This case is here on appeals by the plaintiff from decrees sustaining the defendants’ demurrer and dismissing the bill.
The material allegations of the bill are that on or about May 20, 1952, the plaintiff entered into an agreement with the defendants, “a memorandum of which agreement is hereto annexed and marked ‘A,’” by which the plaintiff agreed to buy and the defendants to sell a parcel of real estate in Tewksbury for $3,700; that the plaintiff paid to the defendants a deposit of $200; and that the property had formerly been conveyed to one Catherine Penney and by her will two undivided thirds had been devised to her daughter, the defendant Kathleen Picardi, and the remaining undivided third to the testatrix’s surviving husband, the defendant William J. Penney. The prayers are for specific performance of the agreement and for damages.
The memorandum referred to in the bill and marked “A” reads as follows:
“I Kathleen Picardi hereby sell to Victor N. Cluff of Tewksbury the land and buildings on Main Street, Tewksbury formerly the home of my mother for the sum of thirty seven hundred dollars of which this is a receipt for two hundred dollars as a down deposit. The remainder to be paid upon the settlement of the estate.
Mrs. Kathleen Picardi Administrator.”
The plaintiff could have set up the agreement in general terms without stating whether it was oral or in writing. He was not obliged to allege, as in substance he has, that it was oral and that he relies upon the paper marked
“A”
as his memorandum of it.
Southwick
v.
Spevak,
252 Mass.
*322
354, 356-357.
Ranicar
v.
Goodwin,
Upon inspection of the alleged memorandum marked
“A.”
it appears
not
to be a memorandum of the agreement set forth in the bill. That agreement is alleged to have been between the plaintiff and the two defendants jointly. The alleged memorandum purports to bind the defendant Picardi alone, even if we assume, without deciding, that her designation as “Administrator” can be ignored and that she is bound personally. There is nothing in the alleged memorandum to bind the defendant Penney. If in fact the defendant Picardi signed the alleged memorandum as authorized agent for Penney as well as in her own behalf, very likely the memorandum would bind both herself and Penney.
Huntington
v.
Knox,
It follows in the opinion of a majority of the court that the demurrer was rightly sustained, and the bill was rightly dismissed.
Interlocutory decree affirmed.
Final decree affirmed with costs of appeal.
