324 Mass. 382 | Mass. | 1949
This is a bill in equity for specific performance of a written contract to sell to the plaintiffs a house and land in Boston. The findings of the judge disclose the following facts. On September 30, 1942, one Annie Redmond died, leaving as her heirs the defendant Julia Redmond, who was her sister, a brother Thomas Redmond, and five nephews and a niece. Her estate consisted of the real estate in question, which was subject to mortgages for S3,700. Julia Redmond was appointed administratrix on January 29,1943.
On April 2, 1947, Niccolls wrote to Julia Redmond and the other heirs, “informing them that he had entered into the said agreement and giving its details.” On April 25, 1947, Julia Redmond wrote him, justifying her previous unwillingness to convey by stating that she had received an offer of $9,000, but saying nothing about the agreement of March 28, 1947. The judge found that $7,800 was the fair market price of the property in February, 1947, but that “by the spring, because of the increased demand and scarcity of moderate priced dwellings, the price obtainable in the open market was at least $9,000.”
The judge found that when on October 28, 1946, Julia Redmond “acquiesced in the plan that Niccolls take the steps he considered advisable and necessary in order to get a buyer,” she “led him to believe that she would back him up in that.” The judge said he was “unable to find that Niccolls had authority to bind her to an agreement of sale for a specific price without first consulting her as to the price,” and he found and ruled “that the agreement [of March 28, 1947] did not bind Julia Redmond personally.”
On a counterclaim filed by Niceolls against his codefendant Julia Redmond, the judge entered a decree ordering Julia Redmond to reimburse Niceolls for the $472.50 awarded to the plaintiff Arthur V. O’Neill. Julia Redmond appealed from the final decree and from an interlocutory decree allowing the answer of Niceolls to be amended by the insertion of the counterclaim. No appeal was claimed by Niceolls. Only the propriety of the decree in favor of Niceolls against Julia Redmond is now in issue.
Niceolls contends that Julia Redmond ratified his act in signing the agreement of March 28, 1947, by her inaction for twenty-three days after being informed that he had signed the agreement, and by her failure to disaffirm the agreement expressly. He relies on statements in our decisions that it is the duty of one in whose name an act has been done by an agent “in execution of a power conferred but in a mode” not authorized, to disaffirm at once. Boice-Perrine Co. v. Kelley, 243 Mass. 327, 330-331. Friend Lumber Co. Inc. v. Armstrong Building Finish Co. 276 Mass. 361, 368, 369. DiLorenzo v. Atlantic National Bank, 278 Mass. 321, 327. See also Foster v. Rockwell, 104 Mass. 167, 171, 172; Harrod v. McDaniels, 126 Mass. 413, 415-416. But the present case does not fall within the authorities cited. Julia Redmond gave no authority to Niceolls to sign any agreement, or to fix any price without previous consultation with her. We think he has made out no case against her for exoneration from liability incurred by his unauthorized act in signing the agreement of March 28, 1947. The distinction is pointed out in Brown v. Henry, 172 Mass. 559, 567.
The judge could not have found that Julia Redmond
The interlocutory decree allowing the amendment inserting the counterclaim is affirmed. The final decree is modified by striking out the paragraph numbered 2, ordering the defendant Julia Redmond to pay $472.50 to the defendant Francis A. Niccolls, and as so modified is affirmed.
So ordered.