Cousbelis v. Alexander

8 Mass. App. Div. 321
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedNovember 8, 1943
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Mass. App. Div. 321 (Cousbelis v. Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cousbelis v. Alexander, 8 Mass. App. Div. 321 (Mass. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Pettingell, P. J.

Action of contract to recover for work done. The defendant’s answer is a general denial and payment, with another answer which the report describes as “by way of recoupment”. The defendant filed, also, a declaration in set-off. After a trial the trial judge found for the plaintiff on his declaration; on the set-off he found for the defendant for $1000.

The parties have briefed and argued the case as a matter of set-off and we so consider it; apparently there was no finding on the answer of recoupment.

The main issue in the case is the sufficiency of a memorandum given by the plaintiff, to take the case out of the statute of frauds. The evidence stated in the report is [322]*322that the defendant owned land consisting of three lots, two of which fronted on Grove Street and one on Calvin Street, and owned no other land in Watertown. The defendant testified that the plaintiff orally,, agreed to purchase the three lots at 32¢ per foot and gave a check for two hundred dollars to the defendant on the face of which, in the plaintiff’s handwriting, were the words “deposit for land on G-alvin Road Watertown price 32¢ a foot”.

There was other evidence that there was a cellar hole on the land, which the plaintiff filled and thereafter changed the surface of the land.

The plaintiff requested the following rulings, each of which was denied.

“1. The memorandum on the back of the check given by a purchaser of land to the seller as a deposit, containing the following language: ‘Deposit for land on Galvin Road Watertown, price, 32f; per foot’, does not satisfy the requirements of the Statute of Frauds and is therefore unenforcible.
, “2. There is not sufficient written memorandum of the oral agreement alleged between the parties, signed by the defendant in set-off, upon which liability can be predicated.
“3. The fact that the purchaser of land under an agreement insufficient to meet the" requirements of the Statute of Frauds, enters upon the land and makes a minor improvement thereon, does not take the case out of the Statute of Frauds.
“4. There is no evidence that the purchaser received any benefit from his transaction with the seller which he is enabled to retain by using the Statute of Frauds as a defence.”

The trial judge found the following facts:

‘ ‘ This is an action upon an account annexed and for breach of contract for installing garage doors at 12 Malcolm Road, Cambridge, for which I find in the amount of the declaration $136.25. Defendant further claimed in Set-Off that on or about September 8, 1941 [323]*323he agreed with the plaintiff to buy land of defendant amounting to 14300 square feet at Galvin Road and Grove Street in Watertown, that the plaintiff paid part of purchase price and entered upon the land and made changes therein but later refused to complete the purchase altho defendant wished him to do so.
“I find that the plaintiff C had known the defendant A three years previous to July 1941. 0 having visited A at the tailor shop of the latter, that C agreed with A to buy his land on Galvin Road, Watertown at 32 cents per foot, that at this time Mr. Faryorj of Union Market Bank at Watertown showed interest in the purchase of this land, that A by deed dated 19 May 1927 acquired 14,300 feet comprising lots 20, 21 and 22 on Galvin Road, Watertown and that A owned no other land in Watertown in 1941. I find that September 1, 1941 C handed A check for $200 inscribed ‘Deposit for land in Galvin Road, Watertown price 32 cents a feet’ (Deft’s Exhibit 1). This check was wholly in handwriting of C and was cashed September 9, 1941 by A. C proceeded to dump upon the land on part of which he had spoken of ‘his company building’ but at the end of January 1942 because of the sudden death of C’s son October 1941 C told A that he should not go through with the trade. He did not demand the return by A of $200 paid in September and A did not agree to the abandonment of the transaction but refrained from paying for the garage doors altho he had accepted them and made use of them.
“I find that the check constituted a sufficient memorandum in connection with the physical alteration of the surface of the land to satisfy the Statute of Frauds and upon testimony of Ronald M. Stone in real estate business in Watertown ,14 years. I find damage due the defendant, i. e. plaintiff in set-off to be $1000 in addition to $200 received.”

There was prejudicial error in the disposition of the rulings requested by the plaintiff, especially in light of one of the rulings of the trial judge.

The third and fourth requests apparently are based upon aspects of the effect of a partial performance of an oral [324]*324contract, unenforcible because of the statute of frauds. The third request is to the effect that entrance upon the land by a purchaser and the performance there by him of a minor improvement will not take the case out of the statute. The fourth deals with the absence of any evidence showing a benefit to a purchaser so entering and performing which will be retained by him by pleading the statute. The third request is an accurate and understandable statement of the law. The fourth, awkwardly expressed, seems to deal with another part of the principle of partial performance, that of the effect of the rentention of benefit, by a party to such a contract who pleads the statute of frauds as a defence.

In equity, under similar circumstances, relief may be granted to a party who partially performs the contract relied upon.

“The fraud most commonly treated as taking an agreement out of the statute of frauds is that which consists of setting up the statute against its performance, after the other party has been induced to make expenditures, or a change of situation in regard to the subject matter of the agreement, or upon the supposition that it was to be carried into execution, and the assumption of rights thereby to be acquired; so that the refusal to complete the execution of the agreement is not merely a denial of rights which it was intended to confer, but the infliction of an unjust and unconscientious injury and loss. In such a ease, the party is held, by force of his acts or silent acquiescence, which have misled the other to his harm, to be estopped from setting up the statute of frauds.” Glass v. Hulbert, 102 Mass. 24, at 35.

The basis of the principle of partial performance is that of estoppel. Williams v. Carty, 205 Mass. 396, at 400. Harrell v. Sonnabend, 191 Mass. 310, at 312. Gadsby v. Gadsby, 275 Mass. 159, at 167, 168.

[325]*325At law, the effect of a partial performance by one party to such a contract may be the recovery of damages. One who has paid a portion of the purchase price of land in performance of such a contract, where the-seller sets up the statute of frauds as a defence, may recover what he has paid. Coughlin v. Knowles, 7 Met 57. Riley v. Williams, 123 Mass. 506, at 509. Twomey v. Crowley, 137 Mass. 184, at 185. One who has partially performed such a contract may recover on one of the common counts. DeMontague v. Bacharach, 187 Mass. 128, at 134, 135.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Mass. App. Div. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cousbelis-v-alexander-massdistctapp-1943.