Arcari v. Strouch

158 A. 222, 114 Conn. 200, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 19, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 158 A. 222 (Arcari v. Strouch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arcari v. Strouch, 158 A. 222, 114 Conn. 200, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 12 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

Avery, J.

This action was brought under General Statutes, § 5489, which permits a mortgagee to maintain an action in his own name against a grantee of the mortgaged premises who, in his deed, assumes and agrees to pay the mortgage encumbrance. Colchester Savings Bank v. Brown, 75 Conn. 69, 71, 52 Atl. 316. The plaintiff, Isabelle Arcari, sued the defendant Fannie Meyers and six others to recover a balance overdue upon a note secured by a third mortgage upon real estate in Hartford, which note the plaintiff alleged the defendants assumed' and agreed to pay in various conveyances of the property to them. All the defendants, except Fannie Meyers, defaulted. She appeared and answered the complaint, denying that she had assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage and the indebtedness thereby secured.

From the finding, it appears that on November 30th, 1923, Morris Aronson executed his promissory note for the sum of $7296, to the order of Barney Sohn, secured by a third mortgage on real estate then owned by Aronson, Nos. 1344 to 1348 Albany Avenue, Hartford. On that date, the premises were subject to a first mortgage for $20,000, a second mortgage for $12,-500, which latter was dated November 27th, 1923, and payable $500 semiannually. The note secured by the third mortgage is now owned by the plaintiff, it having been transferred to her by the indorsements of Sohn *202 ■and others. The mortgage securing this note is also owned by the plaintiff, having been assigned to her by her husband.

By deed, dated April 30th, 1924, Aronson conveyed the property to Saul L. Peizer, an attorney at law, and brother of the defendant Fannie Meyers. In this deed, Peizer assumed and agreed to pay the mortgages upon the property specifically set forth, including the one owned by the plaintiff. On the same date, Peizer conveyed the property by a quitclaim deed, properly witnessed and acknowledged, to his sister, the defendant Fannie Meyers. The deed contained the following assumption clause: “Said premises being subject to mortgages aggregating $38,800 which the grantee herein assumes and agrees to pay.” The deed from Peizer was not put upon record at that time, but was retained by him and put upon record some ten months later, when the defendant Meyers sold the property.

The court has found that this assumption clause was inserted in the deed from Peizer to the defendant Fannie Meyers with full authority from her and with her knowledge. The principal contention of the defendant on this appeal is that she had no knowledge of the assumption clause in the deed to her, and that it was inserted without her authority; and, for the purpose of attacking the conclusions of the trial court upon this point, she asks addition to the finding of some forty-eight paragraphs of her draft-finding and the elimination from the finding of three full paragraphs and parts of four others.

From the subordinate facts found by the court, it appears that in 1924, and prior thereto, Peizer, defendant’s brother, and a man of considerable experience in real-estate transactions, was practicing law in Hartford. He acted as attorney and adviser to his sister in various matters, and she at all times sought *203 his advice and guidance in matters concerning real estate. He discussed with his sister the advisability of her purchasing this property, and suggested that she should purchase it with some cash which her husband had left her in order that the income from this property, together with the property adjoining which was owned by her, might be sufficient to furnish her with considerable additional income for her support. He advised her to buy this property and she accepted and followed his advice. The purchase price was $45,000. She furnished $6000 in cash for the purchase, and immediately upon execution of the deed, went into possession of the premises, and acted as owner until she sold them on February 28th, 1925. During the ten months’ period, while the record title stood in Peizer’s name, she collected the rents, amounting to about $340 a month; paid the instalment of principal and interest which became due November 3d, 1924, on plaintiff’s mortgage as well as the instalment of principal and interest on the, two prior mortgages; and also paid the taxes, charges of upkeep, etc., on the property. Shortly before February 28th, 1925, Peizer obtained two purchasers for the property, but they refused to buy unless they could also buy the premises adjoining owned by the defendant. February 28th, 1925, she sold and conveyed both properties to these purchasers. Peizer represented her in this transaction. He prepared the deed from her to the purchasers in which the encumbrances on each of the properties were set forth with an assumption agreement, wherein she directed that her grantees assume and pay the encumbrances specifying them including the plaintiff’s mortgage. This deed, which was executed by the defendant, recited the fact that the premises transferred were the same conveyed by Peizer to her April 30th, 1924, and the description was taken from the deed from Peizer *204 to her. It is clear upon the evidence that the defendant entrusted the entire matter of the purchase of the premises and the terms upon which they should be bought to the judgment and discretion of Peizer without instruótions or limitation. The assumption of the mortgages in the purchase of the property was within the authority thus reposed in him and the finding of the trial court, that he had authority to insert the assumption clause in his deed to her, was justified. Schley v. Fryer, 100 N. Y. 71, 2 N. E. 280. But whether Peizer had authority to insert in his deed to the defendant the clause assuming the mortgages or whether she had actual knowledge of the fact that he did this, is not of consequence, because the defendant clearly ratified the transaction. As the trial court finds, she was the real purchaser and owner of the property. The knowledge of Peizer as her agent in the transaction would be imputed to her. Corsello v. Emerson Brothers, Inc., 106 Conn. 127, 134, 137 Atl. 390; New York, N. H. & H. R. Co. v. Russell, 83 Conn. 581, 593, 78 Atl. 324; Smith v. Water Commissioners, 38 Conn. 208, 218; Watson v. Wells, 5 Conn. 468, 474. It is true that in the transaction he received a commission from the seller of the property, but the trial court has not found that the fact of his acting for both parties was unknown to the defendant and resort to the evidence, all of which the defendant has brought before us, discloses that he himself, called as a witness by her, testified that she knew that he was receiving this commission and nowhere in the record is there evidence to the contrary. He was not acting in a manner hostile to her interests or for his own individual benefit so as to repel a conclusion .that he communicated to her the real facts of the transaction. Pentino v. Gallo, 107 Conn. 242, 140 Atl. 105. The knowledge so imputed to her was the equivalent of actual knowledge. *205

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Bluebook (online)
158 A. 222, 114 Conn. 200, 1932 Conn. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arcari-v-strouch-conn-1932.