Leonard Finn, trustee under an agreement dated March 15, 1957 (the agreement), has brought suit against Elizabeth Finn (Elizabeth) and Lillian L. Corey (Lillian), alleging that he is the holder, as trustee, of a fund in which both defendants claim an interest. In her capacity as administratrix of the estate of Irving J. Finn, Elizabeth was allowed to intervene as a party defendant. A justice
The facts are as follows. From 1933 until 1960, Irving J. Finn (Irving) was married to Lillian. Between 1946 and 1953 Bonded Oil System, Inc. (the company), a Massachusetts corporation, issued capital stock to Irving and Lillian “as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common.” The agreement was entered into by the holders of all outstanding stock of the company— Irving and Lillian, Irving’s three sisters and their spouses — as well as by the trustee and the company.
The agreement recites: “It is the intention of the parties to provide that in the event of the death of a Husband-Stockholder, the stock holdings of said Husband-Stockholder and/or of his wife shall be liquidated and, in order to effectuate this intention, the Company shall purchase for the treasury any stock owned by him or her.” To carry out this program, the company took out insurance policies, each in the amount of $50,000, on the lives of the husband-stockholders. It was agreed that the trustee would hold the policies as well as all stock certificates “endorsed in blank and with proper transfer stamps attached. ’ ’ The company retained the rights of ownership of the policies as did the stockholders of the stock. The agreement provides further: “In the event of the death of a Husband-Stockholder, the Company shall purchase from his present wife (if she shall survive him) or from his estate (if his said wife shall have predeceased him), and she or it, as the case may be, shall sell to the Company in the manner and upon the terms hereinafter provided all shares of the Company owned by him and/or his said wife at the time of his death.” The purchase price to be paid for the stock was designated in the agreement, which provided also that the stock certificates were to be endorsed with a legend stating that the shares were “subject to the terms of an agreement dated March 15, 1957.”
Shortly after the issuance of the divorce decree Irving and Elizabeth were married in Florida. A year later Irving died. The trustee under the 1957 agreement thereafter collected the life insurance owned by the company in the net amount of $49,841.92, which sum was deposited in court pending determination of the conflicting claims.
1. The principal issue presented is whether Lillian, a signatory of the 1957 agreement and the “present wife” to whom reference is made therein, is entitled to the entire purchase price of the shares of stock in the company issued to Irving and Lillian or whether she is entitled to receive only one-half, the other half going to Irving’s estate. Elizabeth, in her individual capacity, claims to be the “present wife” referred to, but the agreement, coupled with the property settlement, establishes beyond doubt that the marital situation existing in 1957 was that to which reference was made.
2. We now consider the conflicting claims of Lillian and Elizabeth, as administratrix. When Irving and Lillian received title to the shares of stock they were husband and
3. It has long been recognized that a tenancy by the entirety cannot exist between unmarried persons. “The foundation and continuance of a tenancy by the entirety are inconsistent with the legal conception of a man and woman no longer in a state of matrimony.”
Bernatavicius
v.
Ber-natavicius,
4. A decree will issue to the effect that upon Irving’s death ownership of the shares held by him and Lillian as joint tenants passed to Lillian, and that the trustee is to pay to her the entire fund now held by him which is the product of the sale of such shares.
So ordered.
