Wood v. Baldwin

156 N.E. 846, 259 Mass. 499, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1271
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 20, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 156 N.E. 846 (Wood v. Baldwin) 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
Wood v. Baldwin, 156 N.E. 846, 259 Mass. 499, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1271 (Mass. 1927).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

These suits are here on appeals from interlocutory decrees overruling the defendants’ exceptions and confirming the master’s report, and from final decrees in favor of the plaintiffs.

The bill of complaint against the defendant Arba S. Baldwin was filed in the Supreme Judicial Court on July 23, 1920. Upon the completion of the pleadings the cause was referred to a master “to find the facts, and report the same to the court, together with so much of the evidence as, in his opinion, may be necessary to present any question of law which may be raised by the exceptions that may be taken by either party.” During the hearings facts were developed which made it desirable that a bill of complaint be filed against the defendant Evia A. Stone. Thereupon the plaintiffs brought a separate bill in equity against her and filed their complaint in the Supreme Judicial Court on March 21, 1921. Upon the completion of the pleadings in the last suit, by stipulation of the parties and by order of the court, the casé was referred to the same master under the [502]*502same order of reference, and the testimony already taken in the suit against Baldwin was to be considered by the master as taken equally in the suit against Stone.

The plaintiffs, as executors of the estate of Alfred T. Wood, seek the recovery of certain stocks, bonds and other property, alleged to belong to the estate and claimed by the defendants as gifts from the testator; they also seek an accounting, and damages.

The pertinent facts found by the master in substance are as follows: The testator died at his home in Framingham, Massachusetts, on January 19, 1920, at the age of fifty-three years. By his will he disposed of all his estate. He had been a successful dry goods merchant, but the death of his wife on June 17,1914, was a great shock to him and had a marked effect upon his subsequent activities. He became highly nervous and depressed, his mind was abnormally active, and he gradually lost initiative and all voluntary effort. These characteristics never wholly left him up to the time of his death.

The defendant Baldwin is a nephew of the testator, and, except for a period of two years prior to the death of the testator’s wife, had been a member of his household. He began working in the testator’s store in 1906, and had finally been entrusted with the sole management of the business. The testator by no means placed himself entirely in the hands of the defendant; it was the testator’s store; but he had confidence in Baldwin’s judgment and conferred and consulted with him about the business; and he had confidence in his honesty, on one occasion saying he would trust him with his last cent, and that Baldwin was like a son to him and he would lose nothing by staying with and caring for him.

After his wife’s death, the testator took no interest in the store, and everything connected with it was surrendered to Baldwin with full power of attorney to make deposits and draw checks in connection with the business.

While a patient at the Adams Nervine Asylum, an institution conducted solely for the treatment of nervous disturbances and where mental cases are not admitted, the [503]*503testator executed the will under which the plaintiffs are acting as executors. The will was duly probated and no question was raised as to the testator’s mental capacity at the time the will was made. He was discharged from the sanatorium, “Improved”, August 7, 1915.

After leaving the asylum, he did no work and manifested little interest in the business. About Christmas of 1916, he made a trip to California, returning in September, 1917, improved in health. The following year he went again to California, being gone several months. On his return from this trip he was more like himself than he had been since the days preceding his wife’s illness; in the fall and early winter he averaged five hours a day at his store; he assisted in some of the “Drives” in Framingham, and came more in contact with his old friends than heretofore.

A great change came over the spirit of the testator in the year 1919, which brought deep concern to his relatives and friends. The previous fall he began paying marked attention to Mrs. Evia A. Stone. The two had much in common and each found the growing friendship congenial. The result was a proposal, by letter, of marriage. The testator then learned, for the first time, that Mrs. Stone was not a widow, as he had supposed, and was not at that time free to marry. She had already commenced divorce proceedings, and it was agreed that when she was free they should be married. The testator became increasingly sensitive to the fact that because she was a married woman he was not free to pay her open addresses. All this preyed on his mind and, feeling the return of his nervous depression of four years before, he planned to make another visit to California, in February, 1919. A day or two before leaving he gave to the defendant Baldwin a long sealed envelope marked in his handwriting “Property of Mrs. Evia A. Stone, Framingham, Mass.,” and directed Baldwin “if anything happened to him (testator) that he did not come back” to give the envelope to Mrs. Stone. This was the only instruction given. These were the only statements made by the testator. The testator said to Baldwin that he had told Mrs. Stone that he was going to leave an envelope with him, and if she wanted any assistance [504]*504at any time to go to him; and he asked Baldwin to render any assistance to her that he could; this Baldwin agreed to do so far as he was able. The testator also told the defendant Stone that he had left with Baldwin an envelope to be given to her "if anything happened to him, without any question asked”; that if she needed assistance about anything when he was gone to go to Baldwin as he understood and would do anything for her on his (the testator’s) account. At another conversation he told the defendant Stone he wanted her to understand thoroughly about the envelope. She said she thought she did understand it, and recalled what he had said about it at the previous conversation. He also told her that Baldwin had a power of attorney and transacted all his business and would act for her. In addition to the power of attorney before mentioned, Baldwin had a like power in relation to the testator’s personal finances with the Old Colony Trust Company, having joint access with the testator to the deposit vaults in the Framingham National Bank. When the envelope was handed to Baldwin, it contained $6,500 in bonds.

After the testator had gone to California, Baldwin drew a check for $956.26 to pay for Liberty bonds ordered by the testator. Soon after this he wrote to Baldwin from California telling him to put these bonds with the envelope and' if anything happened to him to deliver them to the defendant Stone without question. These bonds were placed by Baldwin in his own box with the envelope as directed. Upon his return from California, about October 1, the testator directed Baldwin to open the envelope, cut the coupons from the bonds and deposit them to the testator’s credit in the Old Colony Trust Company. Baldwin did as directed. No word relative to the envelope or these bonds ever passed between the defendants Stone and Baldwin. In November, 1919, the testator asked Baldwin if he (the testator) had $10,000 in bonds, saying he wanted the defendant Stone to have that amount. Upon investigation Baldwin found that including the original bonds in the envelope, and the Liberty bonds bought after the testator went to California, there was $7,500 in Baldwin’s box; and [505]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 N.E. 846, 259 Mass. 499, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-baldwin-mass-1927.