317 Mass. 283 | Mass. | 1944
This bill in equity was brought in the Superior Court by Otto S. Lyon against five defendants, among whom was Marjorie S. Lyon. Disregarding immaterial allegations, the gist of the bill is that the plaintiff is the owner of real estate in Belmont and of personal property thereon; that all of the defendants have forcibly entered upon the premises in violation of the plaintiff’s rights and intend to damage the real estate and wrongfully to damage and remove personal property therefrom, to the irreparable injury of the plaintiff; and that the plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law. The prayers are for the establishment of the plaintiff’s rights in the personal property, for injunctive relief, and for damages. Without passing upon aspects of this bill not involved in the present appeal, essentially the bill is one to restrain all the defendants from a continuing trespass with anticipated irreparable injury to
To this bill all the defendants pleaded in abatement that when this suit was brought a suit in equity was already pending “on the same cause of action” between the present plaintiff (apparently as a defendant) and the present defendant Marjorie S. Lyon in the Probate Court of Middle-sex County; that the present plaintiff had appeared in that court and had moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction and had filed an answer; that a hearing on his motion to dismiss had been held; and that his motion had been denied by the court. The plea further stated that the Probate Court had enjoined the present plaintiff against interfering with Marjorie S. Lyon’s possession of all property described in the plaintiff’s bill, and that that court had jurisdiction over the subject matter of this suit and over all the parties “alleged to be joined” with the defendant Marjorie S. Lyon. On this plea were indorsed the words, “After hearing allowed by the court.” On the same day an interlocutory decree sustaining the plea and a final decree dismissing the bill were entered. The plaintiff appeals.
Although the indorsement on the plea that it was “allowed” would be appropriate if the hearing had been only as to the legal sufficiency of the plea and not as to its truth, yet the entry of an interlocutory decree sustaining, the plea and of a final decree dismissing the bill leads to the conclusion that the plea was fully heard upon the facts. Moran v. Manning, 306 Mass. 404, 408, and cases cited. See Cohn v. Cohn, 310 Mass. 126, 127-128. Precisely what those facts were we do not know, since the judge made no express findings and the evidence is not reported. Nevertheless, it is apparent that the jffea is bad in substance, and that no evidence that could have been produced under it would have disclosed a defence to this bill. The Probate Court had no jurisdiction of'the subject matter upon which this suit is founded. That court is not a court of general
Some statements contained in the bill not relevant to the cause of action set forth therein and some argument contained in the plaintiff’s brief lead us to suspect that the supposed ground of jurisdiction in the Probate Court was that there was pending therein a libel for divorce by Marjorie S. Lyon, one of the defendants in this suit in equity, against her husband, who is not a party to this suit, and that in connection with the divorce libel Marjorie S. Lyon had filed a petition to enjoin the present plaintiff from interfering with her obtaining possession of the Belmont property, of which her husband had been a tenant while they were living together. The only ground which occurs to us on which it could possibly be thought that the Probate Court had jurisdiction of any such petition would be under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 208, § 33, as appearing in St. 1936, c. 221. That statute provides that in divorce proceedings “the court shall have jurisdiction in equity of all causes cognizable under the general principles of equity jurisprudence, arising between husband and wife . . .”; but it seems obvious that this statute could not draw into the Probate Court a controversy like the present one, the substance of which is not between husband and wife but is between a third person (the present plaintiff) and five • defendants of whom the wife is only one. See MacLennan v. MacLennan, 311 Mass. 709.
Decrees reversed.