STURGIS, J.
This case is a consolidation of two cases, former appeals in which are reported in 239 Mo. 417, 144 S. W. 479, under tbe title of Wrightsman v. Rogers, and in 239 Mo. 430, 144 S. W. 483, Hoverstock v. Rogers. Facts not necessary to be repeated will be found in sucb former opinions. Tbe object of these suits originally was to bave tbe court declare a resulting trust in favor of plaintiffs in certain real estate, •a hotel in Ozark, Missouri ,the legal title of which was then in tbe defendant but formerly in plaintiffs’ mother. Tbe Supreme Court held that under tbe evidence, reviewed by it in an equity case, each of tbe two plaintiffs was tbe owner of a two-ninths interest in said hotel propery by reason of having furnished that proportion of tbe purchase price, but that, a certain note for $1350, held by defendant, was a valid first lien on tbe whole of said property; that plaintiffs’’ mother, who signed sucb note and who then equitably only owned three-ninths of said property, was tbe principal debtor for said amount and that plaintiffs and tbeir sister were in equity her sureties. Tbe cases were reversed and remanded with directions to bave tbe property sold, for an accounting of rents and profits •and to pay tbe amount due on said note out of tbe mother’s interest, if sufficient, and, if not sufficient, to pay tbe balance pro, rata out of tbe interests of tbe plaintiffs and tbeir sister.
It is stated by appellants here, and not denied by respondent, that after tbe cases were- so remanded with directions, tbe property sold for $3125, though tbe record shows nothing as to any sale, bow, or by what authority, made or what it sold for. It is further admitted that tbe $1350 note in question, wdtbout any credit being allowed thereon, amounted to more than [449]*449the property sold for. The defendant, therefore, contented himself by making to the court an accounting of the rents received, less the insurance, taxes, repairs, etc., showing a total received of $2050 and a total paid out of $2300, leaving the property indebted to him for $250. The correctness of this accounting is not questioned. On this showing nothing was due plaintiffs. The trial court so found.
The plaintiffs then put in evidence “the files in the suit,” showing that in January, 1907, and while these cases were pending in the Supreme Court, the defendant had reduced his note for $1350 to judgment against plaintiffs’ mother, whom the Supreme Court held to be the principal debtor, together with another note given by the mother to him, the total judgment being for $2530. The petition and judgment in that case shows that the amount due on the note for $1350, here involved, was $2140, and on the other note $390, making the judgment, as stated, $2530, with costs taxed at $12.30. It was also shown that there was realized on executions issued on this judgment, after allowing the mother her exemption of $300, the sum of $331.90, As this is less than the amount due on the other note sued on at the same time and merged in the judgment on the note for $1350, we see no advantage gained by plaintiffs by putting in this evidence, though granting that plaintiffs are entitled to show payments made on this $1350 note adjudged by the Supreme Court to be a valid lien on the hotel property. On this showing plaintiffs were not entitled to anything.
The other evidence for plaintiffs at this trial com sists of short extracts taken from the evidence introduced at the former trials and which was before the Supreme Court on the former appeals. It is claimed that this evidence shows that certain credits should be given on this $1350 note and that thereby the amount due would be so reduced as to leave a balance due these [450]*450plaintiffs. The trial judge found against this contention.
It will he conceded, or ought to be, that any question arising on the former appeals which was fairly presented to the court and which was necessary to a decision of the case and was in fact then decided is res judicata and binding on the trial court and this court. [Gwin v. Waggoner, 116 Mo. 143, 151, 22 S. W. 710; Hinzeman v. Railroad, 199 Mo. 56, 94 S. W. 973; Ables v. Askley, 133 Mo. App. 594, 133 S. W. 698.] And this is especially true and allows no opening up of old issues when a case is reversed and remanded with directions to do certain things. [State ex rel. v. Anthony, 65 Mo. App. 543, 551; Shroyer v. Nickell, 67 Mo. 589; Scullin v. Railroad, 192 Mo. 6, 90 S. W. 1028; State ex rel. v. Edwards, 144 Mo. 467, 46 S. W. 160.]
In the former trial plaintiffs were seeking to impress the land in controversy with a resulting trust in their favor, based on the fact of their having paid, through their guardian, a part of the purchase price of this hotel property. It was the very gist of their action to, determine the amount each party so paid. Plaintiffs claimed they had each paid one-fourth. The Supreme Court found that of the purchase price the two plaintiffs each paid $900, their sister $900 and their mother $1350. On this the court ascertained and adjudged-the interest of the mother to he three-ninths and of each of the three daughters, inclusive of these plaintiffs, to be two-ninths. These findings are certainly res judicata. The court also found on defendant’s contention that the defendant had loaned the mother $1350, represented by the note in issue, and that this money went into the hotel property; otherwise it would not have been an equitable lien on plaintiffs’ interests therein. It was also shown that the mother owed defendant other notes than this one, but the money represented by such notes did not go into or enhance the value of the hotel property; hence these [451]*451were not made a lien thereon. It was expressly directed by the Supreme Court that, on the sale of the property, the proceeds “be applied to the payment of the $1350 deed of trust and interest.” We also find that plaintiff then, as now, contended, and on the same evidence we have here, that there was not $1350 due on that note and deed of trust and specifically set forth in a motion for rehearing and to modify the opinion and judgment the very extracts from the evidence now relied on as showing that a credit of $1000 should be allowed on such note. This contention and motion the Supreme Court overruled. That court had before it all the evidence; this court has before it only a few extracts therefrom. We think the trial court correctly ruled that the amount of defendant’s lien on this property and the proceeds thereof on a sale of the same was adjudged by. the Supreme Court and was not again open to review, at least on the same evidence presented to that court.
We do not rule that plaintiffs could not have shown that this note or some part of it was paid off after the former hearings in the circuit court, because that would be a matter not then presented. The Supreme Court spoke on the evidence and as of the date of the former trials in the circuit court. But plaintiffs are not making any such claim of subsequent payment. The $1000 credit now claimed arises out of the dealings had between the parties before these suits were commenced.
Even if the trial court was wrong in holding that the allowing of such credit was not open to inquiry on the evidence presented to it, we think that such evidence does not show that plaintiffs are entitled to any such credit. Defendant was the guardian of plaintiffs, they being minors, when he invested their money in this hotel. It seems that he did so without an order' of the probate court and took chances on their ratifying his action on their becoming of age. As their' [452]
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STURGIS, J.
This case is a consolidation of two cases, former appeals in which are reported in 239 Mo. 417, 144 S. W. 479, under tbe title of Wrightsman v. Rogers, and in 239 Mo. 430, 144 S. W. 483, Hoverstock v. Rogers. Facts not necessary to be repeated will be found in sucb former opinions. Tbe object of these suits originally was to bave tbe court declare a resulting trust in favor of plaintiffs in certain real estate, •a hotel in Ozark, Missouri ,the legal title of which was then in tbe defendant but formerly in plaintiffs’ mother. Tbe Supreme Court held that under tbe evidence, reviewed by it in an equity case, each of tbe two plaintiffs was tbe owner of a two-ninths interest in said hotel propery by reason of having furnished that proportion of tbe purchase price, but that, a certain note for $1350, held by defendant, was a valid first lien on tbe whole of said property; that plaintiffs’’ mother, who signed sucb note and who then equitably only owned three-ninths of said property, was tbe principal debtor for said amount and that plaintiffs and tbeir sister were in equity her sureties. Tbe cases were reversed and remanded with directions to bave tbe property sold, for an accounting of rents and profits •and to pay tbe amount due on said note out of tbe mother’s interest, if sufficient, and, if not sufficient, to pay tbe balance pro, rata out of tbe interests of tbe plaintiffs and tbeir sister.
It is stated by appellants here, and not denied by respondent, that after tbe cases were- so remanded with directions, tbe property sold for $3125, though tbe record shows nothing as to any sale, bow, or by what authority, made or what it sold for. It is further admitted that tbe $1350 note in question, wdtbout any credit being allowed thereon, amounted to more than [449]*449the property sold for. The defendant, therefore, contented himself by making to the court an accounting of the rents received, less the insurance, taxes, repairs, etc., showing a total received of $2050 and a total paid out of $2300, leaving the property indebted to him for $250. The correctness of this accounting is not questioned. On this showing nothing was due plaintiffs. The trial court so found.
The plaintiffs then put in evidence “the files in the suit,” showing that in January, 1907, and while these cases were pending in the Supreme Court, the defendant had reduced his note for $1350 to judgment against plaintiffs’ mother, whom the Supreme Court held to be the principal debtor, together with another note given by the mother to him, the total judgment being for $2530. The petition and judgment in that case shows that the amount due on the note for $1350, here involved, was $2140, and on the other note $390, making the judgment, as stated, $2530, with costs taxed at $12.30. It was also shown that there was realized on executions issued on this judgment, after allowing the mother her exemption of $300, the sum of $331.90, As this is less than the amount due on the other note sued on at the same time and merged in the judgment on the note for $1350, we see no advantage gained by plaintiffs by putting in this evidence, though granting that plaintiffs are entitled to show payments made on this $1350 note adjudged by the Supreme Court to be a valid lien on the hotel property. On this showing plaintiffs were not entitled to anything.
The other evidence for plaintiffs at this trial com sists of short extracts taken from the evidence introduced at the former trials and which was before the Supreme Court on the former appeals. It is claimed that this evidence shows that certain credits should be given on this $1350 note and that thereby the amount due would be so reduced as to leave a balance due these [450]*450plaintiffs. The trial judge found against this contention.
It will he conceded, or ought to be, that any question arising on the former appeals which was fairly presented to the court and which was necessary to a decision of the case and was in fact then decided is res judicata and binding on the trial court and this court. [Gwin v. Waggoner, 116 Mo. 143, 151, 22 S. W. 710; Hinzeman v. Railroad, 199 Mo. 56, 94 S. W. 973; Ables v. Askley, 133 Mo. App. 594, 133 S. W. 698.] And this is especially true and allows no opening up of old issues when a case is reversed and remanded with directions to do certain things. [State ex rel. v. Anthony, 65 Mo. App. 543, 551; Shroyer v. Nickell, 67 Mo. 589; Scullin v. Railroad, 192 Mo. 6, 90 S. W. 1028; State ex rel. v. Edwards, 144 Mo. 467, 46 S. W. 160.]
In the former trial plaintiffs were seeking to impress the land in controversy with a resulting trust in their favor, based on the fact of their having paid, through their guardian, a part of the purchase price of this hotel property. It was the very gist of their action to, determine the amount each party so paid. Plaintiffs claimed they had each paid one-fourth. The Supreme Court found that of the purchase price the two plaintiffs each paid $900, their sister $900 and their mother $1350. On this the court ascertained and adjudged-the interest of the mother to he three-ninths and of each of the three daughters, inclusive of these plaintiffs, to be two-ninths. These findings are certainly res judicata. The court also found on defendant’s contention that the defendant had loaned the mother $1350, represented by the note in issue, and that this money went into the hotel property; otherwise it would not have been an equitable lien on plaintiffs’ interests therein. It was also shown that the mother owed defendant other notes than this one, but the money represented by such notes did not go into or enhance the value of the hotel property; hence these [451]*451were not made a lien thereon. It was expressly directed by the Supreme Court that, on the sale of the property, the proceeds “be applied to the payment of the $1350 deed of trust and interest.” We also find that plaintiff then, as now, contended, and on the same evidence we have here, that there was not $1350 due on that note and deed of trust and specifically set forth in a motion for rehearing and to modify the opinion and judgment the very extracts from the evidence now relied on as showing that a credit of $1000 should be allowed on such note. This contention and motion the Supreme Court overruled. That court had before it all the evidence; this court has before it only a few extracts therefrom. We think the trial court correctly ruled that the amount of defendant’s lien on this property and the proceeds thereof on a sale of the same was adjudged by. the Supreme Court and was not again open to review, at least on the same evidence presented to that court.
We do not rule that plaintiffs could not have shown that this note or some part of it was paid off after the former hearings in the circuit court, because that would be a matter not then presented. The Supreme Court spoke on the evidence and as of the date of the former trials in the circuit court. But plaintiffs are not making any such claim of subsequent payment. The $1000 credit now claimed arises out of the dealings had between the parties before these suits were commenced.
Even if the trial court was wrong in holding that the allowing of such credit was not open to inquiry on the evidence presented to it, we think that such evidence does not show that plaintiffs are entitled to any such credit. Defendant was the guardian of plaintiffs, they being minors, when he invested their money in this hotel. It seems that he did so without an order' of the probate court and took chances on their ratifying his action on their becoming of age. As their' [452]*452.guardian he had received and held for each substantially the same amount he - put into the hotel, $900. This became the basis of plaintiffs ’ claim to two-ninths interest, each, in the hotel property and by suing therefor, after becoming of age, they ratified defendant’s action in so investing their money. Had they been of age at the time of. the investment the account would have been at once squared. The defendant, however, kept the “Wrightsman fund” account open and on paper carrying the funds invested in the hotel to his debit therein. The funds of the minors had also been loaned out and defendant advanced the cash and was to be reimbursed, if at all, when the money was collected in. Knowing that he could not settle his guardian accounts until the minors became of age, he kept the accounts on paper much as if he had not invested the funds in real estate. When each of these girls became of age he made out his settlement on the basis of the money'still being in his hands. They ratified his action in previously investing the money in the hotel by giving receipts for the amounts apparently due them without any money being then paid to them. Appellants claimed and were accorded the right to contradict and explain the written receipts given by them to their guardian, showing payment in full of the amount due them on final settlement, by showing that such amount was not in fact then paid; but they seek to deny defendant’s right to go back of his settlement and show that the amount, apparently due on the settlement and receipts then given, had been previously invested in this hotel and which became the basis of plaintiffs’ claim to an interest in the same.
In our view of the case it is of no importance whether the learned trial judge regarded the judgment in defendant’s favor on this $1350 note against plaintiffs’ mother as being binding on these plaintiffs as to the amount due thereon or not. It is conceded that the amount due on such note exceeds what the prop[453]*453erty sold for unless the credit for $1000, dne plaintiff on the face of defendant’s settlement as her guardian, is allowed thereon. No basis for such credit was shown. The refusal of certain declarations of law, asked by plaintiffs, is also of no importance as the same result would be reached had they been given. The judgment being for the right party, the same is affirmed.
Robertson, P. J., concurs. Farrington, J., concurs.