Haddad v. Clark

43 A.2d 221, 132 Conn. 229, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 28, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 43 A.2d 221 (Haddad v. Clark) 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
Haddad v. Clark, 43 A.2d 221, 132 Conn. 229, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 188 (Colo. 1945).

Opinion

Brown, J.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to have the court impress a constructive trust for her benefit upon land in Willimantic owned by the defendant Clara C. Clark and order it conveyed in discharge of this trust. From the court’s judgment for the defendants the plaintiff has appealed. In July, 1942, *230 Ruth B. O’Neil was the owner of three contiguous pieces of land, one of which, with a small adjoining portion of another, is the land in question. The first piece fronted on Church Street on the west and Prospect Street on the south (100.77 feet), and it was bounded on the east in part, for a distance of one hundred feet, by the second parcel, which fronted twenty-five feet on Prospect Street, and in part by the third parcel, which was to the north of the second. The third parcel extended easterly to Bellevue Street. Bounding-the second parcel on the east was property of the defendant Clara C. Clark. There was a house with a garage at the rear upon the first piece.

These tracts had been acquired by Mrs. O’Neil by three deeds of different dates. The second and third pieces and the Clark land had previously belonged to a common owner. In July, 1942, there was a bank or terrace along the westerly side of the second parcel contiguous to the first. This comprised a rather sharp turfed slope, about two feet in height along its more northerly portion, and increasing to two or three times that height as it extended southerly to Prospect Street. From the top of this bank the surface of the land extended easterly across the second parcel and the Clark property at substantially the same level and there was nothing indicating the division line between them. There were several trees along the westerly boundary line of the second parcel and a row of rhododendron bushes extended along it for from twenty to twenty-five feet near its northerly end. There was a retaining wall along the Prospect Street frontage of the first and second' parcels, but there was a clear break in it at the division line, the wall in front of the second being more than a foot higher than that in front of the first and the masonry work in front of one being different in appearance from that in front of the *231 other. The wall in front of the second parcel continued at the same height in front of the Clark property and it had the appearance of one continuous wall. Accordingly, upon inspection the second parcel appeared to be a part of the Clark property rather than of the O’Neil property.

In 1940, the defendant Herbert T. Clark, referred to herein as the defendant, who had owned the Clark property since 1931, conveyed it to his wife Clara and they continued living there. He was a real estate broker, and Mrs. O’Neil, who had lived in the O’Neil house with her husband until 1932, when upon his death she moved to New London, listed the first and third parcels with the defendant for sale. She agreed that when the rest of her property was sold she would sell him the second parcel. He knew that it was her intention to convey to him also a small triangular piece out of the third parcel, adjoining the second parcel on the north, to straighten his north boundary line.

In the spring of 1942, the plaintiff, who had long been a resident of Willimantic and was a very intelligent woman of many years’ business experience, and who owned several pieces of real estate, desired to purchase a property for a residence. At her request the defendant met her on the O’Neil property and showed her through the house; afterwards she walked with him through the land and out over it to Bellevue Street. He told her that the easterly boundary line was “somewhere in the terrace” and pointed out the approximate boundary lines of the third parcel as subsequently described in the agreement hereafter referred to. They went over the property again two weeks later and the plaintiff then offered $9000, instead of the $10,000 asked, for the property, including the frontage on Bellevue Street. After the defendant later *232 told her that Mrs. O’Neil would accept her counter offer of $9000, he again took her through the house and over the land, but this time nothing was said concerning boundaries. A few days later, after carefully examining a written agreement submitted by the defendant, the plaintiff under date of July 9, 1942, joined with Mrs. O’Neil in executing it. It provided for the purchase, for $9000, of two tracts of land separately described, parcels one and three referred to above, with the exception of the small triangular piece, at the southwesterly corner of the latter, mentioned in the preceding paragraph. The agreement defined the southerly line of parcel one as running from the southwesterly corner of the premises “easterly by the northerly fine of Prospect Street about 100.77 feet to'land formerly of Jerome B. Baldwin,” and continued, “thence northerly by said Baldwin land,” no mention being made of the Clark land.

At no time did the defendant either tell the plaintiff that Mrs. O’Neil owned parcel two or the triangular piece, or that this land was not included in the sale. At no time did either'Mrs. O’Neil or the defendant tell the plaintiff that they were selling her the entire property owned by Mrs. O’Neil. On August 10,1942, after a prepared warranty deed and a mortgage back had been read in the presence of the plaintiff, each of which embodied the description of the two tracts substantially as set forth in the agreement, she agreed that they were in proper form, and the deeds were thereupon executed and delivered. On August 22, 1942, Mrs. O’Neil conveyed to the defendant Clara C. Clark the second parcel and contiguous triangular piece. Several months later, the plaintiff, upon being informed of this conveyance, learned for the first time that Mrs. O’Neil had owned land other than that which had been conveyed to the plaintiff. Upon the *233 defendant’s refusal, after repeated requests by her, to sell this land to her, this suit was instituted. The facts found by the court as summarized above are not subject to correction.

By her brief the plaintiff expressly confines her claimed right to relief to one for actionable nondisclosure by the defendant. Furthermore, she accepts the following principles of law, which the trial court adopted from the Restatement, Restitution, § 8. To be actionable for fraud, the nondisclosure must be by a “person intending or expecting thereby to cause a mistake by another to exist or to continue, in order to induce the latter to enter into or refrain from entering into a transaction. . . . Comment b. . . . Non-disclosure is a failure to reveal facts. It may exist where there is neither representation nor concealment. Except in a few special types of transactions . . . there is no general duty upon a party to a transaction to disclose facts to the other party . . . [but] a person who, before the transaction is completed, knows or suspects that the other is acting under a misapprehension which, if the mistake were mutual, would cause the transaction to be voidable, is under a duty to disclose the facts to the other.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A.2d 221, 132 Conn. 229, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haddad-v-clark-conn-1945.