67 A.2d 409 | Conn. | 1949
The plaintiffs Alphonse Balzano and his daughter Carmel brought this action against the defendant Rose, his older daughter. The complaint *586 alleges that since 1935 Carmel has turned over her wages to Rose under an agreement that their combined earnings would be pooled in a common fund and saved for the joint purchase of a home, and that, pursuant to their agreement with Alphonse that he would obtain an interest in the property, he paid all of the household expenses. The complaint goes on to allege that on July 14, 1944, a property was purchased as agreed and title taken in the name of Rose alone, $3200 being paid from the common fund and $800 by Alphonse, and that thereafter the defendant refused to recognize the plaintiffs' ownership and to account for income realized from her use of the premises as a rooming house. Each plaintiff claimed an accounting, that a resulting trust for his proportionate share in the real estate be decreed, that a transfer by deed of such interest be ordered, and damages. The court rendered judgment determining the share of the property and of the income to which each party is entitled and ordered a sale and the distribution of the proceeds accordingly. Both the plaintiffs and defendant have appealed.
We summarize the material facts in the court's finding, which cannot be corrected to the advantage of either party. Prior to 1944 the Balzano family occupied various rents in New Haven. Alphonse's wife died in 1927. Their daughter Rose was then seventeen years of age and Carmel eight. From the time of her mother's death Rose mothered the family and took care of the work and management of the household. She also worked during the greater part of the time up to July, 1944, in various factories and took in some sewing. Her total earnings during the period exceeded $13,000. As a result of hard work and frugal habits, by 1944 she had accumulated total savings of $4200 after paying all of the household expenses during certain *587 periods and her fair share for the rest of the time. Alphonse worked and contributed to the household expenses when able, but for several years was incapacitated by an injury. From 1941 until 1944 the household expenses were paid by Rose with money received from him and from Carmel and with money out of her own earnings. From 1937 to July, 1944, Carmel had various employments and earned a total of approximately $4000. She made regular payments to the defendant as her contribution to the expense of running the house and retained the rest of her wages for her own use. Of the amounts so received from Carmel, the defendant by July, 1944, had a total of $300 left after expenditures made therefrom for running the house and for Carmel's individual benefit.
In the spring of 1944 the plaintiffs and the defendant agreed that they would all contribute toward buying a home at 660 George Street, New Haven, for $8000. On July 14, 1944, this price was paid for the property by the defendant. She procured $4000 of it by a mortgage, and, as had been agreed, her own savings of $3200, Alphonse's of $500, and Carmel's of $300 provided the balance. Sometime before this, certain land belonging to Alphonse had been attached, and, at the defendant's suggestion that he would be liable to get into trouble if title to the property were taken in his name, it was deeded to her as sole grantee. The court expressly declined to find, however, that the purpose of Alphonse in agreeing to this was to hinder or defraud his creditors. There was no agreement between Alphonse, Carmel and the defendant that each was to be the owner of an undivided one-third interest in the property, but at that time each agreed to make a contribution to the purchase price in the amount stated above.
After the purchase of the house the defendant took *588 possession and has since conducted it as a rooming house. The plaintiffs have occupied rooms there and until January, 1945, contributed for food and other things mutually enjoyed by the parties. The defendant has done practically all of the work to keep the rooming house going and has paid $3000 in reduction of the mortgage, $2000 out of the profits and $1000 from her own money. The income received by the defendant to July, 1947, totaled $6163.75, and the expenditures, including the $2000 paid in reduction of the mortgage, $5245.60. An auditor appointed by the court found that the defendant should receive a credit of $1501.50 as the reasonable value of the work she did in conducting the rooming house. This the court disallowed. The amount of profits for which the defendant is responsible is $918.15.
The court concluded: A resulting trust should be impressed on the property pro tanto so that Alphonse shall be entitled to a 500/4000ths and Carmel to a 300/4000ths interest therein; the defendant is indebted to Alphonse in the amount of $114.77 for his 500/4000ths interest in the net profits of $918.15, and to Carmel in the amount of $68.86 for her 300/4000ths interest; a sale of the realty should be had; and the net proceeds of such sale, after $1000 is paid to the defendant for the money expended by her in reduction of the mortgage, should be allocated to the parties in accordance with their proportional interests as stated above.
Upon the plaintiffs' appeal their principal claim is that each of them is entitled to an undivided one-third interest in the property and to receive one-third of the net profits from the rooming house. This is based on the contention that they and the defendant were participants in a joint adventure which their claimed corrections in the finding suggest began at least as *589
early as 1941 and their complaint alleges started in 1935. The court's finding is conclusive that there was no such joint adventure but that the interest of Carmel and Alphonse in the property was limited to their respective contributions of $300 and $500, agreed upon when the purchase was made. The court was therefore correct in concluding that the transaction gave rise to a resulting trust; Samasko v. Davis,
The final claim of the plaintiffs is that the court erred in ordering a sale of the property, because this was not warranted upon the pleadings and because the court failed to find that the sale will better promote the interests of the owners, as is essential in an action for a sale under 5927 of the General Statutes, Rev. 1930 (Rev. 1949, 8236), which provides that "Any *590
court of equitable jurisdiction may, upon the complaint of any person interested, order the sale of any estate, real or personal, owned by two or more persons, when, in the opinion of the court, a sale will better promote the interests of the owners." While the legal title was in the defendant and the plaintiffs had only an equitable title, the parties are joint owners within the meaning of the statute. Kelley v. Madden,
The defendant upon her appeal claims that the court should have held Alphonse precluded from recovery for lack of clean hands because his purpose in having title taken in her name was to defraud his creditors. Gest v. Gest,
The defendant's remaining claim is that the court erred in disallowing a credit to her of $1501.50 which the auditor found to be due her as the reasonable value of her work in conducting the rooming house. As we *592
have stated, the purchase of the house gave rise to a resulting trust. Had there been an express trust pursuant to which the defendant as trustee had conducted the rooming house for the benefit of the plaintiffs, she might well have been entitled to the allowance of the credit claimed. Bissell v. Butterworth,
There is no error on either appeal.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.