Judges: Pierce
Filed Date: 11/26/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
This suit is before this court on the appeal of the plaintiff from an “interlocutory decree recommitting the master’s report,authorizing further hearings to be heard,” from an interlocutory decree dissolving a temporary injunction, and from the final decree “dismissing the plaintiff’s bill.”
The recommittal of the report rested in the judicial discretion of the trial judge; there is nothing in the record which discloses that his discretion was not properly exercised. Anagnosti v. Almy, 252 Mass. 492. Kilkus v. Shakman, 254 Mass. 274. The appeal from the interlocutory decree “dissolving the injunction” is not argued and is treated as waived. No appeal is taken from the interlocutory decree confirming the master’s report and supplemental report, or from so much of that decree as overruled the plaintiff’s exceptions. An examination of the exceptions leads to the conclusion that the final decree is not erroneously affected by such decree. Fay v. Corbett, 233 Mass. 403. Peter Bent Brigham Hospital v. McClure, 245 Mass. 370. The evidence which was before the master is not reported. It follows that the facts found by him must stand, unless they are inconsistent with each other or otherwise plainly wrong. Young v. Winkley, 191 Mass. 570.
Shortly stated, the facts which are pertinent to the issue raised by the appeal are as follows: On November 17, 1925, one Lizzie Grossman, who is not a party to this litigation, borrowed from the defendant Harrington $1,000, and gave him a note therefor secured by a mortgage on four parcels of real estate, one of which was known as the Wyman Street property. As a part of the same transaction, and to induce Harrington to lend the money to Grossman, the plaintiff executed an assignment of two notes secured by mortgages on real estate, given to her by the defendants Mary A. Sweeney and Patrick P. Sweeney, “authorized her husband, Jacob Lonstein, to take the assignment to Attorney Cohan’s office for the purpose of having Attorney Cohan take her acknowledgment, and also authorized her husband and Attorney Cohan to deliver the assignment and the notes to Harrington. Harrington knew at the time of this assignment
As respects this transaction the master specifically finds “that it was her free act and deed”; “that this loan of $1,000 was made by Harrington to Lizzie Grossman, that he expected the money loaned by him was going to her, and that Dora Lonstein was acting as surety for her, but the security upon which he chiefly relied in making this loan was the security furnished by Dora Lonstein.” There was no separate note given by Dora Lonstein to Harrington. “Nothing was said or done . . . about placing fire insurance upon the properties covered by the Grossman mortgage for the protection of Harrington’s interest as a mortgagee of said property, nor was any provision added or attached to existing fire insurance policies to accomplish that purpose. The mortgage itself was the Massachusetts statute form of mortgage. It contained no express provision relating to fire insurance.” There was no legal duty on Harrington to insure the property for the protection of his own interest or that of the plaintiff.
The trial judge, on the facts found in the report and in the report on recommittal, found that “when Attorney Cohan and Mr. Lonstein with Grossman called on the defendant Harrington and requested him to give the partial release he was warranted in believing that they were acting with Mrs. Lonstein’s authority.” It is unnecessary to consider whether the facts reported warranted such inference, because the real fact shown by the report is that Harrington, in executing the
Ordered accordingly.