306 Mass. 104 | Mass. | 1940
This action is described in the writ as an action of tort for conspiracy. The substantial averments of the declaration, reduced to summary form, are these: The plaintiff owned real estate upon which the defendant Charlestown Five Cents Savings Bank held a mortgage in the amount of $105,000. This mortgage had two years and eight months to run at six per cent interest. The plaintiff having secured an offer for the property greatly in excess of the amount of the mortgage, it was “necessary” in order to put through the sale that the bank should accept the amount due on the mortgage and earned interest to date and not charge the unearned interest to the due date of the mortgage, which would amount to about $17,200. The defendant Hart was president óf the bank. He and the defendant Poorvu were engaged in business transactions together and were in the habit of sharing secret profits arising from transactions between the bank and borrowers. The plaintiff divulged the terms of its offer in confidence to Hart and Poorvu. The bank thereupon entered into an
This declaration seems to have been intended to carry out the promise of the writ by stating a case of “tort for conspiracy.” But it fails to show that by force of numbers
Apart from conspiracy no cause of action in tort is disclosed. The bank could rightfully insist upon the payment of interest during the entire period of its original loan. It does not appear that the taxes were not in fact in arrears or that the foreclosure was improperly conducted. None of the parties stood in a fiduciary relation toward the plaintiff, except in the actual conduct of the foreclosure, and the bank had a right to foreclose, if there had been a default, regardless of its motive or that of its officers. Fleming v. Dane, 304 Mass. 46, 51-52, and cases cited.
The plaintiff contends that a cause of action in tort is stated against the individual defendants for inducing the bank to break its contract with the plaintiff and, apparently, that a cause of action is stated against the bank for allowing itself to be induced. Laying to one side other possible difficulties with this contention, the insuperable objection to it, and to any action arising out of the alleged contract, is that the alleged contract itself as set forth in the declaration, if in fact it was made, was an unlawful and corrupt bargain by which the bank was either to give up its right to the interest or to make an increased loan solely in exchange for the plaintiff’s procuring the discharge of an.action pending against Poorvu personally. This is the natural and reasonable construction of the language of the declaration. There is no suggestion of any circumstances which might have given the bank a legitimate interest in such a trade. The declaration must be taken at its face value. In
It follows that the orders sustaining the demurrers should be affirmed and judgment entered for the defendants. Keljikian v. Star Brewing Co. 303 Mass. 53, 61-62.
So ordered.