Court Opinion

ID: 6445513
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:21:07.526296+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:45.862497
License: Public Domain

Wilkins, J.
The defendants, husband and wife, appeal from a final decree granting specific performance of a written agreement, signed by the plaintiff and the defendant husband, for the sale of certain real estate, the record title to which stood in the name of the defendant wife. The judge found that the defendant wife authorized the defendant husband (hereinafter called the defendant) to sell whatever interest she had, whether it was in her own right or was merely an inchoate right of dower. The evidence is reported, and the defendants contend that there is no evidence that the wife authorized a sale. This contention must fail. There was evidence of a conversation between a real estate broker and the defendant in the presence of the wife with respect to the signing of an agreement of sale, in the course of which the defendant said that the property was his, and that the agreement had not been drawn correctly. Thereafter a new draft, containing a higher selling price, was signed by the plaintiff and the defendant. The defendant testified that the wife consented to the sale after he spoke to her. Later the defendant and the wife, pursuant to the agreement, executed a deed, which was taken by the defendant to the registry of deeds on Saturday, January 5, 1946, the date provided in the agreement for the passing of papers. On that date the plaintiff was not present or represented at the registry, because he had not yet received the approval of a loan by the United States Veterans Administration. There was, however, evidence supporting a finding, which the judge made, that it had been orally agreed that papers might be passed later should further time be needed to receive such approval. The loan was approved, and the plaintiff was ready and able to pass papers, by January 7, but the defendants refused to do so. The defendants concede that there was evidence of authority to convey on January 5. This concession, *388which is inevitable upon the record, puts them out of court in view of other permissible findings. The judge was not required to accept the defendant’s testimony to the effect that the wife had signed the deed reluctantly and would not authorize a sale to be made later than January 5. There is no merit in the contention that the plaintiff has not sustained the burden of proof.
There was no error in the denial of the defendants’ motion to strike out the testimony of the conversations with the defendant in the presence of the wife respecting the first draft of the agreement. The testimony, relating as it did to events preceding the execution of the deed by the wife, was clearly competent upon the issue of the defendant’s authority. The ruling being correct, it is of no consequence whether the reason assigned by the judge was accurate. Randall v. Peerless Motor Car Co. 212 Mass. 352, 384. Nickerson v. Allen, 293 Mass. 136, 138-139. Alderman v. Noble, 296 Mass. 30, 33. Cousbelis v. Alexander, 315 Mass. 729, 732. See Bendett v. Bendett, 315 Mass. 59, 60-61.

Decree affirmed with costs.