Balfe v. Tilton

235 F. 448, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedAugust 14, 1916
DocketNo. 373
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 235 F. 448 (Balfe v. Tilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Balfe v. Tilton, 235 F. 448, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385 (D.N.H. 1916).

Opinion

ALDRICH, District Judge.

This cause is now submitted upon motions which raise the question whether the report of the master, John E. Allen, shall be confirmed or rejected and set aside. Upon proceedings prior to the appointment and the hearings before Mr. Allen, certain findings of fact had been made by a former master, and upon hearings the findings had been confirmed in respect to the purposes for which they had been made.

[449]*449The various hearings before the court, and before examiners and masters, were under a bill in equity in which relief was sought upon the general ground that Charles E. Tilton, who was executor of his brother Alfred’s estate, had fraudulently subverted interests which belonged to Alfred’s widow and daughter. Under the bill, which asks for discovery and an accounting, it became necessary, under the pleadings, to determine, as a preliminary question, whether certain releases, which had been executed by the widow of Alfred, were fraudulently obtained. Upon such ascertainments as were deemed proper, the releases were set aside as fraudulent.

The findings with respect to the releases executed by Louise Tilton, the widow of Alfred, were made by James E. Tuttle, as master, under a commission which defined the duties of such master as not requiring a hearing with the scope which would ordinarily be adopted for purposes of strict accounting, but a scope sufficiently broad to cover investigations with reference to the value of the interests of Alfred at the time of his death and at the time of the supposed releases, so far as it was thought that property values reasonably bore upon the question whether Louise was overreached in the supposed settlement between Charles E. Tilton, as executor, and the widow, Louise, and her daughter. Under such a commission, and upon such investigations and hearings as the parties sought, Mr. Tuttle reported that Charles had fraudulently obtained title to a large amount of real estate belonging to his brother, conservatively worth not less than $100,000, that his administration of the estate was fraudulent, that the releases were obtained by fraud, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to an accounting. After Mr. Tuttle’s report came in, the plaintiffs moved for a decree for $100,000, and the motion was denied, upon the ground that the findings of Mr. Tuttle were not for the purpose of definitely establishing rights under a strict accounting, but for the purpose of ascertaining whether the releases should stand across the path of the plaintiffs, and thus put out of contention all questions in respect to the right of the plaintiffs to have an accounting. The report of Mr. Tuttle was accepted and confirmed in respect to such questions, the releases were set aside, an accounting was ordered, and the question of discovery was held in abeyance.

The commission to Mr. Tuttle, and his findings thereunder, were manifestly not for the purpose of establishing ultimate rights under an accounting, but for the purpose of determining whether the release, which lay across the path of the plaintiffs, should be removed, to the end that an accounting might be had.

Under certain explanations and orders, Thomas D. Luce was appointed master, and after an incomplete hearing before him he asked to be relieved from the case, and an order, as it is remembered, was entered accordingly. Subsequently, by agreement of the parties, John E. Allen was appointed master to state the account, and his report is now before me upon motions to which I have referred.

Under such proceedings as had been had before the court and the prior master, and under a decree appointing another master for the definitely expressed purpose of taking an account, it would ordinarily [450]*450be supposed that such master would proceed to that end, without assuming responsibility in respect to matters involved in tire prior interlocutory proceedings, which include findings and decrees. Still the master in this case seems to assume a broader responsibility than is ordinarily assumed by a master. It was entirely beyond his province to criticise a finding of Mr. Tuttle, a former master, and say that it was based upon unsupported conjecture. The criticism of Mr., Tuttle’s report was not pertinent to any issue before Mr. Allen; and beyond what is involved in the idea of the master’s criticism of the findings of a former master in the same proceedings, is the idea that it discredits a finding which was largely the foundation for the decree setting aside the releases.

Under conditions of established fraud, certain intendments and inferences are sometimes warranted. Intendments and inferences sometimes naturally and necessarily spring from the circumstantial situation; therefore it is not for one tribunal, and especially a tribunal not charged with the duty of reviewing a former finding, to- characterize it as based upon unsupported conjecture.

It is quite true that the accounting, contemplated by the submission to Master Allen, was an equitable accounting, with explanations of the theory upon which the ascertainments were made. That, of course, meant that the accounting by Mr. Allen should be an equitable one, and an ascertainment of the fact whether there was anything in the Charles Tilton estate which belonged to the estate of Alfred. The discharge of the duty under such a submission did not require the strong characterizations against the findings of the prior master, and indirectly of the decrees of the court thereon.

The report of Mr. Allen is more like an opinion by a tribunal under the responsibility of writing an opinion in respect to ultimate rights than a statement of an equitable account by a master in equity.

If it be true that Charles Tilton’s administration of the trust existing between himself, as executor of his brother’s will, and the widow and daughter of his brother, was fraudulent throughout, it results that there is some burden upon the defendants to show that the Charles Tilton estate has not reaped any harvest by virtue of the fraud. The fact that there was a fundamental wrong in Charles Tilton’s administering a trust, as between his own interests and the interests of others, goes far in the direction of creating the burden of showing that there is nothing in his estate that belongs to the estate of Alfred.

Under such circumstances of trust relations, the evidence in this case which has been submitted to me from time to time, consisting of letters written by Charles to Louise, and of explanations and transactions, and descriptions of the manner in which proceedings were instituted and carried along, has created a very strong impression in my mind, not only that Charles intended to overreach Alfred’s widow and her child, but that he so managed Alfred’s interests as to benefit by it to their damage.

The character of the letters, the manner of doing business, and the nature of the interviews between Charles and Louise are very weighty in sustaining this view. This does not mean that the estate of Charles [451]*451should be wronged by any general considerations of fraud, and there was no occasion for the master’s interjecting into his report the idea that one guilty of fraud should not be denied equal protection of the law, or atry expressions as to what justice requires. The master’s duty was to state the account and the theory upon which it was made.

As observed, the report of Mr. Allen does not so far relieve my mind as to justify a final decree against the plaintiff.

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Related

Balfe v. Tilton
237 F. 684 (D. New Hampshire, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
235 F. 448, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balfe-v-tilton-nhd-1916.