This is an action of contract, brought in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston, to recover a $500 deposit under an agreement for the sale of land in Sharon. The vendor (Sher) was to convey to the buyer (Swartz) “a good and clear record and marketable title.’’ When the agreement was made, the real estate stood in the name of one Jacobson who “acquired the premises . . . [by] deed dated June 30,1958, from George L. Harwood and Edward M. Anderson, [t]rustees under a [d] eclaration of [t]rust known as the Harwood Realty Trust. ’ ’ The declaration of trust was recorded in the Norfolk County registry of deeds on October 24, 1956. The Harwood trust “was a so-called Massachusetts [t]rust with transferable shares.” The trust declaration “contained no mention ... of the fact that shares . . . had, in fact, been issued” and there was no instrument on record on November 6, 1959 (when papers were to have passed), showing any such issue of shares.
The buyer’s counsel advised his client “that in his opinion title to the premises . . . was not a good and clear record and marketable title.” It was stipulated that tender of a deed would be waived, “it being understood that the sole question is whether there is a good and clear record and marketable title with respect to the . . . Harwood . . . [t]rust.” A lawyer, qualified as an expert, testified that, in his opinion (see
Luce
v.
Parsons,
The trial judge, because there was no evidence of the issue of trust shares on record at the registry of deeds, denied the vendor’s requests for rulings set out in the margin. 1
The court concluded that “the title . . . was not a good and clear record and marketable title” and found for the buyer in the sum of $500. The case was reported to the Appellate Division on the issue of the denial of the vendor’s requests for rulings. The Appellate Division dismissed the report.
1. “A good and clear record title . . . means a title which on the record itself can be again sold as free from obvious defects, and substantial doubts.”
O’Meara
v.
Gleason,
That the title shown on the records permits the existence of a “mere possibility” of a defect in title will not relieve a purchaser from liability under his contract.
Oliver
v.
Poulos,
2. The question whether the vendor’s title was clear was one of fact with the burden upon the buyer to prove that the vendor’s title was not good beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Mishara
v.
Albion,
3. Trusts with transferable shares have been submitted to substantial statutory regulation (see G. L. c. 182) in many respects similar to the regulation of corporations. To be sure such trusts are not corporations, nor are they entities apart from the trustees. See
Peterson
v.
Hopson,
The Appellate Division relied primarily upon
Kaufman
v.
Federal Natl. Bank,
It is appropriate to treat business trusts on a somewhat different basis from private trusts. See Restatement 2d: Trusts, § 1, comment b; Scott, Trusts (2d ed.) § 2.2. We assume (without deciding) that a private trust may fail for want of a beneficiary ascertainable within the period of the Rule' against Perpetuities. See Restatement 2d: Trusts, § 112. When, however, a business trust instrument (which provides for transferable shares) is recorded in the registry of deeds and in the public offices
The specific statutory requirements governing filing such declarations of trust and their annual reports (see G. L. c. 182, § 2, as amended through St. 1948, c. 550, § 39; and § 12, inserted by St. 1954, c. 254, § 2) provide the public
We hold that the existence of the Harwood trust was adequately shown on the record by the recorded trust instrument. There was no affirmative evidence of record that the trust did not validly exist. There was a recorded conveyance of the Sharon property on June 30,1958, to Jacobson by the Harwood trustees, as trustees. The record showed that they then held the record title and that they possessed power to sell. The conveyance sufficiently established the transfer of record title to Jacobson. If there was in fact a defect in the existence of the trust, the burden was on the buyer, who asserted that defect, to prove the facts showing the defect. If such facts had been shown, they would not have affected the record title, but at most would have been relevant only to whether the title was marketable.
4. The vendor’s requests numbered 6, 7, and 8 should have been granted.
5. The order dismissing the report is reversed. Judgment is to be entered for the defendant.
So ordered.
Notes
“6. Failure of the . . . Harwood . . . [t]rust to state that beneficial interest shares had in fact been issued does not affect the validity of the . . . [t]rust as a legal entity where shares had, in fact, been issued. 7. Failure of the . . . [t]rust ... to state that beneficial interest shares had in fact been issued does not render a conveyance by the [t]rustees . . . defective or inoperative where shares had, in fact, been issued prior to such conveyance. 8. Since beneficial interest shares in . . . [the] [t]rust had, in fact, been issued prior to the conveyance in issue [that of June 30, 1958, to Jacobson], said conveyance did effectively transfer the interest of the trust in the realty which it purported to convey.”
