Cantor v. Cantor

325 Mass. 719 (1950) 92 N.E.2d 368

WILLIAM CANTOR
vs.
GERALDINE CANTOR.

Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Middlesex.

February 10, 1950. May 3, 1950.

Present: QUA, C.J., LUMMUS, RONAN, SPALDING, & COUNIHAN, JJ.

A.S. Karff & E.S. Farmer, for the plaintiff.

R.I. Gottlieb, for the defendant.

COUNIHAN, J.

This is a suit originally begun by a husband against his wife, in which he seeks to establish, by way of resulting trust, his ownership of certain real estate at 4 Francis Avenue, Cambridge, and of the household furniture and other personal property therein, and also of the household furniture and other personal property in premises at 7 Francis Avenue. The wife denied the allegations of the husband, and by way of counterclaim seeks to establish her ownership of premises at 7 Francis Avenue, of two insurance policies on her life, and of certain personal property in possession of the husband. When this suit was begun on September 30, 1947, the parties were husband and wife and will be so referred to hereinafter. They are now divorced by decree which became absolute on November 17, 1948. The suit was referred to a master by a rule conformable to Rule 86 of the Superior Court (1932). To the report of the master made on May 17, 1949, the husband filed six objections based upon alleged inconsistent findings of facts and conclusions unsupported by subsidiary findings of facts. The husband also on May 20, 1949, filed a motion "that the master's report be recommitted to the master." After hearing the judge on June 6, 1949, sustained exception 1 and overruled exceptions 3 and 4. He recommitted the report to the master to clarify certain inconsistencies in the report and also to find and report the subsidiary facts upon which the ultimate facts were found relative to the insurance policies. The husband appealed but only from that part of the interlocutory decree overruling exceptions 3 and 4. The judge reserved action on exceptions 2, 5, and 6 "until after the master shall have filed a supplementary report." The master complied with the decree of the judge and filed *721 a supplementary report. Thereupon, after counsel for the husband stated that he did not care to be heard further, the judge on June 27, 1949, confirmed the master's report and the master's report on recommittal and overruled exceptions 2, 5, and 6. From this interlocutory decree the husband appealed. The husband filed with the master on May 16, 1949, two requests for a report of the evidence under Rule 90 of the Superior Court (1932) together with an affidavit which purported to but did not contain a brief, accurate, and fair summary of the evidence upon which he relied to show error. The master attached these requests to his first report but refused to make the summary requested. These requests do not appear to have been brought specially to the attention of the judge, and no action was ever taken by the judge on them. After the interlocutory decree by the judge on June 6, 1949, no motion to recommit for any purpose was ever filed. The husband argues, however, that the action of the judge in failing to recommit the entire report (although he reserved no rights as to this) was error.

There was no error in failing to recommit the master's report even if we assume, without deciding, that the point is now open on appeal from the final decree. Patterson v. Simonds, 324 Mass. 344, 351. The only way, as matter of right, by which an aggrieved party may obtain a summary of evidence is to move for a recommittal under Rule 90, supported by an affidavit under Rule 46 showing what would be a proper summary, so that there may be set forth in the report a brief, accurate, and fair summary of the evidence to test the findings of the master. Minot v. Minot, 319 Mass. 253, 259, 260. This the plaintiff failed to do after the report had been recommitted by the decree of June 6, 1949. Furthermore he was entitled to no such summary of evidence where, as in this case, the evidence was not taken by a stenographer as required in Rule 90.

There was no error in the action of the judge in overruling the exceptions of the husband. "The evidence is not included *722 in the master's report and it does not state nor show that his ultimate findings of fact [other than those relative to the insurance policies] are based solely on the subsidiary facts set forth in the report. The ultimate findings may have been rested on evidence heard by the master, which was not before the ... [judge] and is not before us. Consequently the ... [judge] and this court are bound by the ultimate findings unless the subsidiary facts stated are sufficient in themselves to demonstrate that the ultimate findings could not be justified upon any evidence that the master might have received." Dodge v. Anna Jaques Hospital, 301 Mass. 431, 435. No subsidiary facts were here found inconsistent with the ultimate findings, which are therefore binding on us. We have repeatedly held that it is elementary that exceptions to a master's report cannot be sustained unless there is error apparent on the face of the report itself. Minot v. Minot, 319 Mass. 253, 258. Broderick v. Broderick, ante, 579.

There was no error in confirming the master's report as modified by the decree of June 6, 1949, and the master's report upon recommittal, or in entering the final decree. The master made specific findings that the furniture and the personal property at 4 Francis Avenue are "the property of the defendant — purchased by her principally through her own efforts and with her own money"; that the real estate at 4 Francis Avenue "was purchased by and title was taken in the name of the defendant as her separate property, free of any trust"; that the furniture and other personal property at 7 Francis Avenue "are all the property of the defendant and were acquired by her either through purchase or gifts"; that as to the real estate at 7 Francis Avenue, "both the plaintiff and defendant, when this property was purchased, intended that their ownership therein should be as `tenants by the entirety and not as tenants in common'" and "that their interest in this property remained that way until the plaintiff and defendant were divorced"; that the personal property in possession of the husband and claimed by the wife in her counterclaim "are the personal property *723 of the defendant, that she loaned them to the plaintiff to adorn his office and that she is entitled to their return"; and that both insurance policies on her life are "the property of the defendant and should be returned to her by the plaintiff." The husband did not argue that the evidence was insufficient to support these findings and they must stand. They support the final decree.[1]

Interlocutory decrees affirmed.

Final decree affirmed with costs.

NOTES

[1] By the final decree, in substance, the plaintiff's bill was dismissed; and, in respect to defendant's counterclaim, title to certain enumerated articles and to certain life insurance policies was declared to be in the defendant, and the plaintiff was ordered to deliver them to the defendant in twenty days; and the real estate numbered 7 Francis Street in Cambridge was decreed to be owned by the plaintiff and defendant as tenants in common. — REPORTER.