Harton v. Letendre

7 Mass. App. Div. 342
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 3, 1942
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Mass. App. Div. 342 (Harton v. Letendre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harton v. Letendre, 7 Mass. App. Div. 342 (Mass. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Riley, J.

This is an action of contract to recover money paid by the plaintiff to the Judge of the Probate Court of Hampden County as surety on a guardian’s bond given by the defendant as guardian of the estates of two minors.

The evidence tended to' show that the defendant was appointed guardian of the two minors in question on September 20, 1922 and filed a guardian’s bond in the usual form in the sum of $2000., which was approved on October 6, 1922. On this bond the plaintiff was one of the [343]*343two sureties. It further appeared that on November 16, 1938 the defendant filed his resignation as guardian, which was allowed by the court on April 14, 1939 and that one William T. Cavanaugh was appointed guardian in his place; that on August 21, 1939 the defendant filed substituted seventh and final accounts covering the period from September 1, 1935 to August 16, 1939, in which accounts the defendant charged himself with a total of $1349.89 as money received, asked for the allowance of expenses and disbursements in the sum of $751.60 and charged himself with a balance of $598.29 due to the estates of said wards; that said accounts were allowed on September 12, 1939 and the Probate Court then adjudicated that the said guardian had the sum of $598.29 as the property of said wards to be accounted for by him. It further appears that on March 19, 1940 the aforesaid William T. Cavanaugh, who had succeeded the defendant as guardian of the minors in question, filed in the Probate Court a petition in equity setting forth the facts as above stated with a further allegation that he had demanded from the defendant the sum of $598.29, together with interest thereon from September 12, 1939, and that the defendant had failed, neglected and refused to pay the same; that on November 26, 1940 the petition was taken for confessed and the court decreed that the defendant pay to the minors the said sum of $598.29 with interest, expenses and costs and execution was ordered to issue for this sum. There was further evidence that the defendant did not pay said sum decreed to be paid by him to the aforesaid minors, but that the plaintiff paid the same as one of the sureties on said bond; that since this suit was brought, the defendant filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy and received his discharge in said proceedings and that the plaintiff’s claim was listed in the bankrupt schedules and [344]*344the plaintiff proved her claim in the bankruptcy proceedings but received no dividends therefrom.

The sole question of law argued by the parties is the effect of the defendant’s discharge in bankruptcy upon the plaintiff’s claim.

The court, in finding for the defendant, made the following special finding of fact:

‘ ‘ The Court specially finds that, on the facts agreed to by the parties to this action, there was no evidence that the defendant misappropriated any funds from the estate of his wards, or that he was in any way benefited by his investment of said ward’s funds, or that he was guilty of any misconduct sufficient to constitute a defalcation; that the judgment in the Probate Court shows a simple debt against the defendant which was proveable in bankruptcy and was discharged in his voluntary bankruptcy; and that the plaintiff has failed to sustain the burden of proving that his duly scheduled debt was excepted from the operation of a discharge in bankruptcy.”

while he denied the following Request for Rulings, duly filed by the plaintiff:

1. Upon all the law and evidence, the finding should be for the plaintiff because the debt sued on was a debt created by the fraud, embezzlement, misappropriation or defalcation of the defendant while acting as an officer or in any fiduciary capacity and is not discharged by the subsequent discharge in bankruptcy.
6. If the defendant failed to turn over to his wards the amounts decreed by the Judge of Probate Court to be due said wards from defendant as their guardian and judgment for said amounts was obtained on the defendant’s bond which was paid by the plaintiff as surety on said bond, the defendant is guilty of a defalcation as used in section 17 2 (4) of the Bankruptcy Act.

The first Request was denied as being based upon an assumption of facts found to the contrary by the court and [345]*345the sixth was denied on the ground that the court had found to the contrary. The following Bequests were granted as correct statements of law but stated by the court to be inapplicable to the facts found in this case:

2. If the claim of the obligee on a bond is a non-dis-chargeable one in bankruptcy, and the surety pays it, then the .surety is subrogated not only to the claim, but to its non-dischargeable quality. National Surety Co. vs. Wittich 185 Minn. 321 s. c. A. B. R. (NS) 343.
3. Where a solvent surety has been compelled to make good a wrong of a bankrupt fiduciary that comes within section 17 a (4) of the Bankruptcy Act, he is subrogated to the claim of the creditor, and hence his claim against the bankrupt principal falls within the provision and is not discharged.
5. “Defalcation” as used in the section of the Bankruptcy Act providing that a discharge releases the bankrupt from all debts except those created by “defalcation” while acting as an officer or in any fiduciary capacity, means the failure of one who has received money in trust to pay it over as he ought, being a broader word than “fraud”, “embezzlement” or “misappropriation”, and covering cases where there is no fraud, embezzlement, or willful misappropriation. In re Herbst (D. C. N. Y.) 27 Fed. Supp. 353.

The plaintiff contends that the case was submitted to the trial judge upon an agreed statement of facts and that, consequently, the trial judge was in error in denying her Bequests for Bulings because they were based upon assumption of facts found to the contrary by him, and further argues that he had no power to make such contrary findings of fact.

There appears to have been no written agreed statement of facts filed by the parties and the Beport itself makes no reference to such an agreement, although the judge in his special finding of fact does speak of “the facts agreed to by the parties to this action”. We think [346]*346that the most that could he inferred in the case at bar is that there was an agreement of the parties as to the evidence to be considered by the court. Under such an agreement it is the right, if not the duty, of the court under certain circumstances to make findings of fact. Frati vs. Janini, 226 Mass. 430. Atlantic Maritime Co. vs. Gloucester, 228 Mass. 519. Kimball vs. George A. Fuller Co., 258 Mass. 232. Scaccia vs. Boston Elevated Railway, 308 Mass. 310. Even under a “case stated” which is an agreement by the parties upon all the material ultimate facts on which the rights of the parties depend, the trial judge could draw from these facts any inference of fact that might have been drawn therefrom at a trial, unless the parties expressly agreed that no inferences should be drawn. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) Chap. 231 Sec. 126. There was no such express agreement as to inferences in the case at bar.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mass. App. Div. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harton-v-letendre-massdistctapp-1942.