Mahoney v. Nollman

35 N.E.2d 265, 309 Mass. 522, 1941 Mass. LEXIS 799
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 35 N.E.2d 265 (Mahoney v. Nollman) 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
Mahoney v. Nollman, 35 N.E.2d 265, 309 Mass. 522, 1941 Mass. LEXIS 799 (Mass. 1941).

Opinion

Dolan, J.

This is a bill in equity for specific performance of a written agreement, in which the plaintiff agreed to sell and the defendant to purchase certain real estate situated on Church Street, in the city of Boston. The defendant answering set up, among other defences, that the plaintiff had not a good and marketable title to the land. The proceeding was heard upon a case stated, and, after hearing for final determination, the judge, without decision, reported the bill, answer and case stated and all questions of law therein for the consideration of this court. The sole contention of the defendant is that the land in question is subject to liens for unpaid legacies or balances due thereon, which were bequeathed in the will of Mary A. Dolan, hereinafter referred to as the testatrix, late of Brookline, deceased, and that accordingly the plaintiff cannot convey a good and marketable title thereto. •

The following facts appear in the case stated: Title to the land involved was derived by the plaintiff and one Riley under the residuary clause of the will of the testatrix, which was duly allowed by the Probate Court for the county of Norfolk on September 14, 1932. They were the sole residuary devisees and legatees. By deed dated August 29, 1939, duly recorded, Riley conveyed her undivided interest in the land to the plaintiff. The agreement here sought to be enforced was executed on April 3, 1940. The fifth and seventh clauses of the will of the testatrix read as follows: “Fifth. To my nephew, Reverend John G. Ma-honey, Member of the Society of Jesus, I give and bequeath [524]*524the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) for Masses to be said for the repose of my soul. . . . Seventh. To the Reverend Charles J. Lane, Member of the Society of Jesus, I give and bequeath the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) for Masses to be said for the repose of my soul.” The first account of the executors of the will of the testatrix shows a payment to the Reverend Charles J. Lane of fifty per cent of the bequest given to him, or $1,000. The second account of the executors shows an additional payment to him of twenty-five per cent of his legacy, or $500.

The Reverend Charles J. Lane died on April 15, 1939, after receiving $1,500 on account of the $2,000 bequest provided for in clause 7 of the will. The Reverend John G. Mahoney died on December 31, 1933. No payment is shown by the executors' accounts to have been made in satisfaction of the legacy given him for the purposes specified in the fifth clause of the will. James E. Mahoney, to whom the testatrix bequeathed $500 in the thirteenth clause of her will, died on December 27, 1938, before full payment of that legacy to him. The unpaid balance of this legacy was paid to his three heirs at law. No administration has been taken out upon the estates of the three deceased persons just referred to. The several accounts of the executors, including their final account, were allowed on April 3, 1940, “no person objecting”; no appeal was taken from the decrees allowing them, and no application to reopen the same has been made.

The legatees named in the fifth, seventh and thirteenth clauses of the will died before the accounts were allowed. “The defendant was ready to perform his part of the contract if the plaintiff would cause the estates of Rev. John G. Mahoney and Rev. Charles J. Lane, respectively, to be administered in the proper Probate Court, would establish by such proceeding the respective heirs of Rev. John G. Mahoney and James E. Mahoney and Rev. Charles J. Lane, and would obtain from such heirs a release of any interest they may have in the property here in question. In' the alternative, the defendant was ready to perform his [525]*525part of the contract if the plaintiff would cause a petition to be filed in the estate of Mary A. Dolan for leave to sell said property for the purpose of paying legacies. The plaintiff has refused to follow either of these courses,” but is “ready and able, if the court finds that the property here in question is subject to a lien as asserted by the defendant, to give a satisfactory bond to save the defendant harmless from any claim that may successfully be made against said property for payment of the bequests in question, which the defendant refuses to accept.” The following stipulation was entered into by the parties: “If the plaintiff is entitled to specific performance, it is agreed that she is also entitled to damages in the amount of $137.45. It is further agreed that if a final decree is not entered . . . prior to July 30, 1941, a stipulation as to the amount of additional damages will be entered.”

The plaintiff relies largely upon Wilbur v. Hallett, 305 Mass. 554, 558, and cases therein cited, by which, and by many other decisions of this court, it is settled that Probate Courts are courts of superior and general jurisdiction; that it is a general principle of our practice under our jurisprudence that a decree of a Probate Court within its jurisdiction is good unless it is set aside; that it cannot be attacked collaterally; that such decrees are conclusive upon the courts of common law and cannot be reversed by writ of error or certiorari, and cannot be set aside in equity even for fraud.

Applying these principles to the facts in the present case, it is clear that it is not open to the defendant in this proceeding to object'that payments of the unpaid balance of the legacy to James E. Mahoney to his three heirs, as shown by the executors’ accounts, were not properly paid in satisfaction of that legacy.

We are of opinion, however, that the defendant’s objections that, as appears in the agreed facts, the legacy given by the fifth clause of the will is not shown in the accounts to have been paid, and that but a portion of the legacy given by the seventh clause of the will is shown in the accounts as paid, stand in different case. In raising these [526]*526objections to the plaintiff’s ability to convey a good and marketable title, we think that the defendant cannot be said to be attacking collaterally the decrees allowing the accounts, but rather that he must be taken to be accepting the accounts as allowed, and urging that, when so accepted, the legacy under the fifth clause is not shown or allowed in the account as paid, and that the legacy under the seventh clause is not shown or allowed therein as paid in full, and that hence, these unsatisfied legacies constitute liens upon the land here involved. The case is thus distinguishable from Wilbur v. Hallett, 305 Mass. 554, where the legacy sought to be recovered by petition in equity was shown as paid in the executors’ account, which had been duly allowed.

The position taken by the defendant that the plaintiff’s title should be perfected by taking out administration on the estates of the legatees named in the fifth and seventh clauses of the will and obtaining a release from their heirs or personal representatives is not sound. The legacies in question were given the respective legatees by the testatrix for “Masses to be said for the repose of . . . [her] soul.” It is settled in this Commonwealth that this purpose comes “within the religious or pious uses which are upheld as public charities. Jackson v. Phillips, 14 Allen, 539, 553,” Schouler, petitioner, 134 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.E.2d 265, 309 Mass. 522, 1941 Mass. LEXIS 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahoney-v-nollman-mass-1941.