This is а bill in equity brought by Hannah M. Webster against the defendant William J. Kelly, hereinafter called the defendant, and his wife, Maud A. Kelly, wherein the plaintiff prays that they be ordered to re-
On January 12, 1926, the same judge referred the cause to a “ Special Master to hear the partiеs and their evidence under the usual order of reference and to report upon the following issues: (1) Is the complainant liable to the respondent William J. Kelly for legal services rendered, and, if so, (2) The services rendered and the amount which the respondent William J. Kelly is entitled to recover therefor.” Pursuant to the order, the special master heard the parties, examined their evidence and exhibits and reported, his findings to the court on January 7, 1927. The plaintiff filed eighty-one objections to .this report. She also filed a motion “ (1) That the report by . . . [the special master] be declared of no effect and stricken from the record. (2) That the cause be reсommitted to the said . . . [special master] for the sole purpose of his reporting the evidence that was heard before-him. (3) That the court determine the amount, if any, of defendant’s compensation upon the evidence thus reported and upon any additional evidence which.the court may allow the parties to introduсe. (4) For such other and further relief as to the court may seem just and proper.” The plaintiff also filed an affidavit dealing with her objections and exceptions to the master’s report, and a further affidavit “ designed to give a connected story of what Kelly himself claimed he did for Mrs. Webster.”
The special master pursuant to the order duly filed in court a supplementary report with a report of the evidence. The plaintiff filed a motion for the recommittal of this report. This motion was denied, after hearing, on October 25, 1927, and on March 3, 1928, an interlocutory decree was filed wherein it was ordered, adjudged and decreed “ that each of the several objections and exceptions of the plaintiff to the master’s supplementary report be and hereby is overruled; that the plaintiff’s motion to recommit the said supplementary report be and hereby is overruled; that the plaintiff’s exception to the denial by the [special] mastеr ... of plaintiff’s motion to strike out the question and answer on pages 8 and 9 of his final report be and hereby is overruled; that each of the plaintiff’s several exceptions to the admission and exclusion of evidence appearing on pages 8, 9 and 10 of the supplementary report be and hereby is overruled, and that the final rеport of the [special] master . . . and his supplementary report be and hereby are confirmed.” From this decree the plaintiff appealed.
On March 14, 1930, the plaintiff filed forty-nine requests for rulings and findings. On March 29, 1930, she filed a motion that all the evidence before the special master, the same being duly transcribed and available for filing аs a part of the record, be filed with the court. This motion was denied and the plaintiff excepted. As respects this motion the judge of the Superior Court filed the following statement for incorporation in appeal record: “ When this case was about to be referred to . . . [the special] master to determine whether Mr. Kelly was еntitled to be compensated by Mrs. Webster for legal services rendered, and, if so, in what amount, the parties
In connection with the final decree the plaintiff filed requests for rulings, and at her request, an interlocutory decree was filed on April 2, 1930, relating to the rulings of the judge dated January 12, 1925, supra. On June 18, 1930, a final decree was entered adjudging the deed from the plaintiff to the defendant and from him to his wife voidable, and voiding them; and decreeing that the plaintiff was indebted to the defendant for $253.82 expended by him in repairing the premises which had been deeded to him, $10 for money loaned, $6,000 for legal services and $1,219.33 interest from January 7, 1927 (the date of the filing of the special master’s report) a total of $7,-483.15. The decree further provided that upon payment by the plaintiff to the defendant of this total sum, with interest thereon to the day of payment, within ninety days from the date of the entry of the decree, the premises should be deeded back to the plaintiff and she should
Thе circumstances which gave rise to this suit, as they are disclosed by the reports of the masters, in substance are as follows: after the death of her husband on December 24, 1918, the plaintiff, an elderly woman who had become estranged from her adopted son, was in need of “advice in regard to the management of her real estatе.” She was the owner of her residence, 677 Cambridge Street, in the Brighton district of Boston, and of two apartment houses. The defendant “ was a tenant ” in one of these apartments. She consulted the defendant for the reason that he was an attorney at law and for several years prior to her husband’s death had acted as his counsel in various matters. Her husband had great friendship for the defendant and great confidence in him, and on his dying bed told the plaintiff to consult the defendant in regard to her affairs and that he would look after her affairs properly and competently, both as an attorney and as a friend. The defendant, with the assistance of the adopted son of thе plaintiff, succeeded in restoring the apartments to a paying basis and in selling one of them at an advantageous price. In July, 1920, the plaintiff, who had paid the defendant nothing for his services, because he had served her husband as legal adviser without compensation and had helped her since her husband’s death, expressed the wish to give him several articles of furniture in her residence and to give him her residence after her death. The defendant assented, but informed her that in the circumstances he ought not to make the will and “ suggested that she go to one of the judges of the local court for that purpose.” In consequence of this advice she made out a list of thе furniture which she desired to leave the defendant and went with it to a judge of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston for the Brighton District. On September 22, 1920, in the presence of the presiding judge of that court and two
When the plaintiff took this will to the defendant she asked him if it was satisfactory and he, having in mind a possible contest of the will, suggested that a deed of the premises would be more effective in carrying out her wishes. The master finds “ that the respondent did not instruct or request the complainant to execute such a deed.” On October 2, 1920, the plaintiff went alone to the office of said judge of the Boston Municipal Court for the purpose of executing a deed, and the judge “ drew a deed ” from the plaintiff to John F. Holloran and then drew another deed from Holloran conveying the said premises to the plaintiff “ for and during the term of her natural life, with remainder to William J. Kelly ... in fee.” These deeds were duly executed, acknowledged and recorded. The master finds that the plaintiff, “ at the time of the execution of said deeds, intended to give the respondent said house and land after her death fоr the reason stated in said will; that she had an opportunity to read said deeds before the same were executed and that she neither asked for nor received any information from the respondent or Judge Connelly as to the legal effect of said deeds.” He further finds that the said judge “ dealt with said deeds as a matter of routine, that he had no reason to suspect that the complainant did not understand what she was doing, and that he was concerned chiefly with satisfying the legal requirements to make said will and deeds effective.” After the deed from Holloran was executed, it was delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant and kept by him until introduced in evidence before the mаster.
In October, 1920, the plaintiff became apprehensive as to her ability to live comfortably upon the income obtainable from ordinary investments and with the advice and assistance of the defendant invested her capital in
In this case, although an independent attorney drafted the will and the deeds, he did so “ as a matter of routine.” It was the clear duty of the defendant not alone to advise the plaintiff to have independent advice but to see thаt the advice when given was directed to the significance of her proposed act and that it made clear to her that the legal effect of her Heed was to give the defendant a present vested title to the property conveyed as distinguished from a right or title to come into existence at the time of her death. Here, while there is no taint of fraud or chicanery on the part of the defendant, he failed in his duty because, knowing that the plaintiff by her will intended to give him only an estate to take effect at her death, he did not see to it that she was advised and
The plaintiff’s appeal is also without merit. The first master found that, although the services of the defendant were not rendered under any contract to make no charge therefor, he was willing to wait for his compensation, and that he told her she might pay him or give him what she liked when she got on her feet, if and when she was able; that he knew it was extremely doubtful if she would ever be able to pay him, аnd that he undertook to render said services in a sincere desire to relieve her, as the widow of his deceased client, from a distressing financial situation. The second master found that both parties understood that the plaintiff was to pay the defendant for whatever services he rendered to her, and that the defendant “ told her that hе was willing to help her . . . that he stood ready to serve her and that she might pay him later on.” These findings show an implied promise to pay a reasonable compensation for the defendant’s services. Hayes v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co.
The final decree ordering the reconveyance was properly conditioned on the receipt by the defendant of thе money due him. The original conveyance and the devise in the will were made for the reason that the defendant had been the legal adviser of the plaintiff for two years without receiving compensation, and had competently and for many years served her husband without receiving compensation, and in appreciation оf the great help he had been to her husband. The same relationship of trust and confidence reposed which gave rise to the plaintiff’s right to a reconveyance makes it inequitable upon the facts
The numerous exceptions argued by the plaintiff to the refusal of the trial judge to order a report of the evidence were overruled rightly. Whether the evidence should be reported or not rested in the sound discretion of the trial judge. Henderson v. Foster,
Ordered accordingly.
