269 Mass. 256 | Mass. | 1929
This is an appeal from an interlocutory decree overruling exceptions to and confirming the report of a master, and from the final decree. The bill seeks a decree that a deed from the plaintiffs to the defendant, dated April 11, 1922, is of no legal effect, that the court order a reconveyance of the premises described in said deed, and for such other and further relief as to justice and equity may appertain.
The case was referred to a master who duly made his report. The evidence before him is not reported. It follows that the facts found are conclusive upon the face of the report unless they are inconsistent with each other or are plainly wrong. Young v. Winkley, 191 Mass. 570.
In substance the facts which follow appear in the report: The parties to the bill of complaint are father, mother and son. The parents, as joint tenants, on November 23, 1904, acquired title to certain real estate situated on the easterly side of Main Street, in the town of Hatfield, with the buildings thereon consisting of a two-family house, blacksmith shop, cider mill, and tobacco shed. The father is a blacksmith by trade, has always done blacksmithing,
The pertinent facts respecting the execution and delivery of the deed to the defendant are in substance as follows: While the father was at home, he caused a deed of the real estate in Hatfield and a bill of sale of certain chattels on the premises to be prepared at a law office in Northampton. Prior to the drafting of the deed, the father and the defendant went to the law office several times, and the deed was drawn in accordance with instructions. The defendant paid for the draft of the deed and for having the title searched. The deed is in the usual form of warranty deed conveying the premises free from encumbrances except a mortgage of $5,000 held by the Northampton Institution for Savings “which this grantee [the defendant] assumes and agrees to pay.” It was signed and acknowledged by the father, taken by the defendant to the house in Hatfield and left on the table. That night he took it from the table and it then bore his mother’s signature. Neither the father nor the defendant had ever had any talk with the mother as to her signing the deed. The defendant left $10 or $15 on the table and asked his sister, sixteen years of age, to have his mother sign. The sister asked her mother to sign and told her that the “deed was so that the defendant
The defendant was a minor living at home with his parents and attending high school when the deed was executed. He had always lived at home. He went to grammar school until he was fourteen, and then was three years out of school. When he was seventeen, he went to high school for four years, completing his studies in 1923. He never paid board to his parents. During the years he was attending school, he worked mornings and nights and on Saturdays in the blacksmith shop. He was never paid for the work he did for his father. He testified that when the deed was given his father owed him about $4,000 for labor. He further testified as to various instances where the father had taken sums of money earned by the defendant while working out, or which were the proceeds derived from the sale of a cow and pigs, claimed by the defendant as his own.
There is nothing in the reported facts inconsistent with the finding of the master that the defendant had never been given his time by his father, nor to controvert the findings that during the minority of the defendant, “his father was entitled to his earnings; that there was no money due the defendant from his father at the time the deed was given; and no money due him from his mother. ’' Benson v. Remington, 2 Mass. 113. Manchester v. Smith, 12 Pick. 113, 115. Nor is there any inconsistency between the findings of the master that the property was conveyed to the defendant so that he might manage affairs during his father’s absence, mortgage the property if necessary to raise money to pay bills and so that he would be secured for money that had been and should be advanced by him in payment of his father’s debts, and the fact that the deed was drawn by the scrivener “in accordance with instructions” and contained
The master in conclusion, after a full statement of the account between the plaintiffs and defendant, finds that “the plaintiffs are entitled to a reconveyance of the property upon their discharge of the tax obligations for the years 1925, 1926 and 1927, for which the defendant is liable, and upon their payment to the defendant of the amounts expended by him for them, and upon the property, $7,621.56, less the amounts chargeable to the defendant, $6,112.88, a net amount of $1,508.68.” To this finding certain objections were taken by the defendant. These objections were overruled and the report confirmed by an interlocutory decree from which the defendant appealed. These objections are based largely on alleged inconsistent findings of material facts. Without referring to the objections at length, it is sufficient to say they have been fully considered
The final decree makes no provision whereby the defendant is to be saved harmless and indemnified against any liability which he assumed on the $5,000 note to the Northampton Institution for Savings. The final decree should be amended to cover such liability of the defendant, and as so modified is affirmed. Mills v. Day, 206 Mass. 530. O'Brien V. Hovey, supra.
Ordered accordingly.