Judges: Dolan
Filed Date: 11/26/1940
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/9/2024
This is an action of contract in two counts, in which the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for alleged breaches of alleged agreements by the defendant to send a tax bill for the 1935 taxes on certain real estate, purchased by the plaintiff from the defendant in 1935; and of an agreement alleged to 'have been made by the defendant in 1937 to refrain from foreclosing the mortgage, given by the plaintiff to the defendant as part of the purchase price of the real estate involved, until the plaintiff had an opportunity to adjust the costs and interest due the city of Boston in connection with the taxes for 1935. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on each count but under leave reserved, upon motion of the defendant, the judge ordered that a verdict be entered for the defendant on each count. The plaintiff duly excepted.
The evidence tended to show the following facts. The plaintiff purchased the real estate involved from the defendant on May 20, 1935, and gave a mortgage back in part payment of the purchase price. At that time the defendant had not received the bill for the taxes for the year 1935, which the mortgage deed provided were to be paid by the plaintiff. The defendant was represented by counsel when the papers were passed. At the request of the plaintiff he promised that the tax bill for 1935 would be sent to the plaintiff when received by the defendant. A similar promise was made later by a clerk employed by the defendant. The plaintiff did not pay the 1935 tax bill, and made no inquiry
It is unnecessary to consider questions concerning the authority of the defendant’s counsel or employees to make the promises upon which the plaintiff relies, since it is not shown that any of them was supported by consideration. There is nothing to show that, when the papers by which the defendant conveyed the premises involved to the plaintiff and the plaintiff gave the mortgage back were passed, the promise of the defendant’s counsel, that the tax bill for 1935 would be sent to the plaintiff when received by the defendant, was any part of the consideration for the purchase of the real estate by the plaintiff or a condition thereof. Clearly the subsequent promise of the defendant’s employee cannot be said to be other than gratuitous. The record does not disclose that the promise of the defendant’s counsel, to refrain from foreclosing the mortgage until the plaintiff had an opportunity to secure an abatement of the costs and
Exceptions overruled.