Ashkenazy v. RM Bradley & Co. Inc.

103 N.E.2d 251, 328 Mass. 242, 1952 Mass. LEXIS 642
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 103 N.E.2d 251 (Ashkenazy v. RM Bradley & Co. Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashkenazy v. RM Bradley & Co. Inc., 103 N.E.2d 251, 328 Mass. 242, 1952 Mass. LEXIS 642 (Mass. 1952).

Opinion

Wilkins, J.

These two actions, one against the broker and the other against the seller, are to recover a deposit made by the plaintiff under a written contract to purchase an apartment house at 290 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston. The judge found for each defendant.

The contract, under date of June 20, 1947, called for the delivery of the deed by the seller, Commonwealth-Newbury Mortgage and Real Estate Trust, to the plaintiff at 10 a.m. on November 1, 1947, at the Suffolk registry of deeds, unless otherwise agreed. The selling price was $75,000, $10,000 of which was paid by the plaintiff to the broker when the contract was signed, and the balance was to be paid upon delivery of the deed. Other material provisions were: “Said premises are to be conveyed by a good and *244 sufficient quitclaim deed running to the buyer . . . and shall convey a good and clear record and marketable title to such property, free from encumbrances .... To enable the seller to make conveyance ... he may, if he so desires, at the time of the delivery of the deed, use the purchase money or any portion thereof to clear the title of any or all encumbrances or interests; all instruments so procured to be recorded simultaneously with the delivery of said deed. . . . If the seller shall be unable to give title or to make conveyance . . . the seller agrees to use reasonable efforts to remove any defect in title . . . and the time for the performance hereof shall be. extended thirty days. In case at the expiration of the extended time the seller shall have used reasonable efforts and shall have failed so to remove . . . any payment made under this agreement shall be .forthwith refunded and all other obligations of all parties hereto shall cease and this agreement shall be void without recourse to either party. ... If the buyer shall fail to fulfill his part of the agreement* all payments made hereunder by the buyer may, at the option of the seller, be retained by the seller as liquidated damages. . . . The deposit made by the buyer ... is to be held by R. M. Bradley & Co. Inc. as earnest for the proper performance of this agreement on the part of the buyer, and is to be duly accounted for at the time of delivery of the deed.”

The facts appear from the findings of the judge. Shortly after the agreement was signed the plaintiff became convinced that he had made a bad bargain, and resolved that if he could legally avoid carrying out the agreement he would do so. On July 29, 1947, the plaintiff authorized the broker to sell the premises for $77,500 provided a purchaser was found by August 31 to assume the plaintiff’s obligations under the agreement. When the broker brought this to the attention of one Farrell, the managing trustee of the seller, the latter instructed him to send the seller the $10,000 deposit, and he did. The plaintiff did not learn of this until December 5. In the meantime the plaintiff’s attorney had the title examined, and shortly before *245 November 1 in a telephone conversation arranged with Farrell to meet in the registry on November 3, saying that the plaintiff would not take title because his examination disclosed that the seller could not give a good and clear record title, and that he would cite the particular defects when they should meet.

At the meeting on November 3 at the registry the attorney for the plaintiff informed Farrell that the record title was defective in three respects, of which two are still ■ relied upon: (1) A grantor in the chain of title had made an acknowledgment before a notary public in the State of Wisconsin, but there was appended no certificate of the notary’s authority by the Secretary of State or a clerk of a court of record of that State. (2) A discharge of a mortgage bore a date subsequent to the acknowledgment of the discharge before a notary public. Farrell asked the plaintiff’s attorney if he would accept the deed if a certificate was obtained from Wisconsin. The latter replied that he would not accept the deed unless and until all defects were cleared up. Farrell stated that he did not understand the objections, and that he did not think they were seriously raised. He thereupon tendered an unacknowledged quitclaim deed executed by the seller, and offered to make his acknowledgment as a seller, before the plaintiff’s attorney, who examined the deed and rejected it. Nothing was said about meeting again in thirty days.

On December 1, 1947, the attorney for the plaintiff appeared at the registry, and unsuccessfully had the seller and Farrell paged. On December 3 the plaintiff wrote the broker that defects in title were apparent on November 1; and that no one appeared for the seller on December 1, before which time defects were to be corrected. He demanded refund of the $10,000. The broker replied that the deposit had been turned over to the seller at its request. The seller advised the plaintiff that the deposit was being retained as liquidated damages.

“A good and clear record title free from all incumbrances means a title which on the record itself can be again sold *246 as free from obvious defects, and substantial doubts.” O’Meara v. Gleason, 246 Mass. 136, 138. Oliver v. Poulos, 312 Mass. 188, 192. With this in mind we turn to the several objections to the title adduced by the plaintiff.

1. The first objection made at the registry by the plaintiff’s attorney concerns a deed by Robert E. N. Dodge to Arthur M. Wyman, dated November 30, 1923, recorded in the Suffolk registry of deeds. The judge stated as a fact that the deed was acknowledged before a notary public in the State of Wisconsin who affixed his notarial seal. There was not, however, subjoined or affixed a certificate of authority of the notary attested by the Secretary of State or by the clerk of a court of record in Wisconsin. The judge ruled that “such a subjoined certificate of authority is not required by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 183, § 30 (b), when read in the light of Pub. Sts. c. 120, § 6, and St. 1894, c. 253, and St. 1895, c. 460.”

This ruling was right. General Laws (Ter. Edi) c. 183, § 30, reads: “The acknowledgment of a deed or other written instrument required to be acknowledged shall b§ by one or more of the grantors or by the attorney executing it. The officer before whom the acknowledgment is made shall endorse upon or annex to the instrument a certificate thereof. Such acknowledgment may be made — (a) If within the commonwealth, before a justice of the peace or notary public, (b) If without the commonwealth, in any state, territory, district or dependency of the United States, before a justice of'the peace, notary public, magistrate or commissioner appointed therefor by the governor of this commonwealth, or, if a certificate of authority in the form prescribed by section thirty-three is attached thereto, before any other officer therein authorized to take acknowledgments of deeds.”

This statute makes clear, by the word “or,” that the requirement of a certificate of authority applies only to the last class of magistrate described, “any other officer . . . authorized to take acknowledgments of deeds.” Such was the plain meaning of Pub. Sts. c. 120, § 6. Before the pas *247 sage of St. 1894, c.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 N.E.2d 251, 328 Mass. 242, 1952 Mass. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashkenazy-v-rm-bradley-co-inc-mass-1952.