Caines v. Sawyer

248 Mass. 368
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 7, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 248 Mass. 368 (Caines v. Sawyer) 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
Caines v. Sawyer, 248 Mass. 368 (Mass. 1924).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

These are three bills in equity, the first to establish the plaintiff’s rights in two hundred shares of stock of the corporate defendant and for other relief based upon the existence of such rights; and the second and third to enjoin the collection of two notes, one for $1,200 and one for $1,000, made by the plaintiff, as to which he contends that by reason of his alleged rights in the stock described in the first bill he has an equitable defence. The cases were referred to a master who made a report; and, certain exceptions of the defendant to that report having been sustained, it was recommitted to the master to find and report all the facts not already reported and embodied as findings in his report relating to the issue to the defendant Sawyer of the two hundred shares of common stock of the defendant corporation at the time of the reorganization thereof, and all other facts which relate to the question of the ownership of said stock.” The master thereafter filed a supplemental report, and the case was then heard by a judge of the Superior Court who filed a Memorandum and Order for Decrees.” The evidence before the master is not reported. The cases are before this court upon the appeal of the plaintiff in each case from the final decree dismissing the bill, the plaintiff’s appeal from the decree sustaining certain exceptions of the defendant, and from the order recommitting the report.

In dealing with the inferences of fact drawn by the trial [373]*373judge from the master’s report, this court stands with reference to the facts found and the power to draw inferences as did the trial judge, and is not bound by the findings made by him as all the facts are to be found in the report. Harvey-Watts Co. v. Worcester Umbrella Co. 193 Mass. 138. Mansfield v. Wiles, 221 Mass. 75, 84. Glover v. Waltham Laundry Co. 235 Mass. 330, 334.

It appears from the master’s report that, in 1907, the plaintiff organized the defendant corporation under the laws of the State of Maine with a capital stock of $10,000, consisting of four hundred shares of the par value of $25 each, for the purpose of conducting the business of teaching physical culture, which business he had established in Boston. In that year, the defendant Sawyer — then the wife of one Loud — entered the employ of the corporation as clerk, and later was also an instructor. In December of the same year she purchased eight shares of stock in the corporation from the plaintiff, and was elected a director and clerk. Soon after her employment by the defendant corporation she separated from her husband, and the plaintiff separated from his wife; the plaintiff and the defendant Sawyer began living in the same apartment and continued living together in various places in and about Boston until the fall of 1916, when they became involved in a quarrel and did not thereafter live together.

On or about October 7, 1908, a certificate of two hundred and one shares of the defendant corporation, standing in the name of the plaintiff and consisting of a majority and a controlling interest, was transferred by him to the defendant Sawyer; although this certificate was not transferred on the books of the corporation until the reorganization in 1912, it remained in her possession and she dealt with it as owner. The plaintiff contends, and the. master found, that the two hundred and one shares were transferred to her for the purpose of preventing the plaintiff’s wife reaching it in legal proceedings, and that the defendant Sawyer agreed to return it to him after he had secured a divorce from his wife. Upon this question the master made the following finding: In the course of her cross-examination as a witness, the [374]*374defendant Sawyer stated she does not claim that there was a gift of the stock to her, but stands upon her contention that she purchased the two hundred and one shares and paid for them in October, 1908. The pleadings do not raise any issue of a gift of the stock by the plaintiff to her and there was no evidence that anything was said between them, at any time, relative to a gift thereof. From all of the evidence I find that, at the time of the transfer of the two hundred and one shares of stock, the defendant Sawyer did not pay for them and further find that the certificates were indorsed over to her because the plaintiff feared that his wife might attempt to reach them under some legal process and that the defendant Sawyer agreed to return them to him after he had secured a divorce from his wife.” This finding is not inconsistent with the other findings of the master or with those made by the court. The plaintiff contends that by reason of these findings a resulting trust was created in his favor which he is entitled to enforce. There is no doubt that the' transfer was a fraud upon the plaintiff’s wife. Livermore v. Boutelle, 11 Gray, 217. Chase v. Chase, 105 Mass. 385. Doane v. Doane, 238 Mass. 106. It is plain that the express agreement to return the stock cannot be enforced because it discloses upon its face the fraudulent character of the transaction. Lufkin v. Jakeman, 188 Mass. 528, 532. Verne v. Shute, 232 Mass. 397. Dunne v. Cunningham, 234 Mass. 332. Upon the facts disclosed in the present case the plaintiff cannot have a resulting trust established in his favor, nor is he entitled to any form of equitable relief. The decision in Lufkin v. Jakeman is not applicable to a case of this kind where the plaintiff is obliged to rely upon his fraudulent scheme to defraud his wife to obtain the relief which he seeks.

A court of equity will not lend its aid to relieve a party from the consequences of his fraud but will leave him where his fraudulent undertaking has placed him.

The master further found that in 1912 there was a reorganization of the corporate defendant; that immediately . upon such reorganization the stock was held as follows: seven shares by the defendant Sawyer; two hundred and [375]*375one shares by the plaintiff, certificates therefor having been indorsed by him to the defendant Sawyer in 1908, under the agreement above referred to; and the remaining one hundred and ninety-two shares by various persons, to whom they had been transferred by the plaintiff. Under advice of counsel, a scheme of reorganization was arranged under which $25,000 of preferred stock was to be issued in addition to the $10,000 of common stock and all of the holders of .common stock except the defendant Sawyer were to be given an equal number of shares of preferred stock in exchange for their shares of common stock, and by vote of the directors, the plaintiff was to be given $5,000 of the common stock in payment for his services in selling $10,000 of the preferred stock to new stockholders. Under this arrangement, the defendant Sawyer returned to the corporation the certificates for the seven shares remaining of her original purchase of eight shares, and the certificates for two hundred and one shares which she had received in October, 1908, but which she had not theretofore presented for transfer on the books of the corporation, and new certificates were issued to her, under date of April 2, 1912, for two hundred shares of the common stock and eight shares of the preferred stock.

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Bluebook (online)
248 Mass. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caines-v-sawyer-mass-1924.