304 Mass. 46 | Mass. | 1939
After the decision in Fleming v. Dane, 298 Mass. 216, the declaration wag amended in substantial respects,
Omitting words and sentences not directly bearing upon the essential allegations, the amended declaration may be restated as follows: For many years prior to 1934 the plaintiff owned a parcel of land in Brookline known as “Fleming Corner,” subject to a mortgage of $75,000 to the defendant Brookline Trust Company. Its value was greatly in excess of the amount of the mortgage, but it.could not then be sold at forced sale to advantage. Its greatest value lay in its peculiar adaptability for use as a gasoline filling station. In 1932 the plaintiff had “negotiated” a lease of “Fleming Corner” with the defendant Colonial Beacon Oil Company at a rental of $10,000 per year, said lease to be delivered upon the plaintiff securing a permit from the selectmen for the storage and sale of gasoline. If the permit had been granted the lease would have been delivered, and the lessee would have erected valuable structures on the land, giving to it a permanent value many times the amount of the mortgage, which the plaintiff could then have paid off. As the defendants knew, the plaintiff was without means, otherwise than by leasing, to protect his equity, and in that period of depression could secure no new loan while the property remained vacant and unleased. A permit would have been granted to the plaintiff, a lease delivered, and the plaintiff’s equity preserved, but for the conspiracy of the defendants and their acts pursuant thereto, as. hereinafter set forth. The defendant Dane was president of the defendant trust company and the largest stockholder therein “and of commanding influence in its management.” The defendant Cousens [who, however, had died, and whose executor had been dismissed from the action before the amendment to the declaration was allowed] was a director of the defendant trust company and of the defendant Brookline Savings Bank. “The individual defendants . . . [Dane and Cousens] had and were able to exercise great influence in the community and in the situation above described, and in particular had a commanding influence in the determination of the board of selectmen” as to the granting or refusal of gasoline per
(1) So to use their influence with, and power over, the selectmen as to prevent them from granting a permit to the plaintiff.
(2) To convince the oil company that no permit could be obtained without the consent of the other defendants and thus to induce it to become a party to said plan and to agree not to bid when the property should be offered at a foreclosure sale, but to buy it thereafter from the mortgagee trust company “at a greatly reduced price.”
(3) To foreclose the mortgage by sale at a price “far below its value” by reason of said denial of a permit and the agreement of the oil company not to bid.
(4) To withdraw their opposition to the granting of a permit and to obtain a permit for the oil company.
(5) To sell the property to the oil company “at a greatly enhanced price.” Pursuant to this plan “the defendants” took these steps:
(a) Concealing the plan and pretending to act from proper motives, “by the expression of their "wishes to, and the exercise of their influence on, the board of selectmen” they “caused successive petitions by the plaintiff for such permits to be denied . . . ,” although but for the combined influence of the defendants the selectmen would have granted a permit and denied it solely because of that influence “exerted upon them to that end.”
(b) After the denial of the plaintiff’s last petition in February, 1934, the defendants caused the trust company to foreclose its mortgage and to buy in “Fleming Corner” at the foreclosure sale on March 14, 1934, for $78,000.
(d) The defendants caused a petition for a permit to be filed by the oil company, which was granted on June 4.
(e) On July 6 the trust company transferred the land to the oil company for $98,000.
The declaration then continues with allegations that the plaintiff’s wife had deposited securities to the value of $10,000 with the trust company for safe keeping; that before the foreclosure of the mortgage the plaintiff as his wife’s representative had demanded those securities from the trust company, presenting her order for their delivery, and had stated to the trust company that his wife was physically unable to come to it, that at times her mind was a blank, and her memory impaired as a result of the plaintiff’s failure to get the permit which would have enabled him to protect the property from foreclosure; and that she wished her securities delivered to the plaintiff in order that she and he might, with the avails thereof, pay the interest on the mortgage which otherwise neither of them was able to pay, all of which statements were true, as the defendants knew, but that the trust company, in pursuance of said conspiracy, refused to deliver said securities to the plaintiff. Then follows a reference to the release upon which rested the decision in Fleming v. Dane, 298 Mass. 216, with allegations, substantially different from those appearing in the former declaration, designed to show that the release was obtained by duress. The declaration ends with this paragraph,
“By the aforesaid means the defendants, acting in combination, and using their combined influence to accomplish ends which none of them could have accomplished alone, deprived the plaintiff of his property, to his great-damage, as set forth in the writ.”
From the general structure of the declaration, as well as from its allegations of power and influence on the part of the individual defendants, it would seem that this declara
Eliminating conspiracy as in itself a cause of action, and regarding the allegations concerning it merely as allegations of joint participation, we fail to find the substantive facts necessary to constitute any cause of action stated concisely and with substantial certainty as required by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 7, Second. See Robitaille v. Morse, 283 Mass. 27. All of the allegations of various supposed wrongs are crowded into one count, although not all are pertinent to the statement of any single tort. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, § 7, Fourth; Downs v. Hawley, 112 Mass. 237, 241; Allen v. Codman, 139 Mass. 136, 139; Davis v. H. S. & M. W. Snyder, Inc. 252 Mass. 29, 35. The trust company as mort
Orders sustaining demurrers affirmed.