Kennedy v. Innis

158 N.E.2d 334, 339 Mass. 195, 1959 Mass. LEXIS 786
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 14, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 158 N.E.2d 334 (Kennedy v. Innis) 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
Kennedy v. Innis, 158 N.E.2d 334, 339 Mass. 195, 1959 Mass. LEXIS 786 (Mass. 1959).

Opinion

Counihan, J.

This is a petition brought in the Probate Court to establish ownership in land in Billerica. The petition, answers and counterclaim of the respondents were referred to a master who after hearing filed a report. No motion was made to recommit the report and no objections to it were filed by the petitioner. No evidence before the master is reported. The report upon motion was confirmed by the judge. Thereupon a final decree was entered adjudging that the land which was the subject of the controversy was the property of Robert L. Innis, hereinafter called Innis, at the time of his death (the date of which does not appear). The matter comes here upon the appeal of the petitioner from the final decree. There was no error.

For a better understanding of this case we think it advisable to set forth a summary of the pleadings. In his petition Neil J. Kennedy, hereinafter called Kennedy, alleged that on September 4, 1929, for consideration he purchased from Isedor A. Johnson (hereinafter called Johnson), and his wife Hilda, a large tract of land in fee in Billerica, particularly described in the petition, and that a deed of this property to him was duly recorded on September 5, 1929, in the Middlesex North District registry of deeds in book 781, page 73; that on September 4 he mortgaged that land to Innis and Dougal McLennan, hereinafter called Mc-Lennan, to secure a note to Innis and McLennan for $7,000, payable on demand; that on the same day he mortgaged the property to Johnson to secure a note to Johnson for *197 $4,000 payable in four months; that on March 1, 1930, Innis gave him a partial release of the $7,000 mortgage on a part of the land; that on the same day Innis acting as agent for him sold this parcel of land to one Martin and his wife for $5,000; that Innis received the purchase price out of which he paid the Johnson mortgage and was to apply the balance of the purchase price on the mortgage of $7,000 held by Innis and McLennan; and that thereafter Innis acting as agent for him received moneys for rentals of part of the property, from the sale of standing hay, stone and gravel, and from sales of several lots of land, all on the understanding that such moneys would be applied on the $7,000 mortgage note given by him to Innis and McLennan.

Kennedy in his petition sought only an accounting between the estate of Innis and himself, and prayed that a decree be entered establishing the amount due on the mortgage note for $7,000 given by him to Innis and Mc-Lennan. He also prayed that he be allowed to pay such sum of money as might be found due on the mortgage note and that the administratrix of the estate be ordered to discharge the mortgage.

The answer of the administratrix of Innis denied that Kennedy purchased the whole or any part of the real estate described in the petition but said that this real estate was purchased by her husband, Innis, and that title was taken in Kennedy’s name as a straw. She admitted that Kennedy gave a note of $7,000 secured by a mortgage to Innis and McLennan but said that the mortgage was for the purpose of protecting the purchase of the real estate by Innis. She admitted other allegations of the petition relative to the sales of parcels of this land, standing hay, stone and gravel, and rentals. A part of the receipts of money on these transactions was used to pay off the Johnson mortgage of $4,000. All other money was retained by Innis as the sole owner of this real estate. She admitted the preparation of a plan dividing this real estate into several parcels but said that the plan was prepared and drawn at the direction and expense of Innis. She denied that Innis ever acted as an *198 agent of Kennedy and alleged that at all times he was acting as owner of this land. The answer and counterclaim of the other respondents were substantially the same as the answer of the administratrix. It appears from the docket of the Probate Court that letters of administration were granted the administratrix of Innis on March 9, 1954.

The issue before us is whether Kennedy was the real owner of the land in controversy or whether he was acting as a straw for Innis and McLennan, when he acquired title, and thus held the real estate upon a resulting trust for the benefit of Innis and McLennan. Innis subsequently acquired all the interest of McLennan in this land.

The findings of the master show that Innis and McLennan agreed to purchase from Johnson a large tract of land in Billerica for $12,000. Kennedy was an employee of Innis, and an intimate friend who at that time or sometime later had lived with Innis and his family for several years. On or about September 4, 1929, Innis asked Johnson to prepare a deed of this tract of land to Kennedy as grantee for the reasons that Kennedy was an employee of Innis and also that the wives of Innis and McLennan would be relieved of the necessity of signing deeds and mortgages of this property in the future. Mention was also made that McLennan was involved in marital difficulties. On the same day Innis and McLennan executed and delivered a note for $7,000 to the Billerica Trust Company, secured by a mortgage of certain other land and buildings owned by Innis and McLennan and occupied by Innis and his family. This $7,000 inferentially was used to pay Johnson part of the purchase price of said land. On the same day Innis and McLennan caused Kennedy to give Johnson a note for $4,000 secured by a second mortgage on the granted premises. The balance of $1,000 of the purchase price was paid in the manner hereinafter described. At the time of the purchase, Kennedy executed and delivered to Innis and McLennan a note for $7,000 secured by a first mortgage on the granted premises "to protect the investment of $7,000 made by Innis and . . . McLennan.”

*199 About August 29, 1929, an oral agreement was reached among Innis, McLennan, Kennedy and three other persons, the last four being employees of Innis or McLennan, whereby each put in the sum of $300 making a total of $1,800 which was deposited in the Billerica Trust Company in the name of Kennedy. He withdrew $1,000 and it was paid to Johnson as the balance of the purchase price. By the terms of this oral agreement each of the four employees was to pay into this account which was called “Crosby Gardens” $15 monthly until each had paid his proportionate share of the purchase price. Each of these four paid in $15 each month for seven months or a total of $105 each. At the end of seven months, they discontinued these payments and abandoned the venture. The master found that no partnership existed among the six persons who entered into the oral agreement, but that, “[a]t the most, it was a joint venture.”

In 1945 McLennan released his interest in such property to Innis and since then he died.

In 1933 and in 1940 an accord and satisfaction was reached between Innis and two of the four who made monthly contributions, viz., John and Archibald McLennan, but no part of “their investment” was ever repaid to Kennedy or to one Kelley, the fourth employee.

Innis and McLennan had the land surveyed and plotted into house lots. They constructed an office on the property and handled all sales of various parcels which were sold off. In the early thirties, Innis constructed homes on some of the lots and sold them. On March 1, 1930, Innis sold a lot presumably with a building on it to one Martin and his wife for $5,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 N.E.2d 334, 339 Mass. 195, 1959 Mass. LEXIS 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-innis-mass-1959.