MacDonald v. MacDonald

552 N.E.2d 533, 407 Mass. 196, 1990 Mass. LEXIS 133
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 9, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 552 N.E.2d 533 (MacDonald v. MacDonald) 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
MacDonald v. MacDonald, 552 N.E.2d 533, 407 Mass. 196, 1990 Mass. LEXIS 133 (Mass. 1990).

Opinion

By the Court.

On April 12, 1988, approximately three months after our opinion in MacDonald v. MacDonald, 401 *197 Mass. 513 (1988) (MacDonald I), the Probate and Family Court judge held a nonevidentiary hearing. On April 13, 1988, the judge entered a document dated March 24, 1988, 1 captioned, “The Court’s motion sua sponte to vacate and revoke the motion allowing the execution ... the judgment of contempt . . . and ... the [modified] judgment of contempt ... as the result of the fraud and deceit of the plaintiff and defendant and [their attorneys].” On motion of the plaintiff to summarize the evidence on which his findings were based, the judge issued amended findings and further amended findings. In his amended findings, the judge concluded “that there was in fact a willful and deliberate plan to use this Court for the personal enrichment of the plaintiff and defendant and their attorneys.” The plaintiff appeals. 2 We transferred the case here on our motion. The plaintiff asserts that there is no evidentiary basis for the judge’s findings of fraud on the court by the plaintiff, the defendant, and their attorneys. We agree with the plaintiff’s assertions. “The record demonstrates overt acts by the judge reflecting great bias against [the parties and their attorneys] and substantial disregard for the mandate of this court.” Reserve Mining Co. v. Lord, 529 F.2d 181, 185 (8th Cir. 1976). We therefore reverse the judge’s order revoking the judgments and execution, and his order allowing motions to intervene and a motion to dissolve an attachment. We remand this case to the Administrative Justice of the Probate and Family Court for reassignment to another judge from a different county and for such further proceedings in another county as may be needed consistent with this opinion.

*198 We set forth the facts from MacDonald I. “The plaintiff filed a complaint for contempt in the Probate Court alleging [that] the defendant’s arrearages in alimony and support payments under an order of September 13, 1982, total[ed] $5,908.31. On September 26, 1983, a probate judge authorized an attachment of certain of the defendant’s real estate, which was recorded that day. The following day, September 27, 1983, the defendant sold the real estate. The purchasers gave a mortgage on the property to the Crescent Credit Union (credit union).” Id. at 513-514. The credit union’s attorney 3 conducted a title search on the day after the closing and, in the attorney’s own words, “due to inadvertence, [he] neglected to pick up said Attachment.” The plaintiff’s attorney subsequently informed the credit union’s attorney of the attachment. “Upon learning of his error, the [credit union’s] attorney filed a motion in the contempt case to dissolve the attachment. No motion to intervene was made, and no separate petition to dissolve the attachment was filed. The judge allowed the motion on the day it was filed without prior notice, although the plaintiff apparently was present and given an opportunity to be heard. The plaintiff then moved for reconsideration and stay pending appeal, but these motions were denied. The plaintiff thereupon appealed.” 4 Id. at 514. 5

In MacDonald I, we vacated the order dissolving the attachment and ordered it reinstated as of the date it originally was recorded. See MacDonald /, supra at 515. In support of *199 that result, we reasoned that, “[e]ven if there had been adequate notice, we doubt whether the probate judge could properly dissolve the attachment under G. L. c. 223, §§ 106 and 108 (1986 ed.), on the grounds urged by the credit union. Those provisions permit dissolution of an attachment upon a finding that all or part of the amount demanded in the original action was ‘not justly due.’ The probate judge made no such finding nor does the record disclose that evidence was introduced to support such a finding. Furthermore, decisions interpreting earlier statutes containing analogous provisions make clear that §§106 and 108 provide a remedy against attachments which are invalid or fraudulent.” Id. at 514-515. We also said that .“.there was no .allegation that,the plaintiffs attachment was fraudulent or -invalid within the meaning of the statute and inJaclihe judge made no finding to that effect. We can understand the judge’s concern that the defendant not be uniustlv enriched bv the unfortunate error of the credit union’s attorney. However, the question of the attorney’s error was one which the credit union had ‘no right to [raise] in this form of proceedmgTTt does not show that the debt was not justly due and owing, or that it was not then payable; and, therefore, they show no sufficient ground for vacating the attachment, on petition, by force of this statute.’” Id. at 515, quoting Baird v. Williams, 19 Pick. 381, 385-386 (1837).

After our opinion, the credit union again sought to intervene. The purchasers also filed a motion to intervene. 6 The plaintiff filed a motion to dismiss, a motion for stay of judgment, and a motion for recusal. The judge denied all of the plaintiff’s motions, allowed both motions to intervene, and the credit union’s motion to dissolve the attachment or, in the alternative, to reduce it, and on April 13, 1988, entered a document dated March 24, see note 1, supra, which vacated and revoked the two judgments and the execution “due to the fraud and deceit of the plaintiff and defendant.” Subse *200 quently, pursuant to the plaintiff’s motion, the judge filed some amended findings.

The judge’s findings and amended findings are set forth as follows. The judge found that the plaintiff, the defendant, and their attorneys “at some point in time following the real estate attachment incident on September 27, 1983,” conspired together to recover any arrears in alimony payments from the credit union’s attorney, his insurance carrier, the credit union itself, or the real estate “as the result of [the credit union’s attorney’s] negligence and failure to verify a [duly recorded] real estate attachment on the real estate of the defendant.”

The judge found “that Attorney[s] Terzian and Downs [for the plaintiff in the domestic relations proceeding] and Attorney Littlefield [for the defendant in the domestic relations proceeding] conversed together frequently about this contempt but the three of them apparently chose to let the arrears grow to at least the size of the original real estate attachment which had issued on September 26, 1983, in the sum of $25,000.00. This Court assumes that that decision by the attorneys and their clients to sit on their hands and do nothing to require the defendant, Richard G.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. G.A.S.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2025
Commonwealth v. Jeffrey Rivard.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2025
B.G. v. N.M.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2024
Gary D. Lingley v. Raymond K. Hoyland.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2023
GUARDIANSHIP OF INGRID (and a companion case ).
102 Mass. App. Ct. 1 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2022)
CDM Smith Inc. v. Atasi
D. Massachusetts, 2022
Choi v. Toyota Motor Sales United States, Inc.
103 N.E.3d 766 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2018)
J.S.H. v. J.S.
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2017
M.C.D. v. D.E.D.
59 N.E.3d 1173 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2016)
Adoption of Norbert
986 N.E.2d 886 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2013)
Culley v. Cato
460 Mass. 1009 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2011)
Mt. Ivy Press, L.P. v. Defonseca
937 N.E.2d 501 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2010)
In re the Trusts Under the Will of Crabtree
865 N.E.2d 1119 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2007)
Wojcicki v. Caragher
447 Mass. 200 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2006)
Munshani v. Signal Lake Venture Fund II, LP
805 N.E.2d 998 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2004)
Sahin v. Sahin
758 N.E.2d 132 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2001)
Paternity of Cheryl
746 N.E.2d 488 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2001)
Rockdale Management Co. v. Shawmut Bank, N.A.
638 N.E.2d 29 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
552 N.E.2d 533, 407 Mass. 196, 1990 Mass. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-macdonald-mass-1990.