Monaghan v. Monaghan

Decision Date11 June 1948
Citation323 Mass. 96,79 N.E.2d 900
PartiesEDWIN J. MONAGHAN v. HUGH H. MONAGHAN, executor.
CourtUnited States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court

April 7, 1948.

Present: QUA, C.

J., DOLAN, RONAN WILKINS, & SPALDING, JJ.

Equity Jurisdiction, Claim barred by short statute of limitations. Executor and Administrator, Claim barred by short statute of limitations.

One, against whom a judgment had been ordered on the report of an auditor whose findings were final in an action by an executor against him to recover a bank deposit as the property of the estate, and who had appealed from the order about two months before the short statute of limitations would bar an action by him against the executor upon an alleged debt of the estate to him, had no standing to maintain a suit in equity to establish his claim upon the alleged debt under G. L. (Ter.

Ed.) c. 197 Section 10, after the running of the short statute and after a decision against him on his appeal.

BILL IN EQUITY filed in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Norfolk on January 23, 1947.

On transfer to the Superior, Court, the suit was heard on demurrer and plea by Williams, J.

W. R. Bigelow, for the plaintiff, submitted a brief. R. Wait, for the defendant.

RONAN, J. Arthur D Monaghan died domiciled in Maine on October 8, 1944, and Hugh H. Monaghan was appointed ancillary executor by the Probate Court of Norfolk County in this Commonwealth on June 8, 1945. [1] The executor brought an action of contract against the testator's brother Edwin J. Monaghan on June 18, 1945, to recover a deposit in a savings bank. The defendant in that action contended that the deposit was given to him by the testator. The report of an auditor, whose findings of fact were final, came before the Superior Court, and judgment was ordered entered for the plaintiff executor on April 1, 1946. On appeal to this court, a rescript was sent down on November 4, 1946, affirming the order for judgment. Monaghan v Monaghan,

320 Mass. 367 . The defendant in that action on January 23, 1947, brought the present bill of complaint in the Supreme Judicial Court under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 197, Section 10, seeking a judgment for an alleged indebtedness upon an account annexed against the estate of the defendant's testator, alleging that, in failing to prosecute the claim within the time limited by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 197, Section 9, as amended by St. 1933, c. 221, Section 4, he was not chargeable with culpable neglect. The suit was transferred to the Superior Court. [1] The plaintiff appealed from interlocutory decrees sustaining the defendant's demurrer, adjudging the sufficiency of the defendant's plea, and denying a motion to amend the bill, and from a final decree dismissing the bill with costs.

There was no error. The plaintiff knew every essential fact relative to his brother's estate and concerning the period within which suit might be brought against it. He was not misled by any conduct of the executor. He was familiar with the auditor's report, which on its face showed that he had no right to the deposit and that his claim that the deposit belonged to him could not be supported. Upon the coming in of the auditor's report the judge ordered a judgment for the estate. Thereafter he had more than two months within which to bring action on his present claim....

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1 cases
  • Monaghan v. Monaghan
    • United States
    • United States State Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts Supreme Court
    • June 11, 1948

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