Mills v. Post
Decision Date | 31 October 1882 |
Citation | 76 Mo. 426 |
Parties | MILLS, Plaintiff in Error, v. POST. |
Court | Missouri Supreme Court |
Error to St. Louis Court of Appeals.
AFFIRMED.
John P. Ellis for plaintiff in error.
Truman A. Post for defendant in error.
This suit is before us upon writ of error prosecuted by plaintiff, from the judgment of the St. Louis court of appeals affirming the judgment of the circuit court.
The object of plaintiff's suit is to impress with a trust assets in the hands of defendant as administrator of Joseph Mills, deceased, to the extent of $3,000, and in support of the claim made that said assets are subject to the trust it is alleged in the petition that plaintiff placed in the hands of Joseph Mills, in his lifetime, $3,000 of trust money, which said Mills deposited in a bank to his credit as trustee, and “that said Mills thereafter, and in violation of the trust did take the entire amount of said funds, except the sum of $159, and use and invest the same in his own individual business, and convert the same to his own use, and that amount as taken and used, then was and still is so mingled and confused with the individual estate of Mills, deceased, now in the hands of the administrator of said Mills, as to be incapable of separation from the general mass of assets now held by him; that at the time of the death of said Mills there was in his hands of said trust funds uninvested the said sum of $159, which is now wrongfully held by defendant who claims it as a part of said estate.”
On demurrer the petition was held to be insufficient by the circuit court, and judgment was rendered accordingly, which on appeal to the St. Louis court of appeals, was affirmed on the ground that the averments in the petition forbade a recovery because of the operation of the following principle, viz: “When the subject matter of the trust has been turned into money, or was originally money, and the means of ascertainment fail, owing to its being mixed and confounded with the mass of the estate of the trustee, the right to follow the property ceases, because that right depends on the power of identifying the original property through any change of its original forms.” The principle announced is supported by the authorities cited in the opinion reported in 7 Mo. App. 519.
It is insisted that the averments of the petition as to the sum of $159 are sufficient to take it, so far as that amount is concerned, from under the operation of the above rule. This position is fully and...
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