Dugan v. McGarry

4 R.I. Dec. 81
CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 6, 1928
DocketEq. No. 8067
StatusPublished

This text of 4 R.I. Dec. 81 (Dugan v. McGarry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Dugan v. McGarry, 4 R.I. Dec. 81 (R.I. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

BAKER, J.

Final hearing.

In this case the testimony is quite voluminous and covered the dealings of the parties in considerable detail, so that it does not seem necessary or advisable to refer to it fully.

The bill is brought to set aside and rescind a sale of certain property, of which possession has been taken by the complainants, on the ground of frauflu-[82]*82lent statements made by the respondent and his agent in regard to the property in question, and for other relief incident thereto. This property is located in the Town of Warwick and consists of a good-sized apartment house, so-called, together with certain outbuildings and garages, and several -lots of land.

The respondent denies that any fraud or misstatement inducing the sale was practiced upon the complainants and claims that the business was transacted freely and with the full knowledge and information of all of the parties concerned.

The complainants’ first contention is that Alice G. Dugan is an elderly woman, not well, lacking in judgment and discretion, and that by fraudulent representation she was induced and persuaded to enter into an agreement and to purchase the property involved herein. The testimony does show that she was about 65 years old and of a somewhat nervous temperament. She and her family, however, for many years have been conducting a delicatessen business in the City of Paw-tucket with considerable success, and the Court, from the testimony and from Mrs. Dugan’s appearance as a witness, does not find that she was lacking in judgment or that she was easily influenced or particularly subject to the control of other parties.

The complainant Andrew Towey is the son of the complainant Alice G. Dugan, and the complainant Alice G. Brewer is her daughter, being the wife of B. Harrison Brewer. The complainant Mrs. Dugan says that she supposed she was buying the whole of the premises involved herein for the sum of $18,000. The papers executed at the time the contract was entered into show clearly that a portion of the premises, including the apartment house, was being sold to her for $19,-000. The testimony further shows that between the time the payment was made on the property by Mrs. Dugan and the actual execution of the deeds, she and members of her family visited the property once, and probably twice. It is the claim of the respondent that after, or during one of these visits, she expressed the desire to purchase additional land around the apartment house in question and that a bargain was entered into whereby this should be sold her for $5,000 additional, making the total purchase price $24,000.

There is no question but what the papers, as prepared and executed, were on the basis that the total price was $24,000. Owing to certain difficulty about the husband of Mrs. Dugan, the title to the property was taken in the name of her son, Mr. Towey, and was later transferred to Mr. and Mrs. Brewer, who now have the title but who are holding it for the benefit of Mrs. Dugan. The papers in the case were executed, after several conferences, in the office of an attorney. The acknowledgment of the necessary parties was taken and the Court is satisfied that the contents of the documents were either read or in a general way explained to the complainants, so that they either understood what they were doing or if they failed to do so, it was by reason of their .own negligence. While apparently the complainant Mrs. Dugan is not a woman of great education, the Court finds that she is perfectly capable of understanding a transaction of this type. In fact, it appears from the evidence that she and her son and other members of the family own real estate in Pawtucket, and that she herself is the owner of a lot in Riverside in East Providence.

As to the actual price agreed upon, therefore, and as to the execution of the agreements, deeds and mortgages, the Court finds that the complainants understood the situation and acted freely and voluntarily.

The complainants, however, further urge as a ground for rescission that the [83]*83contract in question is unconscionable and should be rescinded because the value of tbe property was far less than $24,000, and that although they saw the property once or twice before the deeds and mortgages were executed, they relied upon statements made to them by the respondent and his agent.

The complainants did introduce testimony from very reliable witnesses that the property in question was worth in the neighborhood of fifteen or sixteen thousand dollars at the time it was sold. There are certain memo-randa introduced as exhibits in the case which to some extent tend to corroborate this oral testimony. (See Complainants’ Exhibits 13 and 14.) On the other hand, the respondent introduced evidence showing that the property was worth twenty-five or twenty-six thousand dollars. Possibly the Court is not obliged to fix the actual value of this property. It would seem that the rentals, when the place is fully occupied, aggregate something over $200 per month, and the Court is inclined to believe that possibly the sum of nineteen or twenty thousand dollars for the whole property might more nearly represent its fair value than the figure for which it was actually sold. This question, however, is so problematical that the Court doubts whether on the question of value alone the contract is so unconscionable that it should be rescinded, although the Court does believe that the respondent struck a pretty stiff bargain with the complainants.

In the judgment of the Court, the strongest feature which the complainants can urge for rescission of this contract and sale is that certain material statements, upon which they relied and acted, were made to them in connection with the property involved by the respondent and his agent Lewis. These men did not impress the Court favorably in their manner of testifying.

After a careful weighing of the evidence in this connection, the Court finds that the respondent and his agent, Mr. Lewis, did make certain fraudulent statements in regard to the property as inducements to bring about the sale, and that the complainants, and particularly the complainant Mrs. Dugan, relied, and under all the circumstances had a right to rely upon these statements, and that they acted thereon. In this connection, the Court will refer, first, to the previous use of the property. It appears from the evidence that this property at one time had been used as a roadhouse, so-called, the reputation of which was apparently more or less unsavory. The Court believes that the respondent and his agent did make to the complainants certain statements that this place had been a gentleman’s estate. It is hardly conceivable that the complainants could manufacture in detail the testimony they gave on this point. Secondly, the Court finds that the weight of the testimony shows that certain wrong and fraudulent statements were made to the complainants as to the amount of profit which might be derived from the property and as to the number of apartments then rented and then vacant, and as to the number of rooms contained in the house, and other matters of a similar nature.

In answer to this contention, the respondent urges that the complainants viewed and examined the premises and therefore made an independent investigation upon which they relied. It is true that the complainants did make some examination and investigation of the premises. Some of the matters above referred to, however, would not be revealed by an examination.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 R.I. Dec. 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dugan-v-mcgarry-risuperct-1928.