Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Cambell

111 A. 864, 95 Conn. 399, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 10, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 111 A. 864 (Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Cambell) 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
Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. v. Cambell, 111 A. 864, 95 Conn. 399, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 106 (Colo. 1920).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The complaint is brought under General Statutes, § 5113, to determine defendant Cam-bell’s adverse claim to number 117 Market Street, Hartford, which it alleges is owned in common by-plaintiff and defendant Cope, and to quiet and settle the title to the same.

Cambell’s claim is alleged to have arisen under a written agreement of sale by which, fairly' construed, the plaintiff and Cope agree to sell to the defendant Cambell these premises for $10,000, payable, $100 upon execution of agreement, and the balance, $3,900 in cash, the assumption of a first mortgage of $3,000 and a second mortgage to Cope of $3,000, upon tender of a warranty deed by Cope and an administrator’s deed by plaintiff. The agreement further provides that from the $10,000, Cope was to receive $500 in cash and the second mortgage of $3,000, and the plaintiff $3,500 in cash; that taxes and other details were to be adjusted as of date of deed, “the sale being made in behalf of the estate of George Cope subject to the order of the Probate Court and to the approval of the trustees” of the plaintiff.

The complaint further alleges that the plaintiff was in fact, prior to date of this complaint, authorized by the Court of Probate to sell these premises, but the trustees of plaintiff refused to approve of the sale and *402 have never so approved; that on January 19th, 1920, defendant Cambell duly caused to be recorded his copy of the. agreement in the land records of Hartford, claiming an interest in these premises under this agreement; that on January 21st, 1920, plaintiff tendered defendant Cambell the $100 paid on the purchase price at making of the agreement, and requested a release of the interest he claimed in these premises, but Cambell refused to accept this sum or deliver such release. Thereupon the plaintiff brought this action.

The record presents a number of departures from the settled practice in actions brought under this statute. We note at this point two. Prayers for relief one and two require the defendants, Cambell and Cope, to state by answer their claim, if any. Reference to General Statutes, § 5113, will disclose that such prayers for relief are out of place in a complaint under this statute.

In Foote v. Brown, 78 Conn. 369, 377, 62 Atl. 667, we construed this Act, stated the essentials of a complaint under it, and outlined the subsequent procedure with great particularity. It was there said: “A claim that the defendant be required to state the nature of his interests, etc., cannot properly be included in the prayer for relief. Any obligation of the defendant in this respect is determined by the requirements of the statute relating to his answer. Where the defendant has made no claim, he may deny the plaintiff’s allegation that he claims an adverse interest, but ordinarily in such case he would answer by disclaiming any interest.” The answer of Cambell admitted six paragraphs of the complaint and left plaintiff to its proof of the remaining paragraph. The plaintiff company demurred to the answer because defendant Cambell had not particularly set forth his adverse claim. Cam-bell was not required to set forth his claim at length; *403 the complaint had done this, and Cambell's admission and partial denial satisfies the requirements of pleading under this statute. “Where the complaint states truly the plaintiff’s ownership and defendant’s claim based on admitted facts showing the nature and extent of his title, the defendant’s answer should simply admit the allegations of the complaint, and thereupon the question of law determinative of the conflicting claims of title would be in issue. In other cases the defendant must comply with the statute in stating the nature of the interest which he claims.” Foote v. Brown, 78 Conn. 369, 377, 62 Atl. 667.

After the demurrers of plaintiff and Cope to the answer and cross-complaint of Cambell had been sustained, he filed a paper denominated “Amended Answer and Cross-complaint.” The amended answer admitted five of the paragraphs of the complaint and part of another paragraph, and then sets forth what purports to be a detailed statement of Cambell’s claim. The plaintiff moved to strike out paragraphs three, four and five of this answer, because similar allegations were alleged in the complaint and admitted. The motion was denied. It should have been granted: the allegations are obviously repetitions of those in the complaint.

The plaintiff demurred to the remaining allegations of this answer, because immaterial. These allegations, that Cambell was, up to January 20th, 1920, ready to carry out the agreement and repeatedly so informed plaintiff, and plaintiff repeatedly informed Cambell that it was ready to carry out the agreement and that the delay was due to the refusal of the widow of George Cope, its intestate, to approve, and because of differences between her and defendant Cope; that the market value of this property between August 25th, 1919, and January 20th, 1920, had greatly increased; that plaintiff never informed Cambell of its refusal to approve except *404 by service of the writ herein, and did not disapprove within a reasonable time, and did not notify Cambell of its approval or disapproval within a reasonable time, —were all admissible facts, helpful in deciding whether the plaintiff acted reasonably or not. Considered in connection with the admitted allegations of the complaint, these allegations should not be held to be immaterial. The allegation of paragraph seven, that on or about November 1st, 1919, Cambell proposed a rescission of the agreement and a return of the $100 to him, and that plaintiff refused, is one which would have an important bearing upon whether the plaintiff had by its conduct acquiesced in the terms of this agreement.

Cope demurred to the cross-complaint but not to the answer. His demurrer to the amended answer was overruled, and hence this decision forms no part of the appeal. The amended demurrer of Cope to the amended answer, demurs to the same paragraphs that the plaintiff does, because the same are immaterial. The demurrer was improperly sustained. So that upon the demurrers of plaintiff and Cope to the answer and amended answer, the only rulings forming a part of the appeal are those sustaining the demurrer to these paragraphs of the amended answer as immaterial.

The plaintiff and Cope demur to the cross-complaint, because the agreement of Cope and Cambell was indivisible. This demurrer was sustained. This was the correct construction of this agreement. We see nothing in the agreement which indicates a divisible agreement, one part to be performed by the plaintiff and one by Cope. The mere fact that Cope takes his half of the consideration in one form of payment and the plaintiff in another, does not divide the subject of the agreement or the terms of the sale. Nor is the fact that the administrator agrees to give an administrator’s deed and *405 Cope a warranty deed, of any significance. These were the usual forms of deeds for grantors in such relation to give.* The substantial parts of the agreement are interdependent and common to each other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 A. 864, 95 Conn. 399, 1920 Conn. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-connecticut-trust-co-v-cambell-conn-1920.