Kiley v. Doran

134 A. 792, 105 Conn. 218, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 18, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 134 A. 792 (Kiley v. Doran) 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
Kiley v. Doran, 134 A. 792, 105 Conn. 218, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 21 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Haines, J.

The present dispute had its inception in a contract and receipt made the 9th day of June, 1902. It reads as follows:

“Received, Stamford, June 9, 1902, from Frances Doran, five hundred dollars, to be applied on purchase price of land of Estate of John Kiley on Chapel Street, Stamford, an agreement for the sale of which has been made with John Gagan for the sum of $1200 and the deed of which is to be delivered as soon as the administration account of the Estate of James Kiley dec’d. can be settled. At the time of delivery of deed John Gagan is to execute to said Frances Doran a mortgage for $500 subject to a mortgage for $700 to be made to the Stamford.Savings Bank.
Michael Kenealy and
Catherine Shea
Guardians, by
Michael Kenealy.”

There appears to be no disagreement as to the following facts: The title to this property was at this time vested in the seven minor sons of John Kiley, to whom it came by inheritance, but the estate of James Kiley, the deceased owner, was not settled. Michael Kenealy was an attorney, as were his sons, Edward and Matthew, and all practiced law in the same office in Stamford. Michael Kenealy was an uncle of the Kiley boys, was on terms of intimacy with them, educated them and some of them lived with him. He was the legal guardian of five of them, and Catherine Shea was the guardian of the other two. The oldest boy became of age in 1903, the plaintiff in 1908, and the *221 youngest in 1912. For some years and to the time this paper was executed, Gagan Was one of the tenants of the four-family house in question. On March 29th, 1902, written applications were made to the Court of Probate; one signed by Michael Kenealy as guardian for five of said minors, and the other by Catherine Shea as guardian for the other two minors. These applications are identical in form and date. On April 10th, 1902, after due hearing on these petitions, the Court of Probate of Stamford passed an order for the sale of this property. And the same day Michael Kenealy gave five bonds of $2,000 each, with surety, to account for the avails of the sale of the five-sevenths interest of his wards, and Catherine Shea gave two bonds identical in form, for $2,000 each, to account for her two wards. Two pieces of real estate were involved, the first being sold to a third party, and the second being the real estate which is the subject of this litigation. Upon the payment of the $500 mentioned in the receipt, Gagan took complete control of the property, listed it for taxation in his own name, and assumed all other charges and collected and retained all rents and income, and continued to do so until his death in 1923, and neither the Kileys nor anyone in their behalf made any demand for or upon the property or any of the income therefrom. Miss Doran, the defendant, was a niece of the Gagans, the executrix and devisee under the will of John Gagan, and is the same party mentioned in the paper referred to. Since the death of Gagan she has been in possession and maintained the property and collected and retained the rentals. Michael Kenealy died in January, 1916. Mrs. Gagan, Catherine Shea, and Edward Kenealy and two of the Kiley boys were also deceased when this action was brought. No deed was ever given or tendered to John Gagan or to the defendant, *222 on behalf of the Kileys, though they asked Michael Kenealy on several occasions for the deed. His reply was, in effect, that, he would attend to the matter as soon as he could get around to it. Mr. Kenealy died in 1916 without doing so. Thereafter both his sons gave more or less attention to the matter. The year after his death, his son Edward informed Miss Doran that she “was in a fair way to lose the $500” which she had loaned Gagan when the contract was made in 1902. As a result of this suggestion, she paid Edward $700 in cash. The. Kileys later refused to accept this money, and the plaintiff soon after began to buy the interests of his brothers and so acquired all of them. The $700 was turned over by Edward to his mother, who was the executrix of the will of Michael Kenealy, and she deposited it in a trust company where it has since remained. From an examination of the record, it becomes apparent that the significance and importance of many of the challenged paragraphs of the finding are dependent upon the construction the court puts upon the contract. On the other hand, if the defendant’s construction of the contract is correct, then many of these paragraphs of the finding become unimportant.

The court held that by the terms of the contract, Gagan assumed an obligation to pay $700 more to the Kileys before he could become the owner of the property, and that it was incumbent upon him to proceed within a reasonable time to do this in fulfilment of his obligation to them. The conclusion logically followed thab not having so performed for more than twenty-one years, Gagan had been guilty of laches, and the court so finds in one paragraph, and adds the conclusion that Gagan had thus forfeited and abandoned the contract. We are unable to concur in the trial court’s interpretation of the contract, When $500 was ac *223 cepted by Michael Kenealy and this paper drawn by him and executed and delivered to Gagan, the latter owed no further duty to the Kileys, until they tendered him a deed, and, by the contract, they were bound to do this as soon as the administration account of the estate of James Kiley, deceased, could be settled. They have failed and neglected to do so, and the sole responsibility for the delay must rest upon them.

A detailed and careful study of the transcript of evidence before us, satisfies us that some of the paragraphs of the finding, which are covered by the reasons of appeal, should go out. Some of them are not supported by evidence, and some are legal conclusions, while others become quite unimportant in the construction we put on the contract. For these reasons we strike out paragraphs thirteen, the last four words of twenty-seven, twenty-nine, the last sixteen words of thirty, thirty-one, thirty-eight, forty, forty-six, forty-seven, forty-eight, fifty-one, sixty-four, sixty-five, sixty-six, sixty-seven, sixty-nine, seventy, seventy-two, the third word in seventy-seven, eighty, eighty-one and eighty-two. Paragraph seventy-nine, to the effect that the plaintiff was the owner in possession February 3d, 1923 (upon the death of Gagan) and was dispossessed by the defendant, is a legal conclusion which we eliminate from the finding on our own motion. The following paragraphs of the counter finding are supported by evidence, which was not disputed upon the trial: Paragraphs eleven, fourteen, seventeen, eighteen, twenty, twenty-two, twenty-three, twenty-eight, thirty-four, forty-three, forty-five and forty-seven, and these are added to the finding. Briefly stated, they are to the effect that April 10th, 1902, the Court of Probate of Stamford passed an order authorizing the sale of two adjoining pieces of property belonging to the Kiley estate, one of which was the *224 property in question. When the claimed sale was made by Michael Kenealy, the $500 paid him, and the receipt (Exhibit 1) drawn and executed, he handed it to Gagan, saying: “Mr. Gagan the place is now yours,” and from that time Gagan exercised all acts of an owner in possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 A. 792, 105 Conn. 218, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kiley-v-doran-conn-1926.