Feener v. NEW ENGLAND TEL. & TELEGRAPH CO.
This text of 478 N.E.2d 1289 (Feener v. NEW ENGLAND TEL. & TELEGRAPH CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
JEANNE M. FEENER
vs.
NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY & another.[1]
Appeals Court of Massachusetts, Essex.
Present: DREBEN, KAPLAN, & WARNER, JJ.
Robert J. Muldoon, Jr. (Barbara A. O'Donnell with him) for the plaintiff.
Walter J. Connelly for John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company.
John S. May for New England Telephone and Telegraph Company.
KAPLAN, J.
We reverse judgments of the Superior Court for error in the application of rules of former adjudication.
Present action. The plaintiff Jeanne M. Feener, second wife and widow of James E. Feener, Jr., sued New England Telephone and Telegraph Company (NET) and John Hancock Mutual *167 Life Insurance Company (Hancock) in Superior Court charging them with negligence. The complaint alleged that James was provided by NET, his employer, with group life insurance pursuant to a contract between NET and Hancock. Sometime in August or September, 1978, James allegedly delivered to NET a notice of change of beneficiary which should have been so dealt with as to remove his estate as his named beneficiary under the group policy and to substitute Jeanne as his sole beneficiary. However, through the negligence of NET or Hancock, the intended change of beneficiary was not accomplished. After the death, intestate, of James on December 5, 1980, Hancock issued its check for the insurance proceeds, $49,470.24 ($48,000 plus interest), in favor of Jeanne as administratrix of James's estate. In the course of the proceedings in Probate Court, these insurance proceeds were ordered distributed as upon intestacy (G.L.c. 190, § 1), that is, one-half to Jeanne, and one-half in equal shares to Alan and Kristine Feener, James's two children by his first wife. The negligence alleged thus resulted in a loss of $24,735.12 to Jeanne, for which she sought judgment against one or the other of the defendant companies.
Hancock answered the complaint, raising, among other things,[2] the defense of former adjudication. It then moved for summary judgment on that ground, setting out the proceedings in Probate Court.[3] Jeanne filed an affidavit further describing those proceedings. Evidently intending to raise the like defense of former adjudication, NET moved under Mass.R.Civ.P. 12(b) (6), 365 Mass. 755 (1974), to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. The 12(b) (6) motion was not the best suited to the purpose,[4] but, in the interests of efficient disposition, *168 we shall treat NET as if it had joined Hancock in invoking the probate proceedings. A judge of the Superior Court, without explanation, entered judgments for the defendants, from which Jeanne takes her appeal.
Prior probate proceedings. Jeanne was appointed administratrix on May 20, 1981. The check in question, representing in amount nearly the whole of the estate, was received in July, 1981. On November 29, 1982, Alan and Kristine Feener, pointing to their need to receive their inheritance (both were of school age), petitioned the probate judge to order the administratrix to render an account. The petition met a complaint for instructions on the part of Jeanne, as administratrix, joining as defendants herself, as an individual, Alan, Kristine, and NET. This pleading recited the alleged delivery of the notice of change of beneficiary to NET and negligence by NET in handling the notice, and prayed instructions as to distribution. Jeanne, individually, did not answer or move. Alan and Kristine answered asserting that no change of beneficiary had been effected and praying distribution by intestacy. NET answered, denying any delivery of a notice of change of beneficiary and any negligence in that regard. (It filed a motion looking to the joinder of Hancock as a party defendant, but the motion was not pressed.)
A hearing was held on January 3, 1983, but no evidence was offered or received.
In "Findings and Final Judgment" of March 24, 1983, the probate judge found that James's estate was the designated beneficiary of the insurance; ordered Jeanne as administratrix to file her inventory and final account and to distribute the assets of the estate according to the intestacy law; and denied the complaint for instructions. The probate judge also entered an order of dismissal, with prejudice, of that complaint. Thereafter Jeanne, individually, and Alan and Kristine, in consideration of the distributions made to them respectively, formally released Jeanne, as administratrix, of all demands and assented to her account; and the probate judge allowed the account.
Discussion. Counsel for the children contended in Probate Court that Jeanne, as an individual, had no claim against the *169 estate nor had she filed any (see G.L.c. 197, § 9). As administratrix, Jeanne was left with the clear and single duty of distributing the assets of the estate. Her individual claim, if any, was exterior to the estate and against the companies. A petition for instructions was inapposite, as the Probate Court could not afford her a remedy. Her remedy, if she had one, was to be found in the Superior Court.
Upon consideration of the probate proceeding, we see that the judge accepted the foregoing contention. He took no evidence about negligence and made no ruling on any phase of that claim. He dismissed the complaint for instructions with prejudice without giving instructions positive or negative.[5] He ordered distribution of the estate. There was no appeal.
In short, the probate judge accepted that a remedy for the negligence alleged could not be afforded in probate. Indeed, that claim lay beyond the competence of the Probate Court: like a claim for conversion or for breach of contract, the simple negligence claim, as such, was outside both the general and equity jurisdictions of the court, G.L.c. 215, §§ 3, 6. See Prahl v. Prahl, 335 Mass. 483, 485 (1957); Corkery v. Philbrook, 6 Mass. App. Ct. 861 (1978); Dodson v. Maroney, 15 Mass. App. Ct. 982 (1983). Cf. Lucier v. Williams, 323 Mass. 458, 459 (1948); Nixon v. Levinson, post 904, 905-906 (1985). Contrast Glick v. Greenleaf, 383 Mass. 290, 293-295 (1981), S.C., 9 Mass App. Ct. 606, 608 (1980). It is conceivable that pursuant to Konstantopoulos v. Whately, 384 Mass. 123, 129 (1981), the Chief Administrative Justice might have agreed to vest the probate judge with the powers of judge of the Superior Court and enabled him to handle the negligence claim; but that did not occur.
In the present negligence action by Jeanne, individually, against NET and Hancock in Superior Court, NET argues that *170 the subject of the action is precluded as having been part of the probate proceedings as described ("claim preclusion"), or at least that the issue of NET's negligence was decided there against Jeanne ("issue" preclusion). But if, as we have suggested, the probate judge excluded the negligence claim, as he had been urged by the children and could consider himself bound jurisdictionally to do, there is no preclusion of either sort. See Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 26 (1) (c) and comment c (1982); Restatement of Judgments § 65 (2) (1942);[6] 18 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 4412 (1981). The case of Naughton
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478 N.E.2d 1289, 20 Mass. App. Ct. 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feener-v-new-england-tel-telegraph-co-massappct-1985.