180 Mass. 135 | Mass. | 1901
The questions growing out of the declaration in set-off having been waived by the defendant the situation of the case is this: The defendant by separate contracts undertook to erect for a city two buildings, and sublet to Allen, of whose bankrupt estate the plaintiff is now the trustee, the mason work, agreeing to pay him for that work on one building $3,400, and on the other $4,537, payments to be made monthly of a percentage of the value of the work done and materials furnished during the preceding month. After Allen had done most of the mason work and had received from the defendant payments upon account, he fell ill, and left the works uncompleted and without any arrangement for their completion. There ensued an interview between the architect in charge, the defendant and the bondsmen, family and relatives of Allen, the purpose of which was to find out what was to be done in regard to finishing the buildings.
After this interview the defendant finished the buildings. Allen went into bankruptcy and died after the plaintiff had been appointed trustee of his estate. The plaintiff asked the defendant to render a statement of the condition of affairs between himself and Allen, and one was rendered showing a balance by the payment of which the defendant was ready to settle with the estate. This not being satisfactory to the plaintiff, this suit was brought to recover amounts claimed to be owing from the defendant to Allen on account of his connection with the mason work of the two buildings. The case was sent to an auditor, and twice recommitted to him, and his third report made in substitution for his earlier reports, with other evidence, was put in evidence at the trial of the case before the court without a jury. At this trial there was a finding for the plaintiff and the case is here upon the defendant’s exceptions.
1. The first contention is that the plaintiff cannot sue in his own name for a demand which became due to the bankrupt before the commencement of the proceedings in bankruptcy. Under the previous bankruptcy act the assignee was given the right to sue in his own name. U. S. Rev. St. § 5047. There is no corresponding provision in the act of 1898, and the right of a trustee in bankruptcy to sue upon a demand which passed to him by virtue of his appointment rests upon implication. The title
2. The defendant contends, that there was an abandonment of the contracts on the part of Allen which prevented him from recovering anything on account of them, that there was no consideration for any new agreement on the part of the defendant, and no authority on the part of any one to enter into a new agreement with him, and no intention to make such an agreement. The auditor found that Allen abandoned the work and that the defendant did not finish it as Allen’s agent. The judge however was not bound by either of these findings of the auditor and might revise them in the light of other facts found by the auditor as well as in view of the other evidence put in at the trial before the judge. There seems to have been no formal
In the evidence that after Allen ceased work there was a consultation between the architect, the defendant and the bondsmen, family and relatives of Allen as to what should be done to finish the buildings, that the defendant there stated that he was willing to complete them himself and that the balance if any was to be paid to the estate; and that he did complete them and thereafter rendered to the plaintiff a statement showing a balance which he was willing to pay to the estate, justified a finding that there was no definite and conclusive abandonment of the contracts on the part of Allen, that the arrangement that the defendant should complete the work made at the interview was ratified by Allen, and that the contracts were in fact completely performed by Allen through the agency of the defendant. The judge found that the defendant agreed with Allen’s representatives to go on and complete the work specified in the contracts and to pay the plaintiff whatever might remain due to him as Allen’s representative. This with the general finding for the plaintiff disposes of most of the defendant’s contentions. The situation when Allen stopped work furnished a consideration for the agreement found by the judge, if Allen relying upon that agreement omitted to have the work finished by other means; and although he was not himself present at the interview his ratification of the acts of those who there assumed to represent him may be presumed. If as the judge must have found the work was in effect completed by Allen through the agency of the defendant there was no abandonment of the contracts, it was immaterial whether the contracts were divisible and whether the contract price was evidence of the value of the work done by Allen himself.
3. The question of pleading raised upon the defendant’s brief is not shown to have been raised at the trial and is not now open, but it would seem that the findings of the judge show that the general finding for the plaintiff might have been entered upon either count.
Exceptions overruled.