73 A. 765 | Conn. | 1909
This action grows out of a written contract under seal, dated August 1st, 1906, by which the defendants (a copartnership composed of two members) agreed to sell and convey to the plaintiff certain real estate for $294. Twenty-five dollars of the contract price was paid upon the execution of the written agreement, and the balance was to be paid in installments of $5 per week. October 7th, 1906, the plaintiff was further credited with $16 of the contract price.
The agreement provided that if she failed to pay any of the stipulated instalments for thirty days after it fell due, the agreement to sell should become void at the option of the defendants, who should be thereupon released from all obligations thereunder, but have the right to retain for their own use, as liquidated damages, all moneys previously paid by her. Upon several occasions before and after the payment of the $16 the defendants told the plaintiff that she need not make the payments weekly, and that she might pay at her convenience unless the defendants notified her that payment was required. The plaintiff at all times intended to pay for the real estate and was able to do so, and would have carried out the agreement if she had not been misled by these statements of the defendants. The defendants did not notify her that they desired her to make payments, or that they exercised their option to be released *385 from their obligations, but sold the land to another person. The plaintiff, hearing of the sale, tendered the defendants the balance due under the contract, and demanded a deed, or the return of the $41. The tender was made in a short time after the plaintiff knew of the sale. The defendants refused to deed the land and also to return the money. They admit receiving the money, but contend that the plaintiff had forfeited all rights under the contract, by her failure to make payment of the instalments when they became due.
The agreement further provided that no modification or waiver of any term or condition thereof should be alleged or set up, or be of any force or effect, unless in writing and signed by both parties.
It is a familiar principle that when one person has in his possession money which in equity and good conscience belongs to another, the law will create an implied promise upon the part of such person to pay the same to him to whom it belongs, and that in such a case an action for money had and received may be maintained.
In this case the defendants, by orally agreeing that they would notify the plaintiff when they required any money of her, and that she might pay for the real estate at her convenience unless she received such notification, prevented the plaintiff from making the payments within the time limited in the written contract. The plaintiff intended to and would have paid according to the stipulations in the agreement if she had not been misled by the statements of the defendants. She was ready and wanted to make payment of the balance, if given a fair opportunity to do so. The defendants, notwithstanding their statements, now set up the nonperformance by the plaintiff which their own acts brought about. The statute of frauds has no bearing in this case. The cause of action is not the refusal to perform a contract or keep a promise upon which another relied, but the unjust infliction of loss upon one party, with a *386
consequent benefit to the other, from a violation of a confidence which should have been respected. Wainwright v.Talcott,
Parol evidence by the plaintiff, that she was misled by the declarations of the defendants as to the time that she could make payments of the weekly installments, was properly admitted by the court below. Wainwright v. Talcott,
No notice having been given to her of any exercise of the defendants' option to become released from their obligations, it is unnecessary to inquire whether, had such a notice been given, the provision as to liquidated damages would have affected her rights.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.