Carrigg v. Cordeiro

530 N.E.2d 809, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 611, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 695
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1988
Docket87-1401
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 530 N.E.2d 809 (Carrigg v. Cordeiro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carrigg v. Cordeiro, 530 N.E.2d 809, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 611, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 695 (Mass. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

Carrigg filed in a Probate Court on September 24, 1985, a complaint seeking specific performance of a purchase and sale agreement, dated July 25, 1985, between him and Cizaltina Cordeiro. Miss Cordeiro died on December 18, 1987, after the trial and the filing on December 11, 1986, of notice of appeal in this case. The agreement related to a three-family house in Fall River (the locus). The judge found that Miss Cordeiro, sixty-seven years old at the time of trial, had been bom in the house and had lived in it all her life. The agreement contained various provisions, which in some respects appear not to be consistent with each other. Whether such inconsistency exists gives rise to the present controversy.

*612 Article 4 of the agreement provided that the locus was “to be conveyed by a good and sufficient [q]uitclaim [d]eed. Said deed shall convey good and clear record and marketable title thereto, free from all encumbrances except provisions of local zoning law, if any, and municipal betterments, and all easements, restrictions and rights of way, if any, provided they do not substantially interfere with the intended use of the premises” (emphasis supplied). The transfer was to take place at the Fall River registry of deeds “on or before September 6, 1985,” unless otherwise agreed. A two-week postponement of the closing was arranged by agreement. Time was to be of the essence.

Article 6 of the agreement reads, “Full possession of . . . [the locus] is to be delivered to the Buyer at the time of the delivery of the deed .... The Seller and Buyer agree that as part of this sales agreement the Seller shall have the right to continue to live in the first floor apartment for as long as she desires to live there, and to use her washer and dryer in the basement to the same extent as they are presently used. She shall pay to the Buyer for said use the rent of . . . $55 . . . per week, and on the anniversary date of said lease the said rent is to be increased by three and one-half . . . percent each year, for a period of seven . . . years. Thereafter the rent shall be seventy . . . dollars per week for the duration of the lease” 2 (emphasis supplied).

Article 7 provided that the total price was to be $89,900, and by art. 11 a “fee for professional services” of $5,394 was to be paid by the seller to a named broker only in the event of a completed sale to the buyer.

Article 9 made the agreement “contingent upon the Buyer’s ability to obtain a conventional mortgage loan of at least. . . $85,405 ... at current mortgage interest rates. The Buyer agrees to apply for said mortgage forthwith and to make every effort to obtain said mortgage loan. In the event the Buyer is *613 unable to obtain a commitment for said mortgage loan by August 16, 1985, the Buyer shall so advise the Seller and Broker in writing on or before said date and this agreement shall become null and void and all payments made hereunder shall be refunded. If such written notice is not received by the Seller and Broker within the time specified, the Buyer shall be bound to perform his obligations under this contract” (emphasis supplied).

If the deal had gone through, Miss Cordeiro would have made a sale to Carrigg for a net amount of $84,506 ($89,900 less the broker’s commission of $5,394), which was about $6,500 less than the amount of the mortgage of $91,000 to be placed upon the property according to the undisputed testimony of Carrigg’s father, who was agent for the buyer. Thus, as Carrigg would have initially no clear equity in the locus, there was real occasion for apprehension about what Miss Cordeiro’s position would be in the event of a foreclosure of the contemplated mortgage, unless her position was protected by some form of subordination of the mortgage to her somewhat unusual life interest. See as to the nature of that life interest, Tinkham v. Wind, 319 Mass. 158, 159-160 (1946).

The sale of the locus was not completed on the date set in the agreement as extended because, prior to the closing, discussions took place about methods of protecting Miss Cordeiro’s life interest in the first floor apartment, whatever it was. The judge concluded that the dispute “arose over . . . whether . . . [a] lease [to Miss Cordeiro] be recorded before the [proposed] mortgage or after.” That dispute, so the judge decided, “was never resolved.” The judge also found, “Both parties understood that the [proposed] lease . . . was to be in writing and that Carrigg was to obtain a mortgage to finance the purchase, the only issue being the order of recording” of these instruments called for by the agreement.

Other “findings” by the judge were based solely on his interpretation of the written agreement which is a matter as fully open for decision in this court as it is to the trial judge. Sqo Robert Indus., Inc. v. Spence, 362 Mass. 751, 755 (1973, where the Supreme Judicial Court said, “The interpretation of *614 an integrated agreement is a matter of law on which we are not bound by the trial judge’s conclusions unless the problem of interpretation is affected by findings of fact.” We do not perceive any respect in which the judge’s findings of fact affect interpretation of the written agreement. His further purported findings 3 were essentially an interpretation of the agreement in a manner which utterly disregarded (and left exposed to forfeiture by a mortgage foreclosure) Miss Cordeiro’s life interest in the first floor of the locus.

The judge ruled, first, that Carrigg was entitled to judgment ordering specific performance by a conveyance “free from all encumbrances,” second, that a lease be given to Miss Cordeiro “subordinated to a conventional mortgage loan ... of not less than $85,405, and, third that thereafter Miss Cordeiro could record her lease. He also ruled that the broker was entitled to a commission of $5,394. The evidence showed that the attorney for the proposed mortgagee had seen the agreement prior to the date for closing and firmly had refused to proceed with the financing if Miss Cordeiro’s interest was to be given any form of priority over the mortgage.

We think that this is a case where there has been no mutual assent by Carrigg and Miss Cordeiro to any plan for protecting her life interest in the first floor. The judge was certainly correct that there was no explicit provision in the agreement that Miss Cordeiro’s lease was to have priority over the mortgage. It seems plain, however, that to Miss Cordeiro her life interest was important. As the trial judge put it, “she was *615 bom there [at the locus] and she wants to die there.” Because of her family memories of the locus, she felt secure there.

We conclude that the parties to this transaction never reached an agreement about what to do about the protection of Miss Cordeiro’s life interest.

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530 N.E.2d 809, 26 Mass. App. Ct. 611, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carrigg-v-cordeiro-massappct-1988.