259 Mass. 79 | Mass. | 1927
This is a bill for specific performance of an agreement to convey two parcels of real estate. The purchase price was $30,000, and the agreement contained a clause to the effect that the plaintiff, who was the vendee, should be allowed “to place a new first mortgage on each estate, with any bank, for the highest amount possible,” and, out of the proceeds, to pay the defendants $14,900 in cash “in addition to the deposit” of $100 already made. The balance was to be paid in the form of two notes of $7,500 each, “signed by the buyer, or any person, or persons whom he may designate” and secured by second mortgages on the property. The plaintiff arranged with a cooperative bank for a loan of $16,000, to be secured by a first mortgage for $8,000 on each parcel, and was. prepared to pay the defendants, from the amount thus obtained, $14,900 in cash and also was ready to give them notes seemed by second mortgages for the amounts stated in the agreement. The defendants contend that the plaintiff has not complied with the terms of the agreement, because the loan was to be made by a cooperative bank, which requires the mortgagor to subscribe for and pledge to the bank a certain number of shares of its own issue as collateral security for the performance of the condition of the note and mortgage, G. L. c. 170, §§ 22, 23; and that the agreement did not contemplate a loan from a bank which receives as security such a pledge of shares in addition to the mortgage.
A cooperative bank is included in the term “bank” when that word is used in the chapter of General Laws on banking,
The findings by the judge that the evidence did not satisfy him that there was any mistake in omitting to state in the agreement that the first mortgages should not be in excess of $15,000 and that the evidence did not satisfy him that the plaintiff committed any fraud upon the defendants, we cannot say were wrong as matter of law either upon the admitted facts or upon the whole evidence. These findings are conclusive against the contentions of the defendants as to fraud. The judge found that Louis V. Sissenwine read the agreement and that there was nothing in the evidence to show that he did not fully understand what he was doing when he executed it.
The agreement contemplated that both first and second mortgages should be placed on each of the two estates sold, and specifically provided that the two notes to be secured
It could make no difference to the defendants under the agreement which they made whether the amount loaned on first mortgages is thus obtained from one cooperative bank or whether the plaintiff should accomplish the same result by borrowing from two.
No question such as was raised in Comparone v. Mixon, 258 Mass. 537, is here presented.
After considering all of the contentions of the defendants, we cannot say that upon the facts found the court failed to exercise a sound discretion in entering the decree for specific performance.
Decree affirmed.