Castro v. Linchitz

8 N.E.2d 744, 297 Mass. 381, 1937 Mass. LEXIS 762
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 29, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 N.E.2d 744 (Castro v. Linchitz) 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
Castro v. Linchitz, 8 N.E.2d 744, 297 Mass. 381, 1937 Mass. LEXIS 762 (Mass. 1937).

Opinion

Donahue, J.

The plaintiff Pasqualina Castro held a second mortgage upon certain fixtures, furniture and equipment in a restaurant. Her husband is also named as a party plaintiff but he had no beneficial interest in the mortgage, and where the word plaintiff is hereinafter used it will refer to Mrs. Castro. Among other relief sought by this bill in equity is the setting aside of a foreclosure sale under a first mortgage, including the same property, which was held by the National Restaurant Equipment Co., Inc., hereinafter referred to as the defendant. The case was heard in the Superior Court on a master’s report and a decree was entered for the plaintiff.

The plaintiff and one Bruno, who is named in the bill as a party defendant, in January, 1934, formed a copartnership and for.a short time conducted a restaurant, all the money advanced being furnished by the plaintiff. She provided more than $4,800 to the business of the copartnership. Certain of the personal property installed in the restaurant was purchased from the defendant for $3,500 on a contract of conditional sale, the sum of $1,875 being paid in cash by the plaintiff and the balance being represented by a series of notes of $38.58 each, payable on successive weeks.

Serious disagreements arose between the partners and the venture was not a success. Each finally consulted an attorney and on May 7, 1934, a written agreement was entered into, by the terms of which the plaintiff agreed to sell to Bruno all her title and interest in the partnership business and property for the sum of $4,800 to be paid by Bruno’s note for that amount with interest, payable in monthly instalments of $75 each for eighteen months and thereafter in monthly instalments of $150 each, said note to be secured by a second mortgage. The agreement recited that some of the personal property in the restaurant had been purchased [383]*383from the defendant on a contract of conditional sale and provided that Bruno would procure from the defendant a release of the plaintiff from her obligation under the contract of conditional sale and that the mortgage to the plaintiff would be junior to a mortgage to be given by Bruno to the defendant for the amount due on the contract of conditional sale.

A bill of sale in accordance with the agreement was given by the plaintiff to Bruno. The terms of the agreement were communicated to the defendant. It agreed to release the plaintiff from her obligation under the contract of conditional sale but insisted that the mortgage given to it by Bruno should include not only the property sold by it to the partnership but also "all other fixtures and merchandise.” The plaintiff had purchased and installed in the restaurant other equipment for which she paid $1,600. A mortgage dated May 19, 1934, given by Bruno to the defendant included all the partnership property. The mortgage secured a note for $1,968 payable in weekly instalments of $24.60 beginning May 25, although the amount then unpaid on the contract of conditional sale was only $1,388.88. The mortgage given to the plaintiff recited that it was subject to the defendant’s mortgage, but the amount secured by the first mortgage was not stated in the plaintiff’s mortgage and was not known to the plaintiff.

The defendant, on July 20, 1934, purported to foreclose its mortgage by the exercise of the power of sale therein contained. The defendant in thus foreclosing the mortgage owed to the plaintiff as holder of a second mortgage the same obligation of good faith and reasonable care that it owed to the mortgagor. Sandler v. Silk, 292 Mass. 493, and cases cited. The facts found by the master warrant the conclusion that the defendant in foreclosing its mortgage violated the obligation it owed to the plaintiff.

The defendant’s mortgage provided that it might be foreclosed by a sale upon three days’ notice in writing. See Loza v. Osmola, 279 Mass. 220. It gave no such notice. It gave written notice to no one. The only notice given by it to anybody was by a telephone message to the mortgagor [384]*384fifteen minutes before the sale was held. The only persons present at the sale were the mortgagor, the defendant’s president who was its general manager, its attorney who was also an auctioneer and acted in that capacity at the sale, and two men who came with the defendant’s president and attorney to the restaurant. Each of these men made a bid. The defendant’s president made the third and final bid of $1,200 and the auctioneer announced that the defendant had purchased the property. The plaintiff had no knowledge that the defendant’s mortgage was to be foreclosed and no knowledge that there had been a foreclosure sale until August 4, 1934.

The defendant was aware of the existence of the plaintiff’s mortgage and the circumstances under which it was given. It knew that the plaintiff desired, and was able, to protect her interest in the property. Several weeks before the sale, at a time when there was a breach of the conditions of the mortgage of the plaintiff but no breach of the conditions of the defendant’s mortgage, the defendant’s president told the mortgagor to take no written receipts for payments of weekly instalments on the first mortgage, so that the defendant might have apparent breaches of the mortgage on which to base a foreclosure and thus to wipe out the interest of the plaintiff. At the time of the sale the only default under the defendant’s mortgage was the failure of the mortgagor to pay one weekly instalment of $24.60. The sale was so planned and conducted that no one except agents of the defendant was present to bid and the defendant could become the purchaser of property some of which it sold six months before for $3,500 at whatever price it saw fit. The price of $1,200 for which the defendant obtained the property was inadequate. While mere inadequacy of the price received does not make a foreclosure sale invalid, it is a circumstance to be considered in determining whether a foreclosing mortgagee lived up to his obligation of good faith and reasonable care. Sandler v. Silk, 292 Mass. 493, 497. We think that the facts here recited, taken together, without considering the matter of any agreement with reference to foreclosure made by the parties, warrant the con[385]*385elusion that the defendant in the conduct of the sale violated the obligation of good faith and diligence which it owed to the plaintiff. It is not essential for a finding of bad faith and lack of reasonable care to show that a foreclosing mortgagee promised to give a junior mortgagee notice of a foreclosure sale. Clapp v. Gardiner, 237 Mass. 187. Bon v. Graves, 216 Mass. 440. Briggs v. Briggs, 135 Mass. 306. Thompson v. Heywood, 129 Mass. 401. Hood v. Adams, 124 Mass. 481. Drinan v. Nichols, 115 Mass. 353.

Five weeks before the foreclosure sale, at a time when there was a breach of the conditions of the plaintiff’s mortgage but no breach of the conditions of the defendant’s mortgage, its president suggested to the plaintiff that both give the mortgagor three or four months to better his financial condition, that both agree not to “take any action” within such period and that the defendant would agree to “take no action at any time without giving her two or three weeks notice.” The plaintiff stated that she agreed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 N.E.2d 744, 297 Mass. 381, 1937 Mass. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castro-v-linchitz-mass-1937.