Howe v. Richardson

71 N.E. 543, 186 Mass. 259, 1904 Mass. LEXIS 943
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 24, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 N.E. 543 (Howe v. Richardson) 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
Howe v. Richardson, 71 N.E. 543, 186 Mass. 259, 1904 Mass. LEXIS 943 (Mass. 1904).

Opinion

Barker, J.

The general facts are these. John C. Howe died testate on September 25, 1901. Up to his death he had been carrying on business under the name of Howe and French. For some time this business had been conducted for him by-Charles F. Richardson. Mabel Yates Howe, Walter Ashley Priest and Charles F. Richardson were duly made executors of the will. The will contained no provision for carrying on the business. The executors to preserve it as a going concern, in order that it might be disposed of or turned over to the beneficiaries under the will as a going concern, at the request of the beneficiaries under the will took possession of the business and carried it on under the name of Howe and French and the management of Charles F. Richardson until April 18, 1903. On or about that day Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates bought the business of the executors, with the assent of the beneficiaries, subject to the liabilities of the business and agreeing to assume and pay all the debts incurred by the executors in conducting the business.

The testator in his lifetime had carried on the business upon borrowed capital. Charles F. Richardson in the lifetime of the testator had carried on the business as his manager and attorney having a salary as such and also a share of the profits. He continued to act as manager after the death of the testator without any new arrangement as to compensation.

At four different times after the testator’s death Sarah Richardson, the mother of Charles F. Richardson, at his request made loans of money to Howe and French to be used in carrying on the business. The money lent was lent in good faith and was duly put into the funds of Howe and French and at once properly used in paying debts of the concern. The loans were of $3,000 on September 23, 1902, $3,000 on December 24, 1902, $3,000 on March 3, 1903, and $1,500 on April 10, 1903. Notes for each of these loans were signed “ Howe & French by Charles F. Richardson, Executor,” which notes are now held by Sarah Richardson.

[261]*261Immediately after the sale of the business of Howe and French the purchasers, Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates, terminated Charles F. Richardson’s employment as manager of the business. Thereupon on May 26 the demand notes given for the four loans specified were put into bank for collection, presented at the office of Howe and French and refused payment, and then the first of the two bills in equity, sworn to on May 27, and filed on May 28, was brought by Mabel Yates Howe and Walter Ashley Priest, in the interest of Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates against Charles F. Richardson and Sarah Richardson, asserting that the four loans had been made by the latter to the former for his individual use or account, that the four notes were not given to her for moneys lent by her to the executors carrying on business under the name of Howe and French, that no money had been lent by her to the executors, and that she had paid no consideration for the notes and was not a bona fide holder thereof for value, and praying for a preliminary injunction against her to restrain her from negotiating the notes or bringing suit upon them, and that sfie be ordered to deliver them up to be cancelled.

‘ On June 4,1903, Sarah Richardson and Charles F. Richardson filed the second bill in equity against Mabel Yates Howe, Walter Ashley Priest, who had declined to become a plaintiff in it, and Marie Howe Yates. This bill recites the circumstances of the death of John C. Howe, the proof of his will and the appointment of executors, their carrying on of the business under the name of Howe and French, the sale of that business to Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates, the making of the four loans by Sarah Richardson to the executors for the use of the business and their use in that business of the money so lent, and the giving of the four demand notes, alleges that Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates ought to pay out of the assets of Howe and French the debts created by the four loans and the notes, and that the assets of Howe and French transferred to them by the executors are chargeable with such payment, and prays that the notes be adjudged to be debts incurred by the executors in conducting the business of Howe and French and chargeable upon the assets of Howe and French received from the executors by Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates, and that they may be ordered to pay them out of those assets.

[262]*262Answers were filed to each bill, and on June 12, 1908, all the parties stipulated that the causes should be treated as one cause and be heard together, and that if it should be decided therein that the three executors were liable in any form on the notes or for the amount thereof to Sarah Richardson, a final decree might be entered ordering Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates to pay to Sarah Richardson the amount found due upon said notes or obligation.

The cases were heard as one cause by Mr. Justice Morton, who filed a memorandum containing a statement of facts found by him, and a final decree was entered in these words : “ These causes came on to be heard as one cause, by agreement of the parties, upon the merits, and were argued by counsel; and thereupon, upon consideration thereof and of the' agreement of the parties filed, it is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed that Mabel Yates' Howe and Marie Howe Yates pay to Sarah Richardson the sum of ten thousand eight hundred and two dollars and seventy cents ($10,802.70), being the amount of the loans by her to the executors of John C. Howe with interest to June 26, 1903,” that being the date of the decree.

The evidence was taken under the Chancery Rule 35, and the report of the commissioner is part of the record, and the record states requests on the part of Mabel Yates Howe, Walter Ashley Priest and Marie Howe Yates for findings ,of facts and for rulings of law. The causes are before the full court upon their appeal from the decree of June 26, 1903.

The memorandum filed by Mr. Justice Morton containing his finding of facts and rulings of law is as follows :

“Memorandum of Decision.
“ In these cases I find the following facts : —
“ John C. Howe died testate on September 25, 1901, leaving a will which was duly proved and allowed, and of which Mabel Yates Howe, Walter Ashley Priest, and Charles F. Richardson were duly appointed executors. At the time of his death said Howe was carrying on a mercantile and manufacturing business, under the name of ‘ Howe & French.’ The will gave the executors no authority to carry on the business. But for the purpose of preserving the business as a going concern, it was understood and agreed by all parties interested that the executors should [263]*263continue to carry on the business under the name and style of Howe & French, and they did so till April 18, 1903, when the business, and the assets employed therein, were transferred by the executors, with the consent and agreement of all parties interested, to Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates, subject to the liabilities of the business, said Mabel Yates Howe and Marie Howe Yates agreeing to assume and pay all the debts that had been incurred by the executors in carrying on the business of Howe & French. In order to facilitate carrying on the business the other two executors gave to Richardson a power of attorney, of which a copy is annexed to the defendant’s answer in Richardson et al. v. Howe et al.

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Related

Hines v. Levers & Sargent Co.
226 Mass. 214 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1917)
Browne v. Fairhall
100 N.E. 556 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 N.E. 543, 186 Mass. 259, 1904 Mass. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howe-v-richardson-mass-1904.