306 Mass. 291 | Mass. | 1940
In this suit in equity the plaintiff seeks to compel the defendant to surrender to him possession of an automobile of which, he alleges, he is the owner. The de
The case was referred to a master whose findings in addition to facts already stated are as follows: In May, 1938, the plaintiff arranged to purchase the automobile in question from one Suddard, of Wareham, for $700 "cash.” The vehicle was delivered in June with dealer’s plates upon it. The plaintiff obtained a loan of $400 from a telephone workers’ credit union on “his telephone stock”; at that time he had on deposit the sum of $294.10, of which he withdrew $250, making a total of $650 derived from these sources; and the defendant withdrew a bank deposit of $50 (a wedding present to the plaintiff and the defendant). Thus the purchase price of the automobile was made up. In June the defendant drove the vehicle to Hyannis where the plaintiff was employed, taking with her a "box in which the plaintiff kept his valuables.” The plaintiff took the sum of $700 "in cash and check from the box and handed it to the defendant.” The latter went to the seller, Suddard, and he "delivered to the plaintiff [sic] a bill of sale of the automobile” in the plaintiff’s name. The defendant registered and insured the automobile in her own name.
‘ ‘ The plaintiff and the defendant were both working, the plaintiff receiving $36 per week in wages . . . the amount received by the defendant being uncertain. The loan which the plaintiff . . . [obtained] was to be repaid at the rate of $8 per week. The defendant paid to the plaintiff out of her earnings the sum of $8 per week until they separated in November, 1938, which sums were applied to the payment of the plaintiff’s loan except for two weeks when the defendant was on vacation and received no wages. In this way the defendant paid to the plaintiff the sum of $184 and gave to the
The master further found that it was the intention of the parties that the defendant should continue to pay the sum of $8 a week to the plaintiff, during such time as she worked, and that these payments were to be used by him toward the repayment of the loan of $400 secured by him, and that there was no actual gift of the automobile by the plaintiff to the defendant.
An interlocutory decree was entered overruling the defendant’s exceptions to, and confirming, the report of the master. A final decree was entered ordering the defendant to surrender the automobile to the plaintiff. The defendant appealed from these decrees.
The findings of the master are not stated to have been inferences only from subsidiary findings; they apparently rest upon all of the evidence before him, none of which is reported. Since the findings of fact are not inconsistent with each other they must be accepted as true.
It is true that the automobile was registered in the name of the defendant. It does not appear, however, that the plaintiff requested the defendant to register it in her name or that he knew that she had done so until shortly after registration. When he did know that she had done so he made no objection, and did receive from her $15 on account of the registration fee and the cost of insuring the automobile, and he subsequently operated it from time to time. But although registration in the defendant’s name is some evidence of ownership, Burns v. Winchell, 305 Mass. 276, yet in the instant case we think that evidence is not of
The present case resembles in many ways the case of Patterson v. Patterson, 197 Mass. 112, where important articles were claimed by a wife under leases in writing, which were also conditional sales made to her by shopkeepers, and where at pages 116-117 the court said: “The fact that these conveyances were made directly to her, in her name, with the knowledge and consent of her husband, with nothing to control or affect the legal presumption from such conveyances, except the fact that her husband furnished her a large part of the money to pay for the goods, while she furnished the rest, and the further fact that they were bought to be used and were used in the family, warranted, if it did not require the master’s finding that they became the petitioner’s separate property.” In like manner, in the present case the conveyance of the automobile was made directly to the plaintiff in his name with the knowledge and acquiescence of the defendant. Unlike the petitioner in the Patterson case the plaintiff in the present case paid substantially all of the purchase price of the automobile, a circumstance more favorable to him. It is a fair inference that it was bought to be used in the family; the master has found that it was so used by both of the parties. The findings of the master support the conclusion that the plaintiff is the owner of the automobile.
The principles relating to gifts between husband and wife have no application here since the master has found that
Interlocutory decree affirmed.
Final decree affirmed, with, costs.