271 Mass. 258 | Mass. | 1930
This is a bill in equity brought under St. 1925, c. 170, (G. L. c. 223, § 86A), which, so far as here material, provides that “Upon motion of the plaintiff at any time after a verdict has been rendered ... in his
The order to the master required him "to hear the parties and their evidence and report his findings to the court together with such facts and questions of law as either party may request.” He reported no evidence except such as was material to exceptions claimed by the defendants to the exclusion of certain evidence. The defendants Harrison filed twenty-six objections, of which fourteen were to failures to find facts as requested by them, four were to failures to make rulings of law incidental to his determinations of fact as requested, six were to exclusions of evidence, and two were to findings of fact that the loan hereinafter described was made to Nathan C. Harrison and that the stock in Harrison Supply Company, Inc., was his stock. Before the hearing upon the confirmation of the report they moved to recommit the report in order that the master might recognize and apply thé four rulings of law as incidental to his determinations of fact, might make the fourteen findings of fact desired, and might admit the evidence excluded. In this way all that the defendants desired to urge was before the court. Mason v. Albert, 243 Mass. 433.
The denial of the motion to recommit was in the discretion of the trial judge and no abuse appears. No appeal from it can be sustained. Bartlett v. The Roosevelt, Inc. 258 Mass. 494. Goodman v. Goldman, 265 Mass. 85, 87. No valid appeal lies from the order overruling the exceptions to the refusal to find facts as requested. Mackintosh v. Houghton, 242 Mass. 286. Forino Co. v. Karnkeim, 240 Mass. 574,
The desired rulings of law and the rulings excluding evidence remain to be considered. Although a master has ordinarily no duty to make rulings of law, yet, in the conduct of the hearings and incidentally in his determination of questions of fact, questions of law often are involved upon which he must instruct himself. An erroneous decision may result from a mistaken instruction of this kind. A party has a right to have the master proceed upon correct rules of law. To secure this right he may make requests of the master and, after objection, may save exceptions to their refusal. There is, however, nothing in the report to show that any requests for instructions to himself in matter of law were made to the master before his draft report was presented to counsel, or that in his consideration he may not have acted upon the principles embodied in the requests presented with the objections to his report, in so far as they state sound law. No valid ground for sustaining exceptions appears in them. Raymond v. Stone, 246 Mass. 421, 425. Cook v. Scheffreen, 215 Mass. 444, 448 and cases cited.
The master found and there was no dispute that Nathan C. Harrison indorsed the notes in suit in 1921. In 1900 he organized the Harrison Supply Company, in which he and his wife, each having an investment of about $26,000, were the principal stockholders and owned fifty-five per cent of the stock. That company did a prosperous business, and some time before 1920, another corporation, the International Abrasive Corporation, acquired all its stock. Nathan C. Harrison was president and largest individual stockholder in the Abrasive Corporation. In 1922 the Abrasive company through business reverses went into the hands of a receiver under a decree of the District Court of the United States for this district. The subsidiary company also was involved, and its assets were entrusted to the same receiver. Nathan C. Harrison became insolvent as a result. For more than a year he was employed by the
The master excluded testimony of conversations of Nathan C. Harrison with the president of the bank (who had died before the bill in equity was brought) prior to the receiver’s sale, with reference to the state of mind of the president of the bank in regard to the person to whom the bank was loaning, by which the defendants offered to show (1) that Harrison had said that he did not intend to purchase the business; (2) that the president had passed on the receiver’s bill of sale and stated his satisfaction with it; (3) that he had declared that the bank would
This evidence was competent. It was relevant. It did not modify or contradict any writing, nor was it part of negotiations and conversations leading up to and finally embodied in any written contract intended by the parties to contain their full agreement. Ordinarily, at least, there cannot be a loan to a person to whom the lender does not intend to loan and who does not intend to accept the loan. In deciding whether a loan exists, evidence of these intents is relevant and material. This evidence should have been admitted and considered by the master. All the evidence is not reported. We are, therefore, not in position to know that the master’s findings of fact on the
, Ordered accordingly.