222 Mass. 123 | Mass. | 1915
This case comes up on an exception taken by the plaintiff to the refusal of the judge
The facts agreed on were as follows: In April, 1914, one John W. Maxwell applied to the board of selectmen of the town of Clinton for a liquor license of the first class for the year beginning May 1, 1914. The board of selectmen was the board authorized to issue liquor licenses in Clinton. Before Maxwell’s application the board had issued a notice requiring that all applications for liquor licenses of the first class should be accompanied by a certified check for $1,000 payable to the treasurer of the town. On April 4, Maxwell’s wife borrowed from a savings bank the sum of $1,000 on a mortgage of real estate owned by her in her own right. She took the $1,000 to the First National Bank of Clinton, deposited it in that bank in her own name and asked the vice president of the bank to give her a certified check for the amount of the deposit. Thereupon the vice president gave her a check for $1,000 signed by him drawn on the First National Bank and payable “to the order of C. E. Shaw, Treas.” C. E. Shaw was treasurer of the town of Clinton. Maxwell’s wife then obtained from Maxwell’s attorney the application for the liquor license signed by her husband, placed the application and the check in an envelope, sealed the envelope and sent it to Otto Schmidt, the clerk of the
Upon these facts the following finding was made by the judge of the Superior Court: “The court finds that, at the time of the service of the writ upon the trustee in the above entitled case, the trustee had in its possession no goods, effects or credits of the defendant and that the check then held by the clerk of the board of selectmen of the town of Clinton was the property of Mary Maxwell, wife of the defendant.”
The money deposited in the First National Bank when it was deposited there was the money of Mrs. Maxwell. The check upon that bank, signed by the vice president and payable to C. E. Shaw, the treasurer, was her check when it was drawn and delivered to her. The judge was warranted in finding that the check continued to be her property. It was agreed by the parties that Mrs. Maxwell did not make a loan to her husband. That being so, the judge was warranted in finding that what Mrs. Maxwell did was to hand her check to the clerk of the board of selectmen to be delivered by him to Shaw, the treasurer of the town, in case a liquor license was granted by the board of selectmen to Maxwell, but, in case a liquor license was not granted to Maxwell, to return the check to her.
The special finding that the check was the property of Mrs. Maxwell disposes of the question of the plaintiff’s right to have the trustee charged. Under these circumstances it is not necessary to point out other difficulties which stand in the way of the plain
The entry must be
Exceptions overruled.
The case was submitted on briefs.
Sanderson, J.