284 Mass. 268 | Mass. | 1933
This is an action of contract wherein the plaintiff seeks to recover $300 for money had and received for the plaintiff’s use. The answer is a general denial and a plea of payment.
As the case was left with the court, it was agreed on behalf of both plaintiff and defendants as follows: “1. That,, in the early part of the year 1929, one Standish was the owner of certain land in Harvard, in said Commonwealth.. 2. That Standish was negotiating to sell the land to the defendants. 3. That the defendants refused to buy the land of Standish unless said land was made subject to a ninety-nine year lease. 4. That, to meet the defendants’ demand,
At the conclusion of the evidence and before argument the plaintiff submitted certain requests as follows: (1) “An action for money had and received lies to recover money which should not in justice be retained by the defendant and which in equity and good conscience should be paid to the plaintiff.” (2) “The right to recover for money had and received does not depend upon privity of contract, but on the obligation to restore that which the law implies should be returned where one is unjustly enriched at another’s expense.” (3) “No demand need precede an action for money had and received.” (4) “Where rent is paid in advance on behalf of the lessee, it is presumably intended to enure for his use and benefit”; (5) “If the plaintiff as lessee under a lease from the defendant for ninety-nine years assigns his lease to a third person, he remains hable for the rent under said lease in the absence of a special agreement with the defendants to the contrary or a surrender of the lease”; (6) “In the absence of a special agreement to the contrary, the assignee of a lease, as between him and the assignor, is not entitled to the benefit of rent paid in advance by the assignor”; (7) “If George Standish, in consideration of the plaintiff’s taking a lease for ninety-nine years from the defendants, agreed to pay for the plaintiff the rent for three
As the plaintiff contends, it was undisputed at the trial and is undisputed in the report that the defendants have received the sum of $375 from the assignee of the lease, Guptile, for rent from April 1, 1931, to April 1, 1932, and the sum of $240.75 as that portion of the $1,000 not required to pay rent to April 1, 1931. It was also undisputed that on April 1, 1931, the defendants accepted a surrender of the plaintiff’s lease and that the defendants leased the premises to one Guptile; that “there was no understanding or agreement at any time that the defendants would accept a surrender of the plaintiff’s lease in case he should assign or sell the same; nor that the defendants would refund to the plaintiff or to Standish or to any one else any portion of the $1,000 withheld from the purchase price, in case of an assignment or surrender of the lease.”
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the defendants will be unjustly enriched unless they refund the excess to whomever is entitled to it. The record does not disclose
The statement in the report that there was no evidence that the plaintiff, subsequently to the time of the execution and delivery of the exhibits, entered into any agreement or contract affecting any right, title or interest he may have
Order “Report Dismissed” affirmed.