Brownell v. Nason

170 N.E. 462, 270 Mass. 490, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1057
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 170 N.E. 462 (Brownell v. Nason) 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
Brownell v. Nason, 170 N.E. 462, 270 Mass. 490, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1057 (Mass. 1930).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

This is a bill in equity in which the plaintiffs seek rescission of a sale of real estate on the ground of fraud, or in the alternative that they be awarded damages. The case was referred to a master. It was ordered that an interlocutory decree be entered overruling the plaintiffs’ objections to the report and confirming the same, and that a final decree be entered dismissing the bill with costs. Thereafter a final decree was entered dismissing the bill with costs. The plaintiffs appealed. James Nason, being the principal defendant in interest, will herein be referred to as the defendant.

The facts found by the master so far as material are as follows: One Edith M. O’Brien in the spring of 1927 was [492]*492the owner of a parcel of land in Everett. She employed one Porter, an architect, to prepare plans for an apartment house to be erected on the land, to find a contractor to erect it, and to obtain mortgages to finance the costs of its construction. Porter interviewed the defendant with the result that mortgages were placed, and an agreement was made between Mrs. O’Brien and the Nason Construction Co., Inc., of which the defendant was the president, for the erection of the building. The plans were for a fifty-two-room brick and frame apartment house of "second-class” construction. The architect filed blue prints with the supervisor of plans at the State House as required by G. L. c. 143, and obtained from him a certificate of approval. The certificate contained certain requirements under the rules of the building division of the State department of public safety, made under the authority of G. L. c. 143, relating to fire prevention. This certificate was the only approval of the plans obtained under the statute. The requirements printed on the certificate were carried out by the Nason Construction Co., Inc., in the erection of the building. The architect also filed a copy of the plans with the inspector of buildings of the city of Everett, and obtained from him a certificate of approval in the form of a building permit.

During the construction of the building it was inspected from time to time by an inspector of the building division of the State department of public safety, and also by the building inspector of Everett. Each wing of the building is separated from the center by a wall that has no opening. In the basement each of these walls from the foundation to the first floor is of twelve-inch solid brick. Above the first floor the partitions are not twelve inches thick. The superintendent of the Nason Construction Co., Inc., being in doubt as to the requirements for the construction of these partition walls, consulted State and city inspectors, and was informed by the city inspector that wooden studs with wire laths would be sufficient, and by the State inspector that such construction would be satisfactory to him. There was no specific statute, regulation or city [493]*493ordinance applicable to this matter except the general authority given the State inspection department to make such other provisions and requirements as might be necessary in the interest of safety and fire prevention. The State inspector informed the superintendent that these walls above the first floor should be of wire metal lath and hard plaster with two courses of brick above each floor level for fire prevention. He gave no written instructions to that effect, and did not notify the State supervisor of plans of this direction to the superintendent. The building of these walls was sublet by the construction company to a subcontractor who was required to build as above directed. The superintendent of the construction company testified that he supposed the walls were so built. Metal laths were used on three of the four sides of the two partition walls, but on the fourth, wooden laths were substituted in at least two places, and the fire stopping was not carried up two courses of brick above the floor, but in two places that the witness examined the bricks were about flush with the level of the floor. Plaster made of lime, sand and hair was used instead of hard plaster. All the work above described was completed by the construction company while the property was owned by Mrs. O’Brien. The agreement for the sale to the plaintiffs by the defendant was dated September 21, 1927. At this time the building was completed with the exception of some minor matters, and several of the apartments were occupied.

The master further found that no misrepresentation was made to the plaintiffs by the defendant relative to the material, type or structure of the walls, except the statement that there was no opening in the walls and that the wings were entirely separated from the center; that in making the agreement the plaintiffs did not rely upon the walls being fire walls or that they were built of any particular material, and that their type of construction did not influence them in any respect; that the provision in the contract that the defendant “will complete in every detail the apartment house” was understood by the parties not to refer to the partition walls which were already [494]*494built but to the completion of the work then unfinished; that the State inspector and the city inspector both approved the construction of the building, although they were ignorant of the existence of the wooden laths and of the absence of the specified fire stop, but that both of them must have known that the hard plaster was not used. Both inspectors testified, and the master found, that the building was satisfactory to them, and that so far as they knew it complied with the requirements of their respective departments; that no complaint had ever been made by either of them or by any one else in authority that the building did not comply with the law or with any State or city regulations, rules or ordinances.

Although the plaintiffs contended that the plans called for a solid brick wall separating the wings from the center -from the basement to the roof, and that this was a reasonable interpretation of the plans, it is stated by the master that “there is no State or local law, regulation or ordinance requiring such a wall to be constructed, and the superintendent secured the approval of [the] State . , . and city . . . [inspectors] to the erection of a stud wall with metal lath and plaster.” At that time the plaintiffs had no interest in the property, they having subsequently purchased it from the defendant. The master found that the plaintiff Mrs. Brownell testified that, before she decided-to buy, the defendant showed her the plans and pointed out the partition walls, describing them as “fire walls,” and stated that they made the building safer and more valuable. The master states that he does not find that any such conversation took place or that the plans were ever shown her or examined by her before she took title, but that she examined the rooms, learned of the rents, estimated the operating costs and made the purchase in reliance on these facts, and raised no question on account of the fire walls not being mentioned in the agreement. The master further found that the use of wooden laths and plaster in the wall as before described and the construction of the fire stops were a variation from the instructions given by the State and city inspectors, but he further [495]*495found that both inspectors knew of the plaster used and, tacitly at least, authorized it and subsequently approved it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 462, 270 Mass. 490, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brownell-v-nason-mass-1930.