287 Mass. 409 | Mass. | 1934
The plaintiffs, who are husband and wife, in May, 1924, lent $1,000 to Dr. Henry S. Penn, and a note for that amount payable in one year signed by the doctor and his brother was at that time delivered to the plaintiffs. In 1931 they brought suit on the note to recover $800 as the unpaid balance of the principal, naming both makers as defendants. Shortly after August 3, 1928, Dr. Penn left the Commonwealth and has since resided in
Dr. Penn was a physician and in May, 1924, the female plaintiff was his patient. At that time he asked her and her husband for a loan of $1,000 and they agreed to make it if he and his brother, the defendant, would sign a note. The parties agree that the defendant was an accommodation party on the note which was given. Between that time and August 3, 1928, the principal sum named in the note had, by instalment payments, been reduced to $850. On that date the female plaintiff with the knowledge of her husband went to the doctor’s office with the note to ask for its payment. No one was present but herself and the doctor. She was the only witness to testify as to what happened and her testimony includes little of the conversation then had. The doctor paid her $50 and then wrote out and signed a new note for $800 payable to the order of her husband. He gave it to her and asked for the old note. She gave it to him and he tore it up. It did not appear that she raised any question or made any objection to what was done. In fact the record is bare of any recital of the circumstances attendant on the acts above related which give them color or special or peculiar significance. The male plaintiff learned of these facts on the same day.
The plaintiffs’ third request for a ruling, which was refused by the judge, was as follows: “a wife who is a joint payee with her husband, in a promissory note which is joint or joint and several, is not an agent of her husband with implied power to release or discharge one of the two joint promissors, and may not discharge one of two joint promissors unless expressly authorized by her husband.” One of two or more payees named in a bill or note may receive payment of it and discharge the entire claim. Dewey v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. 256 Mass. 281, 284,
The judge gave in terms the plaintiffs’ second request “That a destruction or cancellation of the promissory note, or a release of one of the joint promissors, made unintentionally or by mistake or by ignorance of what was actually done, or without the authority of both of the holders, is not a discharge,” but essential facts assumed in the request were not found by him. He found that there was no evidence on which could be based a finding of any fraud on the part of Dr. Penn at the time the second note was given and the old one destroyed. The female plaintiff could not read or speak English but the doctor spoke her native tongue. There was no testimony that any representation of any sort, either true or false, was made by him. The new note was not accepted by her in ignorance of any material facts. She could, fairly, on the evidence, be held
At the request of the plaintiffs the judge ruled that “one in a fiduciary relationship owes a duty to disclose all material facts to her whose confidence he possesses.” He refused to give the plaintiffs’ fifth request for a ruling, in substance, that “if the court finds as a fact that Mary Saulenas was a patient” of Dr. Penn “at the time of the alleged transactions” he “stood in a fiduciary relationship to her.” The judge found that Mrs. Saulenas was a patient of the doctor at the time of the first transaction but was not his patient at the time of the second transaction. It is not contended that there was any fraud practised or undue influence exerted by the doctor at the time the first note was given. The duration or character of the illness for which the female plaintiff was at that time treated by the doctor, the length or character of the treatment and the extent of the actual trust and confidence which she then or thereafter reposed in him do not appear. On this phase of the case the burden was on the plaintiffs to prove that a relation of trust and confidence having its origin in a relationship of physician and patient was in existence at the time the second note was given. Woodbury v. Woodbury, 141 Mass. 329. Colburn v. Hodgdon, 241 Mass. 183, 192, The judge found
As we find no error in the rulings of law made, the finding for the defendant must stand.
Order dismissing report affirmed.