216 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1913
The question for decision is, whether upon the pleadings and the master’s report, to which no exceptions have been taken, the plaintiff is entitled to equitable relief as to either or alL of the defendants. The defendant, Elbridge G. Woodard, is the husband of the plaintiff, and, no evidence having been introduced as to the laws of the State of Vermont where the transactions out of which the controversy arises took place, we assume its common law to be the same as our own. Callender, McAuslan & Troup Co. v. Flint, 187 Mass. 104. It is plain from the master’s very full and specific findings, that the plaintiff’s husband fraudulently collected and retained to his own use all the moneys derived from the sale of certain real and personal property in which she is found, to have had a joint and equal interest. By our decisions where husband and wife are named as such or are known to the grantor or vendor to be such, ordinarily the conveyance to them of either real or personal property creates at common law an estate by the entirety subject to the right of survivorship, by which “each is secure against an impairment of rights through the sole act of the other.” Donahue v. Hubbard, 154 Mass. 537. Phelps v. Simons, 159 Mass. 415. Boland v. McKowen, 189 Mass. 563, 564. Hoag v. Hoag, 213 Mass. 50. No transfer appears to have been made directly or indirectly from one spouse to the other. The business dealings between third parties and themselves in the purchase, the sale and the mortgaging of the farms, and the purchase and sale of
The final decree dismissing the bill as to Elbridge G. Woodard and Mabel S. Woodard, who are the sole defendants must be reversed, and a decree to be enforced against the property standing in the name of Mabel S. Woodard for the amount found due by the master with interest and costs is to be entered, but its form and terms are to be settled in the Superior Court.
Ordered accordingly.