of the installment payments on the note. The reason, according, to plaintiff, that the title was taken in defendant’s name alone was that plaintiff had recently been divorced and they “weren’t quite sure as to the legal involvements in the event that [his] former wife decided to take additional legal action against [him], and it seemed at the time advisable to put the property in [defendant’s] name to avoid problems of any kind.”

In the spring of 1971, plaintiff and defendant enlisted the services of a real estate agent to find another residence. At least eight offers to buy residences were made, and in each case the earnest money check was drawn on the joint account. In their conversation with the agent, plaintiff and defendant repeatedly referred to the fact that “we are buying a house.” Their efforts resulted in the purchase of a residence at 6 Hortense Place in the City of St. Louis for $35,250. As the result of a discussion between plaintiff, defendant and the real estate agent, it was decided that the sales contract should be submitted in the name of defendant alone. This decision was reached because (a) it was believed, perhaps mistakenly, that the subdivision restrictions which limited the use of the property to a single-family residence would preclude ownership in the names of two unmarried men, (b) the owner had expressed the desire that the house be purchased by people with a large family and the owner might not be receptive to selling the property to two unmarried men, and (c) since the Drexel Street property was in defendant’s name alone, it was believed, again perhaps mistakenly, that it would be easier to obtain financing for the Hortense Place property. As a part of this discussion, mention was made that an attorney could later be consulted to change the record ownership to plaintiff and defendant.

An earnest money deposit for the Hor-tense Place property in the amount of $1,000 was paid by cashier’s check purchased by a cheek drawn on the joint account.

[134]*134The Drexel property was sold, and $6,100.66, the amount received after the payment of the balance due on a secured note and the payment of expenses, was deposited in the joint account, which prior to this deposit had a balance of $7,756.53. A check in the amount of $12,377.99 was then drawn against the joint account for the purchase of a cashier’s check to pay the balance of the down payment on the Hor-tense Place property. Defendant alone executed documents assuming the obligations of the seller under an existing note and deed of trust. Subsequent installment payments of principal and interest on the note were paid from the joint account. Defendant claimed the interest and tax payments as deductions on his income tax returns, but he deposited the total of his tax refunds in the joint account. Some of the furnishings of the Hortense Place residence were purchased with money from the joint account, and all money paid for the Hortense Place property, including the earnest money deposit, the down payment, and the monthly installments, came from the joint account.

In its findings of fact the trial court found that plaintiff’s evidence established an “intention shared by the parties” that “the title to the Hortense [Place] property be taken in the name of defendant alone for the benefit of both.” It also found that “plaintiff’s theory under which he claimfed] a 57.18% interest” was not established by the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
562 S.W.2d 131, 1978 Mo. App. LEXIS 2462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-link-moctapp-1978.