Allen v. Moushegian

71 N.E.2d 393, 320 Mass. 746, 1947 Mass. LEXIS 562
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 71 N.E.2d 393 (Allen v. Moushegian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Moushegian, 71 N.E.2d 393, 320 Mass. 746, 1947 Mass. LEXIS 562 (Mass. 1947).

Opinion

Dolan, J.

This petition in equity is brought by the petitioner as executrix of the will of her father, George L. Lawson, to recover from the respondent certain assets of the estate which came into the possession of the respondent in. the course of his employment as attorney for her in her representative capacity as executrix as aforesaid. In addition to praying for an accounting, the petitioner also prayed that the respondent be ordered to return to her certain shares of stock specifically described in the petition, together with other personal property comprising a part of the estate of the testator, and for general relief. After hearing, the judge on March 13, 1944, entered a decree ordering the respondent to turn over to the petitioner the stock of certain corporations, described in the petition, and to pay to the petitioner the sum of $1,957. The respondent appealed from that decree. On June 29, 1945, the judge filed a report of material facts, which appears on its face to be a comprehensive report of all the material facts upon which he based the decree previously entered by him. See Birnbaum v. Pamouhis, 301 Mass. 559. In this report the judge stated that there was a mistake in phrasing the decree already entered by him, that he found in fact that the respondent had received $6,117.73 which he claimed under his contract, that is, “the power of attorney of January 23, 1937,” and that that sum was made up of proceeds of the sales of fifteen shares of stock of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and shares of stock of the Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, “a total of $4,160.73, and $1,957 received in cash [by the respondent] at different times and not accounted for except in the respondent’s claim for compensation.” Continuing, the judge stated that it was his intention to charge the respondent with the proceeds of the sale of those stocks plus the balance of cash received by him, but that by inadvertence the decree entered ordered the respondent to return the shares of corporate stock in specie. For the pur[748]*748pose of correcting the mistake in phrasing the decree first entered and to make effective the real purpose of the judge, he entered a new decree on June 29, 1945, vacating the first decrete (of March 13,1944) and charging the respondent with the amount received by him as proceeds of the sales of the shares of stock in question, $4,160.73, and the balance of cash received by him from other sources, namely, $1,957, the total being $6,117.73, and ordering the respondent to pay that sum to the petitioner. The respondent appealed also from that dtecree.

The evidence is reported. Material facts found by the judge and those we find ourselves may be summed up as follows: The petitioner is a married woman past middle age. The respondent, who was admitted to the bar in 1924, practises law in Lowell. Early in the year 1937 the petitioner, who knew that her father possessed interests in real and personal property, the amount of which she did not know, became concerned about her prospects of eventually receiving it. She believed "correctly” that her brother had received the larger part of her mother’s estate and was apprehensive as to what might become of her father’s estate after his death. Her anxiety was unnecessary but not unreasonable. In this state of mind she consulted the respondent on January 22, 1937. A friend had recommended him to her. He is a lawyer of about twenty years’ experience. She told him of her fears and that she had no present financial means. He then drafted a power of attorney which in final form provided that his compensation should be twenty-five per cent of the amount that should be "recovered.” 1 In its original form that provision was not set forth. This power of attorney was signed by the petitioner on the next day, January 23, 1937. She had not taken ad-. [749]*749vice from any person other than the respondent concerning the signing of the power, and the respondent did not suggest to her that she should get other advice. The petitioner had had no previous contact with lawyers or law business, except on one occasion in connection with an automobile accident. Her only experience in business was in selling articles of women’s clothing and small wares from house to house in an attempt to increase her slender income. In her dealings with the respondent, from first to last, she did not have enough mental equipment or experience to understand or to appraise the situation that was created between her and the respondent. The judge did not credit the testimony of the respondent that he stated to the petitioner "as a part of her contract that if there should be no recovery, she would nevertheless owe him the value of his services.’’ Sometime after January 23,1937, the respondent examined the Probate Court records concerning the settlement of the petitioner’s mother’s estate and found that her estate had been settled some years before. Later, after a conference with the petitioner and her father, the respondent was appointed conservator of her father’s property on November 20, 1940. Her father died on December 5, 1940. The conservatorship was therefore in force for less than one month. The respondent, who had had possession of the property of his ward, settled his account as conservator on February 14, 1941, in the Probate Court, and was allowed $500 for his services as conservator. The petitioner’s father died testate, as before stated, on December 5, 1940. His will was executed in 1934, and, after money legacies amounting to a little over $1,000, he bequeathed the residue of his estate to the petitioner. His will was allowed without opposition on January 2, 1941. There was no reason why the respondent should have made any elaborate preparations in support of the will. The petitioner, as an executrix residing outside the Commonwealth, appointed the respondent [750]*750her agent. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 195, § 8, as amended by-St. 1933, c. 221, § 2. The respondent, as former conservator of the property of the testator, transferred to the petitioner, as executrix, the property of the testator of which he had had •possession in his name as conservator. He continued, however, to keep actual possession thereof. The inventory of the estate of the testator shows "personal estate $23,400.95, •real estate $5,950.” Between February and June, 1941, the respondent furnished various sums to the petitioner to pay legacies and $485 which was used by her to purchase an automobile. In March and April, 1941, the respondent divided parts of the estate of the testator between himself and the petitioner, giving her seventy-five per cent and keeping twenty-five per cent for himself. As part of this process, the petitioner, who had come into possession of forty shares of stock of the Pullman Company, paid the respondent $275, which was twenty-five per cent of its inventory value. A certificate for forty shares of stock of the American Can Company was transferred by the respondent as conservator of her father’s property to the petitioner as executrix, and then changed into two certificates, one for ten shares and the other for thirty shares, both in the name of the petitioner as executrix. The same course was followed with certificates for one hundred shares of stock of the Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, and sixty shares of stock of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.E.2d 393, 320 Mass. 746, 1947 Mass. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-moushegian-mass-1947.