Magaw v. Beals

Braley, J.

The jury would have been warranted in finding that, ten or twelve years previous to March 17, 1919, the record title to the premises in question was in one Albert E. Little, also an attorney at law, who formerly had been in the same law office as the defendant. While Mr. Little had no beneficial interest, the title being taken in his name for undisclosed reasons, the defendant, his brother, and his sister’s husband, Frank A. Bourne, who acted as trustees under an unrecorded trust deed, were the real owners. Mr. Little when he acquired title, simultaneously reconveyed to the trustees; but the deed never was recorded, and thereafter he took no part in the management and control of the property, and, until informed of the controversy out of which the case at bar arose, he was not aware that the deeds were unrecorded leaving him the owner of record, and he testified “that no one was authorized by him to rent the property in his name.” The defendant testified that, after negotiations with the plaintiff, he leased on February 27, 1919, the premises referred to in the record as 851 Beacon Street, to the plaintiff for a term of six months at a monthly rental payable in advance of “one hundred dollars” beginning March 1, 1919. The lease was executed by the plaintiff, and by “Albert E. Little, by Sidney L. Beals Atty,” and there was evidence that at the time of signing the defendant explained to the plaintiff “that he had sole charge and management of the property and that he was the only person for her to deal with.” The plaintiff, who had entered into occupation, made the first payment. But more or less dispute shortly sprung up over repairs which the plaintiff claimed the defendant agreed to make, and over a water bill which the defendant had paid and for which he contended the plaintiff should reimburse him. The plaintiff then complained to Mr. Little of the conduct of the defendant, and as a result of the information Mr. Little executed to the trustees a deed of the premises which was placed on record on March 17, 1919.

The defendant by assuming to act as the agent of Mr. Little, *324impliedly held himself out as having authority to lease in Little’s name to the plaintiff, who apparently, or it could be so determined by the jury, dealt with him in good faith and in reliance on his representations of authority. Milliken v. Thorndike, 103 Mass. 382. By so doing he made himself personally liable. And this is so, even if he knew of his lack of authority and assumed to act as if he were authorized, or whether he honestly was of opinion that he possessed authority when as matter of fact he had none. Bartlett v. Tucker, 104 Mass. 336. May v. Western Union Telegraph Co. 112 Mass. 90. Conant v. Alvord, 166 Mass. 311. A tenant who enters into the relation of landlord and tenant by demise and occupation as in the present case would be estopped to deny his landlord’s title. Cobb v. Arnold, 8 Met. 398. And the defendant, who acted with full knowledge of the title at the time of the demise, is estopped as between himself and the plaintiff from denying the validity of the execution of the lease. Howe v. Merrill, 5 Cush. 80.

While there was evidence that counsel then acting for the plaintiff tendered the rent a day or two after the first of April and the proportionate part of the water rates due in April to the defendant, who refused to accept for the sole reason, that the plaintiff owed him money advanced in settlement of a water bill left unpaid by a prior tenant, which he testified she had agreed to pay, and the jury could say on the plaintiff’s evidence that she never made the promise, and that the money paid by the defendant formed no part of the water rates accruing -under the lease, yet the tender was insufficient, and she was in default. Dewey v. Humphrey, 5 Pick. 187. See Schayer v. Commonwealth Loan Co. 163 Mass. 322, 323, 324.

The defendant however without making any re-entry as provided under the covenants of the lease for a forfeiture, executed on April 15 a lease in his own name of the premises to one Leach, which the defendant told the jury was done for the sole purpose of dispossessing the plaintiff. In pursuance of this undertaking, planned by the defendant, Leach accompanied by a constable, entered upon the premises and forcibly removed all the plaintiff’s furniture, household goods, effects and wearing apparel into the street, locked the door and retained the key. It was undisputed that in reply to a request of the constable as to what “he should *325do with them” the plaintiff asked that the property be returned to the house, but was informed that this would not be done “unless she paid $150 . . . made up of the rent, water rates, some other incidental charges and the cost of moving.”

The title to the premises was vested in the trustees when the lease to Leach was given, and the defendant is not shown to have had any authority to relet the premises. The ouster of the plaintiff was unlawful for which she can sue in tort for damages. Fifty Associates v. Howland, 11 Met. 99, 102, 103. Chapman v. Harney, 100 Mass. 353. Rogers v. Snow, 118 Mass. 118, 123. Fillebrown v. Hoar, 124 Mass. 580. Skally v. Shute, 132 Mass. 367, 372. Gurney v. Tenney, 197 Mass. 457. Chetteville v. Grant, 212 Mass. 17, 19.

The constable immediately attached all the property under a writ in favor of the defendant, the ad damnum being “three hundred dollars” on the back of which signed by him was the indorsement, "If goods and furniture of defendant are put out of 851 Beacon Street, you are directed to attach them immediately and put them in storage if she does not direct what she wants done with them.” The plaintiff’s necessary wearing apparel and her household furniture “not exceeding $300 in value” were exempt from attachment. R. L. c. 167, § 38, c. 177, § 34. Richardson v. Buswell, 10 Met. 506. Mannan v. Merritt, 11 Allen, 582. It is settled that where an officer attaches personal property exempt from seizure on execution, which may be mingled with other articles not exempt, there is no such confusion of goods as will justify him, even if the owner does not claim exemption, in attaching and holding possession of all the property. Copp v. Williams, 135 Mass. 401. Cornell v. Mahoney, 190 Mass. 265, 267. The defendant who directed the attachment to be made was a wrongdoer and is responsible in damages. Richardson v. Reed, 4 Gray, 441, 442. Feneff v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 196 Mass. 575.

The case was rightly submitted to the jury on each count as stated in the report, and in accordance with its terms “Judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff on the verdicts as reduced by order of the court.”

So ordered.