Wightman v. Wightman

223 Mass. 398
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 223 Mass. 398 (Wightman v. Wightman) 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
Wightman v. Wightman, 223 Mass. 398 (Mass. 1916).

Opinion

Carroll, J.

The plaintiff and the defendant are brothers. From 1898 till April, 1907, the plaintiff (a dentist) practiced his profession in an office in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. The defendant, a younger brother, also a dentist, began working for him in 1898. His wages, beginning at $10 a week, were increased from time to time, until April, 1907, when he received $30 a week. Before this last increase “he had expressed an intention of leaving his brother and starting business on his own account. . . . But he still expressed his desire to quit and had given his brother notice that he should leave in thirty days.” The exact time when this notice of the defendant was given does not clearly appear. We infer from the report of the master, that it was given either in March, 1907, when the defendant’s wages were increased, or a short time before June 1, 1907.

In April, 1907, the plaintiff broke down. As the master reports, “He was evidently mentally unbalanced and utterly incapacitated to do any business that required intelligent thought.” He continued in this condition for some time. “During the month of May, 1907, the plaintiff occasionally visited his office, but after that and until after the first of January, 1910, he gave no attention at all to the business, and during all that time was mentally incapable of giving any attention to it.” In 1908 he was taken to [400]*400a sanitarium and later to an insane hospital. In January, 1910, he recovered, and since then his condition has been normal.

May 28, 1907, the plaintiff went before a justice of the peace and executed a deed “purporting to convey to his brother, the defendant, all his real estate and personal effects.” After a few days he delivered the deed to the brother, and at this time gave him written orders to collect his money, deposited in different banks. There was no valuable consideration for this deed.

The defendant continued to practice his profession at the same office, using the materials, tools and furniture therein. “For a few months he sent out bills on the billheads then in the office in the name of the plaintiff; ... for a few months, also, he entered upon the cash book weekly payments to himself of $30.” In January, 1910, the plaintiff being then in normal condition, demanded of the defendant a return of the property, which had been entrusted to him, and an account of the work done by him in the office. The defendant delivered to him the bank books and on July 20 vacated the room in which the plaintiff previously had carried on his practice as a dentist, and in which the defendant practiced from June 1, 1907, until that date, July 20, 1910. Thereupon this bill in equity was brought.

' The two brothers lived with their mother at Attleborough, the plaintiff paying the necessary family expenses as head of the family. Beginning in June, 1907, and during the plaintiff’s disability, the defendant paid the expenses of the home out of his own funds, amounting to $4,789.03.

The defendant, from money turned over to him by the plaintiff, paid for the latter’s expenses while he was mentally unbalanced. The master found “that from and after June 1, 1907, there was no valid contract for services or otherwise existing between the parties.” The plaintiff, on account of his condition, was obliged to give up his business, and “he made no contract with his brother as to the future conduct of the business. . . . He simply gave up and went out and his brother stayed and went on with the business.” The master then states the account showing a balance due the defendant of $105.77. The master also made the alternative finding, "If, on the other hand, it must be found, upon the foregoing facts, that the defendant was still in the service of the plaintiff, then the account between them must be stated differ[401]*401ently and as follows:” Then follows the account, showing a balance of $1,996.74 due the plaintiff from the defendant.

The bill alleges that the deed of May 28,1907, was obtained from the plaintiff “by fraud and deception practiced upon the complainant, and by undue influence exerted upon the complainant by said respondent.” The master made no finding on this question. His report, however, negatives any fraud on the part of the defendant, and as this question was not argued, we take it to have been waived.

The bill, however, states that the plaintiff “gave into the charge of the respondent the office and furnishings and the tools of his profession, his customers and business, for the respondent to take care of until the complainant’s return to health and to the duties of his profession.” The Superior Court, upon the master’s report, ordered the defendant to reconvey to the plaintiff the real estate described in the deed of May 28, and to pay the plaintiff the costs of suit, taxed at $70, and directed that the plaintiff pay to the defendant $105.77. The case is before us on the plaintiff’s appeal from this decree.

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38 Pa. D. & C. 409 (Montgomery County Orphans' Court, 1940)
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Bluebook (online)
223 Mass. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wightman-v-wightman-mass-1916.