Stauffacher v. Great Falls Public Service Co.

43 P.2d 647, 99 Mont. 324, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 39
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1935
DocketNo. 7,365.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 43 P.2d 647 (Stauffacher v. Great Falls Public Service Co.) 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
Stauffacher v. Great Falls Public Service Co., 43 P.2d 647, 99 Mont. 324, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 39 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought this action against Great Falls Public Service Company, a corporation, Fred W. McMullen, Jessie H. Stevens and S. M. Stevens, defendants, seeking a decree adjudging that the defendant corporation held certain lands in Great Falls in trust for the benefit of plaintiff, and that the other defendants had no right, title or interest in and to the lands. The intervener, Costello, asserted his claim to the lands which was initiated by an attachment subsequently ripening into a judgment on which execution was issued, the lands sold thereunder, he becoming the purchaser at sheriff’s sale, and that in due course he received a sheriff’s certificate and deed to them. The defendants Stevens released their claim, and the action was dismissed as to them. The other defendants made no appearance in the action. The cause was tried upon plaintiff’s complaint, the complaint in intervention,' and the reply and answer to the complaint in intervention. The trial was before the court sitting without a jury. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made in accordance with the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint, and a judgment was rendered and entered in conformity with the findings and conclusions, awarding the plaintiff the relief demanded by him, and denying the intervener all relief. The appeal is from the judgment.

The intervener asserts in this court for the first time that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Plaintiff alleged the corporate exist *327 ence of the corporation defendant; that on April 1, 1930, he furnished the sum of $6,700 for the purchase price of certain described real estate; that on April 4 thereafter the corporation, to which this sum of money was delivered for the purchase of this real estate, in compliance with his instructions purchased it with these funds and received a conveyance therefor in its own name; that plaintiff paid the entire purchase price for the property, and defendant corporation took the property in fact as trustee for him, and he is now the absolute owner thereof; that the corporation has no right or title, claim or interest, in and to the real estate other than as trustee for plaintiff; and that the deed conveying the property, dated April 4, 1930, was thereafter, on April 6, recorded. The complaint contains other allegations as to the claims asserted by the other parties defendant.

This contention of intervener being raised for the first time on appeal, the objection urged is looked upon with disfavor, and every reasonable inference will be drawn from the facts stated necessary to uphold the complaint. (Blackwelder v. Fergus Motor Co., 80 Mont. 374, 260 Pac. 734, and eases there cited.)

The complaint was drafted apparently upon the theory of seeking to enforce a resulting trust. Section 6785, Revised Codes 1921, provides: “When a transfer of real property is made to one person, and the consideration thereof is paid by or for another, a trust is presumed to result in favor of the person by or for whom such payment is made.” This section was formerly section 1312, Civil Code of 1895, and was considered by this court in Lynch v. Herrig, 32 Mont. 267, 80 Pac. 240, and what was there said with reference to this statute was quoted with approval in Eisenberg v. Goldsmith, 42 Mont. 563, 113 Pac. 1127, 1129, wherein questions pertinent to this inquiry were determined by the following language: “ (1) That the statute above.‘is but declaratory of the common law.’ (2) ‘That, in order to raise a resulting trust, the payment of the money as the consideration for the purchase of the property must be made at the time or before the legal title to the *328 property passes to the party to be charged in the trust capacity, and that any moneys paid or contracts or agreements made thereafter are not sufficient- to raise a resulting trust.’ (3) ‘The statute of frauds has nothing to do with the case.’ (4) ‘This resulting trust does not arise from, or depend on, a contract or agreement between the parties. It is independent-of any contract and arises by operation of law from the fact that the consideration for the purchase of the property was paid by one person, and the title to the property purchased, taken in the name of another.’ (5) ‘While the agreements or contracts between parties do not of themselves form the basis of any relief as to the trust, they may be important for consideration in assisting to establish the fact of the ownership of the money and how it was invested.’ But the one fundamental idea running through the statute is that the money paid was in fact the money of the person who claims the existence and benefit of the trust. It is immaterial whether the payment was made by him personally or for him by another; but in either instance the payment must have been made with his money.”

Testing the allegations of this complaint by these rules, and in the light of the rule of liberal construction to be applied in the circumstances of this case, we think the complaint is sufficient as against the objection here made.

Intervener argues that the court was without jurisdiction to render a judgment against the corporation. It appears from the record that the defendant corporation was not served other than by an unacknowledged admission of service on its behalf, purporting to have been executed by one Carl E. Mohs, “its secretary.” Other documents are found in the record as exhibits, executed by this same person as “acting secretary” of the corporation. The signature was not witnessed or otherwise approved. As already noted, the corporation did not appear, but, based on this admission of service, its default was entered before trial.

*329 This contention would present a serious question were it not for certain other facts which we will presently notice, and which, we think, obviate the necessity of deciding the question. Plaintiff urges that intervener is in no position to urge this defect, in that the court might, in its discretion, render judgment against one or more of the defendants, leaving the action to proceed against others whenever a several judgment is proper. (Sec. 9315, Rev. Codes 1921; State ex rel. Stiefel v. District Court, 37 Mont. 298, 96 Pac. 337.) But plaintiff apparently loses sight of the duty enjoined upon the court, under section 9090, to bring in necessary parties to a complete determination of the controversy. (McKenzie v. Evans, 96 Mont. 1, 29 Pac. (2d) 657.) Ordinarily, in a case of this character, the corporation defendant would be a necessary party defendant here. (Sanborn v. Loud, 150 Mich. 154, 113 N. W. 309, 121 Am. St. Rep. 614.)

It was testified to on the trial that, after this action was commenced, the defendant corporation delivered to plaintiff’s counsel, after demand, a deed conveying the property to plaintiff. The action was begun on November 18, 1931. The deed was offered and received in evidence and bore date October 13, 1931. It was executed on behalf of the corporation by J. W. Murphy, president, and Carl Mohs, acting secretary.

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Bluebook (online)
43 P.2d 647, 99 Mont. 324, 1935 Mont. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stauffacher-v-great-falls-public-service-co-mont-1935.