Bagley, Ex. v. Page

189 A. 39, 57 R.I. 186, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 16, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 A. 39 (Bagley, Ex. v. Page) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bagley, Ex. v. Page, 189 A. 39, 57 R.I. 186, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 90 (R.I. 1937).

Opinion

*187 Baker, J.

This suit in equity is before the court on the complainant’s appeal from a decree entered in the Superior Court dismissing the bill of complaint, after a hearing on bill, answer and proof.

The complainant brings the bill individually and as executrix under the will of her deceased husband, Joseph W. Bagley, against her daughter, the respondent, to have a certain note and mortgage for $5,000, covering a parcel of land in the city of Pawtucket, with a house and workshop thereon and the contents of such workshop, declared void as an encumbrance upon the property in which she, the complainant, claims an interest, and to have such note and mortgage delivered up to the court, and the mortgage cancelled and discharged on the records of that city. The basis of the relief asked for in the bill is that no adequate or valuable consideration was given for the note and mortgage. The answer admits most of the allegations of the bill, but denies the one relating to the alleged failure of the respondent to give adequate consideration.

Erom the record it appears that the mortgage, dated July 2, 1932, and recorded in Pawtucket the same day, was made by Joseph W. Bagley, who owned the property in question, to the respondent, his daughter. The complainant did not join in the execution of the mortgage in any way. Mr. Bagley died May 7, 1933, at the age of sixty-seven. In 1914 he had made a will, giving all his property to the complainant for life, with power to mortgage and sell the same if necessary for her support. This will was duly admitted to probate in Pawtucket, and the complainant was named and duly qualified as executrix thereunder. She contends that the mortgage to the respondent was made in order to nullify the will.

*188 The testimony shows that the complainant and her husband had not been on friendly terms, owing to domestic difficulties, for a considerable time prior to his death, not speaking to one another except on rare occasions for some five years. In the spring of 1931, the complainant left'the house in Pawtucket and went to live in Saylesville with a son-in-law to keep house and to look out for his children, his wife having died. Prior to this time, Mr. Bagley, who was suffering from rheumatism and heart trouble, had been living in the workshop on the premises, claiming to have done so on the advice of a physician who had told him to find a place where he could rest and be quiet. During this period Mr. Bagley was receiving in rentals from property he owned in Central Falls sums which averaged slightly in excess of $350 per year. A substantial part of this money was spent in maintaining this property, and the remainder he used for personal expenses. He apparently had no other income.

The respondent, the daughter of Mr. Bagley and the complainant, had been living with her husband and three children, for about eleven years in Attleboro, Massachusetts, where her husband and a daughter were employed. The respondent’s relations with her father were friendly and she often visited and took food to him, especially after her mother went to Saylesville to live. In the spring of 1932, Mr. Bagley urged the respondent to move her family and to come and live with him in Pawtucket and look out for him, as he was then not well and had little money. About this time the respondent paid from her own funds her father’s water bill. Soon after she learned that the property in Pawtucket had been levied on and was being advertised for sale for nonpayment of the city tax for 1931. This tax and additions, amounting in all to $121.65, she herself paid in May, 1932, with'money she took from her own bank account.

In the early summer of 1932, the respondent, after consultation with her husband, decided to take her family to *189 her father’s home in Pawtucket in accordance with his desires, and her furniture and goods were so moved, although this change caused some inconvenience to her husband and daughter, the latter giving up her position in Attleboro. Most of the summer was spent by the respondent and her family at a cottage on Narragansett Bay, frequent visits being made to her father in Pawtucket, and he often staying with them at the shore. In the late summer they moved back to Mr. Bagley’s house and continued to live there, he dying some eight months later. The respondent and her family paid Mr. Bagley no rent. However, she looked out for her father, massaged his hand and arm which were affected with rheumatism, helped him dress and tie his shoes, cut his food and paid all the costs of maintaining the household. At times he was so crippled with rheumatism that he was compelled to use crutches. In addition, the respondent and her husband, at their own expense, painted, papered and renovated certain parts of the house. In December, 1932, she paid from her own funds the city tax for that year amounting to $129.06, and later, before her father’s death, made a payment of $50 on the tax for the following year.

The respondent does not claim that she paid her father any money for the note and mortgage when he delivered them to her, or that there was any prior agreement or understanding between them that she should receive any such documents as a consideration for moving from Attleboro and coming to live with him, in order to look out for and maintain him. It does appear in evidence, however, that, in answer to a question from him when she first moved from Attleboro, the respondent stated that she would look out for him for the rest of his life. She contends, in substance, that a gift of these instruments was made to her by her father from love and affection on his part, and because of what she had done for him and expected to do for him in the future. If actual consideration from her be required, to validate the transaction, she *190 argues that it was furnished by money she paid out in taxes, water bills and the like, the expenses incident to supporting and caring for her father as long as he lived, and money and work laid out on the property. The complainant urges the invalidity of the note and mortgage, but also argues that if the court does not accept this contention, then, in any event, they should be held good only to the extent of the expenditures actually made by the respondent on behalf of her father and his property.

From the testimony of the respondent, it appears that, although the note and mortgage were executed July 2, 1932, she knew nothing about their existence till some time in August of that year. She is the only witness who gives evidence as to their delivery. She testifies that one day, when she had come from the shore and was with her father in his house, she asked him whether he could pay the 1932 city tax which was then coming due, that he stated that he had no money, and that she then told him that she would pay it. Thereupon, he gave her the note and mortgage, telling her to put them away and that he had made the mortgage to protect her for what she did for him, and she then took the papers and kept them. She further testifies that on this occasion he said: “This will always keep you until you get back everything you put in. If I ever get on my feet again and can work, of course, I could pay it all back, and everything would be all right, and otherwise I always want you to have this house, it is yours,”

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Bluebook (online)
189 A. 39, 57 R.I. 186, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bagley-ex-v-page-ri-1937.