McLaughlin v. Corcoran

69 P.2d 597, 104 Mont. 590, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 98
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1937
DocketNo. 7,634.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 69 P.2d 597 (McLaughlin v. Corcoran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLaughlin v. Corcoran, 69 P.2d 597, 104 Mont. 590, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 98 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought this action to quiet title to two lots in the city of Great Falls. His complaint was in the usual short form in actions of this character. Defendant’s answer was in the form of a creditor’s bill. The reply raised certain issues with the allegations in the answer. Since no question is here raised as to the sufficiency of the pleadings it is unnecessary to note the allegations in detail.

The cause was tried before the court sitting without a jury. Extensive and numerous findings of fact were made. The conclusions of law determine the case in favor of the defendant; judgment was entered in conformity therewith. The appeal is from the judgment.

From September 10, 1930, until June 30, 1931, H. B. Lake & Company was a. copartnership composed of H. B. Lake, Cora L. Lake, his wife, Clarence D. Lake, their son, and Helen Lake Beehtold, their daughter. On September 10, 1930, Bertha Steege and Winnie Steege were the owners of a contract to purchase these lots from the Great Falls Townsite Company and on that day conveyed them to Harold Beehtold, the husband of Helen Lake Beehtold. A cheek of the copartnership for $1,500 was delivered to Winnie Steege, which was subsequently cashed. Beehtold paid no money for the purchase of the lots. The co-partnership expended in payment of the costs of construction of a residence on the lots, in landscaping the ground, in maintenance, repairs and taxes, the sum of $21,622. This property was carried on the books of the partnership as one of its assets. On June 30, 1931, H. B. Lake & Company, a corporation, was organized under the laws of Montana. On February 16, 1932, Harold Beehtold conveyed the property to this corporation without any consideration whatever. This deed was recorded April *593 22,1932, and on that day the corporation conveyed the property to Helen Lake Bechtold without any consideration. She on July 18 thereafter conveyed the property to H. B. Lake, her father, without any consideration.

After the organization of this corporation the sum of $1,500.44 was expended on the property for taxes, maintenance and repairs. The property was carried on the books of the corporation as an asset. The insurance premiums were paid by the copartnership and later by the corporation. On April 17, 1933, an involuntary proceeding in bankruptcy was filed against H. B. Lake & Company, the corporation. It was adjudged a bankrupt on May 3, 1933. Warren Toole was appointed trustee and qualified as such on May 29 of that year. Prior to that time he had been appointed and qualified as receiver in bankruptcy for the corporation. H. B. Lake on April 27, 1933, delivered the deed mentioned supra from his daughter to himself, which had not been recorded, and another by himself and wife conveying the property to the corporation, unto Warren Toole as receiver.

The trustee sold and conveyed these lots to the plaintiff as a part of the assets of the corporate estate. Prior to the confirmation of this sale, the defendant served notice upon the trustee and referee in bankruptcy to the effect that he had theretofore secured a judgment against H. B. Lake individually, and caused execution to be issued on that judgment which had been levied on the property, and that he claimed the property belonged to Lake individually.

The defendant had on February 26, 1933, commenced an action in the district court of Cascade county against H. B. Lake and others. The action was later dismissed as to all of the defendants except H. B. Lake. A judgment was entered against Lake on July 29,1933, in the sum of $11,481.50, which was never appealed from, reversed or set aside. An execution was issued out of that court on the date of the entry of the judgment which was levied on the property in question and also on some additional property, from the sale of which the sum of $934.10 was *594 obtained and credited on the execution. At the time of the execution and delivery of the deed by Lake and wife to the receiver, H. B. Lake was insolvent.

All of the foregoing facts were found by the trial court, and no error is assigned on any of these findings. The court also found that H. B. Lake at the time of the conveyance and commencement of the action by the defendant against him, was the owner of these lots; that by the levy of the execution on the lots they became subject to the lien of this judgment; that the deed from Lake to the corporation was delivered with intent to defraud the defendant and was therefore void; that the trustee knew that Lake was insolvent, and that the interest of the defendant in the lots was superior to the claim of the plaintiff. Plaintiff assigns error upon all these findings and on the failure of the court to adopt certain proposed findings.

Certain other facts appear from the record which are not subject to serious dispute, as follows: All of the stockholders of the H. B. Lake & Company were the Lake family, that is, those whom the court found were members of the copartnership. None of the deeds by which this property was conveyed made any mention of any trust in connection with the property. The deed from the corporation to Helen Lake Bechtold was executed on behalf of the corporation by H. B. Lake, its president. He testified that all of the individual grantees in these various conveyances by oral agreement held the property in trust for the partnership or the corporation, but that no written declarations of trust were ever made; that it was deemed unnecessary, as it was all a family affair.

Plaintiff contends that Bechtold held the property under a resulting trust in favor of the partnership and after its organization, in favor of the corporation. When he conveyed it to the corporation the trust terminated. That the other grantees held the property as trustees of a constructive trust or trusts, since a corporation may not give away its property. And lastly he contends that even though there was no constructive trust or trusts, H. B. Lake conveyed the property in the discharge of a *595 moral obligation arising out of what is sometimes referred to as a “parol express trust,” which is unenforceable by reason of the statute of frauds, but which is a sufficient consideration as against the attack of creditors of a grantor seeking to set aside a conveyance as fraudulent. •

The defendant contends, as to the asserted resulting trust in Bechtold, that since he was a son-in-law of Lake, the transfer was presumed to be a gift, and no resulting trust ensued; that if a trust resulted it is immaterial, since it was fully performed by Bechtold and therefore terminated; or that the conveyance by Bechtold could not operate to satisfy the trust, inasmuch as it was not proved at the trial that the beneficial interest in the property was ever conveyed by the partnership to the corporation. As to the various alleged constructive trusts it is asserted they cannot prevail, since no active or constructive fraud was established on the part of any of the alleged trustees of constructive trusts, and since all that was attempted to be proved was a parol express trust which is unenforceable by reason of the statute of frauds. As to the theory that H. B. Lake conveyed to the corporation in performance of a moral obligation it is contended that no moral obligation was resting on Lake to convey to the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
69 P.2d 597, 104 Mont. 590, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaughlin-v-corcoran-mont-1937.