149 A. 785 | Conn. | 1930
The plaintiff in each case is suing upon an alleged promise of the defendant to pay a portion of a mortgage debt evidenced by a series of promissory notes drawn in his favor. The defendant is not a party to the notes or the mortgages securing them, but by virtue of a declaration of trust is an owner in part of the equitable title to the property covered by the mortgages. In the deed conveying the legal title of the property to Musick, trustee, the latter assumed and agreed to pay these mortgage debts, and in the declaration of trust the defendant agreed to pay them in proportion to his interest in the property. Upon the former appeal we held that these promises were for the direct and substantial benefit of the plaintiffs and that, under the law of Florida which accords with the law of this State, the plaintiffs were entitled to maintain these actions to recover the portion of the mortgage debts which the defendant had agreed to pay.Tuttle v. Jockmus,
The appellants' assignments of error may be comprehended under three heads: First, that the subordinate facts do not support the court's conclusion that there was fraud on the part of Musick and Lalley which induced the defendant to take part in the purchase of this property; second, that, if there was fraud, it is no defense in these actions by the plaintiffs who were not parties to it; and, third, that the defendant did not take the proper steps to avoid his obligation by promptly disaffirming his agreement and surrendering the interest he acquired in the property.
1. In support of their contention that there was no proof of fraud on the part of Musick and Lalley the plaintiffs ask numerous corrections of the finding. Many of these seek merely to eliminate from the finding the words "fraud" and "fraudulently" as descriptive of the acts and conduct of Musick and Lalley. Granting the plaintiffs' contention that such characterization of their conduct represents a conclusion of fact, it is a conclusion which is amply supported by the subordinate facts found. Any correction of the finding which could justifiably be made would still leave a clear record of a deliberate scheme to cheat and defraud this defendant. The claim that the subordinate facts do not disclose such fraud as would justify the defendant in repudiating his agreement with Musick and Lalley does not really warrant discussion. *276
2. The plaintiffs further maintain — and this is the contention upon which they chiefly rely — that no fraud on the part of Musick and Lalley, whereby the defendant was induced to enter into this transaction, is available to the defendant as a defense in this action. The plaintiffs assert that the defendant, Musick and Lalley were engaged in a joint enterprise which involved the purchase of this property and its disposition at a profit to be divided among them in the proportions specified, that for the purposes of that adventure the relationship between them was that of partners, and that the defendant's liability is to be determined by the familiar principle of partnership law that the fact that one is induced by fraud to become a member of a partnership is not a defense in an action against him as a member of the partnership by a creditor of the same. The principle is well established but is not applicable to the situation here presented. It assumes the existence of a valid existing claim on the part of the creditor. To grant that assumption would be to beg the question which we are asked to solve. This is not the case of a creditor of a partnership upon a claim for goods sold or for breach of contract, as to which one of the partners denies liability upon the ground of fraud in connection with the formation of the partnership. In this case the fraud alleged inheres in the very contract by virtue of which the plaintiffs seek to recover in this action. They are claiming as third party beneficiaries. The very phrase indicates the nature of their claim and its limitations. As beneficiaries of the contract by which the defendant is held to have agreed to pay a portion of these mortgages their only claim against him is under and by virtue of that contract. If for any reason that contract is void, or voidable by this defendant, if it is tainted with fraud such that he cannot be held bound *277 by it to those with whom he contracted, neither can he be held bound by it to these plaintiffs who stand in their shoes and can claim no superior rights. As gratuitous beneficiaries of his contract their right is a derivative one, and subject to all the defenses which the defendant has as against his original obligees.
The right of the holder of a mortgage to recover upon an assumption of the mortgage by a subsequent grantee is allowed, either on the theory that he is a third party beneficiary of the promise of the grantee, or that, by his promise, the grantee becomes the principal debtor and his grantor the surety, and that the holder is subrogated to the right of the mortgagor against his grantee. In this jurisdiction the relation between the mortgagor and his grantee in such case is held to be that of surety and principal (Cacavelle v.Lombardi,
The trial court has found that the defendant was *279 induced to execute the declaration of trust by the fraud of Musick and Lalley. As one of the cestuis quetrustent under that instrument he adopted as his own the conveyance by Palmetto Properties, Incorporated, to Musick, trustee, containing the assumption by the grantee therein of the plaintiffs' mortgages. Tuttle v.Jockmus, supra, p. 694. It was Palmetto Properties, Incorporated, therefore, in legal effect, with which the defendant made the agreement to pay his proportionate share of these mortgages. But Palmetto Properties, Incorporated, was but one of the agencies employed by Musick and Lalley to deceive the defendant, and his promise made to it was a promise procured by their fraud acting through that corporation. Whether, therefore, the defendant's agreement in the declaration of trust to pay a part of these mortgages be regarded as one made with Musick and Lalley, the other signers of the instrument, or as by adoption a promise made to Palmetto Properties, Incorporated, it was one procured by fraud, which could not be enforced, either by Musick and Lalley, or by Palmetto Properties, Incorporated. It is not therefore enforceable at the hands of the plaintiffs who have no greater rights than the original obligees.
3. Finally, the plaintiffs contend that the defendant has been guilty of laches and has lost his right to rescind the contract because of a failure promptly to disaffirm it and surrender the interest he acquired in the property. The trial court has found that the defendant first learned of the fraud that had been practiced upon him on or about December 15th, 1927, whereupon, immediately after verifying the facts, on January 16th, 1928, he rescinded the contract between himself and Musick and Lalley, and notified each of them by letter that he declined to accept any obligation *280
under the declaration of trust. This finding is attacked in the motion to correct the finding but is amply sustained by the evidence, and supports the conclusion of the trial court that the defendant was not guilty of laches. Neither title nor possession of the property had been transferred to the defendant, and no tender of reconveyance was necessary or required.Harbor Business Blocks Co. v. Gregory,
The fact that Jockmus had an adequate remedy against Musick and Lalley does not impair his defense to this action. Two remedies were open to him, to disaffirm the transaction and return or offer to return what he had received upon recovery of what he had parted with, or to affirm the transaction and recover the damages suffered by the fraud. Bitondi *281 Sheketoff,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.