Court Opinion

ID: 6439462
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:15:38.842602+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:31.345417
License: Public Domain

Crosby, J.
This is an action of contract on a written order in favor of the plaintiff from The Homebuilders, Incorporated to the defendants which was accepted by them. The declaration is in two counts. The case is before this court on the first count only, since, on motion of the *354defendants, to the allowance of which the plaintiff did not except, there was a directed verdict for the defendants on the second count.
The first count alleges that the defendants accepted a written order* drawn on them by The Homebuilders, Incorporated in favor of the plaintiff upon which the defendants owe the plaintiff $1,384.50. At the conclusion of the evidence the plaintiff filed a motion that a verdict be directed in his favor, which was denied subject to his exception. The defendants at the close of the evidence filed a motion for the direction of a verdict in their favor; this was allowed subject to the plaintiff’s exception. The case is before us on these two exceptions.
It appears from the bill of exceptions that in July, 1926, the plaintiff entered into a contract with The Homebuilders, Incorporated, a corporation, to furnish standing finish, cabinet work, and stairs for eleven houses, which the corporation was then erecting on its land, for the price of $2,769. The defendants were construction mortgagees, and it was admitted by them at the trial that the plaintiff had delivered to The Homebuilders, Incorporated all of the material called for by his contract and to the amount claimed by him, and in accordance with the terms of the contract. The *355plaintiff received from the defendants $1,384.50 in four checks. A written agreement in the form of a construction mortgage between the defendants and The Homebuilders,' Incorporated was in force when the order was accepted and is embodied in the bill of exceptions.
The defendants held two construction mortgages on the lots of The Homebuilders, Incorporated. These mortgages and the two mortgage notes described in them respectively were admitted in evidence. Each mortgage was for $18,000 payable in six months from date, with interest at the rate of one per cent per month payable semiannually. The first mortgage is dated May 28, 1926, and is upon lots numbered four, six, eight, thirteen and fifteen; the second mortgage is dated June 19, 1926, and covers lots numbered three, seven, fourteen, sixteen and seventeen. A house was to be erected on each of the lots; the work of constructing the houses progressed relatively equally, and according to the contract, during the time of the first four payments provided for in the mortgage agreements, and these four payments were made by the mortgagees as they became due under the contract on all of the ten houses, and other money was advanced on some of the houses beyond the fourth payment, but not to the amount of the fifth payment. The defendants paid out on the mortgages a total of $27,622. In September, 1926, none of the houses had been completed: there remained to be done the installation of electric fixtures and some of the radiators, the placing of certain hardware and doors, most of the papering and painting, and all of the grading and walks. The rest of the work had been finished. The defendants refused to advance any more money on the mortgages, but The Home-builders, Incorporated was given the opportunity either to dispose of the houses, or to secure permanent loans thereon and to pay off the mortgages held by the defendants. The mortgagees advanced no money thereafter except for expenses.
In November, 1926, before the maturity of the mortgages, the mortgagor sold or secured permanent mortgages on three of the houses. The defendants executed partial *356releases of these houses and received payment for the amount they had advanced on them with interest and legal charges in connection therewith. In addition the defendants received from the mortgagor out of these transactions money which they distributed to certain creditors of the mortgagor, including the plaintiff, as requested by The Homebuilders, Incorporated. On January 17, 1927, the defendants began foreclosure proceedings upon the seven remaining houses, but before a sale was made thereunder they executed partial releases of two of these houses, which were disposed of by The Homebuilders, Incorporated and the defendants received the amount of their advancements on these two houses with interest and charges; in addition they received other money from The Homebuilders, Incorporated which was paid at its request by the defendants to certain creditors including the plaintiff. The defendants never paid to the plaintiff any of the money represented by the mortgages, but paid to him only such sums as were turned over to them for the purpose by The Homebuilders, Incorporated out of sales and permanent mortgage transactions. The plaintiff received nothing from the foreclosure sales. After further foreclosure proceedings instituted by the defendants, and postponements thereunder, the other five houses were sold at two sales, one in February and one in March, 1927, and the defendants received from these sales $16,595. Two of the houses were bid in for the mortgagees and resold by them. None of the houses was completed in accordance with the terms of the agreement between the defendants and The Home-builders, Incorporated.
The order accepted by the defendants recited that the sum named therein was to be deducted from the last payment. The defendants by their acceptance of the order did not agree unconditionally to pay said sum. It was a promise by the defendants to pay the plaintiff what would otherwise become due to The Homebuilders, Incorporated from the last instalment on each house. ■ The plaintiff as an assignee could have no greater right against the defendants than his assignor had. According to the terms of the contract be*357tween the defendants and The Homebuilders, Incorporated the last payment was not to become due and payable until forty-one days after the completion of the houses. There was no evidence to show that any of the houses were finished, but on the contrary the record shows that none of them was completed as called for by the contract. Accordingly, as The Homebuilders, Incorporated had not performed its contract with the defendants, it never became entitled to the last payment which would be due under the contract between the parties. It follows that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover upon the order, and the trial judge rightly directed a verdict for the defendants. O’Connell v. Root, 254 Mass. 218. Apart from the provision in the order that the sum named therein was to be deducted from the last payment, the building contract provided that “in case of a foreclosure all right to any of the payments' which shall not have been made shall absolutely cease and be ended.” As there was a foreclosure, it follows that The Homebuilders, Incorporated was not entitled to any payment after that time. Obviously it is not entitled to the last payment which at the time of foreclosure had not become due.
It is the contention of the plaintiff that the defendants: waived the provisions of the contract between themselves and The Homebuilders, Incorporated, and that the plaintiff.' was not obliged to prove that the last payment ever became* due. There is nothing in the record, however, to show that, the defendants ever waived any provision of their contract, where it was agreed that they were to advance the sum of $18,000 “provided all the terms of this contract are complied with on the part of said mortgagor.” The placing of permanent mortgages upon the houses by the mortgagor and the execution of partial releases by the defendants could not be found to be a waiver by them that the houses were to be built and completed in accordance with the terms of the contract. The cases of Shepard v. Abbott, 179 Mass.. 300, Swartzman v. Babcock, 218 Mass. 334, and Gallner v. William W. Babcock Co.. 237 Mass. 265, are distinguishable in their facts from the case at bar.
*358There was no error in denying the plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict, or in the allowance of the defendants’ motion that a verdict be directed in their favor.

Exceptions overruled.

Amesbury, Massachusetts 69 Congress Street July 29, 1926
E. Harold Stoneman & Clara Balter
31 Milk Street Boston, Massachusetts Gentlemen:
Pay to the order of A. M. Joly of Salem, Mass., two thousand seven hundred sixty-nine dollars ($2769.00) and deduct same from the mortgage loans on our property at Amesbury, Mass. This amount is to be deducted from the last payment.
Yours very truly,
Homebuilders, Inc.,
Wm. J. Mattson Pres.-
WJM/N S. J. Benoit ■ Treas.
E. Harold Stoneman & Clara Balter do hereby accept this order.
E. Harold Stoneman Clara Balter
by E. H. Stoneman