The Carpenters and the Kayes (the plaintiffs) are mortgagors of real property in Boston to the defendant Suffolk Franklin Savings Bank (Suffolk Franklin) . They made payments to Suffolk Franklin, as mortgagee, on account of municipal real estate taxes, and seek an accounting of investment profits realized by Suffolk Franklin on the tax payments. In
Carpenter
v.
Suffolk Franklin Sav. Bank,
On September 17,1970, the plaintiffs filed a bill in equity and petition for declaratory judgment against Suffolk Franklin. A Superior Court judge sustained the defendant’s demurrer and dismissed the bill, and in
Carpenter I
we reversed. Thereafter the plaintiffs amended the bill to allege that they represented all Massachusetts real estate owners who as mortgagors had made monthly tax escrow payments during the six preceding years to any of the 325 other savings banks and cooperative banks in the Commonwealth, and to add each such bank as a defendant. On March 21, 1974, the judge denied the plaintiffs’ motion to certify such a multibank action as a class action, but gave them leave to present a motion to certify a more limited action on behalf of mortgagors to Suffolk Franklin. Such a motion was denied on August 14, 1974. A trial on the merits of the plaintiffs’ claims against Suffolk Franklin was held, restricted to the issue of liability, and the judge made findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 52 (a),
1. The multibank class action. The judge has reported to us the question whether his interlocutory orders denying *317 the motions to certify the action as a class action were correct or incorrect and, if incorrect, whether they constitute reversible error. We consider the two orders separately. We did not address any class action issues in Carpenter I.
In their motion to certify the multibank class action, the plaintiffs sought to represent mortgagors of both residential and nonresidential real estate in Massachusetts, excluding any mortgagor whose estimated tax payments were certified by the mortgagee bank to be pursuant to a written agreement explicitly authorizing the bank to invest the payments, to retain the proceeds, and to be free of any duty to account for them. Although the motion was denied in March, 1974, the judge took into account Mass. R. Civ. P. 23,
We agree, for the most part on the grounds given by the judge. Although our rule 23, unlike the corresponding Federal rule, does not provide for a motion to certify that an action may proceed as a class action, such motions are often necessary and desirable for the efficient handling of class actions, and it was properly within the judge’s discretion to make preliminary rulings on the class action issues.
Baldassari
v.
Public Fin. Trust,
A number of Federal cases have denied certification where the plaintiff has a claim against one defendant only and seeks to represent those having similar claims against other unrelated defendants.
La Mar
v.
H & B Novelty & Loan Co.,
Under our rule 23 the class must be “numerous,” there must be common questions of law or fact, the claims of the representative parties must be “typical,” and those parties must “fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class.” In addition, the common questions must “predominate” over individual questions, and the class action must be “superior” to other available methods for fair and efficient adjudication. Apart from any technical requirement of “standing,” the proposed multibank class action raised
*319
questions of typicality, of fair and adequate protection, and of predominance and superiority. The predominance and superiority requirements introduce a highly discretionary element. See
Baldassari
v.
Public Fin. Trust,
The judge thought it probable that, if the multibank class were certified, he would nevertheless have to try many mortgagors’ cases separately in order to determine whether their individual agreements had established a trust relationship with the mortgagee bank. The effect of each agreement, he said, depended on the language of the loan documents — mortgage deed, note, often a mortgage application, a commitment letter, and related papers. Such documents might vary widely in their effect. Not all of the writings contained identical or even similar language. In addition to varying written formulations, the conduct of the parties might furnish evidence of intention. The judge also took account of alternative procedural devices and methods, “ranging from use of a model [or test] action to consolidation or coordination of the numerous individual actions for all or selected purposes,” quoting Kaplan, Continuing Work of the Civil Committee: 1966 Amendments of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (I), 81 Harv. L. Rev. 356, 391 (1967).
In these circumstances there was no abuse of discretion in the refusal to certify the multibank class action. In
Buchanan
v.
Brentwood Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
We are not insensitive to countervailing considerations. The judge found the plaintiffs’ claims fairly typical of the claims of other mortgagors of residential property to Suf *320 folk Franklin, and estimated the probable gross yield on investment of the tax payments on each mortgage at $10 to $15 a year; “by allowing aggregation of numerous small claims in one action, class actions provide a judicial vehicle for redress which, were separate actions required, would not be financially feasible.” J.W. Smith & H.B. Zobel, Rules Practice § 23.1 (1975). But a class judgment against Suffolk Franklin alone might put it at a serious competitive disadvantage as compared with other savings banks, cooperative banks, and other lenders, and thus might unfairly discriminate against its depositors. The multibank class action would avoid these disadvantages and would facilitate evenhanded application of the statute of limitations.
These considerations have lost much of their force, however, in the present posture of the case. We are upholding the judge’s conclusions that there was no trust relationship between the plaintiffs and Suffolk Franklin and that no resulting or constructive trust should be imposed. This might not prevent the plaintiffs from continuing to represent the class. Cf.
Wolf
v.
Commissioner of Pub. Welfare,
2. The one-bank class action. Although the plaintiffs’ motion to certify as a class action an action on behalf of Suffolk Franklin mortgagors was heard before July 1,1974, the judge denied it after that date and applied our rule 23. He found that the proposed class was sufficiently “numerous,” that there were common questions of law or fact, that the plaintiffs’ claims were fairly “typical” of the claims of mortgagors of residential property but not of the claims of mortgagors of commercial property, and that the plaintiffs would fairly and adequately protect the interests of a class *321 of residential mortgagors. He concluded, however, that the requirements of “predominance” and “superiority” were not met.
The judge read our Carpenter I opinion as requiring consideration, not merely of standardized writings, but also of the individual conduct of the parties to each mortgage and of any further individual circumstances bearing on their intent. Such evidence, he thought, would tend to overwhelm any common questions of law or fact. For that reason and because of possible issues as to defenses and damages, he also foresaw complexities in the giving of notice to members of the class, in the taking of depositions and the use of interrogatories and requests to admit facts, and in the conduct of one massive trial or a multitude of mini-trials. He concluded that greater efficiency, expedition and fairness would result from processing the plaintiffs’ case as a test or pilot case, with prompt appellate review.
He therefore announced that he would try the claims of the Carpenters and the Kayes on the merits of the issue of liability, and would then report for appellate review the class action issues and his findings of fact and rulings of law on the liability issue. After trial he denied a request for reconsideration of the certification of a one-bank class action, and made the report now before us.
Refusal to certify the one-bank class action seems to us unsatisfactory. It seems likely that this case involves several thousand mortgagors who made contracts with the same bank containing identical clauses, pursuant to the same statutes and in accordance with the same long-standing custom and practice. Of course the parties to a particular mortgage were free to make different contracts from the usual ones, and some perhaps did. But we are not to be understood as acquiescing in a procedure which results in divergent adjudications on identical evidence in these circumstances by reason of the vagaries of different finders of fact.
The contracts involved here appear to be integrated agreements, subject to the paroi evidence rule. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 235, 239 (Tent. Drafts
*322
Nos. 1-7, 1973). The interpretation of such agreements ordinarily is a matter of law.
Robert Indus. Inc.
v.
Spence,
Nevertheless, we find no reversible error in the situation that has resulted. The judge refused to certify a one-bank class action, but he did not dismiss any claims. Even if a motion to certify is allowed, it may sometimes be appropriate to stay proceedings on all claims but one and to see whether disposition of that one may not settle the others. Cf.
Lumiansky
v.
Tessier,
3. The merits: trusts. We summarize the judge’s rulings on the issue of liability; we omit his findings as to undisclosed intentions and emphasize standard terms and prac *323 tices. During the depression of the 1930’s banks in Massachusetts lost large sums of money in mortgage foreclosures and often found that tax liens had priority over their mortgages. The practice developed of requiring payments of estimated taxes, and it has been the policy of Suffolk Franklin, in other than exceptional circumstances, to require all mortgagors to make such tax payments to it. The practice of Suffolk Franklin was in all respects in accord with the long-standing custom and practice of the savings bank industry in Massachusetts. The principal purpose was to provide additional security for mortgage loans, relieving the bank of the risk of a municipal tax lien superior in right to the mortgage.
The plaintiffs’ mortgages were “upon the statutory condition,” including the condition that the mortgagor pay all taxes when due. G. L. c. 183, § 20. Each note contained the same clause 1 requiring payment to the holder each month of one-twelfth of the annual real estate taxes as estimated by the holder. This clause was contained in a printed note form used by the bank and supplied by it to the attorney representing it at mortgage closings. The attorney was not authorized to waive the requirement; mortgage loan officers were, if there was a favorable ratio between the loan and the value of the real estate. It was the bank’s policy not to notify the mortgagor that the requirement could be waived.
The bank fully disclosed the nature and extent of the requirement and practiced no fraud or concealment, and the mortgage transactions were in all respects fair and reasonable in the circumstances. The requirement of real estate tax payments did not affect the rate of interest. The plaintiffs paid the bank with monthly checks, each check including the tax payment and the instalment of principal *324 and interest, and the bank made tax payments to the city of Boston, usually in October, equal to or greater than the plaintiffs’ tax payments. Monthly statements to the plaintiffs disclosed the amount of estimated tax payment required, designated “suspense” until 1966 and “escrow” thereafter; annual statements showed the accumulated amounts and the amount paid out.
The amounts of the tax payments were commingled with the bank’s other funds and were available for investment; all or some were probably invested. The probable gross yield on each mortgage was $10 to $15 a year; the benefit to the bank was reduced by administrative expenses. The bank has not paid to the plaintiffs any of the return on such investment. The bank was paying something over four per cent on deposits, and sought to realize at least one per cent more from investments; and its net margin between return on investments and interest on deposits was in the vicinity of one per cent.
Both the Carpenters and the Kayes refinanced their mortgages, borrowing further amounts. In 1969 Kaye spoke to a bank employee about paying his taxes directly to the city, but the employee refused to act favorably on the suggestion. Otherwise none of the plaintiffs sought any alternative arrangements. In connection with some of the loans to the Kayes, the bank was required by G. L. c. 168, § 35, par. 4, to collect periodic tax payments. The payment of interest on the tax payments would not frustrate the bank’s principal purpose in seeking such payments. The “capitalization method” of accounting for tax payments would not have been necessarily inconsistent with any purpose of the bank; under that method each instalment tax payment is treated as a payment of principal, and payment of the tax bill by the bank is treated as an increase of principal.
a. Express trusts. The judge concluded that there was no manifestation of intention to create a trust on the part of either the plaintiffs or the bank. The written agreements were silent as to investment of the tax payments, as to the retention of earnings, if any, and as to intention to create *325 a trust. The judge further concluded that the agreements established contractual relationships, not trusts, that the tax payments constituted general deposits for a special purpose, creating debtor-creditor relationships, rather than special deposits creating fiduciary relationships, and that the bank had the right to treat such payments as its own.
Borrowers, it is said, have brought hundreds of suits such as this one in the past several years, basing their claims on a variety of legal theories, including antitrust, truth in lending, fraud, unjust enrichment, breach of contract and breach of trust. See Notes, 54 B.U.L. Rev. 516, 517 (1974), 47 Temp. L.Q. 352 (1974), 28 Okla. L. Rev. 213 (1975). In a few cases, as in
Carpenter I,
a trust claim has been upheld as a matter of pleading.
Abrams
v.
Crocker-Citizens Nat'l Bank,
In these circumstances the judge’s findings are not clearly erroneous within the meaning of Mass. R. Civ. P. 52 (a), and his findings support his conclusions. A municipal lien for unpaid property taxes under G. L. c. 60, § 37, takes priority over a mortgagee’s interest. See
Gaunt
v.
Arzoomanian,
b.
Resulting and constructive trusts.
The judge ruled that neither the nature of the transaction between the plaintiffs and Suffolk Franklin nor their relationship now calls for the imposition of a resulting trust. We agree, substantially for the same reasons that we uphold his finding that there was no express trust. Cf.
Meskell
v.
Meskell,
The judge also ruled that there was no occasion for the
*327
imposition of a constructive trust. We are not asked to set aside his finding that there was no fraud, and we have held that there was no fiduciary relationship. See
Kelly
v.
Kelly,
The enrichment of the bank may have been unjust in some sense. Apparently the Legislature thought so when it enacted G. L. c. 183, § 61, inserted by St. 1973, c. 299, § 1, effective July 1, 1975. But most of the unjust enrichment, if any, enriched the bank’s depositors at the time. The plaintiffs do not suggest that those depositors should now disgorge their excess returns. Thus a judgment of restitution would ultimately result in a transfer of funds from present and future depositors to compensate for excess payments to past depositors. Doubtless for this reason the Legislature enacted its reform with an effective date over two years after enactment. We do not think we should go further in disrupting legitimate expectations than the Legislature was willing to go.
Moreover, the statutory reform requires that interest be paid “at least once a year at a rate and in a manner to be determined by the mortgagee.” We infer that the Legislature thought the amount of the banks’ unjust enrichment would be very difficult to measure by any objective standards. We are not prepared to substitute our judgment on this point for that of the Legislature. In this aspect, this case is a good illustration of the advantages of legislative law reform as compared with reform by judicial decision. There was no such unjust enrichment, we hold, as to justify the imposition of a constructive trust.
4. Disposition. We hold that there was no reversible *328 error in the judge’s orders, findings and conclusions of law reported to us. The case is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
“The makers agree to pay to the holder hereof with each monthly payment of interest one-twelfth of the real estate taxes and betterment assessments, as estimated by the holder hereof, annually assessed on the premises mortgaged to secure this note. All sums so paid shall be applied to or toward the payment of said taxes and any balance shall be accounted for annually to the owner of said premises.”
