Topper Bros. v. Bohn

12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 177
CourtMuskingum County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 177 (Topper Bros. v. Bohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Muskingum County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Topper Bros. v. Bohn, 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 177 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Frazier, J.

The questions to be decided in this case arise upon a motion to dissolve a temporary injunction heretofore allowed, which motion is presented by the defendant, Bohn; also upon a demurrer to the petition presented by the county commissioners.

Both the demurrer and the motion to dissolve admit the truth of the allegations of the petition that are well pleaded, i. e., for the purposes of this case, but that the facts stated in the petition do not warrant the relief prayed for, by way of an injunction, nor entitle the plaintiff to the remedy against the county. I need not repeat the allegations of this petition. Counsel are familiar with them.

[178]*178Counsel for Bohn & Kern urge that the remedy at law is adequate and that there is no place here for a temporary injunction. They assert that a recovery by way of damages would be adequate.

The prosecuting attorney, representing the county commissioners, urges that no cause of action is stated in this petition against the commissioners.

Now what is the theory of this action? I think there is some misconception about it. I conceive the theory of this action to be an action to enforce a constructive trust. By the terms and allegations of the petition, an agent was employed to purchase certain property for his principal, and has taken a contract in his own name and acquired property rights thereunder, and the principal is now here seeking to have this contract and the rights thereunder transferred to it.

As I have said, this is an action to establish a constructive trust growing out of a fiduciary relationship (and the relation of principal and agent is always a fiduciary one).

The prayer of this petition may have misled counsel; and I will read the substance of it. First, the prayer is that a restraining order be allowed against the defendants, Bohn & Kern, from transferring any rights under this contract or from selling or transferring the contract itself, and that the plaintiff, on final hearing, may be deemed to be the true owner of the contract for the purchase of the superstructure aforesaid, and that the county commissioners of Muskingum county, Ohio, may be ordered and directed to correct their records so as to show the true facts, and be orderd and directed to enter into a written contract with this plaintiff, etc. There is also a prayer that the plaintiff be awarded damages in the sum of $2,000.

Assuming that the allegations of this petition that are well pleaded are true, Bohn was agent of the plaintiff, authorized by the plaintiff to enter into a contract not to exceed a certain sum, for the purchase of this superstructure, and the allegations of the petition are that Bohn, in violation of his relationship and the duties thereby imposed upon him, took this contract to himself.

[179]*179Upon that state of facts, without anything else being shown,. I think the law, under the' authorities, clearly raises what is termed a constructive trust, independent of any question of fraud.

The first view I had about this case was tha,t the sale of this superstructure, under our statutes, was illegal, for the reason that the county commissioners had not proceeded in a proper way, but it seems, after an examination of the statutes, that the court was wrong as to that theory. ' The prosecuting attorney has said to the court here in his argument, that there is no statute preventing the sale by the county commissioners, at private sale, of property owned by the county. I have no doubt that is true. Counsel for the plaintiff have stated that there seems to be no statute governing the sale of county property, property owned by the county, by the commissioners, at private sale. As I have said, the authorities are clear that, under the circumstances, a constructive trust arises.

In 1 A. & E. Ency., 1st Ed., p. 378:

“An agent with power to buy may not purchase for himself. A purchase by an agent in his own name in matters within the purpose of his agency, creates a constructive trust for his principal.”

As I have said, the. allegations of this petition are that B.ohn was the agent of the plaintiff in this matter, and his compensation had been agreed upon, and the things that he was to do are set out in this petition. Again, in 1 A. & E. Ency., 2d Ed., p. 1082:

“An agent to purchase will not be allowed, without the intelligent assent of the principal, to purchase for himself and hold property in his own name, unless-he has openly and notoriously discharged himself from his agency, and a purchase in his own name will be regarded as made on behalf of his principal, for whom he will be considered a trustee. ’ ’ And a great many other authorities are cited.

In 31 Cyc., cited in the argument this morning, the following is found:

“Likewise an agent must not, without his principal’s full knowledge and consent, purchase for himself property which [180]*180he is employed to purchase for his principal. If he does so, it is a breach of faith, and he will be regarded as holding the property so purchased, or the proceeds thereof, in trust for his principal, although he contributes his own funds to the purchase, and he may be compelled to convey the property to his principal upon being reimbursed and upon his principal’s complying with the contract of purchase.”

I have examined a number of other authorities, in addition to those cited. In 67 Atlantic, 999, Bergner v. Bergner, the second paragraph of the syllabus is as follows:

“Where an agent to purchase purchases for himself, he acquires nothing thereby, though he contributes his own means to effect it, and the product will belong to his principal.”

In this ease, a son was acting as agent for his mother, who had furnished him money with which to buy certain stock. Out of his own funds he bought certain other stock, and the mother instituted the suit against him to have the stock transferred to her, on the ground that he was acting as her agent. The decree of the lower court was that the defendant be ordered and directed to assign all of the stock to the complainant and to account to her for the dividends received; and the court of appeals, in passing upon the matter, say:

“An agent to purchase will not be allowed to purchase for himself and to hold the property in his own name, unless he has openly and notoriously discharged himself from his agency.” Citing the authority that I have already cited in the 1st A. & E. Ency., 2 Ed., p. 1082.

In 52 Atlantic, p. 197, will be found a case in which an agent was instructed to buy certain property at an attachment sale, and he was authorized to bid as high as $900 for the property. He did not attend the sale, but he got somebody else to go and attend the sale and bid $800, and he got the property. Thereupon, he turned around and sold it to the agent, and the principal brought an action against the agent, and it was decreed that the agent, under those circumstances, held this property in trust for the principal. I will not take time to further comment upon the ease, but the principles already announced were applied in the case.

[181]*181Again, in 24 N. E. R., 827, Edwards v. Dooley:

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12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/topper-bros-v-bohn-ohctcomplmuskin-1911.