Republic Supply Co. of California v. Richfield Oil Co. of California

79 F.2d 375, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4118
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 1935
Docket7812
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 79 F.2d 375 (Republic Supply Co. of California v. Richfield Oil Co. of California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Republic Supply Co. of California v. Richfield Oil Co. of California, 79 F.2d 375, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4118 (9th Cir. 1935).

Opinion

ST. SURE, District Judge.

From a decree of the District Court, adopting and confirming findings and conclusions of a special master concerning a claim of Universal Consolidated Oil Company (hereinafter called Universal) against the receiver of the Richfield Oil Company of California (hereinafter called Richfield) and the Security First National Bank of Los Angeles (hereinafter called the bank) appeal and cross-appeal have been prosecuted.

At the time of the commencement of this proceeding Richfield was in equitable receivership. Universal filed a bill in intervention against the receiver and the bank, as trustee under a mortgage and trust indenture of Richfield, whereby it was sought to establish a prior lien upon certain assets of Richfield then in the hands of its receiver. The gist of ■ the bill was that Richfield, with knowledge that Universal had a cash balance in bank amounting to $1,625,000, deliberately purchased sufficient Universal stock to procure control of Universal through the election of Richfield officers and attaches to the board of directors of LTniversal; misappropriated the amount named and commingled same with Richfield’s general checking account in the bank; and thereafter invested the funds in certain assets which had passed into the hands of Richfield’s receiver. The prayer was for a prior and superior lien upon, the properties purchased in favor of Universal and against the bank and the receiver.

The matter was referred to a special master, who sustained the allegations of the bill in intervention, found that Universal had successfully traced part of its funds into specific properties which passed into the hands of the receiver, and that Universal was entitled to prior liens upon those designated parcels in the sum of $403,993.92. A general claim for the balance of $779,154.31, which the master found had not been properly traced, was allowed Universal.

The proceeding was instituted, and the master and District Court rested their conclusion upon the theory that recovery was limited to the lowest balance reached by *377 the commingled account between the dates of misappropriations and the dates of acquisition of the specified pieces of property.

The question on appeal is whether a trust may be declared upon the low balance theory.

Preliminarily, it is admitted by appellants that Universal’s funds were misappropriated, and that the misappropriations constituted Richfield’s receiver the trustee of a constructive trust of which Universal was the beneficiary.

Appellants urge that the evidence is insufficient to show a tracing of trust funds, and argue that in order to recover trust funds the injured cestui que trust must prove that “actual trust funds, as distinguished from a presumptive substitute therefor, were employed in the purchase of specific property;” in fewer words, that unless the trust funds are clearly traced into money, plaintiff must fail.

That strict rule has long since been supplanted by a more liberal one, modern only in the sense of its being a logical extension of an equitable principle underlying the idea of trusts, which has been evolved by courts of equity in order to obviate serious injustice — if not penalties —upon the innocent cestui que trust in his efforts to recover that to which he may be, on the merits, rightfully entitled. It is established beyond debate that no change of form can divest a trust fund of its trust character, and that the cestui may follow and reclaim his funds so long as he is able to trace and identify them, not as his original dollars or necessarily as any dollars, but through and into any form into which his dollars may have been converted. Peters v. Bain, 133 U. S. 670, 10 S. Ct. 354, 33 L. Ed. 696; Board of Commissioners of Crawford County v. Strawn (C. C. A.) 157 F. 49, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1100; In re Acheson Co. (C. C. A.) 170 F. 427; Brennan v. Tillinghast (C. C. A.) 201 F. 609; Equitable Trust Co. v. Connecticut Brass & Mfg. Corp. (C. C. A.) 10 F.(2d) 913; Kemp v. Elmer Co. (D. C.) 56 F. (2d) 657; St. Augustine Paint Co. v. McNair (D. C.) 59 F.(2d) 755. The underlying principle of this rule is that the cestui que trust has been wrongfully deprived of that which belongs to him; that his right to his funds has not been lost or destroyed by the misappropriation; and that if, and to the extent, the cestui is able to follow and identify the amount of the misappropriated funds as having been used in the acquisition of other pi'operty, he may recover.

The presumptive substitute referred to in appellant’s argument apparently originated in Knatchbull v. Hallett (Tn re Hallett’s Estate), 13 Ch. Div. 696, wherein it was held that where one in a fiduciary capacity mingles money belonging to another with his own, the whole will be treated as trust property except so far as the tort-feasor may be able to distinguish his own funds. This rule was enlarged later in Re Oatway (Hertslet v. Oatway), [1903] 2 Ch. Div. 356. In that case Oatway, acting in a fiduciary capacity, deposited funds belonging to his cestui in his personal bank account, and from the blended account purchased shares of stock in the Oceana Company. Subsequently the blended account was dissipated. At page 360 of [1903] 2 Ch. Div., Joyce, J., said: “It is, in my opinion, equally clear that when any of the money drawn out has been invested, and the investment remains in the name or under the control of the trustee, the rest of the balance having been afterwards dissipated by him, he cannot maintain that the investment which remains represents his own money alone, and that what has been spent and can no longer be traced and recovered was the money belonging to the trust. ’ In other words, * * * in order to determine to whom any remaining balance on any investment that may have been paid for out of the account ought to be deemed to belong, the trustee must be debited with all the sums that have been withdrawn and applied to his own use so- as to be no longer recoverable, and the trust money in like manner debited with any sums taken out and duly invested in the names of the proper trustees. The order of priority in which the various withdrawals and investments may have been respectively made is wholly immaterial.”

Upon a showing that at the time of the purchase of the Oceana stock the commingled account had a balance in excess of the amount claimed as a trust fund, it was argued that the trustee should be permitted to retain the stock because the excess could have been used to purchase the stock. The judge emphatically refuted that argument by holding that the tort *378 feasor never was entitled to withdraw the trust funds from the account and hold them with the investment made therewith free of the charge in favor of the trust, unless and until the trust money had been restored, which never was done.

The contention of appellant in the instant case that the rule laid down in the Oatway Case has never been followed in our federal courts is not sustained by the - authorities. Brennan v. Tillinghast, supra; Primeau v. Granfield (C. C.) 184 F. 480; In re Pacat Finance Corporation (C. C. A.) 27 F. (2d) 810, 813; Fiman v. State of South Dakota (C. C. A.) 29 F.(2d) 776, certiorari denied 279 U. S. 841, 49 S. Ct. 254, 73 L. Ed. 987. See, also, 82 A. L. R. 160: Nor is any distinction to be made, as

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Bluebook (online)
79 F.2d 375, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 4118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-supply-co-of-california-v-richfield-oil-co-of-california-ca9-1935.