Czelusniak v. Ossolinski

173 N.E. 590, 273 Mass. 441, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1358
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 N.E. 590 (Czelusniak v. Ossolinski) 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
Czelusniak v. Ossolinski, 173 N.E. 590, 273 Mass. 441, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1358 (Mass. 1930).

Opinion

Field, J.

Paul, otherwise Pawel, Ossolinski in 1914, then approximately seventy-two years old, lived in Poland, his native country. He had five children in the United States, three sons, Leopold, Tadeusz and Matthew, otherwise Mieczyslaw, and two daughters, Bertha A., wife of Joseph Czelusniak, the plaintiff, and Helena, otherwise Anniela, Zobecki. Arrangements were made, which need not be described in detail, for Paul Ossolinski to come to the United States. He came, and was admitted, to this country in 1914. He arrived in Springfield on July 21, was met by his five children, and was taken to the home of the plaintiff and his wife where the children of Paul and the husband of his daughter Anniela also lived as members of the household. As a condition of his admission this government required a writing in the general nature of a bond, signed by two citizens of America, of financial responsibility, in substance agreeing to protect the government against . . . Paul Ossolinski becoming a public charge.” The plaintiff “ not only signed and delivered ” such a writing, but obtained the signature of another citizen thereto who met the same requirements as to financial responsibility.” Paul Ossolinski continued to live in the plaintiff’s household and to be supported by the plaintiff to the time of the beginning of the hearings in this case.

The plaintiff brought this bill in equity against Tadeusz Ossolinski, and his wife, Mary, Matthew Ossolinski, and his wife, Helena, Anniela Zobecki and the Chicopee Savings Bank to determine the amounts due to the plaintiff from the defendants Tadeusz and Matthew Ossolinski, and Anniela Zobecki, for the support of their father, to compel [443]*443the payment thereof, and to enjoin the transfer or encumbering of certain real estate alleged to be owned by the defendant Tadeusz, standing in the name of his wife, and certain real estate alleged to be owned by the defendant Matthew, standing in his name and that of his wife jointly, and any other real estate within the county standing in their names, and the withdrawal, transfer or encumbering of moneys standing in the name of the defendant Anniela in the defendant Chicopee Savings Bank. The bill was filed September 25, 1928. The case was referred to a master who held hearings, beginning August 15, 1929, and made a report which was confirmed by an interlocutory decree. The evidence is not reported, and it is not now contended that the report of the master is in any respect erroneous. The judge made findings and rulings based on the master’s report to the effect that the plaintiff was entitled to payment by each of the defendants,” meaning the defendants Tadeusz and Matthew Ossolinski, and Anniela Zobecki — their brother Leopold and sister Bertha A., wife of the plaintiff, not being parties to the bill — of one fifth of the cost to the plaintiff of supporting their father ” from September 26, 1922, to August 15, 1929, with interest and costs, and, in accordance therewith, a final decree was entered, ordering the payment to the plaintiff by each of said defendants of $463.60 with interest and costs, and providing for the sale of the real estate of said Tadeusz and said Matthew and the collection of the deposits of said Anniela, if payment was not made as ordered. The plaintiff appealed from.the final decree.

The only question raised by the appeal is whether, on the master’s report, the plaintiff is entitled to payment by each of the defendants of his proportionate part of the cost to the plaintiff of supporting Paul Ossolinski during the entire period after July 21, 1914, or whether, on the contrary, as the judge ruled, the plaintiff cannot recover the cost to him of such support furnished more than six years before the bill was brought.

The defendants did not by demurrer, plea or answer [444]*444set up either the defence of the statute of limitations or that of loches.

The master found among other things that all of the children of Paul Ossolinski resident in Chicopee “ did agree with each other and with the . . . [plaintiff] that they would contribute equally toward the expense of their father’s support in the . . . [plaintiff’s] household, that the . . . [plaintiff] signed and entered into the agreement required by the government ... in reliance upon, and in consideration of these mutual promises among the said children, and . . . their several promises to the . . . [plaintiff] in this regard, and . . . that the said children agreed on such contribution in reliance upon and in consideration of the agreement to sign, and actual signing of this writing by the . . . [plaintiff] that their said father was received into the . . . [plaintiff’s] household in reliance upon these promises and agreements, and that he was continuously kept by the . . . [plaintiff] in his household in reliance thereon down to the time of the beginning of hearings in this action . . . that the above mentioned children of the said Paul . . . did not agree to contribute to his support ... in any specific, determined, and stated amount no such amount having been mentioned or agreed upon between them . . . that their agreement was confined to an equal contribution toward the expense of his support by the . . . [plaintiff] in his household,” and that neither the amount of the charge to be made for the care of their said father, nor the definite length of time he was to remain in the . . . [plaintiff’s] household was mentioned, discussed, or agreed upon between them.” The master expressly did not “ find that the terms of the agreement for contribution to the support of the father by said . . . [defendant] children made any specific provision as to the time, periodical or otherwise, when they should make such contributions.” The master made findings as to the expense to the plaintiff of supporting the father and found “ that none of the . . . [defendant] children of the said Paul made any payments to or for the account of the . . . [plaintiff] under their agreement for the sup[445]*445port of their father during the entire period of his residence in the . . . [plaintiff’s] household . . . that demands were made by or in behalf of said . . . [plaintiff] for contributions toward such support from the . . . [defendant] Matthew Ossolinski on at least two occasions, the first about the year 1924, the second about the year 1927,” and from the defendant Tadeusz prior to March 21, 1927, “ and that subsequent similar demands were made upon all the . . . [defendant] children in the year 1928.” The master reported further that “ In view of the close and friendly family relationship between the . . . [plaintiff] and his said wife on one hand, and the . . . [defendant] children of the said Paul, on the other hand, extending from 1914 down to 1924 or somewhere between 1924 and 1927, having in mind their respective financial circumstances, the demands upon each by their immediate families, considering also the continuing nature of the agreement between them as to the support of their father, their continuing obligation thereunder, by fair inference, as long as their father was supported in the . . . [plaintiff’s] household under conditions similar to those when such support began, and the fact that the situation as to the kind and extent of care given the father remained substantially the same for a period of about ten years, and on the entire compass of all the evidence received by me, it does not seem to me a reasonable inference that loches is fairly attributable to the . . . [plaintiff] for failure to seek enforcement of the obligations of the . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 N.E. 590, 273 Mass. 441, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/czelusniak-v-ossolinski-mass-1930.