Moynihan v. Murphy

253 Mass. 110 | Mass. | 1925

Wait, J.

The plaintiffs were five of the six daughters and only children of Daniel Moynihan who died intestate in 1886. In 1897 the daughters were living with his widow Margaret, their mother, in a house in Marlborough owned by her. It was old, dilapidated, subject to two mortgages and to unpaid taxes; and there was danger of foreclosure. Margaret Moynihan, on October 15, 1897, conveyed it by a warranty deed containing no trust stipulations to her daughter Annie T. on her agreement to hold it for herself and her sisters who should thereafter keep it in repair, pay the taxes and the interest on the mortgages and provide a home and support for their mother during her life. Annie T. thereafter supported her mother. Her sisters, as soon as they were able to work, turned over their entire earnings to her. From the combined earnings of herself and her sisters, Annie T., as treasurer for the family, supported the family, paid taxes and interest, repaired and improved the real estate, until 1912, when she married Daniel F. Murphy and went with bim to live in Hudson. The plaintiffs remained in the house at Marlborough, lived in common, supported their mother, paid the taxes and paid off the balance due on the mortgages. The mother died in July, 1916, and the plaintiffs paid her funeral expenses. In October, 1916, Annie T. Murphy died intestate, leaving no issue surviving. Her husband was made her administrator; and he claims the real estate at Marlborough as part of her estate. The plaintiffs seek by this bill to establish their rights as owners of five sixths in the real estate; basing their claim on the foregoing circumstances which they allege as facts and contend that Annie T. always held the property in trust for herself and themselves in equal shares.

The widower demurs to the bill. The judge in the Superior Court was right in sustaining the demurrer. The statute, Pub. Sts. c. 141, § 1, in force in 1897, provided that no trust except such as may arise or result by implication of law should be created or declared except by an instrument in writing signed by the party creating or declaring the trust *113or by his attorney. It is apparent from the entire tenor of the bill that here there was no written instrument such as the law required. No trust could be created by oral statements or agreements of either Margaret or Annie T. Moynihan. No trust, therefore, except one implied by law can exist. It is equally certain that the law does not imply a trust upon the facts alleged. There is no trust resulting from any payment by Margaret, such as came to the ancestor in Howe v. Howe, 199 Mass. 598, or in Dana v. Dana, 154 Mass. 491, cited by the plaintiffs. Davis v. Downer, 210 Mass. 573, also urged as an authority by the plaintiffs, is clearly distinguishable. There the performance of the things to be done to establish the trust consisted in carrying out an agreement made by the plaintiff before anything was done by the alleged trustee. Here there is no allegation of any promise made to either Margaret or Annie by any of the plaintiffs. Nothing which they did is the performance of any promise made by them to secure the conveyance in October of 1897. To make out a resulting trust they must prove that they furnished the entire consideration or a specific or definite part thereof, for which it was intended they should receive a determinate and fixed fraction of the whole estate conveyed, as stated in Pollock v. Pollock, 223 Mass. 382, 384. There is nothing of the kind alleged here.

Nor do the facts alleged support a constructive trust. No fraud was practised on Margaret Moynihan. Annie T. Moynihan made no representations and no promises to any of the plaintiffs, so far as the bill shows.

The case is covered fully by the principles announced by this court in Bourke v. Callanan, 160 Mass. 195, and in Tourtillotte v. Tourtillotte, 205 Mass. 547. The order must be

Decrees affirmed.

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