292 Mass. 42 | Mass. | 1935
The plaintiff seeks by this suit rescission of a lease of real estate and further incidental relief. The defendant demurred to the bill for want of equity and loches. An interlocutory decree sustaining the demurrer on the ground that facts were not set forth in the bill entitling the plaintiff to relief and a final decree dismissing the bill were entered. The plaintiff appealed from both these decrees.
The allegations of the bill in substance are these: One Frizzell in December, 1927, owned real estate in Gardner. At that time the plaintiff employed one of its directors as its real estate manager, who had responsibility for negotiating all leases for stores for it and upon whose recommendations the plaintiff relied implicitly. This real estate manager or a corporation owned by him was employed by Frizzell to procure a purchaser for his property and Frizzell agreed to pay to such manager a commission in the event of a sale. Pursuant to this employment the real estate manager of the plaintiff interested the Irrose Realty Corporation, a real estate subsidiary of the D. A. Schulte Co., Inc., which agreed to buy the property in question provided Frizzell could get the plaintiff to lease it for twenty-
The first purchaser of the property in question secured the plaintiff as lessee by reason of the services of the agent of the plaintiff in charge of leasing real estate for it. Undivided loyalty to the plaintiff was due from that agent. “It is well settled that the agent is bound to exercise the utmost good faith in his dealings with his principal. As Lord Cairns said, this rule ‘is not a technical or arbitrary rule. It is a rule founded on the highest and truest principles of morality.' Parker v. McKenna, L. R. 10 Ch. 96, 118.” Little v. Phipps, 208 Mass. 331, 333. This principle finds illustration in many cases dealing with breaches of the fiduciary obligations of agents. Quinn v. Burton, 195 Mass. 277. Sullivan v. Tufts, 203 Mass. 155. Dzuris v. Pierce, 216 Mass. 132, 135-136. Isenbeck v. Burroughs, 217 Mass. 537, 541-542. Lazenby v. Henderson, 241 Mass. 177. Fullwood v. Hurley, [1928] 1 K. B. 498, 502. Chicago Title & Trust Co. v. Schwartz, 339 Ill. 184, 194. Upon the allegations of the bill the plaintiff in the transaction as to the lease was not only unrepresented in any proper
While this agent of the plaintiff was not directly employed by the defendant, the latter seeks to bind the plaintiff by a contract nominally made in its behalf by one who by his faithless conduct had disqualified himself as agent for the plaintiff and had rendered it impossible for him to bind the plaintiff by the lease. The defendant, on the allegations of the bill, at all times material knew of this double employment. It stands in no better position than the Irrose Realty Corporation or Frizzell, who originally employed the agent of the plaintiff. The fact that the defendant did not itself employ this agent does not render the transaction any the less fraudulent with respect to the plaintiff. It does not minimize his breach of fiduciary duty to the plaintiff.
The knowledge of its faithless agent is not imputed to the plaintiff as principal. The agent was conducting for his own benefit a fraudulent scheme against the interest of the plaintiff and therefore could not in that particular act for the plaintiff. Innerarity v. Merchants’ National Bank, 139 Mass. 332, 333. Tremont Trust Co. v. Noyes, 246 Mass. 197, 207, and cases cited.
It is not an essential to a suit in equity for the rescission of a contract such as is set forth in the bill to offer to restore that which has been received and to put the parties in statu quo. The court has power in entering a final decree to insert whatever conditions, if any, justice and equity may require after a full hearing. Thomas v. Beals, 154 Mass. 51. Putnam v. Bolster, 216 Mass. 367, 372. Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Contracts, vol. 2, § 481.
It cannot rightly be ruled that loches on the part of the plaintiff is disclosed on the face of the bill. So long as there is no knowledge of the wrong committed and no refusal to embrace opportunity to ascertain facts, there can commonly be no loches. Manning v. Mulrey, 192 Mass. 547, 550. Stewart v. Finkelstone, 206 Mass. 28, 36. O’Brien v. O’Brien, 238 Mass. 403, 411.
Interlocutory and final decrees reversed.