Stone v. Stone

61 N.E. 268, 179 Mass. 555, 1901 Mass. LEXIS 614
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 268 (Stone v. Stone) 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
Stone v. Stone, 61 N.E. 268, 179 Mass. 555, 1901 Mass. LEXIS 614 (Mass. 1901).

Opinion

Loring, J.

This is a bill in equity to redeem from a mortgage certain land lying partly in the Charlestown District of the city of Boston and partly in Everett. The land was bought in 1854 from the city of Charlestown by Phineas and Amos Stone and three other persons named Gary, Howland, and Sewall. The interests of the several purchasers were originally — Gary, one quarter; Howland, one quarter; Sewall, Phineas and Amos Stone, one sixth each. In 1860, Howland sold his one quarter interest to Phineas and Amos Stone and Sewall, and thereafter each of the remaining purchasers, namely, Gary, Sewall, and the two Stones, had each of them one undivided quarter interest in the land.

The land was originally paid for by a mortgage back to the city of Charlestown for the whole purchase money, one half of which was due in five years and the other in ten years. The half due in five years was paid at maturity, in June, 1859; the other half, amounting to $11,919.75, is still unpaid. In June, 1891, the defendant, Joseph Stone, became the purchaser and assignee of this mortgage.

Phineas and Amos Stone were brothers. Phineas died in August, 1891, leaving the defendant Joseph Stone, his oldest son, his residuary legatee and devisee. About four years after his father’s death, Joseph produced a release from Amos to Phineas Stone, dated February 1, 1880, which he said he had just found among his father’s papers, and claimed that by it Amos had conveyed to Phineas all his interest in the land in question. The release was throughout in the handwriting of Amos Stone, and had never been recorded. Acting on this [558]*558claim, Joseph recorded the release on May 31, 1895, and on July 18,1895, entered to foreclose the mortgage assigned to him in June, 1891; he now refuses to allow the heirs of Amos to redeem. Amos died in February, 1896, seven months after Joseph entered to foreclose. This bill is brought to assert the rights of Amos’ heirs in the premises.

One Abby M. Andrews, who was the clerk of Phineas during his lifetime, was coexecutor with Joseph under Phineas’ will. She told Joseph that Amos owned one quarter of the property in question, and in the inventory of the estate of Phineas Stone it was stated that he owned one quarter of this property and not one half of it. Abby Andrews died two months before the release dated February 1, 1880, was recorded. Joseph was unable to testify definitely as to the time when he found this release, but it was shortly before it was recorded.

It appears that no change was made in the division of the net income of the property after the date of the release of February 1, 1880, but that after that date, as before it, one quarter of the net income was paid to Amos; and this continued for the eleven years after the date of the release during which Phineas was alive and during the four additional years after his death until his clerk, Abby M. Andrews, died, making fifteen years in all. Joseph’s story is that he found the release among some papers in an ordinary docket box on his desk; that the box and the papers had been there since they were taken out of the safe where they were kept by Phineas, and handed to him by Miss Andrews in 1891, and that he had examined these papers several times before 'he found out what the purport of this release was.

When this estate was purchased from the city of Charlestown, the title to it was taken in the name of Gary. At that time, all the purchasers except Gary were members of the city government of Charlestown, and the defendant in his brief admits that “ possibly ” this was the reason for none of the purchasers except Gary appearing as grantees. Gary held the title for one year, namely, until June, 1855, when he conveyed to Howland the legal title to his (Howland’s) one quarter interest; and one year later, namely, in May, 1856, he conveyed to Phineas Stone the. legal title to the one undivided half of the estate bought by [559]*559Sewall, Amos Stone, and himself. Two months later, namely, in July, 1856, Phineas conveyed to Sewall his one third of the one half which had been conveyed to him, Phineas, by Gary.

When Howland sold his one quarter interest to Sewall and the two Stones, in 1860, he conveyed the legal title to it to Amos Stone. Three years later, in October, 1863, Amos conveyed one third of this one quarter to Sewall and one third to Phineas.

These are the only deeds on record, and the defendant now claims, not only that Amos conveyed to Phineas all his interest by the unrecorded release dated February 1, 1880, but also that all the interest Amos had at that time to convey was an undivided one twelfth interest, namely, the interest which was left in him, Amos, under the conveyance to him by Howland of Howland’s one quarter interest after Amos had conveyed away one third of that one quarter to Phineas and the same interest to Sewall.

The master found that Amos had one quarter interest before he executed the release of February 1, 1880, and ruled-that that interest passed to Phineas by virtue of that release. The presiding justice affirmed this finding as to the one quarter interest, but ruled that the release did not apply to the land in question at all, and entered a decree allowing the plaintiffs to redeem.

The finding that Amos, after 1860 and prior to February, 1880, had one quarter interest was right.

In the deed from Amos to Phineas by which Amos conveyed to him his (Phineas’) one twelfth interest which Phineas bought of Howland, the legal title to which had been conveyed to Amos by Howland at the time of the purchase three years before, it is stated that Amos conveys “ one undivided third part of the several parcels of land flats and rights pertaining thereto, situate,” etc. (describing the land in question, among bther parcels) ; the deed then continues as follows: “meaning and intending hereby to convey to said Phineas J. Stone so much of said parcels and rights that was conveyed to me by said Howland as aforesaid, as will make him the said Phineas J. Stone together with what was conveyed to him by John Gary by deed dated May 1, 1856 recorded as above Book 751, Page 274, the owner of one undivided fourth part of the several parcels of land, fiats and rights [560]*560that were conveyed to said John Gary by the City of Charles-town,” by two different deeds, which are there mentioned. The reason for there being two deeds from the city of Charlestown to Gary will be explained later on. There was a similar clause in the deed by which Amos Stone, on the same day, conveyed to Sewall his third of the one quarter which had been conveyed by Howland to Amos Stone. This deed from Amos to Phineas is a statement by Amos, acquiesced in by Phineas (by accepting, and holding under, the deed), that the interest of Phineas in the land at that time was such, that if one third of one quarter, namely, one twelfth, were added to it, he would have one quarter ; that is to say, it was a statement that Phineas then had one sixth. If Phineas, between May, 1856, when he got the legal title to the one undivided half owned by himself, Sewall, and Amos in equal shares, and the date of this deed from Amos to Phineas, namely, October, 1863, had conveyed to Amos his one third of that one half, Phineas would have had at the date of the deed from Amos to him one sixth, as it is indirectly stated in that deed he then had. And we are of opinion that, on all the evidence in this case, it must be found that such a deed was made by Phineas to Amos, and was subsequently lost.

If such a deed had been made, it is not improbable that Amos would not have recorded it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 268, 179 Mass. 555, 1901 Mass. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-stone-mass-1901.