324 Mass. 220 | Mass. | 1949
The purpose of this suit between husband and wife is to determine the ownership of certain United States bonds and postal savings certificates. Since the defendant conceded at the arguments before us that the plaintiff is the owner of the bonds, the questions for decision relate only to the certificates. The evidence is reported and the judge made a voluntary report of the material facts found by him.
Findings of the judge include the following: The plaintiff turned over money ($2,500 in the aggregate) to the defendant from time to time with the request that she use it for
The defendant urges that the judge should have found that she was the sole owner of the certificates or, at the very least, that she had a partial interest in them.' We are of opinion that the latter contention must be sustained. The evidence was conflicting. If the judge believed the testimony of the defendant he could have found that the certificates belonged solely to her. But such a finding was by no means required. The plaintiff’s version of the transaction, which the judge evidently believed, supported his findings. But his conclusion that the plaintiff never intended to make a gift of "any part” of the certificates to the defendant is inconsistent with his specific findings and is not supported by the evidence. The specific findings of the judge show that the plaintiff wanted the certificates to be put in the names of himself and the defendant so that, in case she survived him, she would have title to them without the necessity of seeking administration or probate of his estate.
It follows that the final decree is erroneous in adjudging that the certificates are the sole property of the plaintiff. The decree is to be modified by striking therefrom the provision that the plaintiff is the sole owner of the postal savings certificates and by substituting therefor a provision that the certificates are held in joint account by the plaintiff and the defendant in accordance with the intention of the plaintiff as hereinbefore set forth; the decree shall also order the parties to do such acts and to execute such documents as may be necessary to effectuate that intention, and, as so modified, the decree is affirmed.
„ bo ordered.
The plaintiff testified as follows: “Q. Did you ever intend or did you ever say that your wife should have fifty-fifty ownership of either the bonds or postal savings? A. I always have told her in case either one of us pass away, we wouldn’t have no trouble with courts and lawyers and things like that, so that we wouldn’t have no trouble, that is why I put the money in joint names. Q. Did you ever say to your wife, this is fifty-fifty? A. No.”