Gordon v. Griffith

168 A. 57, 113 N.J. Eq. 554, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 24, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 168 A. 57 (Gordon v. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Griffith, 168 A. 57, 113 N.J. Eq. 554, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79 (N.J. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Complainant is the secretary of banking of the State of Pennsylvania and as such has taken over the Northwestern Trust Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, chartered as a title insurance and trust company, by reason of its insolvency.

In 1920-21, the trust company was in good financial standing, employing over fifty clerks, and the officers and directors decided to purchase and did buy two adjoining tracts of land situate in Ocean City, New Jersey, upon which there was erected a dwelling, which building was remodeled, enlarged and improved, also by the trust company, and which was used for the purpose of occupancy by the employes of the trust company for vacation purposes.

The admitted fact is that the trust company paid out of its funds the total purchase price of the property and that title was conveyed by two deeds, in each of which the grantees were named as Frank H. Griffith, Harry A. Rau and Edward N. Williams, trustees for the Northwestern Trust Mutual Benefit Association.

Complainant says that under the theory of a resulting trust, defendants should reconvey the Ocean City property, the purposes of the trust being at an end.

The first question is as to the law applicable to the facts.

Pomeroy, in dealing with resulting trusts, section 1031, page 2336, says:

"In all species of resulting trusts, intention is an essential element, although that intention is never expressed by any words of direct creation. There must be a transfer, and equity infers the intention that the transferee was not to receive and hold the legal title as the beneficial owner, but that a trust was to arise in favor of the party whom equity would regard as the beneficial owner under the circumstances."

He then reduces resulting trusts to two general types, section 1032, page 2337:

"1. Where there is a gift to A, but the intention appears, from the terms of the instrument, that the legal and beneficial estates are to be separated, and that he is either to enjoy no beneficial interest or only a part of it. In order that a case *Page 556 of this kind may arise, there must be a true gift so far as the immediate transferee, A, is concerned; the instrument must not even state any consideration, and no valid complete trust must be declared in favor of A or of any other person. Such trusts, therefore, generally arise from wills, although they may arise from deeds. If the conveyance be by a deed, the trust will result to the grantor; if it be by a will the trust will result to the testator's residuary devisees or legatees, or to his heirs or personal representatives, according to the nature of the property and of the dispositions.

"2. The second type includes the cases where a purchase has been made, and the legal estate is conveyed or transferred to A, but the purchase price is paid by B."

Perry, in his work on Trusts, section 124, page 183, says, referring to resulting trusts:

"They are sometimes called presumptive trusts, because the law presumes them to be intended by the parties from the nature and character of their transactions with each other, although the general foundation of this kind of trusts is the natural equity that arises when parties do certain things."

Further, in section 125, the same author says:

"Although equity will sometimes construct a trust when there is no such intention, and such constructive trust does not differ in substance from a resulting trust, it seems better for the sake of clearness to reserve the term `resulting trusts' for those which arise from presumed, or implied, intention, which in no case canbe contrary to the actual intention as proved by properevidence."

Vice-Chancellor Leaming, in Down v. Down, 80 N.J. Eq. 68, has extensively quoted from the various text book writers, among others being 1 Lew. Trusts 143, as follows:

"Resulting trusts may be subdivided into the following classes: First, where the owner or person legally and equitably entitled makes a conveyance, devise or bequest of the legal estate, and there is no ground for the inference that he meant to dispose of the equitable; and, secondly, where a purchaser of property takes a conveyance of the legal estate *Page 557 in the name of a third person, but there is nothing to indicatean intention of appropriating to himself the beneficialinterest."

In 26 R.C.L. § 57 p. 1214, the definition and nature of resulting trusts is dealt with as follows:

"When a person becomes invested with the title to real property under circumstances which, in equity, obligate him to hold the title and to exercise his ownership for the benefit of another, a trust arises in favor of such other person commensurate with his interest in the subject-matter. A resulting trust may be defined as one which arises where the legal estate in property is disposed of, conveyed, or transferred, but the intent appears, or is inferred from the terms of the disposition or from the accompanying facts and circumstances, that the beneficial interest is not to go or be enjoyed with the legal title. A trust of this sort does not arise from or depend on any agreement between the parties. Its very name implies that it is independent of any contract and is raised by the law itself on a particular state of facts. It results from the fact that one man's money has been invested in land and the conveyance taken in the name of another; a contract, however, may be looked to as affording evidence of the relation between the parties and the character of the transaction. A resulting trust is a mere creature of equity, and does not arise where there is an express declaration of trust by the parties in writing. Intention is an essential element, and though not expressed in words the law presumes the intent from the facts and circumstances accompanying the transaction and the payment of the consideration for the whole or a definite or aliquot part of the property sought to be impressed with the trust."

Notwithstanding the argument on the part of complainant that a constructive trust should be decreed in favor of complainant, such a result cannot obtain because there is no fraud, either actual or constructive, apparent from the evidence, and, as said by Professor Pomeroy in section 1044:

"An exhaustive analysis would show, I think, that all instances of constructive trusts properly so-called may be referred to what equity denominates fraud, either actual or constructive, as an essential element and as their final source."

Now, with the legal situation clearly before us, the question is, do the facts as disclosed by the evidence demonstrate that a resulting trust in favor of the complainant should be decreed?

It will be observed that in the first instance proof that the lands were purchased by moneys furnished entirely by the *Page 558 trust company and title taken in the name of the beneficial association raises a presumption of a resulting trust.

"In the first instance, where no question arising out of the relationship of the parties is involved, and the trust sought to be established is in land paid for by one person with conveyance to another, it is necessary to show only that the cestui quetrust furnished the purchase money for the land in controversy, and that the deed was taken in the name of another, the trustee."26 R.C.L. § 77 p. 1231.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A. 57, 113 N.J. Eq. 554, 1933 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-griffith-njch-1933.