Benedict v. Heirs, Representatives & Creditors of Dickens

177 A. 715, 119 Conn. 541, 1935 Conn. LEXIS 127
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 177 A. 715 (Benedict v. Heirs, Representatives & Creditors of Dickens) 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
Benedict v. Heirs, Representatives & Creditors of Dickens, 177 A. 715, 119 Conn. 541, 1935 Conn. LEXIS 127 (Colo. 1935).

Opinion

Banks, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to quiet the title to certain real estate in the town of New Fairfield, and the defendant Cassie Hunt, the plaintiff’s grantor, filed a cross-complaint seeking to have her deed of the property to the plaintiff set aside on the ground of fraud and misrepresentation. The court rendered judgment in her favor upon the cross-complaint and the plaintiff has appealed.

The following facts appear from the finding of the trial court: Cassie Hunt, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, is the only heir at law of her father, Thomas H. Conklin, who purchased the property in question, containing about one acre, in 1877 for $110. She lived with him upon the premises until 'the house thereon was burned, about fifty years ago. He died in 1903, and so far as appeared no administration was *543 ever taken out on his estate. The defendant since her marriage has lived about four miles from the property, which she had not visited for seven years prior to August, 1932. Prior to 1931 the Connecticut Light & Power Company flooded a large area, creating a lake known as Lake Candlewood which borders the property on the east. The creation of the lake greatly increased the value of the property which, on September 6th, 1932, was reasonably worth between $2500 and $3000. The defendant had general knowledge of the creation of the lake and that a cemetery located about a quarter of a mile from her property had to be moved because of the flooding of the same, but was ignorant of the fact that her property bordered upon the lake, and of the increased value thereof by reason of that fact. The plaintiff, who had lived in New Fairfield practically all his life, knew both of these facts. One Nevius had sold to the Power Company a small strip of the land, which he erroneously supposed belonged to him, for $10.

On or about September 1st, 1932, the plaintiff, who is a distant relative of the defendant by marriage, called at her house and asked her if she would sell the property. She asked him why he wanted it, to which he made no reply. He told her that Nevius had gotten $10 from the Power Company for a part of the land, and in reply to her inquiry as to what the property was worth said “not much,” and offered her $10, to which she replied that she guessed she would let him have it. He told her to come to the town clerk’s office on September 6th, and sign the deed. On September 6th the defendant had decided not to sell the property, and was about to go to the town clerk’s office and so inform the plaintiff, when the latter and Nevius came to her house with the deed for her to sign. Defendant told plaintiff she had decided not to sell. He *544 asked her if she had ever paid any taxes on the property and she said “No.” He told her that there must be a large amount of taxes due on the property and asked her if she could pay them and she said “No.” She said she ought to have the $10 that Nevius had gotten. Plaintiff told her that Nevius didn’t want to pay it back, and that he would give her $15 which would be better than nothing, and that the property was not worth any more than that to him. Defendant, believing that there was a large amount of taxes due on the property which she could not pay, and that the property was worth no more than $15, signed the deed. Defendant was inexperienced in business affairs, had been under the doctor’s care for two years and was somewhat in need, the town having furnished her with medical care and medicines. No taxes were in fact at that time assessed against the property, of which fact both parties were ignorant. After plaintiff got the deed he did some work on the property, but just what he did or the reasonable cost of the work did not appear. In May, 1933, he sold a portion of the property, about sixty by one hundred feet, for $1200. The court found that the sum paid the plaintiff by the defendant for the property was grossly inadequate, that he had taken undue advantage of her, and that to allow him to benefit by the transaction would be unconscionable.

The trial court sustained the claim of the plaintiff that there was no confidential relationship between the parties which would entitle the defendant to relief on that ground in a court of equity, and his further claim that inadequacy of consideration alone was not a sufficient ground for setting aside the conveyance. Persons who are capable of managing their own affairs may sell their property for less than its value, and when the parties do not stand in a confidential relation a court of equity will not, in the absence of actual fraud, set *545 aside the sale for inadequacy of price alone. Hemingway v. Coleman, 49 Conn. 390. Though mere inadequacy of price may not be relied on as a ground of relief, the inequality of the bargain may be so great, the result so unconscionable, as to require but slight, if any, support from other inequitable features of the transaction, to justify a court of equity in setting it aside on the ground of fraud. “The doctrine is settled, by a consensus of decisions and dicta, that even in the absence of all other circumstances, when the inadequacy of price is so gross that it shocks the conscience, and furnishes satisfactory and decisive evidence of fraud, it wül be a sufficient ground for canceling a conveyance or contract, whether executed or executory. Even then fraud, and not inadequacy of price, is the true and only cause for the interposition of equity and the granting of relief.” 2 Pomeroy, Equitable Jurisprudence (4th Ed.) § 927. “Equity may decree the rescission or cancellation of a contract or conveyance where such a gross inadequacy of consideration is shown as to shock the conscience, because in this case the disparity between the value of the subject and the consideration given for it is regarded as raising an irrefragable presumption of fraud, or (according to most of the authorities) as constituting in itself conclusive evidence of fraud.” 1 Black, Rescission and Cancellation (2d Ed.) § 175.

In none of the numerous cases examined by us has there appeared a more startling discrepancy between the value of the property and the consideration paid than is here present. The inequality is so great that it is “impossible to state it to a man of common sense, without producing an exclamation at the inequality of it.” Lord Thurlow, in Gwynne v. Heaton, 1 Bro. Ch. 1, 9. However, the trial court did not base its action in setting aside the conveyance upon the inade *546 quacy of consideration alone, and it is unnecessary for us to determine whether it would have been justified in doing so. When gross inadequacy ,of consideration is accompanied by other inequitable incidents, such as misrepresentation, concealment, undue advantage taken of ignorance, or misplaced confidence, or the like, a court of equity will not hesitate to grant relief. 1 Black, Rescission and Cancellation (2d Ed.) § 171; 9 C. J. 1176, § 36; 1 Story, Equity Jurisprudence (14th Ed.) § 355.

The finding paints a picture of inequitable conduct on the part of the plaintiff which should bar him from retaining the benefit of his unconscionable bargain.

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Bluebook (online)
177 A. 715, 119 Conn. 541, 1935 Conn. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benedict-v-heirs-representatives-creditors-of-dickens-conn-1935.