The instant case, wherein the plaintiff seeks the release of a right of way over his land together with damages, was returnable to the Superior Court in May, 1963. A second case,
Cohen
v.
Roddy,
No. 140759, was returnable to the Superior Court in Hartford County in January, 1965. In the latter case, Carroll E. Holloway was cited in as an additional party defendant in February, 1965. Although the cases were separate, they were so related that counsel agreed to try them together and further agreed that the evidence introduced would be applicable to both cases. Upon the finding and
The defendant, in its assignments of error, has attempted, in effect, to redraft the report of the referee. This court has consistently discountenanced such a wholesale attack upon the finding.
State
v.
Dukes,
The defendant seeks to have added to the finding a number of paragraphs on the ground that the facts stated in them were admitted or undisputed. To secure an addition on this ground, it is necessary for an appellant to point to some part of the appendix, the pleadings, or an exhibit properly before us which discloses that the appellee admitted that the fact in question was true or that its truth was conceded to be undisputed.
Martin
v.
Kavanewsky,
Subject to the corrections to which the defendant
Prior to March 23, 1956, Carroll E. Holloway caused a corporation to be formed known as Holloways’, Inc., the defendant in this case, and he trans
Prior to March 23, 1956, Roddy entered into negotiations with Thomas E. Hunt for the purchase of additional land at the north end of the shopping center. These negotiations were conducted in behalf of the partnership and for the protection of its interests in the shopping center. At one meeting, Roddy, Hunt, Holloway, an attorney and a surveyor met on the site, and, as a result of this meeting, a map was prepared by Harold R. Sanderson, dated February 22, .1956, and filed for record in the town clerk’s office on March 29, 1956. A portion of this map is reproduced on the next page. Roddy and Holloway made arrangements with the Simsbury Bank and Trust Company to finance the purchase of this property from Hunt. Because of the fact that Hunt and Holloway were not on friendly terms, Roddy performed all the negotiations for the partnership. On March 23, 1956, Hunt conveyed parcel C on the map to Roddy. Roddy then conveyed a one-half interest in the parcel to Holloway. On the same date, by separate deed, Hunt conveyed parcel B to Roddy. Roddy then executed an agree-
The partnership of Roddy and Holloway Development Company was involved in other projects not involved in this case. It was in some financial difficulty, and Roddy, in order to prevent liens from being placed on the partnership property, sold to
On May 19, 1959, Roddy and Holloway conveyed their interest in parcel C to the defendant. On June 15, 1959, Hunt also conveyed his interest in the property designated “Thomas Hunt” to the defendant. To finance these purchases, the defendant executed a mortgage deed to the Society for Savings. All these deeds referred to the aforementioned map for descriptions of the properties conveyed. As part of the consideration for the transfer of parcel C from Roddy and Holloway to the defendant, Holloway, acting as president of the defendant, orally agreed to assume all obligations of the partnership as far as parcel C was concerned. Holloway had full authority to act for the defendant in these negotiations.
Shortly after the defendant corporation acquired
After March 23, 1956, and through 1963, Holloway ordered, individually or on behalf of the defendant, additional surveys from Clifford A. Washburn, Jr. A sketch was also prepared by a Mr. Riggott showing proposed locations of future buildings. Holloway also ordered a map from Merton Hodge. All of these maps and sketches no longer showed the twelve-foot right of way as crossing parcel B. It had been deleted.
The purchase of parcel B by the plaintiff and K.S.B. Associates was unusual. Deposits were given, and the balance of the purchase price was paid before any deed was delivered. After the full purchase price was paid by the plaintiff, an agreement to buy, dated June 19, 1957, was executed. This agreement to buy stated that the property was to be conveyed free and clear of all encumbrances. A month or so later, a deed was signed by Roddy. By December of 1958, the deed had not yet been delivered. During this period, the plaintiff had Attorney Benjamin Globman do a title search on the property. He informed the plaintiff that a twelve-foot right of way ran through the property which he and K.S.B. Associates were purchasing. This information was related to Roddy. Roddy, to remove any fears of his buyers, had his attorney write
After this, nothing was done relative to parcel B until an exchange of deeds which gave A. John Kevorkian the northerly forty feet and the plaintiff the southerly twenty feet of parcel B. The twenty-foot parcel of land which was the plaintiff’s portion of the property contained the twelve-foot right of way which was to be released. Both Kevorkian and the plaintiff, individually, sought mortgage financing of stores to be erected on their respective properties. Both men went to the Small Business Administration and to the Simsbury Bank and Trust Company seeking the necessary financing. Of course, title examination was necessary. After the title work was completed, the plaintiff was informed that the twelve-foot right of way had not been released of record. The plaintiff relied upon and produced the various writings, signed by Roddy, to the effect that the right of way was to be released. Attorney Pease prepared a release of the twelve-foot right of way, which document included all the
On the basis of this finding, the referee recommended that the defendant be ordered to execute the aforesaid release. With this release executed, the title to the plaintiff’s land wTould be marketable. The court accepted the referee’s report and rendered judgment pursuant to it. In accepting the report of the referee, the trial court in its memorandum of decision concluded that the plaintiff believed that this twelve-foot right of way had been extinguished by the creation of a twenty-foot right of way over the defendant’s land; that all of the parties to the two actions were bound by an agreement to effectuate this substitution; that the right of way to be released over the land later acquired by the plaintiff and the new twentv-foot right of way to be created were set forth in a map filed as a public record in the town clerk’s office; and that the defendant corporation acted in pursuance thereto and further that it was bound thereby by its assumption of the partnership obligations of Roddy and Holloway and as an assignee of Thomas Hunt, its predecessor in title.
While the defendant urges numerous assignments of error, its basic claim, the answer to which is determinative of this appeal, is that the judgment cannot be sustained because the corporation was under no duty to execute a release of the twelve-foot easement. It urges that the defendant corporation did not assume the obligation of the partnership of Roddy and Holloway wherein the partnership agreed, upon the completion of a substitute driveway over those portions of parcels B and C shown on the map as a twenty-foot right of way, to release the twelve-foot right of way over parcel B owned by the plaintiff, and that there was no finding of any authority, express or implied, given by the corporation to Holloway, its president, to enter into any such agreement.
There is nothing in the referee’s finding which indicates that any express authority was given to Holloway by the corporation to assume the obligations of the partnership as part consideration for the conveyance of parcel C from Roddy and Carroll E. Holloway to the corporation. Holloway, as president of the corporation, had no inherent authority by virtue of his office to bind the defendant. “The corporation is only liable for the acts of its president if it is shown that his acts are so related to his duties as president that they may reasonably be held to have been done in the prosecu
While there was no finding of express ratification of Holloway’s actions, there were ample grounds to find implied ratification. “If the officers or the agents of a corporation assume to act for the corporation without any authority at all, or if they exceed their authority or act irregularly, and the act is one which could have been authorized in the first instance by the stockholders, board of directors or subordinate officers, as the case may be, it may be expressly or impliedly ratified by them, and thus be rendered
The deed from Roddy and Holloway conveying parcel C to the defendant, dated May 19, 1959, was a quitclaim deed wherein the consideration was recited as follows: “one (1) Dollar and other valuable consideration (being less than One Hundred (100) Dollars”. The deed contained no revenue stamps, and there is nothing in the finding to indicate that any sum of money was paid to the partnership. The function of a deed is merely to pass title to land, pursuant to the agreement of the parties. What the terms of the agreement are is a
The defendant claims that by virtue of the conveyance to it by Westerberg of his land in the shopping center it acquired his rights in the twelve-foot right of way over parcel B. This conveyance was dated April 2, 1962. The release of the twelve-foot right of way over the plaintiffs land was executed by Westerberg on March 20, 1963, at a time when he no longer had title to the land. Obviously the release by Westerberg was meaningless, except so far as it indicates that he, together with all the owners of real estate in the shopping center, understood clearly that the twelve-foot right of way over the plaintiff’s land was to be eliminated. The defendant claims that by virtue of this deed it then
The remaining assignments of error are without merit and do not warrant discussion.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Parcel B as designated on this map contains a small portion of land described by earlier maps and deeds as “Parcel A”.
