Court Opinion

ID: 3492798
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:01:03.036108+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:38:08.626236
License: Public Domain

David E. Stott, herein styled defendant, was, under the will of his father, appointed trustee, along with his sisters Bertha and Julia, for his brother Arthur F. Stott, herein called plaintiff. Arthur, a man of mature years, owned 21 shares of the stock of the Woodward-Jefferson Realty Company of the par value of $2,100, but considered practically worthless until an effort was made by outsiders to obtain control of the company through purchase of stock. Defendant owned 25 shares of the stock and sold his shares, through Augustus Fitzgerald, secretary *Page 496 
of the company, and received $2,500 therefor. Fitzgerald sold the shares for $4,000. Later Arthur's stock was sold to Fitzgerald for $500, as hereinafter explained. The trustees accounted for $500, from the sale of Arthur's stock, and the probate court found that defendant received $1,600, the difference between the par value of the stock and the $500 accounted for. Defendant appealed to the circuit, and, upon trial before the court without a jury, defendant was again found to have received $1,600 more than he accounted for, and judgment passed for that amount with 7 per cent. interest thereon. The case is here by writ of error.
It is claimed the findings of the court are not supported by the evidence. This question comes here by exceptions to the findings. The assignments of error also relate to rulings on the admission and exclusion of evidence. The testimony at the trial, against repeated objections by counsel for defendant, took a wide range. Much of it is of no help and should have been excluded. We recognize the need, where fraud is involved, of permitting a searching out of the facts, but this does not admit of inquiry far removed from the issue. We are removed from the heat of the trial evidenced in this long record, and we have sheared the case of incompetent testimony and confine consideration to the specific charge of active fraud and claimed profit therefrom. This leaves but a narrow issue, with the burden upon plaintiff to establish, by evidence, that his brother employed the office of trustee for the nefarious purpose alleged.
Defendant denies receiving any money on account of the sale of Arthur's stock. Defendant did not dispose of Arthur's stock. Arthur's stock was disposed of by his sisters Julia and Bertha, trustees, along with their stock, and the negotiations were with Mr. Fitzgerald, secretary of the company, and carried *Page 497 
on by Ernest Stott, their brother, who sold his own stock at the same time. David Stott had sold his stock previously to Mr. Fitzgerald, and his only act in the sale of Arthur's was to sign the assignment of the certificate after the sale had been made by the two other trustees through Ernest. Defendant did not receive the $500 agreed to be paid, and paid by Mr. Fitzgerald, and the evidence fails to show he received anything on account of such sale, and reasonable inferences drawn from all the facts fall short of sustaining the judgment.
We have given the fact that a check for $10,500 was made out, payable to David, by the purchaser of the 105 shares sold by Ernest to Fitzgerald the consideration it commands in view of its rejection by defendant and the failure of the amount to square with other facts. Fitzgerald paid $2,500 for the 105 shares and none of this money reached the hands of defendant. The 105 shares were then sold by Fitzgerald to one Jacobs. All the evidence shows that the shares were sold to Fitzgerald, and he paid for them and the check for $10,500 payable to defendant was an error, corrected by return of the check and payment direct to Fitzgerald. The check for $10,500 would have paid defendant the full par value of the stock and take no account of the $2,500 paid by Fitzgerald for the stock, unless we assume that Fitzgerald was but a dummy, and defendants' money paid for the shares. The direct evidence does not warrant any such inference and a suspicion to such effect is too airy to merit judicial acceptance.
The writer of this opinion has read the record twice, because, at first reading, there was an impression favoring affirmance of the judgment, and the second reading was to lay finger upon facts justifying a finding that defendant was guilty of fraud. I cannot support the judgment by pointing to relevant facts, *Page 498 
and when this cannot be done reversal must follow. It is to be remembered that defendant is not charged with mere dereliction of duty in failing to disclose to his co-trustees the amount he received for his stock, and in permitting the sale of Arthur's for a less sum, but he is charged with receiving $1,600 from the sale of Arthur's stock and not accounting for it. Defendant advised his brother Arthur and his sister Bertha to sell their stock some time before their sale to Fitzgerald, and both then refused.
The theory of counsel for plaintiff at the trial was that defendant was guilty of embezzlement. The proofs fail to show the receipt of any money by defendant from the sale of Arthur's stock. In the absence of such proof there could be no embezzlement. To warrant judgment for money received by defendant and not accounted for the evidence would have to establish the fact that defendant did receive the money.
The competent evidence does not justify the judgment rendered. We find no occasion to discuss the errors alleged in the admission and exclusion of evidence. Seven per cent. interest should not be allowed.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to defendant.
BIRD, C.J., and SHARPE, STEERE, FELLOWS, CLARK, and McDONALD, JJ., concurred.
Justice MOORE took no part in this decision. *Page 499