194 Mass. 201 | Mass. | 1907
This case comes up on an exception to a refusal to direct a verdict for the defendant, and on an exception to one portion of the judge’s charge. The case went to an auditor. The only evidence on the question of the defendant’s liability came from the auditor’s report and from the testimony of the plaintiff at the trial. The defendant was an old man unable to testify before the auditor or at the trial. He died less than three months after the verdict. The administrators of his estate were allowed to come in and defend the action, the plaintiff having given his consent. Most of the facts appear in the auditor’s report.
The defendant was the owner of a lot of land in Cambridge, and the plaintiff was a builder. Previous to March 15, 1900, the defendant had agreed to sell and the plaintiff had agreed to buy the land in question for $12,000. The defendant also had advanced money to the plaintiff for the building of five houses on it, which then were completed.
On March 15, 1900, the plaintiff and the defendant had a settlement of all matters between them, and their rights each against the other were reduced to writing in the form of two bonds, one given by the plaintiff to the defendant and the other by the defendant to the plaintiff.
The bond given by the defendant to the plaintiff which, together with a subsequent oral agreement, is the foundation of the action now before us, provided in substance that the amount
In the May following the date of the bond the plaintiff began the erection of a sixth house on the same lot of land. He testified in effect that he applied to the defendant for funds for the erection of the additional house, and that the defendant agreed to let him have for this purpose the interest money to be paid under the mortgage for $35,250, and further sums in addition, and that these advances for the sixth house were to be secured by increasing the amount of the mortgage note provided for in the bond of March 15, 1900, or by a second mortgage on the premises. And it further was agreed that the plaintiff, in place of actually paying over to the defendant the interest due on the $35,250 and then receiving back these sums so paid as an advance for the erection of the sixth house, should apply them directly to paying bills incurred in erecting that house and account to the defendant accordingly.
The auditor found that the defendant advanced to the plaintiff for the sixth house $5,300, including the interest due on the $35,250 and advances in addition thereto.
It appeared that the sixth house was completed in October, 1900.
The plaintiff testified at the trial that from March 15, 1900, to November 6, 1900, a period of nearly eight months, he paid
The plaintiff further testified that in February, 1902, he was told by the insurance agent that the defendant had cancelled the insurance on the building and said he had “ thrown the plaintiff out.”
Thereupon the plaintiff consulted an attorney, and on February 21, 1902, he called on the defendant and tendered a mortgage note for $35,250, dated March 15, 1900, indorsed interest paid to February 21, 1902. The plaintiff further testified that he had put into the sixth house much more than the interest due on the $35,250, and that “he understood that, if anything was due the defendant for interest when he came to take his deed and give his mortgages, it was to go into the additional mortgage; that the defendant, at the time he told the plaintiff he could take the rents and put them into the house instead of paying the defendant, said the interest could be put into the mortgage, and treating it that way, he did not owe any interest when he made the tender; that he did not owe the defendant anything toward taxes; that he had paid him more than enough to meet them ; and that he could not say how much the defendant was indebted to him for over-payments, but it was considerable.”
On this evidence the presiding judge refused to direct a verdict for the defendant. He instructed the jury, among other things, that before the plaintiff was entitled to a deed he was bound to pay the taxes and interest on the $35,250; that if on February 21, 1902, the plaintiff had not paid the defendant sufficient money including the rents collected after January 24,
He further instructed the jury that if there was an oral agreement as to advances for the sixth house, as the plaintiff asserts, and when he went to the defendant on February 21,1902, he was “ ready and willing to give the mortgage as he had agreed to give it, and upon an accounting with the defendant to give a mortgage for the sum that should be found due, and the defendant refused to have any arrangement with him, — to make any accounting with him, — then the plaintiff would be entitled to recover, if he had been ready and willing on his part to perform the agreement which he had made.” To this part of the charge the defendant took an exception.
The first contention made by the defendant’s counsel in support of these two exceptions is that the rights of the plaintiff under the bond were terminated before the tender of February 21,1902.
In support of this contention he relies upon the concluding clause in the defendant’s bond, which is in these words: “ And it is expressly provided and agreed that upon failure by the obligee to perform the aforesaid conditions in regard to the payment of interest, taxes, and assessments, and in regard to insurance, waste and liability, the obligor may take possession of the premises and collect for his own use the rents and profits thereof, and this obligation shall be absolutely void.”
No such contention appears to have been made at the trial. If the point had been taken at the trial, it would have been a question for the jury whether the defendant took possession under this clause of the bond. The jury could not find that he did enter under that clause without finding that the plaintiff’s testimony as to the conditions under which the defendant took possession was not true.
It is not necessary to go further, but it ought to be pointed out that the clause here relied on by the defendant is a clause by which valuable rights of the plaintiff would be forfeited by the defendant’s acting under it, and therefore it is one against which equity would give relief on compensation being made within a reasonable time; see for example Gordon v. Richardson, 185 Mass. 492, and cases cited; and this would have governed the
The defendant’s next contention is that the plaintiff had failed to pay the taxes on the land and interest on the advances for the sixth house. So far as the unpaid taxes are concerned the jury, under the charge of the presiding judge, could not find for the plaintiff without finding that the defendant had been put in funds by the plaintiff to pay those taxes and that interest.
The defendant never had asked for an accounting to fix the amount to be secured by mortgage for advances on the sixth house, and until that was done no interest on that sum could be said to be in default. It would seem pretty clear that the reason for the defendant’s putting this off was because he had not discharged, and did not wish to discharge, the attachments as he had agreed to do.
The last argument is that there is no evidence that the plaintiff’s willingness to give the other mortgage ever was communicated to the defendant. On the evidence already stated we are of opinion that the jury were warranted in finding that it was impliedly, if not expressly, communicated to him.
Exceptions overruled.