Thе plaintiff brought suit against the defendant for the dissolution of their partnership, an accounting, the appointment of a receiver, and damages. The first count of the complaint alleges breach of the рartnership agreement. The second count alleges that the defendant made false representations to induce the plaintiff to enter into the partnership so that he could obtain the plaintiff’s money and that the plaintiff relied upon them to his damage. It further alleges misappropriation of the pаrtnership funds. The case was referred to a state referee, who found that the plaintiff, in full performance of his promises under the contract, had delivered to the defendant $7000 in cash or its equivalent, *81 a deеd to real estate valued, by agreement, at $3000, and a note for $10,000. He also found that the defendant had fаlsely represented the value of Ms interest in the partnership and that he had used partnership proрerty and money to meet his own personal obligations. It was agreed that the plaintiff was indebted to the partnership in the amount of $789.75. The court accepted the report of the referee and rendеred judgment dissolving the partnership, canceling the deed and the $10,000 note, and awarding $6210.25 damages to the plaintiff. The defendant has appealed.
The defendant’s claims of error raise two issues. The first is that the plаintiff is not entitled to restitution on the ground of fraud because the specific acts of fraud relied upon are not pleaded. Where a claim for damages is based upon fraud, the mere allegation that а fraud has been perpetrated is insufficient; the specific acts relied upon must be set forth in the complaint.
Gates
v.
Steele,
*82
The defendant’s second claim is that the plaintiff is not entitled to restitution because he has not elected to seek such relief but has affirmed the contract by asking enforcement оf his rights under it, and, further, that he has failed to return the consideration he received in order to put the defendаnt in statu quo ante. Neither claim appears in the written claims of law attached to the report оf the referee and nothing in the memorandum of decision in the Superior Court indicates that it was raised there. There was no finding. Under these circumstances we are not required to consider the claims. Practice Book §§ 154,409; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc., § 44. That aside, the judgment can be supported on the theory that the plаintiff was affirming the partnership contract and seeking a recovery for the fraud itself. It does not appear from the report that the plaintiff received anything of benefit from the defendant or from the pаrtnership which he should return except $789.75, for which the court made allowance in the judgment. This was proper.
Cain
v.
Norman,
The rule that equity, having taken jurisdiction for one purpose, will hеar all issues is applied to cases in which the court, on a proper ground for the intervention of equity, has taken jurisdiction in respect to questions concerning partnership matters. 1 Pomeroy, op. cit., §§ 114, 239. The plaintiff, as he was entitled to do, sought equitable relief.
Brownback
v.
Nelson,
The right to recover money damages is not always the sole remedy for the breach of a contract. When one party has fully performed his part of thе agreement, he may invoke, in an appropriate case, the exercise of the equity pоwer of the court and seek rescission and restitution, if damages are wholly inadequate to do justice.
Caramini
v.
Tegulias,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
