KIRK, J.
This is a bill in equity to compel the defendant John J. Hanrihan to deliver to the plaintiff, Edmond L. Hanrihan, twenty-five shares of the common capital stock of the Albany Carpet Cleaning Company, hereinafter referred to as the corporation, and to require the corporation to record on its stock transfer books the transfer from John to Edmond.
The present defendants, who are John, the corporation, and the directors of the corporation, have appealed from interlocutory decrees overruling their demurrers and from a final decree granting to Edmond the relief prayed for.
The judge found the following facts: James E. Hanrihan, the founder of the carpet cleaning business, was the father of six children, including John and Edmond. Of the other four children, three were girls and one a younger boy. The
In 1924, the business was incorporated. The litigation centers upon the discussions and events leading up to the incorporation. A dispute arose between John and Edmond concerning the control of the planned corporation. Edmond said that they should have equal control of and equal rights in the corporation whereas John asserted that he should have a majority of the voting stock and be in control of the corporation because he was the oldest and had been more active in the business management of the enterprise whereas Edmond had devoted most of his time to shop operations. Their uncle Edmond L. Grimes acted as mediator throughout this period of controversy and undertook to establish a plan whereby all of the children would be treated fairly. It was agreed that each of the children would contribute to the corporation the one-sixth interest which each had in the parents' estates. The corporation was to issue two classes of stock, preferred and common. Only John and Edmond were to have the common voting stock. The other four children were to share equally all of the preferred stock, after allowing for a nominal share of preferred stock to each member of the board of directors. The core of controversy was the division of the common stock between John and Edmond. Among other things it was determined that a "salary differential" had developed during the years John and Edmond had conducted the business whereby $5,000 more in back pay was owed to John than was owed to Edmond. Edmond L. Grimes proposed several plans of stock distribution
The judge found: "Early in 1924 the negotiations reached a point which appeared to be satisfactory to all concerned, and Edmond L. Grimes drafted a proposal which was discussed and agreed upon by Edmond and John Hanrihan, and the uncle's attorney was then instructed to draft the necessary papers to incorporate the rug cleaning business." On the basis of this written proposal and a collateral oral understanding which the judge established on conflicting testimony, the judge concluded that the agreement as to stock distribution was as follows: "John ... [would receive] fifty-two and one half per cent (52 1/2%) of the common stock amounting to five hundred twenty-five (525) shares, and Edmond ... [would receive] forty-seven and one half per cent (47 1/2%) of the common stock — namely, four hundred seventy-five (475) shares. I find that it was the understanding that the five per cent (5%) common stock differential in favor of John would be voted by the Board of Directors, and when the back salary of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000) had been fully paid to John this five per cent (5%) of the common stock would be equally divided between John and Edmond." The articles of organization signed by Edmond while he was at Saranac, New York, for reasons of health show that John was issued 525 and Edmond 475 shares of common stock. The back salary differential was adjusted in 1927. The judge found "that John and Edmond continued to run the corporation on an equal basis, both with respect to authority and salary, ... until 1949 when John violated his agreement ... to turn over one half of the fifty (50) shares of common stock ... [and] to share equally with Edmond and that attempts to adjust this dispute met with no success, whereupon Edmond commenced action in 1951." The judge concluded that Edmond was not guilty of laches and was not barred by the statute of limitations.
The purpose of designations is to achieve an abbreviated record which is to be treated as a report of all the evidence. Cohen v. Santoianni, 330 Mass. 187, 190. See Everett v. Capitol Motor Transp. Co. Inc. 330 Mass. 417, 420. So treated, our duty is to examine the evidence and decide the case according to our own judgment, accepting the findings of the trial judge, whether based wholly or partly upon oral testimony, as true, unless they are shown to be plainly wrong, and finding for ourselves such other and additional facts as we deem to be justified by the evidence. Berry v. Kyes, 304 Mass. 56, 57-58. Carroll v. Markey, 321 Mass. 87, 87-88. LeBlanc v. Molloy, 335 Mass. 636, 637. We cannot say that the judge was plainly wrong in his finding as to the agreement for stock distribution. It must therefore stand.
The parol evidence rule did not bar consideration of evidence other than the proposals printed on galley sheets and the incorporation papers. "Parol evidence rightly was received in this suit in equity to show the real nature of the transaction between the parties." McCarthy v. Fitzgerald, 296 Mass. 181, 183. There was no indication that the parties intended to be bound by the statements in the galley sheets and the incorporation papers; parol evidence therefore was admissible to determine whether there was an agreement, and whether a particular writing had been assented to as a complete and accurate integration of that agreement. The judge was not wrong in finding that none of the writings represented the actual agreement. The evidence disclosed a series of negotiations which culminated in the agreement found by the judge. Caputo v. Continental Constr. Corp. 340 Mass. 15, 18-19, and cases cited. Cotty v. Meister, 339 Mass. 202, 204-205. See Farmer v. Arabian Am. Oil Co. 277 F.2d 46, 49.
It has been argued on John's behalf that if there was an agreement in 1924, whereby John was obliged to turn over to Edmond the twenty-five shares of stock when John received the $5,000 back pay "differential," the fact that John did receive the $5,000 in 1927 and did not then turn over the twenty-five shares constituted a breach of the agreement for which an action of contract would lie and since more than six years have elapsed the claim of Edmond is now barred by the statute of limitations. G.L.c. 260, § 2. We do not think that this plausible analysis reflects the true nature of the transaction entered into by the brothers.
We are of the opinion that the transaction is in the nature of a resulting trust pro tanto. We think that the shares which John took in his own name above fifty per cent were impressed with a trust in favor of Edmond. The aim of John and Edmond was the acquisition of one thousand shares of stock with voting power. Each contributed his equal share in his parents' estates to that end. This fact, the character of the transaction itself (see Scott, Trusts [2d ed.] § 404.1), gives rise to the inference that Edmond did not intend that John should have the beneficial interest in any of the shares purchased by Edmond. "If ... [one] pays a real aliquot part of the purchase price, one half ... etc., ... [there is] no difficulty in holding that presumptively it was intended that he should have a corresponding aliquot part of the property purchased, and ... [is] entitled to recover such an interest, even though no other evidence is offered as to the intention of the parties." Scott, Trusts (2d ed.) § 454, p. 3065, citing Root v. Blake, 14 Pick. 271, and Hayward v. Cain, 110 Mass. 273. Restatement 2d: Trusts, § 454, and comments. The equivalence of the contribution of the two brothers by giving their equal
The arrangement for the payment of the corporation's debt to John did not alter the essential nature of Edmond's interest in the two and one half per cent of the shares. This was merely an ancillary security transaction for the benefit of John who had bare legal title to the two and one half per cent of the shares for security purposes. Newton v. Fay, 10 Allen, 505. Reeve v. Dennett, 137 Mass. 315, 316. McCarthy v. Fitzgerald, 296 Mass. 181, 183-184. The beneficial interest remained and still remains in Edmond because of the resulting trust.
Nor is the plaintiff barred by laches which is a question of fact. Shea v. Shea, 296 Mass. 143, 147. Suburban Land Co. Inc. v. Billerica, 314 Mass. 184, 191. A party is not guilty of laches if he acts with reasonable promptness after the repudiation of a resulting trust by the trustee. Boston & No. St. Ry. v. Goodell, 233 Mass. 428, 438. Glover v. Waltham Laundry Co. 235 Mass. 330, 339. Quinn v. Quinn, 260 Mass. 494, 497. See O'Brien v. Hovey, 239 Mass. 37, 42; Stewart v. Finkelstone, 206 Mass. 28, 36-37. The interval between the repudiation and the commencement of the suit was found by the judge to have been used in an effort to avoid litigation. It is particularly urged upon us, however, by John that the death of Edmond L. Grimes handicaps his defence. See Garfield v. Garfield, 327 Mass. 529. The record leads us to believe that it at least equally handicaps Edmond's claim. In the circumstances we regard this bill as a prompt and proper response by Edmond to John's repudiation of his obligation to Edmond. All the principals to the transaction in 1924 were before the judge who tried the issues. The rights of third parties are not involved.
The statute of frauds is not applicable to a resulting trust. Brady v. Brady, 238 Mass. 302, 304. Restatement 2d: Trusts, § 40, comment d; § 440, comment c.
So ordered.
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