325 Mass. 185 | Mass. | 1950
This is an appeal from a final decree entered upon a bill in equity brought under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 228, § 5, as appearing in St. 1937, c. 406, § 1, ordering the executor to appear and defend a pending action of tort which had been commenced against his testator during his lifetime. The judge made findings of fact and the evidence is reported.
Some of the facts are undisputed and others we find for ourselves. The plaintiff on September 22, 1942, commenced an action of tort to recover damages for alleged malpractice by the original defendant, a physician, who died testate on June 12, 1945. His executor was appointed and gave bond for the performance of his trust on July 6, 1945. The attorney who had appeared for the defendant filed a suggestion of death on April 13, 1946, but he did not notify the plaintiff or her counsel of the defendant’s death and he never furnished either of them with a copy of the suggestion of death. The plaintiff’s counsel first learned of the death on April 3, 1947.
The judge found that justice and equity required that the executor should be ordered to appear and defend the action of tort and that the plaintiff was not guilty of culpable neglect. The correctness of both of these findings is challenged by the present defendant.
Prior to the amendment of § 5 of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 228 by St. 1937, c. 406, § 1, no citation could issue under § 4 or under § 5 of that chapter after more than a year had elapsed since the giving of bond by the personal representative of the deceased defendant, and the fact that the plaintiff had failed to discover the death of the decedent within the year did not affect this statutory limitation. Finance Corp. of New England v. Parker, 251 Mass. 372. E. S. Parks Shellac Co. v. Jones, 265 Mass. 108. A plaintiff, having a claim in tort which survived the death of the alleged wrongdoer, was a creditor under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 197, § 9, as amended; Brotkin v. Feinberg, 265 Mass. 295; Bickford v. Furber, 271 Mass. 94, 98; Union Market National Bank v. Gardiner, 276 Mass. 490, 494; Gordon v. Shea,
It must be assumed that the Legislature was familiar with the existing law and the decisions of this court relative thereto and sought by the amendment to G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 228, § 5, by St. 1937, c. 406, § 1, to eliminate some of the hardships plaintiffs encountered by reason of their failure to learn seasonably of the death of a defendant. Gar Wood Industries, Inc. v. Colonial Homes, Inc. 305 Mass. 41. New England Novelty Co. Inc. v. Sandberg, 315 Mass. 739. Meunier’s Case, 319 Mass. 421. Section 5, as amended, in so far as material, provides that a citation “shall not issue after the expiration of one year from the time such executor or administrator has given bond, except that if the supreme judicial court, upon a bill in equity filed by a plaintiff or
This statute does not stop with merely providing in general for the late issuance of a summons to the personal representative of a deceased defendant to appear and defend the action where justice and equity require such an order and where the plaintiff has not been guilty of culpable neglect. It does not define justice and equity or culpable neglect. It does not state that one shall not be deemed guilty of culpable neglect if written notice of the death of the defendant is not furnished to the plaintiff or his counsel and a suggestion of death is not filed within the prescribed period. The conduct of the plaintiff in not acting within the year from the appointment of the personal representative is to be considered, but it is the conduct of the personal representative to which the statute is directed to a great extent, since failure to give notice and to file the suggestion within “nine months of his appointment” “may be sufficient ground for granting the relief herein authorized.” This provision must be construed with the rest of the statute. It is to be assumed that relief will be withheld if the plaintiff’s action is plainly lacking in merit or if the granting of relief would result in substantial injustice or manifest inequity.
The judge .was not plainly wrong in finding that justice
The words “culpable neglect” as they appear in this statute were apparently taken from G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 197, § 10, Mulligan v. Hilton, 305 Mass. 5, 7; but they are not to be so rigidly construed and applied as they were in that statute, and the failure to discover the death of a defendant within the one year period is no longer as matter of law a bar to the plaintiff. Those words are qualified, and the judge may find that a plaintiff is not guilty of culpable
This being an appeal in equity, questions of law, fact and discretion are open. We determine for ourselves whether there has been any abuse of discretion, allowing appropriate weight to the opinion of the trial judge. Boston v. San-tosuosso, 307 Mass. 302, 323, 353. Coe v. Coe, 313 Mass. 232, 235. National Shawmut Bank v. Morey, 320 Mass. 492, 498. Hill v. Trustees of Glenwood Cemetery, 323 Mass. 388, 394. We are satisfied from an examination of the record that there was no wrongful exercise of discretion.
The executor finally contends that, as the evidence shows that nearly all of the assets had been distributed prior to the filing of this bill in equity, the decree ought to be modified; and he suggests that it should set forth the form of the execution which should be issued in the event the plaintiff prevails in the action at law and that only such assets remaining in the estate as the judge of the Probate Court may determine should be applied in satisfaction of the execution. We do not agree with this suggestion. The statute, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 228, § 5, as amended, expressly provides that "Neither such relief nor the final determination of such action shall affect any payment or distribution not concerned with said action which was made before the filing of such bill in equity.” The decree was subject to this statu
nDecree affirmed with costs.