282 Mass. 609 | Mass. | 1933
The defendants Charles E. Pease, Clara C. Pease, the Colony Golf Club, Incorporated, Georgianna L. Conway and Albert J. Conway appeal from a final decree. No relief against the last two was decreed, and they were found innocent of the fraud for which remedy is given against the other appellants. We are unable to see that they have been aggrieved. They claimed an appeal from an interlocutory decree overruling their demurrer to the bill as originally filed; but, later, they joined in a demurrer to the bill as amended, and from an interlocutory decree overruling that demurrer no appeal was claimed. They filed answer to the bill as amended. They have waived any right to be heard on the earlier demurrer. They need not be considered further. Harrell v. Sonnabend, 191 Mass. 310, cited by the defendants, is not authority to the contrary. It rests on different circumstances. As no appeal was claimed from the interlocutory decree overruling the demurrer to the amended bill, we need not consider matters of pleading. It is sufficient that the bill sets out facts upon which a decree may properly be entered.
Those facts are as follows: Defendant O’Hara, at the solicitation of Charles E. Pease, interested the plaintiffs in a proposed purchase of the golf links of the Colony Club at Thompsonville, Connecticut. The land subject to encumbrances belonged to Clara C. Pease, who with her husband had organized the corporation in Connecticut, leased the land to Mrs. Conway, who assigned to the club and, with him, held practically all the capital stock which, on the incorporation, had first been issued to the Conways. After negotiations throughout which the plaintiffs understood that O’Hara was a purchaser on equal shares with themselves, a contract was drawn up. The Peases and Conways were parties of the first part; the Colony Club, of the second; the plaintiffs and O’Hara, of the third, and
The judge found the transaction to be fraudulent. The decree annulled the contract, and ordered the Peases to repay to each plaintiff the $6,000 which he had paid, with interest; to pay $709.60 to the trust company for its just charges and expenses; and to pay costs in stated sums. It further ordered that if within twenty days from its date they paid in to the clerk the amount called for above, the clerk should pay over the several amounts decreed to the plaintiffs and the trust company, and the trust company should reconvey the land to its grantor, the goods to the vendor named in the bill of sale, and the certificates of stock to the registered owners. If they failed so to pay, then a commissioner named was to sell the land and stock and to dispose of the proceeds as directed in appropriate provisions. If not enough was obtained to pay the plaintiffs, they were to have execution against the Peases for the balance unpaid. The trust company, after the sale and transfer of the stock as decreed, was to reconvey to the Colony Club the personal property which had been transferred by the latter.
No extended argument is needed to show that O’Hara’s conduct was a fraud upon the plaintiffs, in which Clara C. and Charles E. Pease were implicated, and, through them, the Colony Club of which Charles was secretary and treasurer and Clara was a director as well as its largest stockholder. Shadman v. O’Brien, 278 Mass. 579. The representation with regard to the playing rights was material. In reaching an agreement on $30,000 as a purchase price the difference between fourteen outstanding rights and
There was no error in annulling the contract; in ordering the Peases to return their money to the plaintiffs and make- payment to the trust company; and in providing, in the event of payment by the Peases, for transfers of the property held by the trust company to those from whom it was received. This would leave all parties as nearly as possible in the situation in which they stood before the vitiated contract was made.
The plaintiffs suggest alterations in the decree which go beyond mere clerical corrections. They ask in their brief that payment by the Colony Club be required. They did not appeal. We think it too late for them now to ask other than clerical changes in the decree. The appeal of the Colony Club does not open to them opportunity to demand added burdens on that club.
No argument is made by the appellants attacking the decree in so far as it relates to a sale of the interest of Clara C. Pease in the land in Connecticut and the appointment of a commissioner to make such sale. We, therefore, treat any questions with regard thereto as waived, and do not consider them.
Decree affirmed with costs.