Ciborowski v. Kosciak

39 N.E.2d 639, 310 Mass. 704, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 638
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 39 N.E.2d 639 (Ciborowski v. Kosciak) 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
Ciborowski v. Kosciak, 39 N.E.2d 639, 310 Mass. 704, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 638 (Mass. 1942).

Opinion

Cox, J.

The plaintiff’s bill alleges, in substance, that the deed of a parcel of real estate in Worcester was taken in the names of the parties as tenants in common, with the agreement that the conveyance to the defendant, although absolute in form, was as collateral security and was intended by the parties as an equitable mortgage; that the deed was security for the promise of the plaintiff to pay a note of the defendant for $1,500, and also to pay him $1,500; that the plaintiff paid the note, paid the defendant $1,000 and tendered him the further sum of $500 which he had refused to accept. There was a prayer that the defendant be required to execute and deliver a deed of his interest in the real estate to the plaintiff.

The defendant set up in his answer counterclaims against the plaintiff, the plaintiff’s wife and a corporation. (Rule 32 of the Superior Court [1932].) The new parties answered to the counterclaims, but before they had done so, the suit was referred to a master. The allegations in the counterclaims will be dealt with later.

[706]*706The evidence is not reported, and it does not appear from the master’s report that his ultimate findings of fact are based solely upon the subsidiary facts that he found. The subsidiary facts found are not inconsistent with the ultimate findings. Dodge v. Anna Jaques Hospital, 301 Mass. 431, 435. The only question open on the appeal of the plaintiff from the final decree, there having been no appeal from the interlocutory decree confirming the report, and the final decree not being adversely affected by the interlocutory decree, is whether the final decree is within the scope of the bill and counterclaim and supported by the facts found by the master. Springfield Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Friele, 304 Mass. 224, 226.

1. The master found, with reference to the allegations in the plaintiff’s bill, that the parties agreed to purchase the real estate as joint owners and that the deed was taken in their names as tenants in common; that the transaction did not amount to an equitable mortgage; that the defendant agreed orally that he would convey his interest to the plaintiff for $3,000; that he received $1,000 in cash and, as a part of the transaction, the defendant’s note for $1,500, upon which the plaintiff was an accommodation indorser, was surrendered and cancelled by the substitution of the plaintiff’s note; that the plaintiff tendered the $500 “due to the defendant,” but that the latter refused to execute the deed unless other matters, to which reference is hereinafter made, were “straightened out.” By the terms of paragraph 1 of the final decree, the plaintiff is ordered to pay the defendant $500 and to deliver to him the note for $1,500 (that was cancelled) upon tender by the defendant to him of a quitclaim deed of his interest in the premises in question. There are further provisions that the defendant, upon such conveyance, shall be under no further obligations to the plaintiff with reference to said real estate.

It is an elementary rule that relief in equity is limited by the allegations contained in the bill. Seder v. Kozlowski, 304 Mass. 367, 369. That part of the decree now under consideration grants affirmative relief to the defendant. The defendant answered the plaintiff’s bill. The statute of [707]*707frauds is not pleaded. The defendant makes no claim for affirmative relief in his counterclaim with reference to the transaction now under consideration. It is true that in his answer he refers to the transactions that are the basis of his counterclaim. In the circumstances, the defendant is not entitled to the affirmative relief granted. Westfield Savings Bank v. Leahey, 291 Mass. 473, 476. The master found that the agreements relative to the sale of the real estate in question and those set out in the counterclaim were separate and independent transactions. It is to be observed that by the terms of the first paragraph of the decree the obligations to pay $500 and to deliver the promissory note are imposed upon the plaintiff, provided the defendant tenders a deed. Nothing is said as to what shall happen if the tender is not made, although it appears that the plaintiff has already paid the defendant $1,000, has procured the cancellation of the defendant’s note for $1,500, and has tendered $500, the balance remaining due. It is true that the master found there was no equitable mortgage. But where, as here, it appears that the issues upon which a final decree is based have been fully heard, and where, upon the facts found, the plaintiff is entitled to relief, he should be allowed to amend his bill by alleging the liability of the defendant as found. Accordingly, the Superior Court may allow the plaintiff so to amend his bill within thirty days after rescript, Seder v. Kozlowski, 304 Mass. 367, 370, and thereupon, as a part of the final decree, the defendant, upon payment to him of $500, is to be ordered to execute and deliver to the plaintiff a good and sufficient quitclaim deed of all his right, title and interest in the real estate in question. If no such amendment is allowed, the bill is to be dismissed. There is no finding of the master that the plaintiff has the $1,500 note of the defendant that was cancelled, and it was error to order the plaintiff to deliver it to the defendant.

2. One allegation of the defendant’s counterclaim is, in substance, that he and the plaintiff own a farm as tenants in common, title to which was taken with the agreement of the plaintiff that, at any time the defendant should so [708]*708request, he would pay him a specified sum, together with one half of any expenditures made by the parties on account of the farm, in exchange for the defendant’s deed of his interest therein; that the defendant had requested an accounting with the plaintiff in regard to this real estate and had offered to give him a deed of all his interest therein in exchange for payment to him of the amount found due upon the accounting, but that although the plaintiff had agreed to do this, he had since refused. The master found that the plaintiff did agree to purchase the defendant’s interest in the farm at any time he should request it, and that “such a request was made.” He also- found that the amount the defendant “put in” was $746.22, obviously more than one half of the equity, inasmuch as the purchase price of the farm was $5,450 and the parties executed a purchase money mortgage for $4,085. If we assume that, as incidental to the defendant’s counterclaim for specific performance, it was necessary to ascertain what the defendant “put in,” as has been done, it becomes necessary to determine whether the decree, in ordering the plaintiff to pay the sum found due, upon tender of a deed, was warranted.

The plaintiff contends that there is no finding that the defendant offered to perform his part of the agreement or that he was ready, able and willing to do so, or that the plaintiff refused to perform his part. We think it follows from the finding that the defendant requested the plaintiff to carry out the agreement, that he not only demanded performance, but that he also was ready and willing to perform. These conclusions are also borne out by the finding of the master that the defendant refused to execute a deed of the real estate in Worcester “unless the . . . [farm] and the insurance business should also be straightened out.” We are also inclined to the opinion that the master’s findings warrant the conclusion that the defendant was able to give a deed of his interest in the farm. Compare Strumskis v. Tilenas,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.E.2d 639, 310 Mass. 704, 1942 Mass. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ciborowski-v-kosciak-mass-1942.