Goodfellow v. Newton

Lummus, J.

This is a petition by the executor of the will of Agnes M. Choate, late of Fitchburg, for instructions as to his duties under her will. The facts are agreed. At the death of the testatrix on July 7, 1944, she owned among other parcels of real estate and personal property the following four parcels of real estate: (a) the Pine Street parcel, worth $6,100, which until September 3, 1942, was unencumbered; (b) the Charles Street parcel, worth $5,050, which until September 3, 1942, was unencumbered; (c) the Main Street parcel, worth $8,300, which for some years and until September 3, 1942, was covered by a mortgage for $10,000 given by the testatrix and held by the Fitchburg Savings Bank; and (d) the Prichard Street parcel, worth $37,000, which for some years and until September 3, 1942, was covered by a mortgage given by others and held by the Fitchburg Savings Bank, upon which there was due an unpaid balance of $38,400, which the testatrix had assumed and agreed to pay. In the summer of 1942 the Fitchburg Savings Bank deemed the security upon its two mortgages inadequate, and threatened to foreclose, with the result that on September 3, 1942, the testatrix gave to the bank in substitution for the old mortgage notes a new note for $48,400, the aggregate amount due on the old mortgage notes, and secured it by a new blanket mortgage' covering all four parcels. When the testatrix died she owed the bank *407the principal of the new note and $228.50 as interest thereon, a total of $48,628.50.

By her will, executed on January 20, 1944, the testatrix devised specifically to the respondent Francis L. Newton the Pine Street parcel and the Charles Street parcel. There were other legacies, general and specific, and other specific devises. The other two of the four parcels in question, namely, the Main Street parcel and the Prichard Street parcel, passed without mention by the residuary clause in equal shares to the respondents Vera Lesure Perry and Gladys Howland. The executor paid the blanket mortgage note out of property left by the testatrix, without requiring the respondent Francis L. Newton or the parcels specifically devised to him to contribute, relying upon his written undertaking to contribute any amount for which the parcels specifically devised to him might subsequently be held liable. The controversy is between the respondent Newton, on one side, and the respondents Perry and Howland on the other.

Prior to January 1, 1910, when St. 1909, c. 198, took effect, a mortgage note given or assumed by a testator and therefore constituting a debt of his estate (Andrews v. Bishop, 5 Allen, 490; Creesy v. Willis, 159 Mass. 249, 251; compare Porter v. Howe, 173 Mass. 521, 526), as in the present case, was primarily payable out of the personal estate of the testator not specifically bequeathed, in the absence of a contrary direction in the will for marshalling the assets. Hays v. Jackson, 6 Mass. 149, 151, 152. Lee, appellant, 18 Pick. 285, 288. Hewes v. Dehon, 3 Gray, 205. Plimpton v. Fuller, 11 Allen, 139, 140. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 202, §§1,9. The result was, that not only land specifically devised but also land passing by a general devise or as intestate property was entitled to be exonerated by the personal estate not specifically bequeathed from a mortgage debt for which the testator was personally liable. Morse v. Bassett, 132 Mass. 502, 506. Staigg v. Atkinson, 144 Mass. 564, 571. Robinson v. Simmons, 156 Mass. 123, 125, 126. Hayward v. Hayward, 199 Mass. 340, 342. Note, 5 Am. L. R. 488. But since a residuary gift passes nothing *408except what may remain after all debts and all other legacies and devises are satisfied, a residuary devisee could not require exoneration or contribution from other devisees or legatees. Blaney v. Blaney, 1 Cush. 107. Webster v. Webster, 105 Mass. 538, 543. Bowen v. Hoxie, 137 Mass. 527. Tomlinson v. Bury, 145 Mass. 346, 347. Sawyer v. Freeman, 161 Mass. 543, 546. Robinson v. Cogswell, 192 Mass. 79, 83. Cooney v. Whitaker, 192 Mass. 596. Hayward v. Hayward, 199 Mass. 340, 342. Smith v. Livermore, 298 Mass. 223, 228. See also Conway v. Shea, 282 Mass. 25, 88 Am. L. R. 551; Macomber v. King, 288 Mass. 381.

A partial change was made in the preexisting law by St. 1909, c. 198, now G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 191, § 23. That statute provides as follows: “A specific devise of real estate subject to a mortgage given by the testator, unless the contrary shall plainly appear by his will, shall be deemed to be the devise of the interest only which the testator had at the time of his decease in such real estate over and above such mortgage.” The statute proceeds to give the executor the right to sell the real estate for the purpose of restoring to the estate what was paid out of the testator’s “other property” to satisfy the mortgage debt. The statute was applied in Doane v. Bigelow, 293 Mass. 406.

The statute, it will be noticed, relates only to a “specific devise” of real estate. Applied to the two specific devises to the respondent Newton, the statute allowed him only such interest in the Pine Street parcel and the Charles Street parcel as might remain “over and above” the blanket mortgage, unless a contrary intent “plainly” appeared. The residuary devises to the respondents Perry and How-land were general and not specific (Cooney v. Whitaker, 192 Mass. 596; Kaplan v. Leader, 297 Mass. 145), and were not affected by the statute. But in the nature of things and wholly apart from the statute the residuary devises were subject to the mortgage debt, for nothing passed by them except what might remain after all the debts of the testatrix, including the debt upon the blanket mortgage, were paid.

The question in the present case is whether the judge was *409right in holding that the specific devises and the residuary-devises are on an equality with respect to their duty to contribute to the discharge of the blanket mortgage, and that all must contribute in proportion to value:

The respondent Newton relies on Brownson v. Lawrance, L. R. 6 Eq. 1, 6 (1868), a case arising under Locke King’s Act, 17 & 18 Viet. c. 113. In that case Lord Romilly assumed that the law of England was, like our law, that a residuary devise is not specific. Blaney v. Blaney, 1 Cush. 107, 116. Winchester v. Forster, 3 Cush. 366. Farnum v. Bascom, 122 Mass. 282, 286. Cooney v. Whitaker, 192 Mass. 596, 599. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 191, § 19. He held that the residuary devise, rather than a specific devise, must bear the primary burden of a blanket mortgage. His view was followed in Estate of Hill, 87 Pa. Super. Ct. 173 (1926). But his assumption as to the law of England has been held erroneous, and his decision consequently has been overruled. Gibbins v. Eyden, L. R. 7 Eq. 371, 375 (1869). Sackville v. Smyth, L. R. 17 Eq. 153. In re Smith, 33 Ch. D. 195. 3 Jarman, Wills (7th ed. 1930) 1991.

It may be thought anomalous to require a specific devisee to contribute proportionately with a residuary devisee. But the very purpose of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 191, § 23, is to cut down the rights of a specific devisee for the benefit of the residue of the estate. And it seems- even more anomalous to give to the specific devisee a right of exoneration when the statute provides that he shall have none but shall take subject to the mortgage. On the whole, we think the judge was right.

n , Decree affirmed.