220 Mass. 106 | Mass. | 1915
This case comes up on an appeal from a final decree entered on a master’s report to which no exceptions were taken. The evidence before the master was not before the Superior Court and so is not before us.
The facts found by the master are in substance as follows: On November 17, 1909, the defendant Bragg made a written agreement with the plaintiff and his two sons to sell to them a piece of land in Greenfield "known as the 'Leonard Farm’” which was therein bounded and described. The price was $1,300, $100 of which was paid at the making of the agreement and the balance was to be paid in monthly instalments. The plaintiff and his sons entered under that agreement and paid the sum of $675 toward the purchase money. About three years later (in the autumn of 1912) the plaintiff’s sons surrendered their rights in the contract to their father who alone continued to live upon the farm. The plaintiff relinquished his rights under the old agreement on the making of “an entirely new oral contract” which he made with the defendant Bragg. This new contract was afterwards reduced to writing. This writing was in these words: “Greenfield, Mass., April 1,1913. Agreement between J W Bragg & German Noyse Said Noyse agrees to Pay said Bragg $1100 dollars with interest from date for the Leonard place so called & is to pay $25.00 each month untill paid in full also Insurance & Taxes I witness thereof we have set our Hand & Seal J W Bragg G. P. Noyes.” The plaintiff continued to occupy the farm under the new contract. He made ■payments under the new contract amounting to $200. In October, 1913, he offered to make payment of a $25 instalment. The defendant refused to accept the money. At that time the plaintiff was not in default in any payment called for by the contract. “In November 1913,” the defendant conveyed the farm to
The defendant demurred to the bill and filed a motion to dismiss. A final decree in favor of the plaintiff was entered in the Superior Court. By the final decree the demurrer was overruled, the motion to dismiss was disallowed and the plaintiff was given the relief he asked for/ The decree is set forth in the note.
1. The objection that the plaintiff had an action at law to recover damages fat breach of agreement does not deprive equity of its jurisdiction to compel specific performance of the contract. Jones v. Newhall, 115 Mass. 244, relied upon by the defendant was decided before St. 1877, c. 178 (now R. L. c. 159, § 1) was enacted. St. 1877, c. 178 (now R. L. c. 159, § 1) was enacted to avoid the conclusion which the court was forced to adopt in Jones v. Newhall and similar cases. See Dole v. Wooldredge, 135 Mass. 140; Boston & Maine Railroad v. Sullivan, 177 Mass. 230. But even in Jones v. Newhall the jurisdiction of the court to compel specific performance of a contract for sale of real estate was recognized. See Jones v. Newhall, ubi supra, at page 248.
2. The plaintiff had a right to act upon the defendant’s refusal to accept the payment which he tendered in October. It was not necessary after that for the plaintiff to go through the nugatory act of making a further tender.
3. The allegations of the bill are not uncertain, vague and indefinite.
4. It is not necessary in a bill to compel specific performance of a contract to convey real estate to set forth any special reason why the plaintiff is entitled to relief in equity.
5. The issue of the statute of frauds does not seem to have been in the mind of the master when he made his findings. If there had been direct evidence that the defendant did not own two parcels of land in Greenfield, one known as the “Leonard Farm” and the other known as the “Leonard Place,” there would have been no question as to the identification of the land covered by the agreement of April 1, 1913. Harrigan v. Dodge, 200 Mass.
6. There were no loches on the part of the plaintiff. The master in his findings did not state the day in October when the tender refused by the defendant was made by the plaintiff. In his brief the defendant assumed that it was made on the thirty-first day of that month. The fraudulent conveyance to the defendant Purrington was made some time “in November.” It is stated that the deed to her was dated November 1. The defendant Purrington undertook to enforce her rights under that deed by suing out a writ to obtain possession of the premises on December 1, 1913. The present bill was filed on December 6, 1913. On these facts the plaintiff seems to have acted with reasonable promptitude. What is of more importance, no rights of any party intervened.
7. A motion to dismiss a bill in equity is not the proper way of taking the objection that necessary parties defendant have not been joined. In addition to that the objection of non-joinder of necessary parties defendant in the case at bar was cured by the second amendment to the bill.
8. The final decree is wrong in depriving the defendant of the right which he had under the contract to leave his money at interest at six per cent until the purchase price was paid in monthly instalments of $25 a month.
9. The amount of the taxes paid by the defendant Bragg for the year 1913 should have been stated in the decree and the new decree should state the amount of taxes for that year and those for the year 1914. It was proper in the decree to provide that papers should be passed at the registry of deeds when the transaction was closed by payment of the final sum due. The provision that the defendant should give forty-eight hours’ notice is not
10. There are two matters in the decree not objected to by the defendant which are prejudicial to him. He has taken an appeal from the decree and we think that they should be corrected.
Under the agreement of April 1, 1913, the plaintiff is entitled to a deed which shall convey to him a good title to the “Leonard Place” subject to the rights of the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company which have been acquired by that company since the agreement and for which the plaintiff has accepted payment. The decree requires the defendant to give the plaintiff a warranty deed. In that respect it is wrong.
11. The other provision of the decree not objected to by the defendant but which is prejudicial to his rights is that the defendant is entitled to interest at six per cent upon the purchase money until it is finally paid in full and not merely six per cent “to the date of the bringing of this action” as provided in the decree.
12. We find no error in the decree in the matter of insurance. It was found by the master that the premium on the policy of insurance on the property in the spring of 1912 was “charged against his [the plaintiff’s] account” and so was paid by him.
13. The defendant Purrington is a mere volunteer from one who had full notice and she has no rights which should be protected in the decree.
14. The decree ought to have provided that the deed to the plaintiff should fully describe the land in the agreement of November 17, 1909, in place of providing that it should convey the premises mentioned in paragraph 5 of this decree. But the plaintiff, not having taken an appeal from the decree, is in the position of standing satisfied with it, and no change in that respect should be made.
15. The decree appealed from should be modified in the following particulars: (a) By striking out the word “thereupon,” being the second word of article 6 of the decree. (b) By striking out the word "warranty” in the same article of the decree, (c) By striking out the following words in the same article, to wit, “ and the taxes upon said premises for the year 1914; and upon the
So ordered.
Final Decree. “ This case came on to be heard at this sitting of the Court upon the plaintiff’s bill and the amendments thereto, the answers of the defendants, the motions of the defendants to dismiss the bill, the demurrers of the defendants to the bill, and fhe report of the master, and was argued by counsel, and thereupon, upon consideration thereof, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed,
“ 1. That the defendants’ motions to dismiss the bill be disallowed.
“2. That the defendants’ demurrers be overruled.
“ 3. That the Report of the Master be confirmed and the findings therein adopted.
“4. That the defendant Queenie L. Purrington be enjoined permanently from prosecuting her action in the District Court of Franklin County, described in the eighth paragraph of the bill.
“5. That the defendant Queenie L. Purrington shall forthwith release and ' quitclaim to the defendant John W. Bragg, all interest she may or appear to have in the premises which the said defendant Bragg assumed by his deed of conveyance dated November 1st, 1913, recorded in the Franklin County Registry of Deeds, Book 595, Page 177, to convey to her.
“6. That thereupon the defendant John W. Bragg shall execute and deliver to the plaintiff, German P. Noyes, a good and sufficient warranty deed of conveyance of said Premises mentioned in paragraph 5 of this decree, free from all encumbrances, excepting whatever right the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company may have had in said premises prior to the bringing of this action, and the taxes upon said premises for the year 1914; and upon the delivery to him of such deed the plaintiff shall then and there pay to the defendant Bragg the sum of the purchase price stated in the agreement between them, to wit, eleven hundred dollars plus interest thereon at the rate of six per centum per annum from April 1st, 1913 to the date of the bringing of this action, and the taxes paid by the said defendant Bragg for*109 the year 1913, after deducting therefrom the sum of two hundred dollars, the sum of the payments heretofore made thereon. The delivery of the said deed by the defendant Bragg, and the receipt thereof by the plaintiff, shall be made in the office of the Registry of Deeds of the said County of Franklin as soon as reasonably may be hereafter:—provided however, that the said defendant Bragg shall give to the plaintiff forty-eight hours’ notice of the time when he will be prepared to deliver said deed at the place above stated.
“ 7. That the defendant Bragg pay to the plaintiff his costs in the sum of (127.97) twenty-seven dollars and ninety-seven cents.”