Court Opinion

ID: 3319976
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:37:35.29538+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:59:43.251750
License: Public Domain

The plaintiffs seek the specific performance of a contract to convey certain land belonging to the estate of A. S. Blake, late of Waterbury, deceased, which estate is now in the process of settlement in the Court of Probate; or, failing in that, damages for the breach of said contract. This redress is sought against one Root, who is the administrator of said estate but sued in his individual capacity, and two other persons, who are the only heirs at *Page 231 
law of said deceased. The contract which is made the foundation of the action is one signed by said Root as administrator, and by him alone. The trial court having found against the allegation of the complaint that Root, in making said contract, acted as the agent of the two heirs at law, the plaintiffs expressly disclaimed before us all right to have either a specific performance or damages at the hands of these two defendants. There remains, therefore, to be considered, the rights to redress which the plaintiffs claimed to have by virtue of the contract, as one made by the defendant Root in some other capacity than as agent for his codefendants.
It is unnecessary to inquire as to what the results might have been had the contract been couched in unconditional terms providing for the vesting of the title to the property in question in the plaintiffs, since such was not the character of the contract he signed. His undertaking embodied the stipulation that the deed called for was "to be given as soon as possible after estate is advertised and the deed can be given." What did the parties intend by the insertion of this provision, and what significance did they intend for it in its relation to the other provisions with which it is associated? Contracts are to be construed according to the words used, the subject-matter, the context, and the intention of the parties. Bigelow v.Benedict, 6 Conn. 116, 121. In arriving at the intent of the parties, their situation and the circumstances connected with and surrounding the transaction should be considered.Bartholomew v. Muzzy, 61 Conn. 387, 393, 23 A. 604.
When the writing in question, embodying the undertaking of this defendant Root, was made, all the parties concerned in it knew that the property to which it related was a part of the estate of Blake, that Root was the administrator thereof and acting in the premises as such administrator, that his two codefendants were the sole heirs at law of said Blake, that an order of the Court of Probate was necessary to enable a conveyance to be made, and that the conveyance could be made by an administrator's *Page 232 
deed only. Under such circumstances, the insertion in the contract of the stipulation recited assumes an obvious importance and conveys a declaration of the intention of the parties, not to be mistaken, that the obligation to convey was not one to convey in any and all events, but one which contemplated a compliance with the statutory requirements as a condition precedent. As that condition has not been satisfied, there has been no breach of the agreement.
The plaintiffs urge that as Root was instrumental in bringing about unfavorable action by the Court of Probate upon his application for an order of sale, he is personally estopped from availing himself of the fact that the condition precedent to his obligation to give title never came into existence.
This contention is unsound. He presented the matter to the Court of Probate for its determination and action. Thereafter the matter was out of his hands and he was powerless to control the issue. He did that which was required of him when the machinery of the court was put into motion. When that had been done the responsibility and the result rested with the court. In giving it such information and taking such steps as would safeguard the interests of the estate in his charge in the proceeding before the court, he was but doing his plain official duty. The absence of an order of sale was not chargeable to his wrong-doing, but was the result of judicial inquiry and adjudication.
The plaintiffs' brief suggests, in support of a personal liability, that Root was guilty of misrepresentation and fraud, in that he led the plaintiffs to the belief that he had the authority of the heirs at law to sell. The sufficient answer to this claim is found in the fact that he did not purport to contract for them, but for himself as representing the estate. The plaintiffs cannot go outside of the memorandum in writing to show a contract other than the one there stated. Nichols v. Johnson, 10 Conn. 192, 198.
The plaintiffs complain of the judgment of the court in *Page 233 
that no costs were awarded to them. They do not venture to assert that they were, in any broad view of the results of the case, the prevailing parties. But they say that they had judgment for $500, and that costs follow such a judgment as of right. The defendants had judgment under the prayer of their counterclaim, that the contract sued upon be delivered up to the defendant Root who signed it: the plaintiffs, one for the return to them of the money which they had paid under the contract and refused to receive when tendered back. The latter adjudication was plainly dictated by equitable considerations, and was incorporated into the redress given in the adjustment of the whole transaction before the court as a measure of equitable and not legal relief. At law a tender operates in this State as a bar.Tracy v. Strong, 2 Conn. 659, 662. "Costs in equity are always discretionary." Hoyt v. Smith, 28 Conn. 466, 472. The situation presented by the pleadings was, furthermore, within the provisions of § 196 (p. 55) of the Rules of Court.
   There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.