Couture v. Morin
Couture v. Morin
Opinion of the Court
There is no merit in this appeal. The defendant Joseph Morin, in writing and under seal, agreed with the nominal plaintiff, Couture, to hold a note for $1,000 payable to himself and a mortgage deed to himself as mortgagee of real estate in Worcester securing the note, in trust to sell and assign for the purpose of raising cash to be applied, first, to the expenses of the transaction, next, to the payment to himself of $386 due him from Couture, and, then, to pay over the balance to Couture. He did not do this. Instead, after he had received an offer of $700 for them from a would-be purchaser (which he agreed was a reasonable price for them), and after he had agreed to transfer them for $400 to an assignee of Couture’s rights, he made neither the sale nor the transfer, but assigned the note and mortgage without consideration to his son, Emile F. Morin, to hold as a straw, and to foreclose the mortgage. This bill was, thereupon, brought for an accounting and general relief. The foreclosure proceeding of Emile F. Morin was abandoned • because a first mortgage upon the real estate was foreclosed by sale at which Joseph Morin bought in the property and the equity of second mortgagee and of mortgagor was extinguished. Couture assigned the trust agreement for value to one Riordan, who brought the bill in the name of his assignor. Later Couture became bankrupt. His trustee refused to intervene in the suit. The transfer once agreed upon for $400 fell through because the attorney acting in that matter for Joseph Morin demanded an additional sum for his fee. Riordan offered to pay the $400, and his ability to make payment is not questioned.
In such circumstances, which appear from the evidence, reported under the rule, and the findings of fact of the trial judge, we think findings are required that the note and mortgage were worth $700; that Joseph Morin was not faithful to the trust which he undertook; that loss thereby resulted to Riordan, and, in consequence, Joseph Morin owes to him the difference between $700 and the debt due to Morin. This amount the decree fixed at $284 with interest.
The bankruptcy of Couture was immaterial. It occurred after the assignment to Riordan, the real plaintiff, which the trustee in bankruptcy took no steps to question.
Whether or not the transfer to the son as a straw by Morin, trustee, was» a breach of duty justifying legal proceedings, clearly no right to foreclose was contemplated by the trust agreement. Beginning a foreclosure, failing to sell at a fair price, refusing to transfer to the assignee of the cestui que trust at the agreed sum, would support the proceeding instituted and the decree entered. See Page v. Franklin, 214 Mass. 552; Ashley v. Winkley, 209 Mass. 509.
Emile F. Morin has done nothing reprehensible. The bill properly was dismissed as against him.
Decree affirmed with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.