308 Mass. 262 | Mass. | 1941
This is a suit in equity in which the plaintiff seeks to restrain the defendant, his wife, from interfering with his possession of certain real estate, standing in the names of the parties as “joint tenants,” in part of which the plaintiff conducts a variety store, and from entering on the premises or removing any personal property, and to compel the defendant to account for all the rents and profits of the premises, including the store, during the time that the plaintiff “was not under conservatorship.”
The defendant filed an answer setting forth that, by virtue of her ownership and that of the plaintiff of the property as joint tenants, she was entitled to possession of the property including the business of which she asserted ownership; and she set up a counterclaim by which she sought
In the matter of so much of the counterclaim as concerns the defendant’s prayers for reformation of the deed of the real estate involved, the findings of the master are substantially as follows: The real estate in question was pur-. chased on January 2, 1919, by the plaintiff and one Boddy. Each paid one half of the purchase price over and above a mortgage back. On August 28, 1919, the plaintiff purchased Boddy’s interest for $1,000. The defendant did not pay any of the purchase price in either of these transactions. In September, 1925, the parties had some talk with their attorney, one Rochefort, about transferring the property to both of them. As a result the premises were conveyed by the plaintiff to Rochefort on September 30, 1925, and on the same day Rochefort conveyed them to the defendant. Some time later when the deed to the defendant was returned to her she "found that the title to . . . [the] premises through error stood only in her name.” In April, 1926, the parties conferred with Rochefort and told him that "they were to have equal shares.” In consequence the defendant conveyed the premises to Rochefort on April 26, 1926, and on the same day he conveyed the premises to the “plaintiff and defendant, husband and as joint tenants . . . [This] deed did not incorporate any reference by words either affirmatively or negatively to its creation of a tenancy by entirety in the grantees.”
An interlocutory decree was entered confirming the master’s report, and a final decree was entered adjudging the plaintiff to be the owner of the business in question; permanently restraining and enjoining the defendant from interfering with the plaintiff in his possession of the “store and the premises in which the same is conducted”; ordering the defendant to turn over to the plaintiff or his attorney “a list of all claims or debts owed to the . . . business while conducted by her during the absence of the . . . plaintiff, and any documentary evidence necessary to aid the . . . plaintiff in the collection of said claims”; and dismissing the defendant’s counterclaim. The defendant appealed. She now concedes that she is bound by the findings of the master as to the ownership of the business, but contends that the plaintiff is not entitled to an injunction, that she should not have been ordered to turn over to the plaintiff a list of claims or debts owed to the business and documentary evidence relating thereto, and that she is entitled to a reformation of the deed dated April 26, 1926.
Because the master has found that the defendant has not
We are also of opinion that the findings of the master do not support the direction in the decree that the defendant turn over to the plaintiff the list of debts and documentary evidence referred to in' the decree, the master having expressly found that the parties agreed that nothing was due from the defendant to the plaintiff in the matter of an accounting when the defendant conducted the business while the plaintiff was not under conservatorship. The findings of the master reveal no basis for this order.
The remaining question is whether the defendant is entitled to have the deed of April 26, 1926, running to the plaintiff and to her as “husband and wife, as joint tenants,” reformed so as to run to them “as joint tenants, but not as tenants by the entirety.”
It is established that a deed conveying land to husband and wife as joint tenants, without more, operates to create a tenancy by the entirety unless a contrary intent appears on the face of the instrument. Hoag v. Hoag, 213 Mass. 50, 53. It is equally well established that such a tenancy confers upon the husband rights paramount to those of his spouse under which during his life and the continuance of the marital relationship he is entitled to possession and control of the granted premises, together with the use and the profits therefrom. Voigt v. Voigt, 252 Mass. 582. Raptes v. Pappas, 259 Mass. 37. Bernatavicius v. Bernatavicius, 259 Mass. 486. Cunningham v. Ganley, 267 Mass. 375. Peter v. Sacker, 271 Mass. 383. Splaine v. Morrissey, 282 Mass. 217. Childs v. Childs, 293 Mass. 67.
Manifestly in the present case the deed in question did
The evidence is not reported, and the finding of the master that the defendant has not been guilty of loches, not being inconsistent with the subsidiary facts found by him, must stand. Dodge v. Anna Jaques Hospital, 301 Mass. 431, 435.
In view of all that we have said, we are of opinion that the plaintiff is not entitled to any relief on his bill. The final decree entered by order of the judge is reversed and, instead, a decree is to be entered dismissing the plaintiff’s bill; and on the defendant’s answer in counterclaim a decree is to "be entered that the deed in question, dated April 26, 1926, recorded in North District Essex Registry of Deeds, Book 521, page 301, be reformed so as to run to “Robert E. Franz and Bessie R. Franz, husband and wife, both of Andover in the said County and Commonwealth as joint tenants but not as tenants by the entirety.”
Ordered accordingly.