191 Mass. 51 | Mass. | 1906
The defendant is the executrix of the will of Max Nold, and this action is brought to recover $1,140 for board alleged to have been furnished by the plaintiff to said Nold and his wife, and various sums of money, amounting to over $1,400, alleged to have been received by Nold from the plaintiff or to have been paid by the plaintiff for his use. The case was tried before a judge of the Superior Court without a jury, the only evidence being an auditor’s report, which set forth his findings of fact in detail as to all claims made by the plaintiff.
The defendant asked the judge to rule that upon all the evi-. dence in the case the plaintiff was not entitled to recover for the board claimed or for the money alleged to have been lent or expended, unless for the items enumerated in the fifteenth section of the auditor’s report; that if as a fact the defendant’s testator received board where he was living, and different sums of money either from the plaintiff or the plaintiff’s money, and the plaintiff only consciously expected to be reimbursed for these sums out of the property of the defendant’s testator, and by a particular method, namely, through the expected inheritance by the plaintiff’s wife at the death of the testator,
The judge declined to make any of these rulings ; and ruled, at the request of the defendant, that the intention of the plaintiff, which he had without disclosing it to the defendant’s testator, with reference to the board and cash furnished or advanced, and the question whether he intended the same as a gift or not, are immaterial, and the evidence of such intention should not be considered, but the intention of the plaintiff must be determined from all the circumstances of the case; and found for the plaintiff in the sum of $979 and some cents. The defendant excepts to the refusal of her requests for rulings.
Without going over the specific findings of the auditor in detail, we think that upon the statements of the report the judge was warranted in finding that the plaintiff furnished to the defendant’s testator, the board and money for which he was allowed to recover, not as a gift, but with the expectation that it was to create a liability on the part of Nold for its repayment, and knowing and relying upon the fact that Nold had property more than enough to repay him. And in spite of the statement made by the auditor as to the seventh of the plaintiff’s requests for findings,
We cannot doubt that from the specific findings of fact made by the auditor the judge had the right to draw inferences of fact contrary to those drawn by him. Livingston v. Hammond, ubi supra. Peaslee v. Ross, 143 Mass. 275. Emerson v. Patch, 129 Mass. 299.
Exceptions overruled.
The plaintiff’s wife was the only child of Max Nold, the defendant’s testator.
The seventh finding requested by the plaintiff was as follows:
“ That the money, provisions, and board furnished by the plaintiff to the said Hold as hereinabove set forth were furnished by him with the distinct purpose and intention that the same should not be a gift or gratuity to Hold, and that Hold knew or as a reasonable man ought to have known that the plaintiff did not intend to make him a gift or gratuity thereof, and that as a result if Hold had during his lifetime attempted to dispose of his property as a gift to a third person, such disposition would have been in fraud of*53 the rights of the plaintiff as a creditor, voidable by him, and that the disposition by will after his death stands upon the same footing.”
In regard to this the auditor said: “ In reference to the plaintiff’s seventh request for a special finding I do not feel justified in making it.”