Kennedy v. Baker

59 Tex. 150, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 122
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1883
DocketCase No. 1235
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 59 Tex. 150 (Kennedy v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Baker, 59 Tex. 150, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 122 (Tex. 1883).

Opinion

Walker, P. J. Com. App.—

We are clearly of the opinion that the plaintiff’s cause of action, as shown under the pleading and evidence, was barred by the statute of limitations at the time he instituted his suit. More than two years had elapsed at that time since the date of the note given by the railway company to the defendant for the trust deposit made by White for the benefit of Shirley. The note was executed and delivered, according to the evidence, before its maturity. The note was dated March 20, 1877, payable at six mbnths, and it was by the defendant converted into bonds in-the transaction he had with the railway company in the month of July, 1877, when he acquired from the company certificates for the one hundred bonds of §1,000 each, and which, at a later date, the-company took up, and the contemplated bonds were delivered to-the defendants as provided for by the certificates. The cause of action accrued to Shirley as soon as the defendant Baker obtained possession or control of the money which belonged to Shirley. The-transaction between White and the railway company through the-defendant, at that time its vice-president, and the transaction subsequently between the defendant and the company, made at his request, through which he obtained the company’s promissory note for the principal and interest of Shirley’s money, constituted an effectual conversion of the deposit by the act of the defendant into-assets of Baker, which the railway company held in the capacity of debtor to Baker. This conversion constituted Baker, by operation of law, a trustee. The trust was not an express trust; the trust was not created by a contract whereby he assumed the position and relation of trustee, but the law imposed upon him the obligations-which had attached to the railway company as trustee of the fund., for the benefit of Shirley.

The statute of limitations commenced to run against Shirley as-soon as his right accrued to demand from Baker the money which [154]*154he had received from the railway company. When Baker recognized the money as being within his possession and control (which he did do by taking the note of the company for the same, with interest), he became subject, eo instanti, to Shirley’s right to demand and receive the same from him. Consequently the statute of limitations began then to run, and when suit was brought by Kennedy on the 31st day of October, 1879, the bar of two years had become ■complete.

Against this view of the subject, the plaintiff interposes the objection that if the relation between Shirley and Baker was that of •cestui que trust and trustee, the latter could not invoke such a defense except by his having repudiated such trust relation, and having held the fund, adversely to Shirley, claiming the money absolutely as his own. This proposition has no proper application to this case; ■the nature of the trust with which Baker was affected in this transaction does not pertain to that kind of trust to which the above rule -of law relates. See Wingate v. Wingate, 11 Tex., 433; Tinnen v. Mebane, 10 Tex., 252.

“The doctrines of trusts are equally applicable to real and personal estate, and the same rules will govern trusts in both kinds of property.” Perry on Trusts, sec. 16.

This trust was a resulting trust; the transaction was such that the courts will presume that the defendant, under the facts of the case, intended'to hold the money of Shirley on the same terms as, the railway company engaged to do when it received it from. White. That company received the money on the conditions specified in the receipt of Baker, its vice-president, dated December, 1873, as follows:

“ Ofeioe op the Houston & Texas Central Bailway Company.
“ Henry K. White has deposited with the Houston & Texas Central Bailway Company $1,500 in gold, subject to the order of W. B. Wasson, or whom it may concern, being the amount of money deposited with him by Thomas M. Shirley to pay said Shirley’s draft in favor of W. B. Wasson, which Wasson has not called for.
(Signed) “ W. B. Baker,
“ Vice-President.”

The evidence shows that the money thus deposited was not for the benefit, use or control of White, but for the benefit of Shirley, ■and that the latter adopted and confirmed the action of White in the premises, and that the railway company accepted and recognized the transaction as being of that character.

It was a breach of the trust for the railway company to pay the. [155]*155money to Baker on Ms request. Baker obtained it without consid-” ■eration, and whether he had had notice or not of Shirley’s equities .and rights, he would be constituted a trustee for Shirley. If the trustees convey the estate by a breach of the trust, the cestui que trust may follow the estate into the hands of a volunteer, whether he had notice or not; and into the hands of a purchaser for value, if he had notice of the trust. . . . The purchaser under such .circumstances becomes a trustee, and liable in the same manner as the person from whom he purchased;' for knowing another’s rights to the property, he throws away his money. Even trover may be maintained against a purchaser in breach of the trust with full knowledge of the trust. And this applies not only to direct or express trusts, but also to constructive trusts, equitable incumbrances .and liens for the purchase money.” 2 Perry on Trusts, sec. 828, and authorities there cited.

Baker had full knowledge of all the facts when the railway company received the money, and thenceforth throughout; but that, fact is not, it seems, required to exist in order to affect his liability as a trustee. “ A mere volmiteer, or person who takes the property without paying a valuable consideration, will hold it charged with all the trusts to which it is subject, whether he have notice or not; for in such case no wrong or pecuniary loss can fall upon him in ■compelling him to execute the trust to which the property that ■came to him without consideration was subject.” 1 Perry on Trusts, sec. 217.

It is obvious that Baker is chargeable as a trustee, and that the trust is a constructive trust. The character of the trust is one, however, that is within the operation of the statute of limitations..

In Wingate v. Wingate, 11 Tex., 433, Justice Lipscomb said: But it does not follow that every kind of trust forms an exception to the operation of the statute of limitations; if so, half the business transactions of men would be removed from its influence. And the ■doctrine has been settled by a train of decisions, from the case of Lackey v. Lackey,- Prec. in Ch., 518, decided by Lord Macclesfield, down to the present time, that, to remove a trust from the operation ■of the statute, it must be such a trust, technically, as is created by the mutual confidence of the parties, such as equity alone can take •cognizance of and afford redress. If it is a trust that common law -courts' could give relief, the statute will run, although the party may have sought his relief in chancery. In such cases, the fact of the suit being brought in the court of chancery will not defeat- the -statute; it can be avoided only by a technical trust of which the [156]*156courts of common law could afford no relief. When it is laid down, that, so long as a trust is continuing and subsisting, the statute does-not commence to run between the cestui que trust

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Tex. 150, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-baker-tex-1883.