Kannavos v. Annino

247 N.E.2d 708, 356 Mass. 42, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 659
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 9, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 247 N.E.2d 708 (Kannavos v. Annino) 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
Kannavos v. Annino, 247 N.E.2d 708, 356 Mass. 42, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 659 (Mass. 1969).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

These bills in equity are brought by the vendees of real estate, fixtures, and personal property in *43 Ingersoll Grove, Springfield, against the vendors, to rescind the purchases made in 1965. The amended bills alleged that the vendees bought in reliance on the vendors’ fraudulent misrepresentations and concealment of material facts. Demurrers to the amended bills were overruled. The facts are stated on the basis of a confirmed master’s report. By final decree rescission of the purchases was ordered. The vendors appealed.

Kannavos and his wife acquired 11 Ingersoll Grove from the vendors (who are the trustees of Annino Realty Trust) on June 28, 1965. Kannavos and Bellas bought 71-73 and 79 Ingersoll Grove from the vendors on July 12, 1965. The situation as to each purchase is substantially the same. 2

Mrs. Annino (who at all pertinent times “was authorized to act and did act on behalf of . . . Annino Realty Trust”) had bought the Ingersoll Grove properties in 1961 and 1962. At that time there was a single family house on each property. Each house was, under the Springfield zoning ordinance, in a Residence A district, where multi-family uses are prohibited. This zoning has remained in effect at all times since 1961. Despite the zoning provisions, Mrs. Annino converted each single family house into a multifamily apartment building. 3 Each was furnished and rented as a multi-family dwelling. All the work of conversion was done “without obtaining any building permit,” as each trustee of the realty trust knew. Each trustee also knew that the use of the buildings for multi-family purposes was in violation of the zoning ordinance.

In 1965 Kenneth F. Foote was retained as real estate broker “to try to sell the properties.” He caused advertisements, of which the following is an example, to appear in Springfield newspapers: “Income gross $9,600 yr. in lg. single house, converted to 8 lovely, completely furn. (includ. TV and china) opts. 8 baths, ideal for couple to five free *44 with excellent income. By apt. only. Foote Realty." Each advertisement clearly advertised, in some form of words, the particular property as being income property of multi-family use.

Kannavos, a self-employed hairdresser, about thirty-eight years old, 4 read one advertisement. He “wanted to acquire some income real estate." He got in touch with Foote, who showed him the 11 Ingersoll Grove property and gave him income and expense figures obtained from Mrs. Armiño. Kannavos executed a purchase agreement to buy 11 Ingersoll Grove. The vendees had no lawyer representing them with respect to the negotiations, the agreement, or the final closing. An attorney representing a mortgagee, under a mortgage obtained by the vendees, drew and recorded the papers used at the closing, at which the vendors were also represented by an attorney “to check the adjustments."

“No statements were made by the . . . [vendors], by . . . Foote . . . [or by either attorney] at any time dining the negotiations or closing, to the . . . [vendees] with respect to zoning or building permits. The . . . [vendees] made no inquiry of the" vendors, Foote, or the vendors’ “attorney at any time before or during the closing with respect to zoning or building permits. All statements made by the" vendors, Foote, or the vendors’ attorney to the vendees “were substantially true and the . . . [vendees] do not complain of any spoken misrepresentation."

Mrs. Annino and Foote both represented to the vendees “that the property . . . consisted of eight . . . furnished apartments which were being rented to the public for multi-family purposes. They knew that Kannavos’ reason *45 for buying the property was to rent the apartments to the public. . . . Kannavos had no prior experience with real estate. He was unaware of any zoning or building permit violation and would not have purchased the property if he had known of any such violation.”

The sale of the other properties (71-73 and 79 Ingersoll Grove) occurred in substantially similar circumstances. Discussion of other property owned by the vendors started shortly before Kannavos acquired 11 Ingersoll Grove. The vendees saw an advertisement of the houses at 71-73 and 79 Ingersoll Grove in July, 1965, and then went to see them. Mrs. Annino and Foote “represented to . . . Kannavos and Bellas, that the property [71-73 and 79 Ingersoll Grove] was rented as multi-dwelling property and that Bellas and Kannavos could continue to operate it as multi-dwelling property. The . . . [vendees] continued to operate the buildings as multi-dwelling property up to and including the date of the hearing. The operation showed a profit . . . .” The vendors represented to Bellas that “71-73 [and] 79 Ingersoll Grove would be a good investment for him as rental multi-family real estate.”

“By . . . registered letters dated July 26, 1965 . . . the city . . . notified Bellas and Kannavos with respect to ... 79 Ingersoll Grove that the property was being used for multi-family purposes in violation of the building code and zoning ordinance . . . that the wiring was illegal and should be corrected by a licensed electrician with a valid building permit . . . and that the plumbing was in violation of the building code and should be corrected by a licensed plumber with a valid building permit .... By three registered letters of July 26, 1985 with respect to . . . 71-73 Ingersoll Grove, Bellas and Kannavos were notified by the Building Commissioner ... of the same violations of zoning, wiring, and plumbing.”

The two groups of vendees “had no actual knowledge of the zoning or building code violations until . . . notified” by the city authorities. The vendees promptly through *46 their attorney “notified the . . . [vendors] of the rescission of” each sale.

“Each property is worth substantially less if operated only as a single family dwelling instead of [as] a multifamily dwelling.” The city has started civil proceedings “to abate the use of each property as [a] multi-family” dwelling.

From his subsidiary findings summarized above the master concluded, among other things, that the vendors made no actual spoken misrepresentations; that they “intentionally withheld” from the vendees that the operation of .the. buildings “was in violation of the zoning ordinance”; that the vendors “represented . . . that the buildings . . . were being used as multi-family dwellings and ... in each case that the . . . [vendees] could continue” so to operate them; and that the vendees “would not have bought the real estate if . . . [they] had known of the violations of the zoning ordinance, or the building code.” He also concluded .that the vendees “relied upon representations of the . . . [vendors] and the appearances of the real estate in that it was being used for multi-family purposes” and that they “made no independent inquiry concerning any violation of the zoning ordinance or building code.” 5

From the master’s subsidiary findings, we draw our own conclusions. See Samia v. Central Oil Co. 339 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
247 N.E.2d 708, 356 Mass. 42, 1969 Mass. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kannavos-v-annino-mass-1969.