Cohn v. Bridgeport Plumbing Supply Co., Inc.

115 A. 328, 96 Conn. 696, 24 A.L.R. 808, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 30, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 115 A. 328 (Cohn v. Bridgeport Plumbing Supply Co., Inc.) 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
Cohn v. Bridgeport Plumbing Supply Co., Inc., 115 A. 328, 96 Conn. 696, 24 A.L.R. 808, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 137 (Colo. 1921).

Opinion

Gager, J.

One Whitman was engaged in the construction of an apartment house. Prior to the transactions out of which this action arises, the premises had become subject to two mortgages amounting to $65,000. On June 6th, 1918, Whitman owed the defendant, The Bridgeport Plumbing Supply Company, Incorporated, $5,000, as evidenced by his note, and on said day he owed the defendant, The Eastern New York Marble Company, Incorporated, $5,500, evidenced by two notes, one for $4,669, and one for $831; on June 6th, Whitman mortgaged the premises in question to the Supply Company and the Marble Company, to secure these debts. On June 6th, immediately after giving this mortgage, Whitman conveyed his equity in the premises to the defendants Cóhn and McManus, as trustees under a trust agreement signed by Whitman and the trustees and providing, among other things, that the trustees should take possession of the premises, complete the construction of an unfinished building thereon, receive the income therefrom and pay the obligations, including taxes, interest on the mortgage notes and instalments on principal *698 when due, with power to sell and to reconvey the premises when the three above-mentioned notes were satisfied. On July 24th, 1918, the trustees, Cohn and McManus, the Marble Company and the Plumbing Company, entered into an agreement with one Haflich, by which Haflich agreed to guarantee certain amounts or advance cash for the completion of the apartment building, to an amount not exceeding $6,500. On July 19th, 1918, and in anticipation of the agreement of July 24th, 1918, the Marble Company transferred to Haflich its note of $4,669, secured by mortgage, as collateral security for his guarantees and advancements in the completion of the building, and the Plumbing Supply Company, on July 24th, 1918, also transferred its note of $5,000, secured by mortgage, as security for such guarantees and advancements, the notes and mortgage to said companies-being those of June 6th, 1918, given by Whitman as above described. The transfers to Haflich were in form out-and-out transfers, but the transfers and the indorsements of the notes were actually mortgages to said Haflich to secure him upon his advancements.

Haflich thereupon undertook to carry out the terms of his agreement of July 24th, 1918, and advanced moneys and paid bills, and, by January 8th, 1919, had incurred obligations under this agreement amounting to $4,964.76, which included a bonus of $827.46. On January 8th, 1919, the trustees mortgaged their interests in the premises described in the trust agreement, to Haflich, to secure the payment of the $4,964.76 liabilities incurred by him in carrying out the trust agreement. No part of this sum was repaid. Between January 8th, 1919, and March 6th, 1919, the attention of the defendant companies was called by the plaintiff, then acting as attorney for Haflich, to the financial situation, and several conferences were held, *699 but the parties were unable to make any arrangement by which the necessary money could be procured to pay the defendant Haflich for his obligations and advancements, or to pay an instalment of one of the earlier mortgages then coming due. On March 7th, 1919, the matter of the Haflich claim was taken up by the representatives of the Plumbing Supply Company, the Marble Company, the trustees, and Haflich, who at that time was represented by the plaintiff. They finally entered into the following oral agreement: the defendant companies were to endeavor , to effect a sale of the premises, or a sale of the securities which they had turned over to Haflich as collateral security, or in some maimer, if possible, to arrange to pay the obligations to Haflich on the premises in which they were concerned, so that on or before April 21st, 1919, they might repay to Haflich the sum of $4,964.76, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from the 8th day of January, 1919, to the date of payment, and also, if possible, realize on their own investment in the building on account of labor and material furnished by them in its construction. If the defendant companies did not succeed in some way in raising the funds with which to pay said sum to said Haflich, and if they failed to pay said sum to him on or before April 21st, 1919, then the said Haflich was ipso facto to be and become the owner of the notes and mortgage that had been assigned to him as collateral security, and Haflich would thereafter hold said notes and the mortgage of June 6th free from any agreement to hold the same as collateral security, and the defendant companies would have no further interest in said notes or the mortgage. Upon the making of this agreement, Haflich agreed to refrain from taking any steps to foreclose or realize upon his securities until April 22d, 1919, and agreed *700 that if said companies should fail, on or before April 21st, 1919, to make said payment to Haflich, he would not seek to hold either of the companies on any claimed liability for its indorsement on either of said notes. It was also agreed that this agreement should be reduced to writing, and that proper quitclaim deeds should be prepared to be signed by said companies, which should be held by McManus, one of the trustees, until April 22d, 1919, when, if the defendant companies had paid Haflich’s claim, he would return the deeds to the companies, otherwise he would deliver them to Haflich; and Haflich agreed that if he was paid on or before April 21st, 1919, he would release his interest in the notes and mortgage that had been assigned to him as collateral. The quitclaim deeds referred to were never executed by the defendant companies. Haflich carried out his part of the agreement of March 7th, and the defendant companies failed to pay Haflich on or before April 21st, 1919, the sums then due Haflieh for the completion of the building, and have never paid any of said money to him. On April 28th, 1919, Haflich transferred to the plaintiff the notes and mortgages which the defendants had, on July 19th, 1919, and July 24th, 1919, transferred to him as security for the obligations to be incurred by him in completing the building, and on April 28th, 1919, said Haflich transferred and conveyed to the plaintiff the note for $4,964.76 and the mortgage given to him by the trustees to secure the same, dated January 8th, 1919. On August 2d, 1919, Whitman, the original owner and mortgagor, by quitclaim deed transferred his equity in the premises to the plaintiff.

With the cardinal facts as above stated, the plaintiff — claiming to be the owner of the Whitman mortgage of June 6th, 1918, to the defendants, the Plumbing Supply Company and the Marble Company— *701 brought his action of foreclosure against the trustees and said companies to foreclose the mortgage of June 6th, 1918, against the trustees and the defendant companies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 A. 328, 96 Conn. 696, 24 A.L.R. 808, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohn-v-bridgeport-plumbing-supply-co-inc-conn-1921.