Livermore v. Aldrich

59 Allen 431
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1850
StatusPublished

This text of 59 Allen 431 (Livermore v. Aldrich) 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
Livermore v. Aldrich, 59 Allen 431 (Mass. 1850).

Opinion

The opinion of the court, (Metcalf J., did not sit,) contains a sufficient statement of the facts and pleadings in the case.

Fletcher, J.

The amended bill in this case sets out, that ' on or about the 18th day of March, 1846, the plaintiff made an agreement with one William Parsons, Jr., by which Parsons agreed to convey to her or to whomsoever she should direct in writing, a certain estate in Boston, upon the payment to him of the sum of $12,500, within sixty days from the time of the agreement, with interest from that time ; that the plaintiff entered into a negotiation with the defendant Aldrich, with a view to obtain his aid in raising the $12,500, to pay for the estate; and that various plans and arrangements were formed and entered into "between them for this [432]*432purpose, but which all failed and were abandoned and given up; when it was finally agreed between them, as follows, to wit, that the plaintiff should give him an order on Parsons, requesting him to transfer the title of the estate to the defendant ; that the defendant, upon the receipt of the title and simultaneously therewith, should mortgage the estate to the New England mutual life insurance company, for the sum of $10,000, to be received from them and paid to Parsons in part fulfilment of the condition of the contract, and with this $10,000, and $504 to be borrowed of the plaintiff, and other moneys of his own sufficient for that purpose, should pay Parsons the whole sum due by the condition of the contract, which was then supposed to be about $12,600; that before any other deed of the estate was made, or any further incumbrance of any kind was placed thereon, he would then pay the plaintiff the sum of $504, borrowed of her as aforesaid, and the sum of $3000, in money, and would execute to her an absolute deed of the premises, subject to the mortgage to the New England mutual life insurance company, for $10,000, and to a mortgage to Scribner and Cooledge, the other' defendants, for the sum of $6000; that when this arrangement was fully completed, he would make the mortgage to Scribner and Cooledge, for the sum of $6000; and that in the mean time, and before the payment was made, and the deed executed to the plaintiff, the deed so taken by the defendant Aldrich was to be of no effect or force whatever, save as a deed of the estate in trust for the plaintiff.

In compliance with this agreement, the plaintiff gave Aldrich an order in writing to Parsons, to execute a deed of the estate to Aldrich, according to the agreement. This order was dated April 9th, 1846, but was not delivered until April 24th, 1846. Upon the presentation of this order to Parsons, he made a deed of the estate to Aldrich, and Aldrich, at the same time, made a mortgage of the estate to the New England mutual life insurance company, to secure his note to them for $10,000, which, with the sum of $504, borrowed of the plaintiff, and about the sum of $2050, in addition thereto, amounting in all to about the sum of $12,550, the defendant paid to [433]*433Parsons, in full compliance with the contract made with him as before set forth. Aldrich then duly executed a deed conveying the estate to the plaintiff, upon condition that she should pay the two mortgages aforesaid, the mortgage to the New England mutual life insurance company, and the mortgage (thereafter to be executed) to Scribner and Cooledge, amounting in all to the sum of $16,000 ; which deed, after consulting her legal adviser, and by his advice, the plaintiff accepted, and the same was duly delivered to her.

By the request of Aldrich, the plaintiff" did not put her deed on record, but delivered it to her brother, Horatio G. Liver-more, who, by the request of Aldrich, accompanied him to New York, there to receive the sum of $3504, in fulfilment of the contract made by Aldrich as before stated. On the passage to New York, the deed made by Aldrich to the plaintiff, and delivered to and accepted by her, was privately abstracted from the possession of her brother, under circumstances which induced the plaintiff to believe that it was done by Aldrich. Upon the arrival of Aldrich and Horatio G. Livermore at New York, after various shifts and experiments, and under various pretences, Aldrich wholly failed and refused to pay the $3504, and finally made and delivered an absolute deed of the estate to Scribner and Cooledge, so that the plaintiff has wholly lost her estate.

The bill charges upon Aldrich the fraudulent purpose and design of defrauding the plaintiff of her estate, and sets out various acts and things as manifesting such fraudulent intent. It also charges that Scribner and Cooledge had full knowledge of all the facts, and fraudulently cooperated with Aldrich to defraud the plaintiff of her estate.

The bill alleges, that Aldrich, if he had performed his contract, would have made by the business about $500, and that Scribner and Cooledge took possession of the estate under their deed. And the bill prays, that Aldrich, Scribner, and Cooledge may be decreed to make and deliver to the plaintiff a deed conveying to her a good and perfect title to the premises, subject to the mortgage to the New England mutual life insurance company, upon the payment to them of the sum of [434]*434money so paid by Aldrich to Parsons, after deducting therefrom the following sums, namely, the sum of $10,000 borrowed of the New England mutual life insurance company, the sum of $504, borrowed of the plaintiff, and the amount received by Scribner and Cooledge from the rents of the estate, since they took possession thereof; that an account may be taken of the rents and profits of the estate since it came to the possession of Scribner and Cooledge ; and for such other and further relief as may seem meet.

It was conceded, at the hearing, on the part of the plaintiff, that, in support of the bill, no agreement was relied on as •made in writing, other than the deeds, documents, and letters recited or referred to in the bill, which are to be considered under the demurrer.

There is a demurrer to the bill, which states for cause, that the plaintiff has not shown in her bill, that the trusts concerning land in the bill set forth were created or declared in any writing, signed by the party alleged to have declared the same, or his attorney; nor are these alleged trusts such as arise or result by implication of law; and so this court has no jurisdiction in equity of the subject-matter of the bill. It was assumed in the argument by both sides, that the estate was of the value of $16,000, and it may be so taken for the purposes of the consideration of the court.

This court, as a court of equity, has no jurisdiction of matters of fraud, except when such matters arise indirectly in cases, in which the court has equity jurisdiction. But jurisdiction in this case is claimed on the ground of a trust; and it is maintained on the part of the plaiti'tiff, in the first place, that the bill discloses resulting trust, or a trust by operation Cc law.

When land is purchased, and the conveyance of the legal estate is taken in the name of one person, and the consideration is paid by another, the trust of the legal estate results to the person who advances the purchase-money, and the party named in the conveyance is a trustee for the party from whom the 'consideration proceeds. So, if only a part of the purchase-money is paid by the third party, there will be a resulting trust [435]*435in his favor pro tanto.

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1 Johns. Ch. 57 (New York Court of Chancery, 1814)
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19 F. Cas. 1218 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1824)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Allen 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livermore-v-aldrich-mass-1850.