Prest v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance
Prest v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of contract to recover the penal sum ($4,000) named in a probate bond. The answer of the defendants Caswell and Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company (hereinafter referred to as the defendant) contained, in substance, (1) a general denial of all the allegations in the plaintiff’s writ and declaration contained; (2) a specific denial that the defendant “signed, delivered, and executed a certain instrument or bond as surety in the Probate Court in and for the county of Suffolk in the sum of $4,000”; (3) a call upon the plaintiff to prove each of these allegations; (4) a specific denial that “said bond was returned by the said court to the said Weymouth without approval by the judge of probate or the register or assistant registers of probate”; and (5) allegations “that the obligation relied upon by the plaintiff never became a valid or enforceable instrument because of the fact that it was never delivered to or accepted by the obligee, but was in fact rejected thereby.”
With the consent of all parties the case was heard by a judge of the Superior Court. At the conclusion of all the evidence he found for the defendant and at the request of the plaintiff reported the case to this court, subject to the provision which follows: “If a finding for the defendant was permissible upon any view of the admissible evidence, then judgment is to enter on the finding. If, as a matter of law, upon the admissible evidence a finding for the plaintiff was required, then judgment is to enter for the plaintiff in the amount of . . . $4,000.”
Subject to the defendant’s exception the judge admitted in evidence exhibits “B” and “C.” Exhibit “B” is a letter
Exhibit “D” is a letter dated October 11, 1926, bearing the caption “The Commonwealth op Massachusetts Suffolk County Probate Court and Court of Insolvency Boston.” It is addressed to Guy L. Weymouth, and is signed “John R. Nichols Asst. Register by S. P.” It reads: “Enclosed please find additional bond in the case of John R. Kingston, which you mailed to this office. Before you can file this bond it will be necessary for you to file a petition for additional bond. Form for same is enclosed.” It is found that John R. Nichols is, and was when exhibit “D” was written, assistant register of probate for Suffolk County; that “There is no record in the clerk’s office of the Probate Court for Suffolk County of the receipt of the instrument in question (Ex. A) and there was no entry upon any docket relating to the estate concerning this instrument”; and that there “was no reference in any docket entry having to do with the John R. Kingston Estate of any instrument
Subject to the exception of the defendant, entries from "the second, third and fourth accounts of Guy L. Weymouth as conservator of the Kingston Estate which were allowed without contest after publication and assent from a guardian ad litem were admitted: 1. Second account Item, ‘Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company, $10.00.’ 2. Third account Item, ' Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company, additional bond premium, $16.00. January 27, 1927, Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company, old bond, $10.00.’ 3. Fourth account Item, 'January 4, 1928, Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company, premium on bond, $10.67. July 16, 1928, Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company, premium on bond, $10.00.’” The fifth, sixth and seventh accounts of Weymouth had not been presented for allowance and were not offered in evidence.
It was agreed that it is the practice and procedure of anybody acting in the probate office for Suffolk County on behalf of the register or assistant register, "when a bond is offered without a petition, to return the bond.” This evidence was objected to by the plaintiff and was admitted subject to his exception.
The difficulty about the case arises equally whether the bond is treated as a statutory bond or as a common law bond, and lies in the lack of evidence that the instrument, in the lifetime of Guy L. Weymouth, was ever delivered by him and accepted by the named obligee .as a present, operative, legal obligation binding the principal and surety named therein. All that appears is that, at some time between October 1, 1926, and October 11, 1926, Weymouth mailed the bond (Exhibit "A”) to the Probate Court for Suffolk County or to some one official of the Probate Court in Boston, and that on October 11, 1926, an assistant register remailed the bond (Exhibit "A”) to Weymouth with a notification that "Before you can file this bond it will be necessary for you to file a petition for additional bond.” However mistaken the assistant register might be as to his
Judgment for the defendants.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William M. Prest, Judge of Probate v. Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company & another
- Status
- Published