Graham v. King

■JUDGE HAZELRIGG

delivered the opinion or the court.

The appellants, Robert A. and M. E. Graham, husband and wife, lived in Mobile, Alabama, until in November, 1890. They had two daughters, Birdie H. and Ella May, the former of whom, in October of that year, married her co-appellee, Edward F. King, whose former home was in Louisville, Kentucky, but who was then living in Mobile. The young people came at once to Louisville and stopped with King’s mother. In some' ten days, in pursuance of an arrangement to that effect, Mrs. Graham followed with her younger daughter, on a visit, and perhaps to board with her son-in-law and daughter. They rented a house, which the mother furnished. The appellees had no means, but Mrs. Graham brought with her -some twenty-two hundred dollars in cash; also some Mobile and Ohio railroad bonds of the value of five thousand dollars, and Alabama State bonds of the value of six thousand dollars.

This was her whole estate, and it had been given her by her father. Her husband was engaged in the -.sewing machine trade in some way, was at home but little, and was left in Alabama. He appears to have *344been substantially without any estate. Yery soon after coming to Louisville, Mrs. G-raham was induced to invest the larger portion of her means in real estate-in that city, where the prospects were good of making a profit by speculation in that market, and of increasing her income by the rents if the property were not sold at an advance. After looking at several pieces of property, King’s judgment being mainly relied on, she selected and bought a vacant lot on the northeast corner of Floyd and Ormsby Avenue, at the price of two thousand five hundred and seventy dollars and fifty cents, and it was decided to build thereon two houses — -a dwelling-house and a storehouse. King transacted all the business connected with the purchase of the lot and the erection of the houses, the total cost being nearly eight thousand dollars.

The title of the property was taken to the appellee,. Birdie H. King, and this was done, as now contended by Mrs. G-raham, without her consent and in fraud of her rights. That not until she began to assert her right to collect the rents from the store-house, when completed, and the refusal of the appellees to concede that right to her, was she apprised of the nature of the transaction by which more than half of her estate had been transferred to her daughter by the fraud of' her son-in-law; that when the lot was bought she was informed by King that, as her husband was away and his whereabouts uncertain, he would so .fix the title to it that she could sell and convey it to any purchaser who might be found, without having to send to Alabama for her husband; that such delay might lose the chance of a desirable sale, &c.

*345Tlie appellees contend that Mrs. Graham made a gift of the property to her daughter, the appellee, and built the improvements thereon as an advancement to her; that she was apprised of how the title was taken,- and there was .no fraud practiced on h'er.

The chancellor dismissed the petition of Mrs. Graham and her husband seeking to have the property adjudged to be the wife’s, and they have appealed. During the course of the litigation, much bitter feeling has been exhibited between those whose relations are ordinarily supposed to be so close as to preclude the possibility of severance by mere greed of money. We do not deem it necessary to review the testimony at length. Upon a careful examination of it, we are led to the irresistible conclusion that Mrs. Graham has been deceived, imposed on, defrauded, and did not voluntarily deprive herself of the substantial portion of her estate. Manifestly she was misled as to the nature of the arrangement by which the title was placed in her daughter--she was assured that it was her own property, and that she could sell it whenever she pleased. She seemed utterly unable to consider it otherwise, even after the astounding news was broken to her that her son-in-law declined to let her have the rents, and when, upon inquiry and consultation with her attorneys, she learned of the true condition of the title. After the suit was brought, and against her lawyer’s advice, she paid the builder, to whom she was not personally bound, the sum of one thousand dollars, as the balance due on the improvements. “He was poor,” she said, and had built her houses. She “ knew they were hers.” She is corroborated *346in the essential elements of her contention by her daughter, Ella May, and by disinterested witnesses.

The trust under which Mrs. King holds the title is not a resulting trust, now inhibited by the statute, as contended by counsel for appellees, but a constructive trust which maybe “invoked,” as Mr. Pomeroy puts it, “for the purpose of circumventing fraud,” &c. He says: “Constructive trusts include all those instances in which a trust is raised by doctrines of equity for the purpose of'working out justice in the most efficient manner, where there is no intention of the parties to create such a relation, and in most cases contrary to the intention of the one holding the legal title. * * They arise when the legal title to property is obtained by a person in violation, express or implied, of some duty owed to the one who is equitably entitled, and when the property thus obtained is held in hostility to his beneficial rights of ownership.” (Yol. 2, sections 1030-1044.)

He further says: “Whenever the legal title to property, real or personal, has been obtained through actual fraud, misrepresentations, concealments, or through undue influence, duress, taking advantage of one’s weakness or necessities, or through any other similar means or under any other similar circumstances, which render it unconscientious for the holder of the legal title to retain and enjoy the beneficial interest, equity impresses a constructive trust on the property thus acquired in favor of the one who is truly and equitably entitled to the same, although he may never, perhaps, have had any legal estate therein.'’ (Section 1053.)

*347These great and fundamental principles are not affected by any statute. They are as eternal as Truth itself, and are worth remembering, not by jurists alone, but by all who deal with their fellowman.

The property described belongs to the appellant, M. E. Graham, and the judgment dismissing her petition is reversed that it may be so adjudged.