Shinberg v. Garfinkle

278 N.E.2d 738, 361 Mass. 109, 1972 Mass. LEXIS 859
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 278 N.E.2d 738 (Shinberg v. Garfinkle) 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
Shinberg v. Garfinkle, 278 N.E.2d 738, 361 Mass. 109, 1972 Mass. LEXIS 859 (Mass. 1972).

Opinion

*110 Cutter, J.

Mr. Shinberg, an attorney, by this bill in equity seeks an accounting from Garfinkle, a Boston architect, with respect to transactions in 1965, and thereafter, involving construction of a nursing home in Cambridge. The case was referred to a master, whose report, once recommitted to him, was confirmed. Garfinkle has appealed from a final decree (a) stating that Garfinkle holds, as constructive trustee for Mr. Shinberg, all the trust certificates of Shirson Realty Trust, which owns the nursing home, and all the stock of Sonley Corporation, which operates the home, and (b) ordering Garfinkle to pay to Mr. Shinberg $145,894.64, said by the decree to represent the profit made by Garfinkle in the enterprise described below, plus interest and costs. The facts are stated on the basis of the pleadings and the master’s report as supplemented after recommittal.

Mr. Shinberg and Garfinkle, friends for several years, had discussed nursing homes as an investment. About May 4, 1965, Garfinkle by telephone told Mr. Shinberg of “an opportunity to participate in a Cambridge [n]ursing [h]ome venture.” Garfinkle needed $25,000 to do so. “He requested . . . [Mr. Shinberg] to advance that sum.” The next day Garfinkle met with Mr. Shinberg and his father, a doctor. “Garfinkle outlined the business venture” and said “that, if he received $25,000, he would .. . share his interest with [Mr.] Shinberg on a 50-50 basis” and “that once a permanent mortgage was placed . . . the $25,000 would be refunded.” Nathan Korff and Dr. Frederick P. Nadel were to be other investors, but “wished to do business only with Garfinkle.”

On May 7, 1965, a memorandum agreement, prepared by Mr. Shinberg, was made. 1 This recited, among other matters, (a) that $25,000 had been advanced by Mr. Shinberg to Garfinkle; (b) that the building permit had *111 been granted and all plans had been approved; (c) that a $400,000 bank mortgage had been placed; (d) that there was a firm bid to build the home for $288,000; (e) that the cost or approximate cost of land, demolition, and furnishings had been determined; and (f) that there had been approaches by a prospective purchaser. 2 The agreement then proceeded, somewhat ambiguously, to deal with a part at least of Garfinkle’s obligations to Mr. Shinberg in the manner set out in the margin. 3

Garfinkle, Nadel, and Korff opened a bank account with a deposit of $75,000 representing a one-third capital contribution by each. 4 On May 28, 1965, GKN Realty Trust (see fn. 3) was formed. The necessary papers were recorded on June 1, and transferable certificates “were issued to each of the principals” (i.e. Garfinkle, Korff, and Dr. Nadel). Garfinkle received his certificates in June, 1965. There was “no express written agreement between the parties for Garfinkle to deliver . . . certificates.” Mr. “Shinberg asked Garfinkle on more than one occasion for the certificates and Garfinkle said he was only one of three trustees and was without power to issue *112 them.” In June, 1965, Garfinkle in fact had signed a request (which the other trustees refused to sign) that trust certificates be issued to Mr. Shinberg and his nominee. The master found that “Garfinkle agreed to turn over to [Mr.] Shinberg a one-half . . . share of his ... [own] shares in the GKN Trust when the shares were issued.”

Beginning in the fall of 1965, Mr. Shinberg and Garfinkle made weekly trips to the construction site during which the former renewed his request for the issuance of shares and the return of funds advanced by him. By December, 1966, Mr. Shinberg was “fed up” with the transaction. Garfinkle then offered Mr. Shinberg, apparently in settlement of all claims, a total of $30,500 payable $15,000 in cash and the rest in notes. On December 22, 1966, Mr. Shinberg executed a release to Garfinkle and delivered it, subject to an escrow agreement that it would be delivered when full payment (apparently of Garfinkle’s offered settlement) had been made, either on the due date of the notes or when the nursing home was sold, whichever date first occurred.

Prior to December 22, 1966, Garfinkle had paid $3,350 to Mr. Shinberg. Under the escrow agreement Mr. Shin-berg, at the time of the master’s report, had received $22,500. The total received by Mr. Shinberg since the inception of his dealings with Garfinkle is $25,850. Mr. Shinberg now holds Garfinkle’s notes in the aggregate sum of $8,000.

In April, 1967, the nursing home was sold to Milton Richmond, a friend of Garfinkle, and Bernard L. Shapiro as trustees of the Shirson Realty Trust. Mr. Shinberg first learned of the sale in August, 1967. He asked Garfinkle why the terms of the escrow agreement had not been carried out. He was then told by Garfinkle that “no sale had been made because he had purchased the nursing home.” 5

*113 On September 25, 1967, Mr. Shinberg wrote to Garfinkle, with a copy to the escrow agent, that because there had been a breach of the escrow agreement he was making demand under the terms of the original agreement of May 7, 1965 (see fns. 1-3, supra). The escrow agent, without consulting Garfinkle, returned to Mr. Shinberg the release which had been held under the escrow agreement.

The question then arose whether the escrow agreement was enforceable. The master found that Garfinkle made false statements to Mr. Shinberg (a) that the nursing home was not for sale “at a reasonable price” (whereas it was for sale and, indeed, was sold in April, 1967); (b) that he (Garfinkle) had not received funds from the trust (whereas $26,600 had been paid to him on or before January 10,1966); and (c) that no trust certificates had been issued to him (Garfinkle), when in fact such certificates had been issued in June, 1965. The master found that Mr. Shinberg in December, 1966, “felt he had made a bad deal” and “was relying exclusively upon Garfinkle’s representations as to [the] status of the venture ... which representations ... were not true.” Mr. Shinberg was in no position to learn anything regarding the GKN Trust because he was not a trustee or a certificate holder. He relied fully upon Garfinkle for all information. 6 “Garfinkle was not in control of the trust books.”

The master concluded, without sufficient explanation, that the “gross profit” to each trustee (Garfinkle, Korff, and Dr. Nadel) was $112,702.26. This sum, reduced by $24,850 (see fn. 4, supra), left a net profit of $87,852.26. Half of this amount would be $43,926.13. 7

1. Garfinkle contends that the master’s report on its *114 face contains inconsistencies which indicate its unreliability. See Gil-Bern Constr. Corp. v. Medford, 357 Mass. 620, 623. See also P & D Serv. Co. Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Dedham, 359 Mass. 96, 98.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 N.E.2d 738, 361 Mass. 109, 1972 Mass. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shinberg-v-garfinkle-mass-1972.