Gallinaro v. Fitzpatrick

267 N.E.2d 649, 359 Mass. 6, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1054, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 774
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 267 N.E.2d 649 (Gallinaro v. Fitzpatrick) 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
Gallinaro v. Fitzpatrick, 267 N.E.2d 649, 359 Mass. 6, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1054, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 774 (Mass. 1971).

Opinion

Spalding, J.

By this bill in equity the plaintiff seeks specific performance of a purchase and sale agreement for real estate, damages, and cancellation of a lease. The defendants in their answers sought the discharge of a mortgage and damages. A final decree was entered dismissing the bill and granting certain relief to the defendants. The plaintiff appealed. The judge made a report of material facts. The evidence is reported.

We summarize the findings of the judge as follows. The real estate in question is located at 354 Market Street in Brighton and consists of land and a building containing twenty-four apartments. These were owned by the defendants Richard H. Fitzpatrick (Fitzpatrick) and Joseph P. McHugh (McHugh) as trustees of the Fitz-Hugh Real Estate Trust (trust). At all times relevant to this case, the apartment building was under construction.

*8 During the summer of 1967, one Arthur Speros (Speros), a real estate broker, approached the defendants concerning the availability of the property for sale. This conversation resulted in an oral agreement that the defendants would accept $300,000 with $50,000 in cash. A purchase and sale agreement was drawn, but never executed. Speros and his associate, Mr. William A. Katsenes (an attorney), commenced suit against the defendants for a brokerage commission, and made a real estate attachment on the property in question. This attachment was burdensome to the defendants because they wanted to obtain additional financing on this and other properties which the trust was considering purchasing. Further negotiations resulted in the preparation of another purchase and sale agreement. A meeting was held at the office of Mr. Katsenes on the evening of December 11, 1967, at which several alternate proposals were discussed. Finally, a purchase and sale agreement for $290,000 was executed by the parties. The plaintiff gave Fitzpatrick a check for $30,000 drawn on the Coolidge Bank and Trust Company of Watertown (Coolidge Bank). Gallinaro was at that time made aware of the fact that the defendants were negotiating for the purchase of other property and needed the $30,000 “shortly” to accomplish this. The check was signed by Mary M. Gallinaro, the mother of the plaintiff. Neither Fitzpatrick nor McHugh realized at that time that this was not a check of the plaintiff himself. As he handed the check to Fitzpatrick, the plaintiff said, “Don’t run down to the bank tomorrow and try to cash this. I have to put some money in the account. Wait a day or so.”

A release of the attachment was prepared and recorded the following day. In return, the plaintiff was given a note in the amount of $30,000 secured by a mortgage. This was intended as security for the return of the $30,000 deposit in the event the sale was not consummated. The mortgage was recorded on December 18, 1967. The purchase and sale agreement, in a separate page, contained an agreement that the plaintiff would take the property subject to the *9 existing first mortgage, and the defendants represented that their mortgage did not contain an “alienation clause.” 1 During negotiations in November and again at the time of signing on December 11, 1967, alienation was discussed by the parties. The mortgage, which bore an interest rate of 6M%, did in fact contain an alienation clause. The bank later approved a mortgage application from the plaintiff made on February 2, 1968, for $230,000 at 7%.

December 11, the day the $30,000 check was given to the defendants, was a Monday. The next day Gallinaro made a deposit of $29,800 in the joint account of his mother and father in the Coolidge Bank. This deposit brought the total balance in the account to over $30,000. The deposit consisted of $7,087 in cash, the rest in checks. One of these checks was a treasurer’s check for $20,000 on the Garden City Trust Company. On Wednesday, December 13, Fitzpatrick brought the $30,000 check given by the plaintiff to the Coolidge Bank and asked that it be certified. The bank refused. He returned with the check on Friday, December 15, and made the same request. The bank again refused to certify the check, and an officer of the bank attached a slip to it containing the notation “uncollected funds.” Thereupon, Fitzpatrick called Miss Sylvia Katsenes (an attorney and the sister of Mr. Katsenes, who had drawn up one of the purchase and sale agreements) and told her the deal was off because the check had been twice presented and could be neither certified nor cashed. At no time thereafter were McHugh or Fitzpatrick offered $30,000 in cash or its equivalent.

On January 9, 1968, Fitzpatrick was notified by Mr. Katsenes that Gallinaro would be at the Suffolk registry of deeds on March 1 at 11 a.m. ready to take title to the property. The defendants did not appear, although the plaintiff was there, ready to go through with the transaction.

The judge found that the defendants were justified in re *10 fusing to carry out the terms of the agreement because of their inability to get the $30,000 deposit check certified. He also found that the misrepresentation concerning the alienation clause did not give rise to damages. The judge entered a final decree dismissing the bill, ordering a discharge of the recorded mortgage to the plaintiff and surrender of the note secured thereby to the defendants, and ordering the plaintiff to pay to the defendants’ counsel fees in the sum of $2,000.

1. The plaintiff argues that the finding that the defendants “could reasonably expect that within a day or so the purchaser would have deposited cash in the account so as to make the check good” was plainly wrong. This argument is based on the use of the phrase “within a day or so” and on what the plaintiff terms “normal procedure” in such a transaction contemplating the deposit of checks rather than cash. From a careful examination of the testimony we are unable to say that the trial judge was “plainly wrong” in making his finding. His finding must, therefore, stand. Yankee Network, Inc. v. Gibbs, 295 Mass. 56, 59.

2. The next point pressed is that the evidence required a finding that the check for $30,000 was accepted as payment of the deposit on the purchase and sale agreement. Whether a check is received and accepted as an absolute payment was a question of fact for the judge in view of all the circumstances attending its delivery. Dutton v. Bennett, 256 Mass. 397, 402. Emerson v. Deming, 304 Mass. 478, 483. We are finable to say from a review of the testimony that the judge was plainly wrong in his conclusion that the check was not in fact received as payment.

3. The plaintiff next argues that even if the check was not received as payment, the defendants were obligated to present the check properly to revive the underlying obligation. While we agree with the plaintiff’s premise, we are of opinion that the defendants properly presented the check, not once, but twice, that on both occasions certification was refused, and that therefore the defendants were justified in refusing to perform.

*11 General Laws c.

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Bluebook (online)
267 N.E.2d 649, 359 Mass. 6, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1054, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallinaro-v-fitzpatrick-mass-1971.