256 Mass. 528 | Mass. | 1926
This bill in equity is brought by the plaintiff by her conservator, for an accounting of the rents and profits of certain real estate conveyed by the plaintiff to the defendant. It is alleged that the conveyance was obtained by fraud and undue influence practised upon the plaintiff by the defendant. The case was referred to a master who
The evidence before the master is not reported and his findings of fact will not be reversed unless mutually inconsistent or plainly wrong. Eddy v. Fogg, 192 Mass. 543. Wallin v. Fredin, 241 Mass. 233. The trial judge was authorized to draw such further or different inferences from the facts found by the master as' were reasonably warranted. Smith v. Kenney, 213 Mass. 6, 9. Adams v. Whitmore, 245 Mass. 65, 67.
“When a case is presented to this court on appeal from a decree entered on a master’s report, without full recital of evidence, this court draws its own inferences from the facts found without giving weight to the decree. It is in this respect in the position of the trial judge.” Adams v. Whitmore, 245 Mass. 65, 67, 68.
After the hearings before the master were completed and he had prepared his report and supplemental report, and before the latter was filed, the plaintiff died, and thereafter ,a special administrator of her estate was appointed who has entered an appearance and is represented by the attorney
The deed was executed on September 10, 1918; it appears from the findings of the master that at that time the plaintiff was sixty-nine years of age; that she was by birth a French Canadian; that she could not or did not speak English; that at the time of the hearings before the master she was under conservatorship; that her husband, Alfred Dugrenier, died on September 3, 1918, seven days before the deed was executed. It also appears that many years ago Rebecca Frederick, a native of Canada, and a distant relative of the plaintiff’s husband, came to five with them and remained a member of the family until November, 1922, when she returned to Canada. It was also found by the master that in the year 1910 the plaintiff had a shock and was very ill for thrée months; that she became somewhat improved in health, but at times would lose her memory and her sight was affected, her face was drawn out of shape and one arm and leg were paralyzed. She. could dress herself at times and at other times she was unable to do so, and “ever since she had the first shock she had continuation attacks every once in a while.” During this period Rebecca Frederick lived with and assisted the plaintiff in doing the housework, collecting rents, and performing other work.
In dealing with the exceptions to the master’s report and its recommittal, the trial judge found and ruled as follows: “The plaintiff at the time of her husband’s death on September 3, 1918, was the owner, subject to a mortgage and certain other encumbrances, of two apartment houses in Lawrence, comprising together six or seven apartments, in ■one of which the plaintiff had lived for many years with her husband and an unmarried woman, Rebecca Frederick, who was virtually a member of the family and the mainstay of the household. . . . Within a week after her husband’s death the plaintiff at the suggestion of the defendant, conveyed her entire property to the defendant upon the condition, embodied in the deed, that the defendant should provide suitable maintenance for the plaintiff and her said companion, • Rebecca Frederick, during their lives. The defendant also
We need not refer to all the findings of the trial judge, nor determine whether, as the defendant contends, some of them are contrary to those found by the master.
The defendant was a stepbrother of the plaintiff’s husband, and after her husband’s death, it does not appear that there was any one except the defendant upon whom the plaintiff could rely for advice and guidance concerning her affairs. The master found that he had been a trusted friend of the plaintiff’s husband and was the executor of his will; that no other person stood in so close relation to the plaintiff and Miss Frederick as the defendant; that “They accepted his strong personality as matter of course and implicitly relied on him”; that “When Dugrenier died leaving in the household but the two women, his enfeebled widow and Rebecca Frederick, naturally they looked to Moison.”
Without further reciting the findings, it is manifest that the plaintiff relied on the defendant and implicitly believed that he would act for her best interest. The confidence which she reposed in him, as shown by the master’s findings, established a relation which in effect was one of trust. In view of her age, ignorance of the English language and enfeebled condition, she was much more susceptible to undue influence than if she had been in sound health and mentally
The master seemingly bases his ultimate finding upon his subsidiary finding that she had sufficient understanding to make the deed. That, however, is not decisive of the issue whether it is legally binding upon her or upon the representative of her estate. As was said in Lyons v. Elston, 211 Mass. 478, at pages 481 and 482: “Although weakness of mind is often a condition for the exercise of improper influence, the full possession of one’s faculties does not necessarily render one immune to such influence. There may be absent that strength of character required to resist the overpowering will of another.”
The findings of the master show that the plaintiff deeded all her real estate to the defendant upon no consideration except that he would provide a suitable maintenance for her and Rebecca Frederick during their natural lives respectively, and would cause their bodies to be buried as stated in the deed; that about fourteen months after the deed was executed and delivered to the defendant, he caused her to execute another deed releasing him from the obligations imposed in the first deed; that on September 21, 1922, he sold the entire estate for $21,250 and removed both women from their former home to his own house, where Miss Frederick remained for a year and a month, when he paid her $125 and obtained from her a general release from all debts and demands, and she went to Canada; that about ten weeks after Miss Frederick left, the plaintiff went to five with relatives in Lynn under an oral agreement by which the defendant paid $25 a month toward her support. She remained in Lynn until her death. Upon these undisputed facts and the other facts found by the master, and in view of the relation of trust and confidence which existed between the parties, the irresistible conclusion is that the deeds in question were
It follows that the interlocutory decree entered by order of the trial judge sustaining the plaintiff’s exceptions and confirming the master’s report as modified and recommitting the report for an accounting is affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.