Di Libero v. Pacitto

46 A.2d 39, 71 R.I. 361, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 27, 1946
StatusPublished

This text of 46 A.2d 39 (Di Libero v. Pacitto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Di Libero v. Pacitto, 46 A.2d 39, 71 R.I. 361, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 6 (R.I. 1946).

Opinion

*362 Flynn, C. J.

This bill in equity was brought to have a trust, in favor of the complainant, declared in certain real estate, the legal title to which was in the names of the respondents; and for other relief incidental thereto. In the superior court, after a hearing on bill, answer and proof, a final decree was entered declaring respondents to be trustees of that property for the benefit of complainant and ordering them to convey the legal title to him. The cause is here on respondents’ appeal from that decree.

The evidence for the complainant shows the following facts: The property in question, consisting of one lot of land improved by a three-family house, is located at 61 Danforth street in the city of Providence. Prior to the purchase hereinafter referred to, the house was uninhabitable, having been greatly damaged by fire and other causes. On April 26, 1940, the complainant and his cousin Giuseppe Di Libero agreed to purchase this property from Peter Signore, the real owner, for the price of $1800, payable $200 in cash and the balance by assuming an existing mortgage of $1100 to the Union Trust Company and by giving a second mortgage in the sum of $500 to Signore or his nominee. The complainant and his cousin each contributed $100 of the cash payment to Signore, who gave them a receipt showing the location of the property, the purchase price and terms of payment. Complainant’s cousin, however, withdrew from the transaction and by agreement complainant received credit for the entire $200 cash payment.

During the following month, and before the deed was delivered, complainant moved into the house and proceeded to make it habitable. Major repairs and improvements involving labor and materials costing several hundred dollars were *363 made by or at the order of the complainant and were paid for entirely by him. Much of this, including considerable material and labor provided by a licensed plumber and by a licensed electrician, was accomplished before the respondents knew of the proposed sale or of the transaction whereby the legal title was eventually conveyed to them.

Several years previously the complainant had given a mortgage on other property which had been foreclosed in 1932 or 1933; and he asked the respondents to do him the favor of taking title in their names for his benefit, because someone had said: “When you lose the property the mortgagee can come on the other properties if you buy it.” When respondents agreed to do this, the owner Signore thereupon made an application in their names for an owners’ title insurance policy and the transaction was subsequently carried out at the office of the title company on June 22, 1940 in the presence of the owner, the complainant, the respondents, and a representative of the title company. The owners of record executed a deed to the property, subject to the existing first mortgage of $1100, to the respondents, who are husband and wife, and they made and delivered a note and second mortgage in the sum of $500 to the owner’s nominee. The revenue stamps on the deed indicated a total purchase price of $1800 and the title policy was written in- the same amount. The deed was thereafter recorded and returned to these respondents.

The second mortgage of $500 was later paid from the proceeds of a loan in that amount obtained by complainant from Carmine A. Colaluca, who corroborated this fact, as did Maria Mallozzi in whose tenement and presence the loan was made. The complainant also furnished the respondents with moneys which they used to pay the balance due on the first mortgage at the bank. The reason for this was because the complainant, who was employed at good wages in the shipyard, could not easily get to the bank during business hourá, whereas respondent Paolo Pacitto, who had not worked for a couple of years during which he received $13.05 *364 weekly under the workmen’s compensation act, had time to go to the bank.

All payments of mortgage interest and principal, taxes and other expenses concerning the property, including the cost of repairs and improvements to the house, were made with money provided entirely by the complainant for such purposes. In this connection complainant also paid the respondent Paolo Pacitto the sum of $228 for the latter’s services in helping with certain stucco work which was not begun until some time after the conveyance to respondents. The complainant rented the tenements, fixed the terms of the tenancies, collected the rents and managed the property, all without control or direction by the respondents. He caused certain of the tenants to be ejected therefrom, the actions being necessarily brought in the names of the respondents as the titleholders, but the attorney’s fees therein actually were paid by the complainant.

Finally, as the complainant stated, when “I have finished everything about the house and my mind is quiet down”, he requested the respondents “to fix this thing” by conveying the property to him. The respondent Paolo Pacitto first urged him to leave the property in respondents’ names as a protection against creditors and finally refused to make the conveyance. Suit was then brought to establish, by way of a resulting trust,'the complainant’s ownership of this property and to compel the respondents to convey the legal title thereto to the complainant.

On the other hand, the evidence for the respondents on vital facts was in conflict with that introduced by the complainant. This evidence tended to show that the respondents purchased the property from Signore for $1600, payable by the assumption of the existing first mortgage of $1100 and the giving of a second mortgage of $500 to the owner; that the respondents paid the bills at the title company and provided the money to pay all the taxes, interest, water bills and other charges against the property; and that they paid with their own money the second mortgage of $500 and *365 the balance of $624.91 due on the existing first mortgage to the Union Trust Company.

The respondents testified that they provided the money for whatever payments were made by the complainant. They admitted that the complainant did considerable work in repairing and improving the house, and that he took charge completely of rentals and collections; but they insisted that he had done so as their agent, for which services he had received free rent. The respondents further testified that they hired and paid the attorney who brought ejectment proceedings against the above-mentioned tenants. They admitted that they knew nothing of the improvements and repairs made and paid for by the complainant just prior to their taking of the deed in their names. -The respondent Paolo Pacitto insisted that the real purchase price of the property was $1600, although his wife conceded that it was $1800; and neither of the respondents explained or refuted the fact that the complainant had paid $100, and by agreement had received credit for the additional $100 paid by his cousin in cash to the owner on April 26, 1940 as part of the consideration. They explained their ability to pay the $500 on the second mortgage and the final payment of $624.91 on the first mortgage merely by a general reference to some money which they claimed was in their possession in their home.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A.2d 39, 71 R.I. 361, 1946 R.I. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/di-libero-v-pacitto-ri-1946.