Manoog v. Miele

213 N.E.2d 917, 350 Mass. 204, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 711
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 213 N.E.2d 917 (Manoog v. Miele) 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
Manoog v. Miele, 213 N.E.2d 917, 350 Mass. 204, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 711 (Mass. 1966).

Opinion

Reardon, J.

This case involves a deficiency judgment and is here on the defendants’ exceptions to the judge’s refusal to give certain instructions to the jury and to his ex- *205 elusion of a question during trial. The facts are as follow.

On December 4, 1958, the defendants executed a $45,000 note secured by a mortgage on certain parcels of real estate. They defaulted on this note in May, 1962. Following notice on October 5, 1962, of his intention to foreclose, the plaintiff took possession of the premises on October 23, 1962. On October 26, 1962, nineteen days before the foreclosure sale, the plaintiff Manoog entered into an agreement with one Barber for the purchase and sale of the property described in the mortgage. Under the agreement Barber gave Manoog a $2,000 deposit and contracted to purchase the premises from him for $45,000, subject however to the acquisition of title by Manoog at the foreclosure sale. Manoog described the contract purchase price of $45,000 as a “fair price for that property” on October 26, 1962. The agreement further provided that Manoog was to receive from Barber as part of the purchase price a ten year mortgage in the sum of $35,000 at six per cent interest and was to pay a broker’s commission. Manoog “talked” to the defendant Snow about the agreement before it was executed but did not then or later disclose the purchase price. Before the foreclosure sale Manoog permitted Barber to occupy the premises and to bring trucks upon the property. At the foreclosure sale held on November 14, 1962, there were seven or eight people in attendance, including Barber, and the auctioneer made a general solicitation for bids. Manoog, however, was the sole bidder and, when his bid of $40,000 was accepted, he gave the auctioneer a $2,000 deposit in accordance with the terms of the sale as advertised. Sometime thereafter Manoog sold the land to Barber for $45,000. In this action the jury assessed a deficiency of $5,488.67 against both defendants. This figure reflected the total of the unpaid balance of the note, unpaid interest thereon to the date of sale, taxes paid by Manoog, and the costs of sale, with credits to the defendants for rents received by the plaintiff prior to sale, and such amounts as they had prepaid for the real estate taxes.

1. The question which was put to the plaintiff and excluded was, “You expected to keep the $45,000.00 when you *206 passed papers on' that property without disclosing it to Snów or Miele?” There was evidence that the plaintiff had never disclosed to the defendants the details of his agreement with Barher. Since the plaintiff never in fact disclosed the price, whether or not he had intended to disclose it was of no importance. The question asked was thus immaterial and the judge did not err in excluding it';

2. The judge, in charging the jury on the responsibilities of the mortgagee in. the circumstances described above, cited and quoted from West Roxbury Co-op. Bank v. Bowser, 324 Mass. 489, 492, where it was said, “It is familiar law that a mortgagee in exercising a power of sale in a mortgage must act in good faith and must use reasonable diligence to protect the interests of the mortgagor. . . . The burden is on the mortgagor (the defendants here) to prove that the mortgagee has failed in that duty. . .'. When, as was the fact here, ‘ a mortgagee ... is both seller1 and buyer, his position is one of great delicacy.- Yet,' when he has done his full duty to the mortgagor in his conduct of the sale under the power, and the bidding begins, in his capacity as bidder a mortgagee may buy as cheaply as he can, and owes no duty to bid the full value of the property as that value may subsequently be determined by a judge or a jury. ’ ” The judge continued his charge, “Now, the defendants have introduced evidence and a fact that is not disputed is that prior to the foreclosure sale plaintiff made an arrangement with one Mr. Barber to sell the property to him at a price of $45,000. The defendant [s] . . . [cMim] that under those circumstances there was á breach of the duty owed by the mortgagee in the mortgagee’s conduct df the foreclosure sale. That is a question of fact that you will have to determine. It is not a question of law, but Í can instruct you the defendant[s] . . . [argue] that you have a price differential there. ... You aré entitled td ask yourselves, also, these questions. Acting in good faith and with reasonable diligence, should Mr. Manoog have said to Mr. Barber when they were negotiating for á property, ‘Look, the property is going to be sold at a foreclosure sále. *207 Why don’t you show up at the sale and hid for yourself?’ Should he have refrained from entering into an agreement as a matter of good faith with Mr. Barber or were the terms of the agreement he entered into substantially different from the terms of the mortgage foreclosure itself so that it had no effect on the bidding? These are questions, Mr. Foreman, ladies and gentlemen, that you are going to have to decide and not questions of law upon which the Court can give you any instructions. So that with respect to the issues in the case, you must decide this issue. First, did the plaintiff act in good faith and did he exercise reasonable diligence in the conduct of the foreclosure sale? If your answer is the Plaintiff did act in good faith and in the exercise of reasonable diligence in the conduct of the foreclosure sale, then you would be warranted in finding for the plaintiff . . ..” In addition to giving the portions of the charge quoted above, the judge had granted one of the requests of the defendants for instructions to the jury to the effect that [t]he mortgagee, in foreclosing his mortgage has the duty of good faith and reasonable care to secure the highest price that the property can bring.” The judge, however, denied the defendants’ request that he charge the jury that the [p]laintiff, as foreclosing mortgagee is a trustee for the benefit of all persons interested, including the Defendant [s].”

There was no necessity for the judge to go further than he did in delineating the obligations of the mortgagee in this instance. The principles drawn from the West Roxbury Co-op. Bank case cited by the judge provide appropriate guidelines for the jury on the facts which had been laid before them. Cambridge Sav. Bank v. Cronin, 289 Mass. 379, 383. Union Mkt. Natl. Bank v. Derderian, 318 Mass. 578, 581-582. Andover Sav. Bank v. Basha, 326 Mass. 725, 727. Cohen v. Bay State Cafe, Inc. 341 Mass. 1, 5. The sense of the charge given to the jury was that the duty of acting with good faith and reasonable diligence imposed on the mortgagee was a strict one. What the judge had to say about the mortgagee’s duties placed them in their *208 proper perspective before the jury. The jury would have been confused rather than assisted by the employment of the word “trustee” in the judge’s charge, for there is no built-in magic in that word which would have added any more in the way of guidance than the judge conveyed without using it.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
213 N.E.2d 917, 350 Mass. 204, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manoog-v-miele-mass-1966.