308 Mass. 41 | Mass. | 1941
The allegations of the amended petition are in substance these: The petitioners George F. Chandler and Rose A. Chandler are husband and wife, and the petitioner George F. Chandler, Jr., is their son. The respondent is the administratrix of the estate of Francis Tally, who was the maternal uncle and had been the guardian of George F. Chandler. In 1913 George F. Chandler purchased a business from Tally for $25,000, of which sum Chandler paid $20,000 in cash. He made an assignment, absolute in form, to Tally of Chandler’s interest in the estate of one Blanchard “to secure the payment of” the remainder of the purchase price, amounting to $5,000, which sum, with interest, “was to be deducted by the said Francis Tally from moneys received under said assignment, and the balance of the moneys received under said assignment to be turned over to the said George F. Chandler.” In 1914 Tally received by virtue of the assignment $20,555.25 in various securities and $729.75 in cash and received in addition a certificate for fifteen shares of railroad stock. In 1915 he received the further sum of $345.76. Tally, though requested, at no time made any accounting to George F. Chandler of the sums received by virtue of the assignment. In August, 1915, George F. Chandler made a demand upon Tally for an accounting, which Tally refused, alleging that Chandler was a spendthrift and would dissipate any moneys received by him. Tally “further stated that he would hold the balance of securities and cash received under the assignment for the benefit of” Chandler’s wife, Rose A. Chandler, and. of their children, who at that time were George F. Chandler, Jr., one of the petitioners, and Dorothea Chandler, who died in September, 1915. Because of the relationship of uncle and nephew between Tally and George F. Chandler “and because of his subserviency to his said uncle Francis Tally, and relying upon the promises made to hold the said securities and cash, referred to above, for the benefit of the said George F. Chandler’s wife and children, your petitioner George F. Chandler took no legal action to secure
The principal prayers are for an accounting and payment to the petitioners of the amount found due.
The demurrer is directed to the entire petition and not to any separate parts of it. Want of equity, vagueness, and loches are set up among other grounds of demurrer.
We assume, without deciding, that the allegations of the petition are sufficiently definite to show that the proceeds of the Blanchard estate which came into Tally’s hands in 1914 and 1915 by virtue of the assignment were received by him as security only, and that he held them under an oral trust to pay himself the balance of $5,000 due him for the price of the business and to turn over the remainder to George F. Chandler. The petition fails to show, however, with adequate certainty that the petitioners George F. Chandler, Jr. and Rose A. Chandler ever acquired any interest in this fund. Doubtless Lally could have declared an oral trust for their benefit in personal property owned by himself, but he could not declare himself trustee for their benefit of George F. Chandler’s interest in the fund without the consent of George F. Chandler. The petition does not allege that George F. Chandler took any part in the transfer of the beneficial interest from himself to his wife and son or that he consented to the transfer. The allegation that he relied upon Tally’s promise to hold the fund for their benefit as a reason for not himself enforcing the trust is not equivalent to an allegation of consent to a transfer to them of the beneficial interest. It goes no further than to state an alleged reason for not enforcing in his own behalf rights still belonging to himself. In substance he alleges that he has hitherto delayed bringing suit for himself because of his confidence that Lally was still holding the fund intact in his possession. There is nothing to show
It appears from the petition itself that George F. Chandler is barred from enforcing the trust by his own loches. The defence of loches may be availed of by demurrer where the bill itself discloses that defence. Snow v. Boston Blank Book Manuf. Co. 153 Mass. 456, 457. O’Brien v. O’Brien, 238 Mass. 403, 411. It is true that mere delay in bringing suit by a beneficiary under an express trust, whatever effect it may have upon his right to claim damages for a breach of trust, does not commonly deprive him of his right to assert his equitable title in the trust property. Allen v. Stewart, 214 Mass. 109, 113. O’Brien v. O’Brien, 238 Mass. 403, 411. Patterson v. Pendexter, 259 Mass. 490, 493. Stuck v. Schumm, 290 Mass. 159, 166. Shea v. Shea, 296 Mass. 143. Scott on Trusts, § 219. But where the trustee has repudiated his obligations as trustee and holds adversely, a beneficiary with knowledge of the repudiation can no longer rely upon the trustee’s continued performance of his duty. The beneficiary is then in a position similar to that of any other party who has an equitable claim against an adversary and may become barred by loches if he fails to proceed with reasonable
The result is that the demurrer was rightly sustained as against the petitioner George F. Chandler on the ground of
Decree affirmed.