McGuire v. Murray

77 A. 692, 107 Me. 108, 1910 Me. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 23, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 A. 692 (McGuire v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGuire v. Murray, 77 A. 692, 107 Me. 108, 1910 Me. LEXIS 78 (Me. 1910).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This bill in equity is brought to obtain from the court a decree that the defendant Murray holds the legal title to a certain dwelling house and lot in Bangor in trust for the plaintiff, and to compel the defendants to convey the property to him free of all liens and incumbrances. The case comes to the Law Court on report.

The material facts alleged and not denied and those satisfactorily established by the evidence, may be succinctly stated as follows:

On the 22nd day of February, 1893, Mary J. McGuire, wife of the plaintiff, being seized in fee of the house in question, valued at $5000, conveyed it to her mother Ellen Cassidy by a warranty deed in which the consideration was stated to be two thousand dollars, and received therefor a promissory note for $2000 signed by Mrs. Cassidy and witnessed by William Cassidy, her husband. At the date of this deed Mrs. McGuire, the grantee, had a suit for slander pending against one Largay, and this conveyance is said by one of the plaintiff’s witnesses to have been made to "cover up the property” in anticipation of a possible cross action by Largay against Mrs. McGuire. No such cross action was ever brought, however, and there were no existing or subsequent creditors who were or could have been defrauded by this conveyance to Mrs. Cassidy.

[110]*110Mrs. Cassidy, the grantee in this deed, died in the year 1902, leaving her husband William Cassidy surviving her, and as her heirs five children, namely, Mary J. McGuire, wife of the plaintiff, and William J. Cassidy, Ellen C. Buckley, Annie M. Crane and Margaret E. Welch. She left a will by the terms of which, after disposing of certain specific items of real estate, she devised and bequeathed all of the residue of her estate, real and personal to her husband, William Cassidy, in trust for the purposes therein specified, during the lifetime of her husband William Cassidy, and provided that at his death the. trust should cease and that the entire residue and remainder of the estate, with the exception of three parcels of real estate otherwise disposed of, should be divided equally among her children William J., Annie, Margaret and Ellen if living. As a result of these testamentary provisions, the defendant William Cassidy, took the legal title to the McGuire premises in question and the heirs above named took only contingent remainders, although the will makes no specific mention of this particular piece of real estate.

In the year 1903, the year following the death of Mrs. Cassidy, Mary J. McGuire the wife of the plaintiff, and the grantor in the deed in question, died testate, and by the terms of her will, her husband who was made executor, succeeded to all of the rights of the testatrix in the homestead in question. Nearly two years after the death of his wife the plaintiff found among her papers the promissory note for $2000 in question signed by Ellen Cassidy and given to Mrs. McGuire by Mrs. Cassidy at the time of the conveyance of the property to her. As a result of the investigations which followed the discovery of this note, the plaintiff ascertained for the first time that the legal title to the homestead, which he and his wife had occupied and controlled and upon which they had paid the taxes as absolute owners, without interruption or change during all these years, had been conveyed to his wife’s mother in 1893 and by operation of the provisions of her will transferred to the defendants. Neither did the defendant William Cassidy have any knowledge of the transaction until the deed of 1893 was found on record as a result of the examination following the discovery by the plaintiff [111]*111of the $2000 note. This note which then amounted to $3440 was a legal claim against the estate of Ellen Cassidy, which was estimated to have a value of at least $20,000. The note was not barred by the general statute of limitations, because it was a witnessed note, and it was not barred by any special statute for the reason that William Cassidy, executor of the will of Ellen Cassidy never gave the notice of his appointment required by the statute. It may be conceded that Mrs. McGuire’s conveyance of the property in 1893 was for the purpose of avoiding anticipated claims against her, and that she could not invoke the aid of a court of equity to obtain a reconveyance. But none of the defendants invoked this principle in the conferences between the parties immediately after the discovery of the deed and note, or made any claim to hold title to the property by virtue of that conveyance, — certainly not without payment of the note for $2000 and interest, held by the plaintiff against the estate of Mrs. Cassidy. On the contrary it was known that at the time of the execution of her will Mrs. Ellen Cassidy had expressly stated to the scrivener that this property in question belonged to her daughter Mrs. McGuire. It was thereupon mutually agreed between the plaintiff on the one side and William Cassidy who was then trustee under the will of Ellen Cassidy, and the heirs of Ellen Cassidy named as defendants being all parties in interest, that the plaintiff should surrender the note for $2000 then amounting to $3440, to the representatives of the estate of Ellen Cassidy, and in consideration thereof that the trustee William Cassidy and the heirs of Ellen Cassidy should convey the legal title to the real estate in question to the plaintiff Dennis McGuire. The defendants above named thus promptly and voluntarily recognized the existence of an oral trust in favor of Mrs. McGuire. In execution of the mutual agreement above stated, the plaintiff on May 8, 1905, surrendered the $2000 note and it bears upon its face this memorandum signed by the attorney who delivered the note to Mr. Cassidy : "Settled by reconveyance of the property for which this note was given.” William Cassidy and the heirs of Ellen Cassidy gave the plaintiff quitclaim deeds of their respective interests in the property. The [112]*112plaintiff also signed and delivered to the defendant William Cassidy, a memorandum of that date stating that these two transactions were in full settlement of all matters between the two estates.

It is not now questioned that in Ellen Cassidy’s will the terms of the devise of her real estate to her husband William Cassidy as trustee, were sufficiently comprehensive to include the McGuire lot in question; but it is manifest from the form of the quitclaim deed to the plaintiff of May '8, 1905, in which William Cassidy is described as "widower” considered in connection with all the other facts and circumstances, that the parties in interest understood that by the terms of Ellen Cassidy’s will, her children took vested interests in the real estate in question and that the quitclaim deeds in one of which William Cassidy joined as "widower” would have the effect to vest in the plaintiff the same full title in fee simple to the property which Mrs. McGuire conveyed to Ellen Cassidy by her conveyance of 1893. It is perfectly obvious, however, that in making that settlement completed May 8, 1905, all of the parties were acting under an .entire misapprehension in regard to the state of the title and the effect of the conveyances then made to the plaintiff. It is not now in controversy that by the provisions of Ellen Cassidy’s will the legal title to the McGuire property in question was vested in William Cassidy, the trustee named in the will, and that under the residuary clause of the will, the children took only contingent remainders which could not be conveyed by them either by quitclaim or warranty deeds. See Robinson v. Palmer, 90 Maine, 246.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 A. 692, 107 Me. 108, 1910 Me. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcguire-v-murray-me-1910.