317 Mass. 485 | Mass. | 1945
This is an action of tort for deceit brought by the holder of two notes, payable to the United States Bond & Mortgage Corporation of Massachusetts, hereafter called the corporation, one in the principal sum of $7,900 and the other for $11,788, and made by the defendant and Sarah A. Johnson, his mother. Both notes also purported to bear the signature of the defendant’s wife, Anna N. Johnson, as the third comaker, but her signature was forged by the defendant. Both notes were secured by mortgages on real estate, and the signature of Anna N. Johnson on these mortgages was also forged by the defendant. There was evidence that the notes were given for loans made by the corporation to the defendant; that at the times the loans were made and the notes taken, the corporation knew that the defendant was the owner of the premises included in the mortgages; that it relied upon the genuineness of the signatures on all the instruments; and that it would not have accepted the notes if it had known that the signatures of the defendant’s wife had been forged. It also appeared from the evidence that the plaintiff was the holder in due course of both notes, and that it has been paid by an insurance company $18,388 for the loss sustained on account of taking the forged notes. The defendant filed a petition in bankruptcy in 1935 in which he scheduled these notes. He received a discharge in bankruptcy in 1936. The vice-president of the plaintiff testified that it had placed a value of $24,000 upon , the notes when they were received by it and that the defendant or his mother had made some payments on the notes. The judge found for the plaintiff in the sum of $24,500, and the defendant’s appeal from an order of the Appellate Division dismissing the report brings the case here.
The first contention of the defendant is that the loan receipt given by the plaintiff to the insurance company is
Furthermore, if the defendant’s requests on this branch of the case, many of which are framed in broad terms and in some instances are mere abstractions of law, can be understood to raise any question apart from the nature and effect of the loan receipt, then we perceive no error in the denial
The next contention of the defendant is that his discharge in bankruptcy bars recovery on the ground that there was no evidence that the corporation in parting with its money was induced to do so solely by reliance upon the signatures
The final contention of the defendant is that the judge adopted an erroneous rule of damages. The judge granted the plaintiff’s twelfth request that, if the finding were for the plaintiff, “then the measure of damages is the full amount of the notes in question,” and the fifteenth request that the value of the notes when delivered by the defendant was nominal. The twelfth request purports to be based on Sibley v. Hulbert, 15 Gray, 509. The judge also granted the thirteenth and fourteenth requests to the effect that the measure of damages was the difference between the actual value of the notes when delivered to the corporation and what their value would have been if they had been as represented by the defendant. These two last mentioned requests set forth the proper rule of damages if the corporation was the plaintiff. Morse v. Hutchins, 102 Mass. 439. McKinley v. Warren, 218 Mass. 310. Leader v. Kolligan, 262 Mass. 63. Piper v. Childs, 290 Mass. 560. David v. Belmont, 291 Mass. 450. Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Torts, § 546. There was, however, no evidence of the financial worth of the defendant or of his mother at the times the notes were delivered to the plaintiff. Neither was there any evidence of the value of the real estate included in the mortgages, after making a proper allowance on account of the failure of the defendant’s wife to join in the mortgages. The burden is on a plaintiff in an action for deceit to prove his damages. Brackett v. Perry, 201 Mass. 502. Connelly v. Bartlett, 286 Mass. 311. McCarthy v. Brockton National Bank, 314 Mass. 318. The evidence did not support a finding that the notes and mortgages were .of only nominal value. The judge was wrong in making that finding and in ruling that the measure of damages was the full amount of the notes. There is nothing in Sibley v. Hulbert, 15 Gray, 509, that supports his action. In that case the purchaser of a note from the payee who represented that the note
The plaintiff contends that if the granting of the twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth requests was inconsistent with the general finding for the plaintiff, then the defendant’s remedy was a motion for a new trial and not a request for a report. It has been held that, where a general finding is inconsistent with the granting of a request, the remedy is either a motion to correct the ruling made on the request or a motion for a new trial. Charles Street Garage Co. v. Kaplan, 312 Mass. 624. Lander v. Samuel Heller Leather Co. Inc. 314 Mass. 592. There was no inconsistency^ here between granting the requests and the general finding. The error here was in applying correct principles of law to a fact, that is, that the notes and mortgages were of only a nominal value, which could not properly be found from the evidence. The question whether the evidence warranted such a finding of fact was a question of law, which the defendant was entitled to have reviewed. Lanoue v. Buscicchia, 261 Mass. 236. Massachusetts Lubricant Corp. v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. Inc. 305 Mass. 269. Nichols v. Donahoe, 309 Mass. 241. Hurley v. Ornsteen, 311 Mass. 477.
We have confined our attention to the three contentions
So ordered.