Baldwin v. Higgins

27 A.2d 345, 68 R.I. 324, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 28, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 345 (Baldwin v. Higgins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Higgins, 27 A.2d 345, 68 R.I. 324, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 73 (R.I. 1942).

Opinion

*325 Capotosto, J.

This is ah action of assumpsit to recover on a promissory note made by the defendants Edgar G. Higgins and his wife, Hilda, under date of November 4, 1925, for the sum of $3000, payable to the order of the plaintiff one year after date, with interest, payable semiannually in advance at the rate of 8% per annum. The payment of this note was secured by a second mortgage deed to the plaintiff executed by the defendants on the date of the note, covering certain real estate in the city of Cranston in this state.

The declaration contains a count in special assumpsit on the note and also the common counts. The defendants pleaded: (1) The general issue; (2) the statute of limitations; and (3) a special plea to the effect that, on November 23, 1925, the defendants conveyed the mortgaged real estate' to certain grantees, who “agreed to pay said promissory note, of which facts said plaintiff had notice and at *326 that time the plaintiff agreed to and did accept the said grantees as the sole obligors on said promissory note and thereafter accepted payments on said promissory note from said grantees and agreed to look solely to said grantees on all future payments on said promissory note.”

The case was tried before a justice of the superior court sitting with a jury and resulted in a verdict' for the plaintiff in the sum of $4069.32, including interest. The defendants’ motion for a new trial was heard and denied. The case is before us on the defendants’ exceptions to rulings during the trial; to the refusal to grant certain requests to charge, and to the denial of their motions for a directed verdict and for a new trial.

The following undisputed facts appear in evidence: (1) The real estate covered by the mortgage to the plaintiff, dated November 4, 1935, was subject to a first mortgage for $6000 to Annie Higgins, mother of Edgar G. Higgins. (2) By warranty deed, dated November 23, 1925, the defendants conveyed that real estate to Thomas F. Caulfield and his wife Margaret, the former being the father-in-law of the defendant Edgar G. Higgins. This deed recited that the granted premises were free from all incumbrances “Except mortgages of record.” The grantees did not therein assume payment of plaintiff’s mortgage. (3) Following the initial transaction of November 4, 1925, all payments of interest and one payment of $150 on principal were received by the plaintiff from or through Caulfield. The receipts for such payments were made out in Caulfield’s name by plaintiff’s husband. (4) Interest was paid on the mortgage to May 4, 1934. On July 20, 1934, there was a foreclosure sale under the first mortgage to Annie Higgins. (5) Suit on the note in question here was commenced by writ of attachment dated June 15, 1939.

The evidence, however, is sharply conflicting on the controlling issue of whether Caulfield made the payments on the mortgage for the defendants, or whether such payments were made by him in his own behalf, without defendants’ *327 consent, under an agreement with the plaintiff that she would look to him and not to the defendants for the payment of the mortgage and note. On this point, the plaintiff testified that, while Caulfield’s daughter came to her home with payments of interest on the mortgage, she al-. ways “looked to Higgins” for her money; that, until this case was tried, she did not know Caulfield nor did she know that Higgins had sold the property to him; and that she made no agreement of any kind with Caulfield with reference to the mortgage afid note.

Plaintiff’s husband testified that the interest due May 4, 1926 was paid to him by Caulfield personally at the plaintiff’s house, and that, with the exception of this one payment all other payments were made at that place by Caulfield’s daughter. In answer to a question by defendants’ counsel in cross-examination, he testified, without objection from him, that Caulfield then told Baldwin that he was “acting for Higgins * * * he was paying it (the interest) for Mr. Higgins.” He also testified that Caulfield wanted the receipt in his name so that “he could go and give that receipt to Higgins” to show that the interest was paid. He denied that Caulfield ever told him he had bought defendants’ house.

The defendant Edgar G. Higgins testified that, when he signed the mortgage and note in question, he told plaintiff’s husband that he had an agreement to sell the real estate to Caulfield. “I think I told him at the time that Mr. Caulfield was going to assume the two mortgages, my mother’s and his.” He further testified that shortly after that sale, on November 23, 1925, he met plaintiff’s husband and told him: “That deal has gone through, Mr. Caulfield is the new owner of the property and is taking over the mortgages. * * * Q. Did he say anything in return? A.' Well, I don’t remember exactly what he did say.” (italics ours) Higgins denied that thereafter Caulfield and his daughter were acting for him in their dealings with the plaintiff.

*328 Caulfield testified that when he made the first payment of interest to plaintiff’s husband in May 1926, he told him that he then owned the property which was covered by plaintiff’s mortgage, and that he was the one to whom the plaintiff “would look for the payment of the mortgage. * * * Q. Did Mr. Baldwin, John Baldwin, here ever agree to make an agreement with you whereby, as agent for Mrs. Baldwin, that he would take you or accept you in place of Mr. Higgins in payment of that note? A. No. Q. Did Mary E. Baldwin herself ever agree with you to accept you in place of Higgins upon the payment of this mortgage note? A. No, no; never saw the lady.”

' The defendants’ first exception is to the denial of their motion for a directed verdict. Under this exception they make two contentions: First, that since Caulfield made all payments on the mortgage after the negotiations in 1925, the plaintiff released them from all liability on the mortgage note by agreeing to substitute Caulfield as her debtor in their place and stead on that instrument; and second, that, in any event, recovery on that note was barred by the statute of limitations, as no action was brought thereon against them until after the lapse of more than twelve years from its maturity date. Both of these contentions are argued by the defendants as if the evidence were undisputed that Caulfield, with the plaintiff’s knowledge and consent, was acting for himself and not for the defendants in his dealings with the plaintiff, whereas the evidence is in serious conflict on this point.

Fundamentally, this case presents a question of fact and not of law. The case of Industrial Trust Co. v. Goldman, 59 R. I. 11, upon which the defendants strongly rely, is clearly distinguishable in its facts from the instant case. The differences in the facts of the two cases are so obvious that we can dismiss the Goldman case as inapplicable to the case at bar without further discussion.

We have repeatedly said that on a motion by a defendant for a directed verdict, the trial justice is not concerned with *329

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 345, 68 R.I. 324, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-higgins-ri-1942.