Stewart v. Ticonic National Bank

72 A. 741, 104 Me. 578, 1908 Me. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 22, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 72 A. 741 (Stewart v. Ticonic National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Ticonic National Bank, 72 A. 741, 104 Me. 578, 1908 Me. LEXIS 108 (Me. 1908).

Opinion

King, J.

This case comes to the Law Court upon report. The facts from which it has arisen are as follows : The defendant bank, having a suit pending in the Supreme Judicial Court for Somerset County, against the estate of Napoleon B. Turner, at the September term, 1898, of said court, took a judgment and one execution for $2251.20 debt and $15.26 costs of suit against thegoods and estate of the testator. George K. Boutelle, president of the bank, acted as its attorney, and Mr. Stewart, the plaintiff in this suit, acted as attorney for the Turner estate. Certain real estate was seized on said execution and sold December 5, 1898 to the bank for $2182, in satisfaction of the execution.

Immediately thereafter the bank began three actions to recover possession of the real estate sold, one against the executor, one against the heirs, and one against the widow, of Turner.

Thereupon the plaintiff wrote Mr. Boutelle : "If the bank will stop these suits, and make him and the heirs and the widow no further expense, but let everything remain as it now stands until the first day of next November, a month and five days before the year’s redemption would expire, I will guaranty that he shall pay the whole amount due on the exn and take an assignment of it, and [581]*581of the sale; and in case he fails to do this by Nov. 1, 1899, I will pay the bank and take the assignment myself within fifteen days after Nov. 1, 1899.”

This guaranty was accepted and the writs not entered. Oct. 16, 1899, the plaintiff wrote Boutelle "Enclosed is check and agreement as per our interview of Saturday. Your signature as President of the Bank will be all right.” The agreement was signed and returned, and is as follows :

"Received of D. D. Stewart twenty-two hundred and ninety-one dollars, and in consideration of that sum the Ticonic National Bank of Waterville hereby agrees to assign to him a judgment recovered by said bank in the Supreme Judicial Court for the County of Somerset at its September Term A. D. 1898, against Napoleon B. Turner as executor of the estate of his father, Napoleon B. Turner, late of St. Albans in said County of Somerset, deceased; and said Ticonic National Bank also further agrees to convey to said D. D. Stewart, for the consideration aforesaid, by good and sufficient deed, without expense to him, all the right, title and interest which said bank acquired to the estate of the said Napoleon B. Turner, Senior, and of the said Napoleon B. Turner, Jr. by virtue of a sale upon Dec’r 5, 1898, on the execution issued upon the judgment aforesaid, said bank having been the purchaser at the officer’s sale of the real estate aforesaid, and received a deed of the same from the officer making said sale, which deed was duly recorded in the Registry of Deeds for said County of Somerset, and is to be referred to in the description of the property to be conveyed to said Stewart. Said assignment of said judgment, and said deed of said real estate to be made to him within thirty days after his request for the same. In the meantime he is to have full power and authority to avail himself of any rights or remedies that said bank may have at law, or in equity, touching said real estate, in the name of said bank, but without expense to said bank & saving them from all expense.
The Ticonic National Bank of Waterville.
By George K. Boutelle, President.
Waterville, Oct. 16, 1899.”

[582]*582At the December term of said court 1899, the plaintiff entered an action in the name of the bank against Mary C. Turner, widow of, and devisee under the will of, Napoleon B. Turner, to recover a part of the real estate sold on the execution.

The defendant had no knowledge that this suit was commenced and pending till September of the following-year when Mr. Boutelle was notified that the action was in order for trial, and he might be needed as a witness. To this action defense was made, that judgment and execution for both debt and costs had been entered and issued against the goods and estate of the testator contrary to the statute, and that the several parcels of land seized on the execution were sold in solido, of which defense this defendant was notified, and that the plaintiff would expect the bank to reimburse him for all expenses and loss in case the sale was held void. The defendant promptly repudiated any such liability. The case was reported to the Law Court and a decision in favor of the defendant was announced April 14, 1902 (Bank v. Turner, 96 Maine, 380).

Upon petition to the court at the September term 1902, presented by the plaintiff in the name of the bank, the record in the original suit was amended, proper judgment entered up, and execution issued on which the same real estate was seized and sold to other parties, Dec. 22, 1902, for $2613, which the plaintiff received.

The plaintiff claims to recover, as for money had and received, the amount he paid the bank on Oct. 16, 1899, with interest, together with $490.59 for his costs, disbursements and services in the suit against the widow, and in the subsequent proceedings to have the judgment corrected and the property resold, less the amount he received from said sale and interest, that difference being $617.33.

There is no evidence whatever that the defendant made any express representation ffo the plaintiff in respect to its judgment and execution against the Turner estate, or the sale of real estate thereon. If the defendant is under any liability to the plaintiff in the premises it must arise by operation of law from his payment to it of the amount due on the execution and its agreement to make the assignment and conveyance to him as specified in its written instrument of Oct. 16, 1899.

[583]*583The plaintiff claims that the case falls within the well settled rule that in the sale of a chattel there is an implied warranty that it exists, unless it clearly appears that the parties intended the contrary.

His position is that the defendant sold to him, and he bought of it, a judgment of court against the Turner estate, together with the interest in certain real estate acquired by the defendant as purchaser at an officer’s sale under said judgment, and that consequently the defendant must be held to an implied warranty that there was at the time of the sale such a subsisting valid judgment, and sufficient for the basis of a valid seizure and sale of said real estate ; that in fact no such judgment existed, whereby the defendant is liable to him for his resulting damages.

The learned plaintiff in his brief directs the attention of the court to a great number of cases where the principle is applied, that a mutual mistake of fact may authorize the rescinding of a contract, and that in the sale of a chattel there is usually an implied warranty that it exists. These principles are well settled. But what shall be deemed such a mutual mistake, and under what circumstances and conditions the law will imply such warranty, may not be easily determined in every case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A. 741, 104 Me. 578, 1908 Me. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-ticonic-national-bank-me-1908.