Mascari v. Mascari

151 N.E. 77, 255 Mass. 92, 1926 Mass. LEXIS 1094
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 151 N.E. 77 (Mascari v. Mascari) 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
Mascari v. Mascari, 151 N.E. 77, 255 Mass. 92, 1926 Mass. LEXIS 1094 (Mass. 1926).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

This is a suit in equity in which the plaintiff seeks to reach and apply certain real estate claimed to belong to the defendant Guiseppe Mascari, in payment of an alleged loan of $2,000 and interest. The case was referred to a master who heard the parties and filed a report, which has been confirmed. The defendants’ exceptions to the report have been overruled and a decree entered in favor of the plaintiff.

From the facts found by the master, it appears that the plaintiff and the defendant Guiseppe (who will hereafter be referred to as the defendant, or principal defendant), are brothers, and at one time were in business together. On or [94]*94about July 2, 1913, the defendant executed and delivered to the plaintiff a note for $2,000, secured by a mortgage on real estate in Boston, and payable in seven years from its date with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum. This amount represented various sums which the defendant owed the plaintiff. The property, equity in which at the time was vested in the defendant, was subject to two prior mortgages. Previously to the giving of this mortgage, on August 9, 1906, the defendant, to protect his property from attachment by his wife in case she should institute divorce proceedings against him, by arrangement with the plaintiff, executed to the latter a mortgage on his property for $10,000. In 1908 his wife instituted divorce proceedings and on October 9, 1908, the plaintiff made entry upon the premises for the purpose of foreclosing the mortgage. On April 25, 1910, at the request of the defendant, the mortgage was discharged.

For a period of three years after the execution of the $2,000 mortgage, the defendant paid the plaintiff the interest thereon when due. In 1916, one Leah Wollman brought suit against the defendant for personal injuries and attached the real estate which was subject to the plaintiff’s mortgage; for the purpose of defeating her rights under the attachment, the plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, on July 6, 1916, made entry on the premises to foreclose the mortgage, and on July 18,1916, by a foreclosure sale, sold the property for $800, purchasing it himself. At the time of this foreclosure the real estate was subject to a first mortgage on which there was then due about $10,000, and a second mortgage of $350 held by one Bosenberg. The defendant, in order to settle the Wollman suit and to reduce the amount due on the first mortgage, borrowed $3,180. The loan was made with the understanding between the lenders and the defendant that the Bosenberg mortgage should be foreclosed, and the equity in the property be conveyed by the plaintiff and his wife to one Chincholla, a common friend of the plaintiff and defendant. This was done to accommodate the defendant and to enable him to obtain the loan of $3,180. Incidental to obtaining the loan, the plaintiff borrowed [95]*95$300 from Rosenberg, which sum, together with $50 furnished by the defendant, was paid to Rosenberg, who then assigned his mortgage to Chincholla. The mortgage was foreclosed by Chincholla and the property bought in his own name for $150. It was part of the arrangement between the plaintiff and defendant that, if the former conveyed the property to Chincholla, the defendant would execute a new mortgage to the plaintiff for $2,000 whenever Chincholla should reconvey the property to the defendant. Chincholla knew of this arrangement and was asked by the plaintiff to give him a new mortgage to secure the amount due him from the defendant, and Chincholla promised to do so.

The loan of $3,180 above referred to, after deducting expenses, was applied to the settlement of the Wollman suit, and to reducing the amount due on the first mortgage to $8,675. The balance, $450, was paid to the plaintiff, and reimbursed him for the $300 spent by him to procure the assignment of the Rosenberg mortgage for the benefit of the defendant, and reduced the defendant’s indebtedness to the plaintiff by $150. Since that time nothing has been paid on account either of principal or interest on the debt due to the plaintiff. It is found that there is now due him $1,850 with interest at five per cent per annum from December 19, 1916.

The master found that in 1913, when the mortgage was given, no suits whatever were pending against the defendant in any court, nor was there any prospect of such suits. On March 5, 1918, Chincholla deeded the real estate to the defendant’s sons, Edward and Michael, and to a woman known as Josephine Mascari who lived with the defendant but to whom, he was not then married. The consideration for this conveyance was $350, although the equity in the property was over $8,000. There were various conveyances of the real estate afterwards between these three defendants, but the master found that the record title now stands in the names of the defendants Edward and Michael; that Michael has no valid interest therein; that Edward’s interest is limited to the sum of $250; that the interest of the defendant in the equity is $8,500 less $250 invested by Edward; that [96]*96all the transfers subsequent to the execution of the deed from Chincholla to Josephine, Edward and Michael, culminating in the vesting of title in-Edward and Michael, were in fraud of the plaintiff’s rights and for the purpose of hindering and delaying him in collecting from the defendant the amount due.

The defendants filed three exceptions to the master’s report which will hereafter be considered. They were overruled by a judge of the Superior Court, who ordered a decree to be entered confirming the report and establishing the claim of the plaintiff for $1,850, with interest thereon at five per cent from December 19,1916; directing the principal defendant to pay the same to the plaintiff, and in default of such payment within thirty days from date of the decree, that a special master be appointed to sell the real estate, subject to the first and second mortgages thereon, and out of the proceeds of the sale to pay the plaintiff the amount due; and that the surplus, if any, be paid to the several defendants according to their respective interests. A decree has been entered in accordance with the order so made.

The first exception is for failure of the master to find that the defendant was entitled to a credit of $800, the purchase price for which the plaintiff bid off the property when he foreclosed his $2,000 mortgage and purchased it in his own name, in 1916. The master found that at the request of the defendant, the plaintiff deeded the property to Chincholla upon the defendant’s promise again to secure him for the full amount due. There was no fraud on the plaintiff’s part in connection with this transaction, and it is found that the other defendants had knowledge of the promise of the principal defendant to the plaintiff; they also knew that $1,850 was due him, yet all joined in the attempt to prevent its payment. The plaintiff received nothing from the foreclosure sale, which was consummated at the request and for the benefit of the defendant. Accordingly, he should not be required to account for the amount so bid by him. As the trial judge correctly ruled, if the plaintiff’s rights to the security given by the mortgage have been lost by reason [97]

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.E. 77, 255 Mass. 92, 1926 Mass. LEXIS 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mascari-v-mascari-mass-1926.