Zaidman v. Cohen

58 A.2d 118, 74 R.I. 19, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 2, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 A.2d 118 (Zaidman v. Cohen) 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
Zaidman v. Cohen, 58 A.2d 118, 74 R.I. 19, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 26 (R.I. 1948).

Opinion

*20 Condon, J.

This is a bill in equity for the cancellation of a mortgage on certain real estate on. Larch street in Providence belonging to Jacob S. Cohen, late of the town of Foster, deceased, who devised said real estate to his daughter Doris S. Zaidman, the complainant herein. The respondent, Samuel S. Cohen, is a brother of the deceased and the holder of an unrecorded transfer of that mortgage. Complainant claims that respondent was paid the full amount of the balance due on the mortgage on March 1, 1943 and that she is entitled to have the mortgage discharged on the record. After a hearing on bill, answer and proof, the superior court entered its decree denying and dismissing the bill of complaint. From that decree complainant has appealed to this court.

The appeal is based on two grounds, but on our view of the evidence it will be sufficient to consider only one, namely, that the decree is contrary to the evidence and the weight thereof. Complainant contends that she proved her case in the superior court by a fair preponderance of the evidence and that the trial justice clearly erred in finding to the contrary. We are of the opinion after considering the evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom that such contention is correct.

Jacob S. Cohen died on August 19, 1943 possessed of a substantial estate which he disposed of by will. He left the Larch street real estate to the complainant and did not state or otherwise indicate in his will that it was encumbered by a mortgage. On the contrary complainant testified that her father had told her on two occasions, *21 one in New York in March 1943 and the other in Boston, Massachusetts, on May 21, 1943, that the property was to be hers if anything happened to him and that it was free and clear. She also testified that the respondent said to her at the reading of her father’s will a few days after his funeral that she was a lucky girl and that he had held a mortgage on the property but now it was clear. Respondent denied that he ever made such a statement. However, complainant’s brother Herbert B. Cohen, who was present on that occasion, substantially corroborated her.

After her father’s death the complainant took over the management of the property and collected the rents from the tenants. Respondent was a tenant and he paid his rent regularly to the complainant. He did not inform her or anyone else that he held a mortgage on the property until the spring of 1946 when he told a prospective purchaser. And it was not until after the final hearing of the instant cause in the superior court in November 1946 that he demanded any payment of interest or principal on the mortgage. A satisfactory reason for such concealment cannot, in our opinion, be found anywhere in the record. Respondent testified concerning the transfer and his financial relations with his brother but such testimony is, to say the least, open in some particulars to inferences unfavorable to the respondent.

The circumstances surrounding the transfer were most peculiar. Jacob S. Cohen originally mortgaged the real estate in question to the Peoples Savings Bank in Providence for $6000 and by March 1, 1933 had reduced the mortgage to $3450, when it was transferred to the respondent. According to the respondent’s testimony, he did not go to the Peoples Savings Bank but gave his check for $3450 to his brother Jacob, who handed it to the bank and received the mortgage and note, together with other documents pertaining thereto, and also a transfer made out to Samuel S. Cohen. Respondent testified further that Jacob did not deliver those papers to him but kept the mortgage *22 and note which, he placed in his personal safe in the office of the Washington Finance Company of which he and respondent were directors; and that Jacob placed the transfer, the title policy, and a letter addressed to his wife informing her of the mortgage transfer, in a long manila envelope with the name “Sam” typed on it, in which respondent kept his personal papers. That envelope was kept in another safe, in the front office of the finance company, to which respondent had access.

After Jacob’s death respondent did not ask anyone in the finance company’s office to give him the mortgage and note nor did he ever ask the complainant or Jacob’s executor for those papers. And yet respondent claims that Jacob, at his death, owed him a balance of $2500 on the mortgage loan. He filed a claim against Jacob’s estate for the sum of $274.56, which was for expenses that he had incurred at the time of Jacob’s last illness and death in New York. That claim was paid without question, and he gave a receipt acknowledging that it was payment in full of his claim against the estate.

He did not file a claim for the balance due on the mortgage because, as he said, he knew enough about the law to know “that as far as real estate it has nothing to do with an estate.” Yet a short time before that explanation was given he had testified that he said at the reading of the -will: “I want you children to know that I have a legitimate claim, and I refuse to file the legitimate claim, of thirty-five hundred dollars.” He further testified that he did not state the basis of the claim and that he said, “Let’s forget it.” What he was referring to was the mortgage.

Thus, if respondent is to be believed, at one time he explains that he did not file a claim for the unpaid balance of the mortgage because he knew it was not a claim which could be filed against the estate, and at another time he says he did not file such a claim because he generously decided to “forget it.” Incidentally the balance is $2500 and not $3500, as he claimed. It is difficult to believe the *23 respondent in such circumstances. If he wished to forgive a mortgage debt which his brother Jacob owed him he knew that the only effective way to do it, assuming that he did not have the mortgage and note in his possession, was for him to record the mortgage transfer which he held and discharge the mortgage of record. He did neither.

On the witness stand respondent gave another explanation of his conduct in not asking for payment of the balance of the mortgage which is equally unconvincing. He said when the will was read he received an insurance policy in the amount of about $6000 which although originally payable to the complainant had been assigned to him, and that he decided in his own mind since he was receiving that sum he would not press for payment of the mortgage. If that was his intention why did he not then disclose to complainant his possession of the mortgage transfer? But a few days later he discovered there was a further assignment of the policy and that it was not payable to him after all. Instead of getting $6000 it developed that he received nothing.

Thus the reason which he gave for his silence now no longer existed. Thereafter the natural thing for him to have done would have been to apprise complainant of his ownership of the mortgage, if it was still unpaid. But he did nothing and neither asked for nor received a single payment of interest after Jacob’s death. Indeed, he allowed almost three years to pass without telling the complainant of the mortgage transfer which he held.

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Bluebook (online)
58 A.2d 118, 74 R.I. 19, 1948 R.I. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zaidman-v-cohen-ri-1948.