Sanchirico v. Di Santo

18 A.2d 333, 66 R.I. 161, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 20, 1941
StatusPublished

This text of 18 A.2d 333 (Sanchirico v. Di Santo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanchirico v. Di Santo, 18 A.2d 333, 66 R.I. 161, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 16 (R.I. 1941).

Opinion

*162 Moss, J.

This is a suit in equity to compel specific performance by the respondent of a certain agreement between him and the complainant. Thereby, according to the allegations of her bill, it was agreed that he would convey to her, for the sum of $4650, certain described real estate covered by an agreement between him as vendee and the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, hereinafter called the H. O. L. C., as vendor, for the sale and conveyance of such real estate.

In this bill it is also alleged, in substance and effect, that according to the aforesaid agreement, between the complainant and the respondent, the conveyance from him to her would be made as soon as he had received a deed of such real estate from the H. O. L. C. and would be subject to a purchase-money mortgage, to be made by the respondent to the H. O. L. C. and to be paid in monthly installments; and that the consideration from the complainant for such conveyance by the respondent would be the sum of $4650, as follows: $150 paid by her at the time of the making of this agreement between them, the assumption by her of the aforesaid mortgage and of the payment of the sum secured thereby, and the payment by her to him, upon the delivery of the deed, of the difference between $4500 and the sum secured by such mortgage.

It is further alleged in the bill of complaint that for the above-mentioned sum of $150 the respondent gave to the complainant a written receipt dated “Providence, R. I., December 1, 1939” and signed by the respondent, and the body of which reads as follows:

“I have received from Filomena Sanchirico of Providence the sum of One Hundred Fifty Dollars ($150.00) on account of the purchase price of a dwelling house lo *163 cated at No. 422 Broadway, Providence, Rhode Island. The purchase price to be Forty Six Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($4650.00).
“The purchaser agrees to assume the mortgage on said property and the balance to be paid in cash at the time of the delivery of a Warranty deed.”

In the bill of complaint certain supplementary and incidental relief is prayed for, but we need not concern ourselves with this phase of the cause.

The respondent filed an answer, in which he admitted the allegations of two of the paragraphs of the bill of complaint. These are the first, in which it is alleged that the respondent entered into an agreement with the H. O. L. C. and thereunder purchased the aforesaid real estate; and the fifth, in which it is alleged that on December 8, 1939, the respondent obtained title to this real estate by a proper deed of conveyance from the H. O. L. C. and gave to that corporation a mortgage on that real estate for the sum of $4050. The allegations of the other paragraphs of the bill he either denied or else neither admitted nor denied and put the complainant upon the proof thereof.

By way of further answer, and also by way of a cross-bill, in which he brought in, as parties respondent thereto, Gennaro Onorato and Isotta Onorato, husband and wife, he alleged that the above agreement was indefinite, uncertain and incomplete, and therefore not susceptible of enforcement. The statute of frauds was not brought into the cause in any way.

The only other allegations in this part of the answer that were seriously relied on at the hearing on the merits of the cause were that the performance of the alleged agreement depended on the consent or approval of the H. O. L. C., which, at the time of this agreement, owned this real estate and at the time of the filing of this answer held a mortgage *164 covering such real estate, and that it withheld such consent or approval; that performance of the alleged agreement would expose the complainant and respondent to prosecution by the federal authorities; that the complainant and the Onoratos had conspired together against the H. O. L. C. to get the property from the H. O. L. C. for the Onoratos; and that the H. O. L. C. might prosecute the respondent and the complainant and the Onoratos, should the alleged agreement between him and the complainant be performed.

At the conclusion of the hearing of the cause on its merits, in the superior court, the justice before whom it was heard rendered a decision, in which he made it clear that he was convinced that an agreement substantially as alleged in the bill of complaint had been proved; and that it was not indefinite, but was adequate, in view of the proven circumstances. In substance and effect he also found that the respondent refused to perform that agreement, not by reason of opposition by the H. O. L. C., but for some different reason or reasons not made clear by the respondent. He also found that no such conspiracy by the complainant and the Onoratos nor any such danger of prosecution by the H. O. L. C. or the federal authorities, as had been charged by the respondent, was proved; and after examining the evidence we cannot hold that these findings were against the evidence or the weight thereof.

On this decision a decree was entered, for specific performance of this agreement in accordance with its terms, and denying and dismissing the cross-bill. From this decree an appeal was taken by the respondent on the grounds that it was against the law and against the evidence and the weight thereof.

The following facts were shown by the evidence.' Prior to November 20, 1936, Gennaro Onorato and his wife were the owners in fee of the real estate involved in this cause, which was one of .five adjoining apartment' houses, in one of the *165 others of which, two doors away, the respondent, at the time of the events directly involved in this cause, had his office as a physician. The Onoratos on the above date lived in one of the apartments in their house. They had executed a mortgage on this property of theirs to the H. O. L. C. for $8500.

For breach of the conditions of this mortgage and in exercise of the power of sale therein, the H. O. L. C., on November 20, 1936, sold this property at public auction and bought it in. The evidence does not show at what price it was bought in or whether or not the Onoratos or either of them, after thé sale, remained indebted to the H. O. L. C. Thereafter and until the date of the conveyance, hereinafter described, from that corporation to the respondent, it managed the property through agents, collecting the rents and paying the taxes and other expenses. During this period the Onoratos continued to live in the apartment in which, they had been living, but under a sublease from one of their relatives who had obtained a lease from the H. O. L. C.

On October 2, 1939, the respondent made, to the real estate broker who was in charge of the property for the H. O. L. C., an application to purchase this property from the H. O. L. C. for $4500. One week later the complainant, through her husband, made to the same broker an application to purchase the property from the H. O. L. C. for $4600. The assistant state manager of that corporation, who was called as a witness for the respondent, testified that, so far as he could ascertain, the latter application did not reach the office of the H. O. L. C. No evidence to the contrary was introduced.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A.2d 333, 66 R.I. 161, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanchirico-v-di-santo-ri-1941.